In Re the Marriage of Jolene Michelle Johnson and Paul Lee Johnson Upon the Petition of Jolene Michelle Johnson, and Concerning Paul Lee Johnson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 11, 2015
Docket14-0182
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Jolene Michelle Johnson and Paul Lee Johnson Upon the Petition of Jolene Michelle Johnson, and Concerning Paul Lee Johnson (In Re the Marriage of Jolene Michelle Johnson and Paul Lee Johnson Upon the Petition of Jolene Michelle Johnson, and Concerning Paul Lee Johnson) 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 Jolene Michelle Johnson and Paul Lee Johnson Upon the Petition of Jolene Michelle Johnson, and Concerning Paul Lee Johnson, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-0182 Filed March 11, 2015

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JOLENE MICHELLE JOHNSON AND PAUL LEE JOHNSON

Upon the Petition of JOLENE MICHELLE JOHNSON, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning PAUL LEE JOHNSON, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Robert A. Hutchison,

Judge.

Paul Johnson appeals from the district court’s order modifying the decree

dissolving his marriage to Jolene Johnson. The modification awarded Jolene

physical care of their two minor children. We agree with the district court’s

findings and affirm. AFFIRMED.

Mark R. Hinshaw of The Law Offices of Mark R. Hinshaw, West Des

Moines, for appellant.

Elizabeth Kellner-Nelson of Kellner-Nelson Law Firm, P.C., West Des

Moines, for appellee.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Potterfield and Bower, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, J.

Paul Johnson appeals from the district court’s order modifying the decree

dissolving his marriage to Jolene Johnson. The modification awarded Jolene

physical care of their two minor children. We agree with the district court’s

findings and affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Paul and Jolene were married in September 2007. They had two children

together who are currently seven and four years old. Their marriage was

dissolved by court decree on October 31, 2011. The dissolution decree awarded

the parents joint custody and, despite their contentious relationship, joint physical

care of the children.

Paul took on a new paramour, Cyrena, with whom he now lives. The

district court’s findings of fact—which are supported by the record—state:

Paul lives with Cyrena Johnson, age 28; their history and status [are] confusing. At one point, Paul testified that he and Cyrena had been together for two years. However, later testimony established that they moved in together in October 2012 after knowing one another for approximately three months. . . . [P]olice were called to Paul’s home on September 29, 2012 in reference to a possible domestic dispute. However, at that time, Cyrena denied any romantic relationship between her and Paul. The fact the police could not determine whether there was an intimate relationship between Paul and Cyrena was one of the reasons no domestic abuse assault charge was filed, according to the report. Thus it is not clear when their romantic relationship began.

In addition to Paul and Jolene’s two children, there are four other children living

in Paul’s household: Cyrena’s three daughters from two prior relationships and

Paul and Cyrena’s child. Paul’s older child from another relationship visits in

Paul and Cyrena’s home. 3

In the years following the dissolution decree, Paul and Jolene’s already

tenuous relationship grew even more strained. Cyrena interjected herself into

the tense relationship as well by communicating directly with Jolene to criticize or

challenge Jolene about her care of the children. Paul began to permit his

parents or Cyrena1 to take on the care of the children without honoring Jolene’s

first right of refusal as provided in the dissolution decree.2 Jolene discovered this

fact when she went to Paul’s house to check on the children after she could not

reach Paul by phone. She discovered that Paul had left the children in his

mother’s care. An altercation between Paul’s mother and Jolene ensued, and

police were called to the scene.

Another ongoing incident during the period between the dissolution and

modification involved an infestation of bed bugs in Paul’s home. The children

were returning to Jolene’s care with mysterious bug bites. Jolene asked Paul to

have his home checked for an infestation numerous times. Paul and Cyrena

denied that there was any problem at their home, insinuated that Jolene’s home

may have been the source of the bites, and claimed that a professional had

determined there was no problem at Paul’s home. Ultimately a bed bug

infestation was discovered in Paul’s home.

Both Paul and Jolene claim that the other disparages them in front of the

children. The older child, P.J., has demonstrably borne the brunt of the parties’

1 The record also reflects Paul sometimes tasks an unnamed individual—who is known to the children as “cousin” and appears to be either a friend or relative of Cyrena’s—with the children’s care. 2 The decree provides: “If either party is unable to be personally present with the children during their respective visitation or parent time for longer than three (3) hours, they shall first offer the time to the other parent to spend with the children prior to obtaining third party care.” 4

acrimony. On the recommendation of one of P.J.’s teachers, Jolene arranged for

him to begin meeting with a counselor.3 After six months of counseling, P.J.’s

counselor wrote:

[P.J.] is a sad and confused child. He does have a great deal of anxiety which seems to emanate from his belief that his father and step-mother hate his mother. From [P.J.]’s perspective, he reports hearing a great deal of negative, critical, and mean- spirited remarks about his mother.[4] . . . Of course, these situations have escalated the problematic co-parenting relationship that seems to exist between Jolene and Paul. . . . The hostility that exists between the two families is very troubling to [P.J.]. This situation has a direct effect on his ability to cope with life stressors and distracts him from normal developmental tasks. [P.J.]’s troubles are compounded given the current joint physical care status. He is under a great deal of stress.[5]

Jolene applied for modification of the decree of dissolution on April 10,

2013, claiming the circumstances since the order establishing joint physical care

had substantially changed due to increased hostility between the parties and the

deterioration of the children’s mental and emotional well-being. Paul resisted

Jolene’s application. He filed an application for the district court to appoint a

custody evaluator. The court did so. The evaluator conducted his evaluation

and reported to the court, “It is my recommendation that the custody

arrangement be modified so as to provide that the mother be the primary care

giver and physical custodian.”

3 Jolene informed Paul of the arrangement and invited his input or participation. Paul elected not to participate and noted that he did not believe counseling was necessary. 4 In an email to Paul, Jolene wrote, “[P.J.] says that [Cyrena] calls me an idiot, stupid, and bit[ch]. He has also said that Cyrena tell[s] them to hit me, not talk to me, not listen to me and that she is a better mom th[a]n I ever will be.” 5 Paul claims the counselor’s findings are the result of a bias in Jolene’s favor. We agree with the district court: there is no evidence in the record of any bias that would have guided the counselor’s findings in one way or the other. 5

The district court conducted a hearing on the modification application. It

heard the testimony of Jolene, Paul, Cyrena, and Paul’s mother. The district

court issued its modification order on December 30, 2013. In its order, the court

made specific findings regarding the credibility of pivotal witnesses:

Neither Paul nor Cyrena were credible while testifying. Cyrena in particular seemed to think that her time on the witness stand was a source of great amusement. . . .

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In Re the Marriage of Hansen
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687 N.W.2d 110 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2004)

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In Re the Marriage of Jolene Michelle Johnson and Paul Lee Johnson Upon the Petition of Jolene Michelle Johnson, and Concerning Paul Lee Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-jolene-michelle-johnson-and-paul-lee-johnson-upon-the-iowactapp-2015.