In re the Marriage of Humphrey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 7, 2026
Docket24-2072
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Humphrey (In re the Marriage of Humphrey) 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 Humphrey, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 24-2072 Filed January 7, 2026 _______________

In re the Marriage of Jennifer Angela Humphrey and Marc Allen Humphrey

Upon the Petition of Jennifer Angela Humphrey, Petitioner–Appellant,

And Concerning Marc Allen Humphrey, Respondent–Appellee. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dallas County, The Honorable Thomas P. Murphy, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Kimberley K. Baer (argued) of Baer Law Office, Des Moines, attorney for appellant.

R.A. Bartolomei (argued) of Bartolomei & Lange, P.L.C., Des Moines, attorney for appellee. _______________

Heard at oral argument by Chicchelly, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. Opinion by Langholz, J.

1 LANGHOLZ, Judge.

After two years of high-conflict litigation and an exceedingly contentious three-day trial, Jennifer Humphrey appeals the decree dissolving her nineteen-year marriage with Marc Humphrey. She challenges the district court’s decision to place the parties’ two minor children in Marc’s physical care rather than in their joint physical care. She makes a host of challenges to the decree’s financial provisions, arguing that (1) she should have received an extra $1.3 million as an equalization payment because of many errors in the identification and valuation of marital property; (2) the child- and spousal-support decisions were based on an incorrect determination of Marc’s income; and (3) she should have been awarded some ongoing spousal support rather than a $170,000 equalization payment in lieu of spousal support. Finally, Jennifer challenges the district court’s denial of her request for trial attorney fees and seeks an award of appellate attorney fees.

On our de novo review, we affirm. Giving appropriate deference to the district court’s factual findings—especially considering the parties’ high degree of conflict and difficulty in communicating and showing mutual respect—we agree that joint physical care is not in the best interests of the parties’ children. Although some of Jennifer’s challenges to the court’s identification and valuation of the marital property have merit, even accounting for those adjustments, the district court’s property division is equitable—indeed it substantially favors Jennifer. We agree with the court’s determination of Marc’s income. And given all the unique circumstances here—especially Marc’s comparatively advanced age—we also agree that the award of an equalization payment in lieu of spousal support is appropriate. As for attorney fees, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Jennifer’s request and we likewise decline to award appellate attorney fees.

2 I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Marc and Jennifer married in March 2005. Marc was then fifty-one and Jennifer was thirty. They have three biological children together. At the time of trial, their oldest daughter was eighteen—attending college out of state—their younger daughter was twelve, and their youngest son was ten. Jennifer also has another son from a previous relationship whom Marc adopted.1 The son was three years old when the parties married, and by the time of trial, he was twenty-two and attending law school.

Marc is an attorney with a solo legal practice focusing mainly on representing personal-injury plaintiffs. Jennifer is currently a nurse. Her employment varied during their marriage. When they welcomed their first child in 2006, Jennifer was in nursing school and working as a certified nursing assistant. She took time off school and that job to care for their first- born and then obtained her nursing degree in 2008. Around 2010, she began working “on and off” as an unpaid legal assistant for Marc for a few years.

The family’s income from Marc’s legal practice—structured as an S corporation—varied wildly throughout their marriage. Most of Marc’s cases were on a contingency-fee basis. And he financed his law firm’s expenses on a line of credit. In 2012, after an unexpected loss in a case on which Marc had spent significant expenses, the family suffered a dramatic financial crisis. Their bank ended the line of credit, they lost their home and other commercial property, and the bank obtained two deficiency judgments—one against the law firm and Marc and a second against Marc and Jennifer. At the time of trial, the amount still owed on these judgments totaled more than $1 million.

1 Marc also has three other adult children from a previous marriage.

3 During this time, Jennifer returned to work as nurse to help support the family. By 2015, the family’s financial situation improved somewhat after Marc’s lucrative resolution of another case. They bought a new home on nearly 13 acres and a 26-acre undeveloped tract of land that they rent out to a farmer who grows alfalfa. And Jennifer stopped working outside the home to help care for their children—then ages one, three, and ten.

The parties paint starkly different portraits of family life over the next seven years. Because of the narrow joint-physical-care question before us on appeal, and the district court’s finding that neither party was entirely credible, we need not resolve most of those disputes. But the parties agree that even during this time that Jennifer was staying home, she was repeatedly absent from the home—at least once out of state—for days or weeks without telling her family members where she was.

Jennifer was also an avid—and apparently talented—gambler, frequenting the Prairie Meadows Casino. Over the course of the marriage she withdrew $80,000 from a joint account to finance her gambling activities. And she realized about $195,000 in gambling winnings—not including the $80,000 she spent. But she failed to pay taxes on those winnings, resulting in a $60,000 unpaid tax liability.

Tax debt haunts Marc as well. He failed to file taxes from 2019 through 2023, resulting in about $1.3 million in state and federal tax liabilities. Marc explained that during some of these years his law firm again suffered financial losses, and he chose to support his family rather than pay taxes. At the time of trial, Marc had set aside $875,000 from his law firm income in 2024 in an escrow account for the payment of some of the liability as he worked with a tax attorney to resolve the issues.

4 In May 2022, a heated argument led to Jennifer smashing their Mercedes with a baseball bat and puncturing its tires with a screwdriver. Jennifer has not lived in the family home since. The incident led to criminal charges—Jennifer eventually pleaded guilty to fourth-degree criminal mischief, resulting in a deferred judgment and a five-year no-contact order protecting Marc.2

Two weeks after that incident, Jennifer petitioned to dissolve the parties’ marriage. The case quickly devolved. Jennifer submitted a fraudulent affidavit—purportedly from a third party supporting her request for temporary physical care—earning admonition and sanction from the court. Marc was similarly admonished for his “‘scorched earth’ approach in his battle with Jennifer,” including involving the parties’ children in the case. But ultimately, in its November 2022 temporary-matters order, the court placed the minor children in Marc’s sole legal custody and ordered limited—and initially supervised—but gradually increasing parenting time for Jennifer. The court also ordered Marc to pay monthly spousal support of $2,500 while the dissolution proceeding continued.

After a three-day trial in September 2024, the district court dissolved the parties’ marriage. Consistent with the agreement of the parties, the court ordered joint legal custody of their two minor children. But the court rejected Jennifer’s request for joint physical care. The court reasoned: In this case, joint physical care will not work.

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In re the Marriage of Humphrey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-humphrey-iowactapp-2026.