In re the Marriage of Mack

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 12, 2018
Docket17-1568
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Mack (In re the Marriage of Mack) 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 Mack, (iowactapp 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1568 Filed September 12, 2018

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF EDDIE R. MACK AND KATHY A. MACK

Upon the Petition of EDDIE R. MACK, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning KATHY A. MACK, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Audubon County, James S.

Heckerman, Judge.

An ex-husband appeals a dissolution decree, arguing the district court

should have (1) imposed discovery sanctions; (2) accounted for dissipation in the

property division; (3) ordered trial attorney fees; and (4) denied the wife’s request

for a noncompetition clause. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

Gina C. Badding of Neu, Minnich, Comito, Halbur, Neu & Badding, P.C.,

Carroll, for appellant.

J. C. Salvo and Bryan D. Swain of Salvo, Deren, Schenck, Gross, Swain &

Argotsinger, PC, Harlan, for appellee.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Tabor, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

Although Eddie and Kathy Mack could not reconcile their differences to

preserve their marriage, during more than twenty years together the couple did

build a successful small business—Midwest Hard Parts, Inc. (MHPI). That

lucrative aluminum-scrapping venture lies at the heart of this divorce appeal.

Eddie raises four claims: (1) the district court should have imposed discovery

sanctions when Kathy failed to turn over business records; (2) the property division

was inequitable and should have accounted for Kathy’s dissipation of corporate

assets; (3) the court should have ordered Kathy to pay trial attorney fees; and (4)

the decree improperly included a noncompetition clause, limiting Eddie’s future

business prospects. After reviewing the record, we find Eddie failed to preserve

error on the first issue. On the remaining claims, we find the decree to be

equitable—with two small exceptions. Due to a mathematical error, we modify

Kathy’s equalization payment slightly in Eddie’s favor. We also order Kathy to pay

$7000 toward Eddie’s trial attorney fees.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Eddie and Kathy first married in 1984. They stayed together for twelve

years, divorced for two months, remarried, and continued as husband and wife for

nine more years before Eddie filed for divorce. This is an appeal from their second

divorce.

Nearly twenty years ago, Kathy and Eddie started MHPI in their garage.

Eddie scrapped transmissions for the aluminum and discovered a demand for the

parts they kept stocked on their shelves. The Macks incorporated their business

in 2000. Kathy handled ordering, bookkeeping, and payroll duties while Eddie 3

handled parts and labor. They also raised three children—all of whom were adults

by the time of this divorce. Throughout their relationship, the Macks used the

business to pay personal expenses and allowed an accountant to separate the two

categories for tax purposes.

Eddie and Kathy separated in December 2015. Eddie filed a petition for

dissolution in March 2016. Trial was originally set for September 2016 but did not

occur until July 2017. In the interim, the parties reconciled and split up several

more times. Simultaneously, they peppered each other with discovery requests

and pretrial motions—mostly by Eddie against Kathy. Between the petition and

the decree, Eddie filed an application for a restraining order; many discovery

requests; seven motions to compel; applications to inspect the MHPI business

premises; five motions for sanctions; motions to produce MHPI’s business keys

and computer passwords; and motions to appoint an auditor. The couple’s

representations to the court that they had reconciled, brief cessations of hostilities

and subsequent separations, and simultaneous adversarial filings created

significant confusion and delay.

In April 2016, Eddie sought a restraining order to prevent Kathy from

(1) dissipating corporate assets and (2) restricting him from conducting business

activities; Kathy sought the same injunctions against Eddie. In May, the district

court allowed Kathy to keep running MHPI and excluded Eddie from both the

business premises and its assets. It ordered Kathy to direct the company’s

accountant to prepare monthly profit and loss statements and to provide them to

Eddie. And the court allowed Eddie to retrieve several recreational vehicles that

were located on the premises. 4

In August 2016, Eddie filed a motion to compel discovery of the parties’

2015 tax return, credit card statements, bank account statements, and answers to

his earlier interrogatories. The court sustained the motion to compel and ordered

Kathy to produce the documents by August 19. On August 22, Eddie filed a second

motion to compel alleging Kathy failed to provide complete financial disclosures

and that—despite the May order—Kathy had not provided monthly profit and loss

statements. For the first time, Eddie asked for unspecified sanctions against

Kathy. It appears the court never addressed his motion.

In early fall, the parties jointly requested a continuance, eyeing potential

reconciliation. But in November 2016, Eddie filed a third motion to compel: he had

requested and not received backup copies of MHPI’s QuickBooks records. He

also accused Kathy of dissipating corporate assets to pay attorney fees and other

personal expenses. The court held an unrecorded hearing in December and

issued an order in January 2017. The court ordered the parties to draw only $1000

each per week from the company as salary and $1000 each per month for attorney

fees. No further use of business funds for personal expenses was allowed. The

court ordered Kathy to give backup copies of the company’s QuickBooks records

and other financial documentation to her own accountants, Kevin Garrett and Ron

Nielsen, and Eddie’s accountant, John Sklenar, by February 1. The order

instructed the accountants to receive monthly copies of the QuickBooks records

and provide oversight to prevent personal use of corporate funds. The court did

not impose any sanctions.

In March 2017, Eddie filed another motion to compel, asserting he had not

received the QuickBooks records; nor had he received requested credit card 5

statements or check copies. Kathy responded she was producing all the

documents she had. She also asserted she gave the QuickBooks records to her

accountant Garrett, and could not control whether he provided them to Eddie’s

accountant.1 She asserted and maintained throughout the proceedings that

Eddie’s discovery requests were duplicative and meant to harass her rather than

obtain relevant information. The court set a hearing on the motion for May 8, but

it is not clear from our record what orders followed from that hearing.

In early June 2017, Eddie filed another motion to compel, asserting the

QuickBooks records he received were “raw data” instead of the “backup” version

requested and from which reports can be generated.2 Other financial documents

were still missing. He requested again, generally, that Kathy be sanctioned. He

specifically requested attorney fees. After a hearing on June 12, the court

sustained the motion to compel and ordered production of seven credit card

statements, as well as Kathy’s personal bank statements. The order did not

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