In Re The Marriage Of Jody L. Keener And Connie H. Keener Upon The Petition Of Jody L. Keener

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 9, 2007
Docket130 / 05-1257
StatusPublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of Jody L. Keener And Connie H. Keener Upon The Petition Of Jody L. Keener (In Re The Marriage Of Jody L. Keener And Connie H. Keener Upon The Petition Of Jody L. Keener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 Jody L. Keener And Connie H. Keener Upon The Petition Of Jody L. Keener, (iowa 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 130 / 05-1257

Filed February 9, 2007

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JODY L. KEENER AND CONNIE H. KEENER

Upon the Petition of JODY L. KEENER,

Appellant,

And Concerning CONNIE H. KEENER,

Appellee. ________________________________________________________________________ On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Marsha

Beckelman, Judge.

Former wife seeks further review after court of appeals modified

dissolution decree. DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS

VACATED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND CASE REMANDED.

Robert F. Wilson, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.

Daniel Bray of Bray & Klockau, P.L.C., Iowa City, for appellee. 2

STREIT, Justice.

When two people cannot get along, sometimes it is better for both

of them to just pick up their toys and leave. Unfortunately in this case,

that was not so easy. During their marriage, Jody and Connie Keener

founded a very successful toy company. The district court awarded all of

the stock in the company to Connie but required her to pay Jody nearly

$7 million over eleven years in order to equalize the property division.

Jody complained the court should have awarded interest and provided

security for this judgment. The court of appeals agreed, awarding Jody

interest at the statutory rate and giving him an equitable lien on the

business and all of its assets. On further review, we find Jody did not

prove the value of certain intangible assets of the corporation. We find

the value of the corporate stock to be $10,169,171 and order Connie to

pay Jody $4,280,650 over six years. We further order interest be paid on

the judgement rendered herein and Connie’s obligation to her ex-

husband be secured by a UCC lien on the corporate stock.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Connie and Jody were married in 1992 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

They do not have any children together. Jody filed for dissolution in

2002.

Connie is fifty-eight years old. She was born in Hong Kong and

lived there until she came to the United States in 1975. In Hong Kong

she worked as a cashier, in hotel management, in the travel agency

business, in an employment agency, and finally at a bank. While living

in California, she worked as a secretary and a commercial bank loan

assistant. She has two children. This is her second marriage.

Jody is fifty-two years old and a native of Iowa. He has five

children and this is his third marriage. Jody has an unusual 3

background. He quit school at the age of twelve to work for various

carnivals. While in the carnival business, Jody began buying and selling

closeout toys and furniture. He left the carnival business around the age

of twenty and began manufacturing and distributing furniture. In 1988,

Jody was charged with and pled guilty to felony conspiracy to defraud

the United States and two violations of misdemeanor willful failure to file

federal income taxes for 1981 and 1982. While in prison, Jody

completed his GED. Upon his release in May 1991, Jody worked for the

Dove Imports company which was formed by a group of pastors and

friends in Marion, Iowa. The business bought and sold furniture and

toys.

While on a business trip to California for Dove Imports, Jody met

Connie. After a short courtship, Connie moved to Cedar Rapids, the two

were married, and they started their own business. In July 1992, the

day before they were married, Jody and Connie incorporated Alpha

International. Connie was the sole shareholder.1 However, the business

was their joint venture from the beginning. Jody was responsible for

purchasing merchandise, sales, marketing, contract negotiations, and

arranging toy manufacturing. Connie was involved in the financial aspects of the business—invoicing, writing checks, keeping the books

and tracking finances. The company started in the couple’s garage but

grew rapidly and became very successful. At its peak, Alpha employed

approximately one hundred people. Originally, Alpha was primarily

involved in the wholesale distribution of closeout toys and collectibles.

After acquiring two other companies, Alpha began manufacturing and

designing toys as well. During their marriage, the Keeners purchased a

Jody and Connie put all of their assets in Connie’s name in order to avoid 1

Jody’s creditors. 4

great deal of real estate, all of which was placed in Connie’s name alone.

Alpha does not own any real estate although it rents office and

warehouse buildings from Connie.

In late 2001, the Keeners began experiencing marital difficulties.

In May 2002, Alpha’s board fired Jody. Thereafter, Jody reactivated and

incorporated a company called J. Lloyd International. J. Lloyd is in the

business of reselling closeout inventories and also consults on toy

manufacturing.

Trial was held between March 23, 2004 and April 8, 2004. The

district court issued its dissolution decree on March 14, 2005. The value

of Alpha was the biggest point of contention. The district court valued

Alpha at $15,169,171 and awarded the business to Connie. The court

awarded Connie all of the real estate used by Alpha. The district court

valued J. Lloyd at $1 million and awarded it to Jody. Connie also

received the marital home. Jody was awarded most of the remaining real

estate.

The property division was heavily skewed in Connie’s favor.

Connie received $18,086,095 in property whereas Jody’s property award

was worth $4,524,786. Thus, “[i]n order to equalize the property

division,” the district court ordered Connie to pay Jody $6,780,650 in

installments. The court ordered Connie to pay Jody $600,000 per year

by May 1 of each year beginning in 2006, until the amount is paid in full.

Both parties filed motions to enlarge. In response, the court

clarified its characterization of the payments Connie owes Jody by

amending the decree with this additional language:

Because the total judgments ordered herein to be paid by Connie Keener to Jody Keener involve periodic payments, judgments for the periodic payments, as ordered by the court, will become judgments of record as the periodic 5 payments (or installments) are due. [Jody] shall be paid judgment interest on due and unpaid installments.

The court otherwise denied Jody’s request for interest on the $6,780,650.

The district court refused Jody’s request for a lien on Alpha and the

company’s assets. The court also declined Connie’s request to lower its

valuation of Alpha.

Both parties appealed. Jody argued for interest and security on

the payments Connie owes him. Connie argued the district court

overvalued Alpha. The court of appeals ruled in Jody’s favor. It

concluded the cash payments to Jody from Connie should bear annual

interest from the date of the decree at a rate set by Iowa Code sections

535.3(1) and 668.13(3) (2005), “because Jody will otherwise be

inequitably deprived of the use of his payments equalizing the property

division.” The court of appeals also concluded “it is inequitable to deny

Jody’s security in the property division” and granted an equitable lien

against Alpha and its corporate assets. The court denied Connie’s

request to decrease the valuation of Alpha and increase the valuation of

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