In re the Marriage of Higgins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 29, 2026
Docket25-0904
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Higgins (In re the Marriage of Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Higgins, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-0904 Filed April 29, 2026 _______________

In re the Marriage of Stephanie Nicole Higgins and

Robert James Higgins Upon the Petition of Stephanie Nicole Higgins, Petitioner–Appellee,

And Concerning Robert James Higgins, Respondent–Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Webster County, The Honorable Ashley Sparks, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Jamie Hunter of Dickey, Campbell & Sahag Law Firm, P.L.C., Des Moines, attorney for appellant.

Andrew B. Howie of Shindler, Anderson, Goplerud & Weese, P.C., West Des Moines, attorney for appellee. _______________

1 Considered without oral argument by Greer, P.J., and Schumacher and Chicchelly, JJ. Opinion by Greer, P.J.

2 GREER, Presiding Judge.

Robert Higgins appeals from certain provisions of the decree dissolving his marriage to Stephanie Higgins. Arguing he was prejudiced because the district court excluded his exhibits and witness testimony from the trial as a sanction, Robert requests a new trial. Robert also disputes the custody award as he advocated for joint legal custody, and he asserts the property division award failed to do equity between the parties. Finally, he requests an award of his appellate attorney fees. Stephanie also requests that Robert pay her appellate attorney fees.

After our review, we find that the district court properly imposed sanctions on Robert, that the determination of sole custody with supervised visitation was correct, as was the property division, and that neither party should be awarded appellate attorney fees. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Stephanie and Robert married on September 17, 2016, and have one child together, born in 2016. The couple separated in December 2023 with Robert staying in the marital home and Stephanie moving with the child to her father’s home. Both residences were in the same town. Stephanie filed for a dissolution of the marriage in February 2024; the trial was held in February 2025. At the time of trial, Stephanie was thirty-five years old and was employed in cybersecurity for the Iowa Air National Guard. Robert, age forty-seven, had lost his job with the Iowa Army National Guard,1 but now worked at a bar and his income was supplemented though his military retirement and veteran benefits.

1 Robert was terminated from employment with the Iowa Army National Guard in January 2023.

3 In early 2023, the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) became involved with the family after the department received a report that Robert was using methamphetamine. There were other allegations related to the failure to supervise the child around unsecured firearms and domestic assault against Stephanie by Robert. The HHS report noted concerns about Robert’s “use of illegal drugs,” which he admitted, and concerns “about the parents’ relationship and use of anger skills.” During the investigation, Stephanie and the child moved into the home of Stephanie’s father, but when HHS closed the case, they moved back into the marital home with Robert. Then, in November, HHS became involved again after reports that Robert was again using methamphetamine and that he “scuffled” with Stephanie in the presence of the child. The HHS report noted that the allegations of denial of critical care and use of dangerous substances were founded. Robert admitted his use of methamphetamine due to his depression and issues with the marriage. After determining that the allegation of use of dangerous substances was founded, HHS developed a voluntary services safety plan in January 2024, with Robert agreeing to supervised contact with the child.

The HHS safety plan provided that Robert would: (1) “have supervised visits with [the child],” (2) “get a substance abuse evaluation [and] follow the recommendations,” (3) work with HHS and another agency, and (4) engage in drug tests as requested by HHS. In February, Stephanie filed for dissolution of the marriage. A no-contact order had been put in place between Stephanie and Robert, but, after the hearing on that issue, it was dismissed upon Robert’s agreement to abide by the HHS safety plan. Then, on April 1, the HHS social work case manager alerted the parties’ counsel that a supervisor had not been approved to supervise Robert’s visits with the

4 child because “Robert stated he wouldn’t participate in any services. . . . [H]e feels he does not need supervised interactions.”

Stephanie petitioned for a dissolution of the marriage; the district court addressed her subsequent motion to determine temporary custody and visitation of the parties’ child. Just prior to the hearing, Robert was charged with forgery for accessing Stephanie’s bank account and taking funds. The April 3 temporary custody order established temporary joint legal custody in the parents with primary physical care in Stephanie, but the order copied the safety plan established by HHS with set deadlines for compliance, conditioning Robert’s parenting time on his sobriety and requiring the visits to be supervised by Robert’s mother.

The plan also mandated that Robert complete a substance-use evaluation and provide a release of information to the attorneys in the case. Specific limited visitation was set out conditioned on obtaining a substance- use evaluation and a clean drug patch test result. Robert testified at the temporary hearing that he sought intensive outpatient treatment and had submitted to drug testing at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. But, that treatment was completed in March 2024. As far as any HHS drug testing, none was ever accomplished, and Robert did not provide any substance-use evaluation results. At the temporary-matters hearing, Robert said he was never asked by HHS to provide drug testing and, at the dissolution trial, he testified he could not afford to do the tests. Regardless, Robert has not had contact with the child, supervised or otherwise, since April 2024, when the temporary-matters order was issued.

During the progress of the case, Robert filed various pleadings, including several motions for temporary custody, motions to reconsider, and

5 an application for rule to show cause. In August, Robert’s attorney withdrew, and Robert has been self-represented until this appeal.

Without counsel to communicate with, in September, Stephanie moved to compel discovery responses. In the motion, she referenced an email from Robert where he indicated that he would not respond to discovery until he was allowed to speak to his child. Robert did not resist the motion to compel, and the district court gave him until October 15 to fully answer the discovery requests. After the deadline passed, with no discovery forthcoming, Stephanie moved for sanctions. The district court reviewed the discovery requests before ruling, and while Robert responded to the motion for sanctions, he never formally answered the discovery requests. On November 13, the district court ordered that Robert “is prohibited from presenting information or evidence that was requested in discovery but not provided to [Stephanie] without further order of the Court.” (emphasis added).

A one-day trial occurred in February 2025 where both parties testified. Prior to the trial, the parties were required to meet, and they arrived at a pretrial stipulation on several issues. Because they could not agree on the issue of custody, Stephanie urged the court to award her sole custody. Robert advocated for joint legal custody. Both parties requested primary physical care.

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