In Re the Marriage of Mary Kay Frary and Daniel L. Knipper Upon the Petition of Mary Kay Frary, and Concerning Daniel L. Knipper

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 2016
Docket14-1398
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Mary Kay Frary and Daniel L. Knipper Upon the Petition of Mary Kay Frary, and Concerning Daniel L. Knipper (In Re the Marriage of Mary Kay Frary and Daniel L. Knipper Upon the Petition of Mary Kay Frary, and Concerning Daniel L. Knipper) 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 Mary Kay Frary and Daniel L. Knipper Upon the Petition of Mary Kay Frary, and Concerning Daniel L. Knipper, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-1398 Filed January 13, 2016

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MARY KAY FRARY AND DANIEL L. KNIPPER

Upon the Petition of MARY KAY FRARY, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning DANIEL L. KNIPPER, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Ian K. Thornhill,

Judge.

Mary Kay Frary appeals the district court’s ruling on Daniel Knipper’s

motion to enforce the parties’ dissolution decree and stipulation. REVERSED

AND REMANDED.

Benjamin W. Blackstock of Blackstock Law Offices, Cedar Rapids, for

appellant.

Charles A. Hallberg of Hallberg Law Office, Cedar Rapids, for appellee.

Heard by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ. 2

DOYLE, Judge.

Mary Kay Frary appeals the district court’s ruling on Daniel Knipper’s

motion to enforce the parties’ 2010 dissolution decree and stipulation. Mary Kay

contends the district court’s order “invalidat[es] portions of the prenuptial

agreement entered into by the parties.” Upon our review, we reverse the order of

the district court and remand.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Mary Kay Frary and Daniel Knipper married in 1996. Prior to their

marriage, Mary Kay and Daniel entered into a premarital agreement, providing in

part that in the event their marriage was dissolved, each party would “retain and

manage his or her own property” as set forth in the attached Schedule “A” and

Schedule “B.” The agreement stated in relevant part:

1. This agreement is intended to bind the parties and their heirs, assigns, and personal representatives, and limit the right of each party to participate in the property of the other in the event the intended marriage is terminated by a dissolution of marriage, altered by a Decree of Separate Maintenance, or affected by any other judgment, decree or legal proceeding that relates to the respective property rights of the parties, or the parties separate, die, or the occurrence or nonoccurrence of any other event in which the ownership of the property of the parties is to be determined. .... 3. It is the agreement and stipulation of both parties hereto that in the event of a dissolution of marriage that the property distribution and settlement shall be made precisely in accordance with this Agreement and that the property listed on Schedule “A” and Schedule “B”, attached hereto and by this reference made a part hereof, remain the property of the person listing the property and who owned such property before the marriage. 4. It is the desire of the parties that this Agreement be given full force and effect by a court of law in the event of the initiation by either party of a dissolution of marriage, separate maintenance proceeding, separation, or any other legal proceeding relating to the respective property rights of the parties, or upon the death of either party. It is the intent of this Agreement that each party retain 3

ownership of the property listed by that party in Schedule “A” and Schedule “B” attached. In addition thereto, the parties agree: .... (d) In case of a divorce or death, Dan shall have no interest in any inheritance or gift to Mary Kay from her parents, or from any other source, or in any asset acquired prior to the marriage to Dan. (e) In case of a divorce or death, Mary Kay shall have no interest in any inheritance or gift to Dan from his parents, or from any other source, or in any asset acquired prior to the marriage to Mary Kay.

The parties acknowledged in the agreement that they were “aware” of the Iowa

Code provisions relating to division of property upon dissolution of marriage and

premarital agreements.

Schedule “A” set forth the assets of Mary Kay the parties agreed would

remain with Mary Kay, including: “IRA at 1st Nat. of Oelwein Prime Vest (First

Trust) from divorce settlement [qualified domestic relations order] QDRO

& previous Hall & Hall IRA Plan, $36,000”; “Mass. Fidelity IRA (Aegon) from

divorce settlement, $36,000”; and “401k at Hall & Hall (18,000.00) of which was

rolled over from divorce [from Denny Frary] QDRO, $22,000.00.”

In 2009, Mary Kay filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. The parties

reached a stipulation resolving property distribution and spousal support.

Paragraph 9 of the stipulation provided:

Savings Accounts, Stocks, Bonds, Retirement Plan or Other Investments. Each party shall receive any savings, stocks, bonds and other investments in their name. Any pension plans of a party shall be divided by way of a Qualified Domestic Relations Act Order (QDRO) for the contributions of each party to their pension plans during the term of the marriage and each party shall sign all documents necessary to carry out this provision. Petitioner shall prepare any QDRO for her pension plans and Respondent shall prepare any QDRO for his pension plans and such QDROs shall be submitted to counsel for the other party for approval, and said QDROs shall be submitted to the plan administrator for approval and to the court for approval. 4

The only mention of the parties’ premarital agreement in the stipulation was in

paragraph 1, with regard to real estate (e.g., “The above real estate is the

property of Mary Kay Frary pursuant to . . . the Prenuptial Agreement signed by

Mary Kay and Daniel on June 18, 1996 . . . .”). Both parties and their respective

witnesses signed the stipulation. In May 2010, following a hearing, the district

court entered a dissolution decree that approved and incorporated the parties’

stipulation.

In January 2014, Daniel filed a motion to enforce decree and stipulation.1

The motion alleged in part, “No QDRO has been submitted by [Mary Kay].”

Daniel requested the court “enter appropriate Order compelling [Mary Kay] to file

a QDRO in accordance with the agreement of the parties, and award [Daniel]

attorney’s fees for failing to do so under this decree, and enter other relief as is

just and equitable under these circumstances.”

Mary Kay filed a response to Daniel’s motion and a request to enforce the

premarital agreement. Mary Kay thereafter filed several additional responses to

Daniel’s motion, requesting the court enter an order “that she has no pension

plan to be divided with the Respondent, Daniel Knipper, and to enforce the

prenuptial agreement signed by both parties.” Several more responsive

pleadings were filed by the parties before a hearing took place on June 4, 2014.

On July 2, 2014, the district court entered an order granting Daniel’s

motion to enforce decree and stipulation. The court found in part:

1 We question why Mary Kay did not take action to prepare a QDRO to divide her Advantage Sales plan—the sole plan Daniel’s attorney requested her to QDRO—which Mary Kay conceded was subject to division. Mary Kay’s inaction for more than three years after the dissolution decree was entered led to this proceeding. 5

Applying the governing law, the court finds that the parties’ May 2010 stipulated settlement, and not the provisions of the 1996 prenuptial agreement, governs the division of the parties’ retirement accounts because the settlement agreement, as written and agreed to by the parties, is a valid modification of their earlier premarital agreement. Said differently, the court finds the parties, in negotiating their stipulated settlement, modified certain terms of their earlier agreement.

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In Re the Marriage of Mary Kay Frary and Daniel L. Knipper Upon the Petition of Mary Kay Frary, and Concerning Daniel L. Knipper, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-mary-kay-frary-and-daniel-l-knipper-upon-the-iowactapp-2016.