In Re the Marriage of Matthew Morris and Allison Morris Upon the Petition of Matthew Morris, and Concerning Allison Morris, N/K/A Allison Walsh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 29, 2014
Docket13-1884
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Matthew Morris and Allison Morris Upon the Petition of Matthew Morris, and Concerning Allison Morris, N/K/A Allison Walsh (In Re the Marriage of Matthew Morris and Allison Morris Upon the Petition of Matthew Morris, and Concerning Allison Morris, N/K/A Allison Walsh) 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.

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In Re the Marriage of Matthew Morris and Allison Morris Upon the Petition of Matthew Morris, and Concerning Allison Morris, N/K/A Allison Walsh, (iowactapp 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 13-1884 Filed October 29, 2014

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MATTHEW MORRIS AND ALLISON MORRIS

Upon the Petition of MATTHEW MORRIS, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning ALLISON MORRIS, n/k/a ALLISON WALSH, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lee (North) County, John G. Linn,

Judge.

Allison Morris, now known as Allison Walsh, appeals the physical care,

child support, and property distribution provisions of the decree dissolving her

marriage to Matthew Morris. AFFIRMED.

Stephen T. Fieweger of Katz, Huntoon & Fieweger, P.C., Moline, Illinois,

for appellant.

Daniel L. Bray, Lori L. Klockau, Chad A. Kepros, and David M. Cox of

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

Heard by Danilson, C.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ. 2

DANILSON, C.J.

Allison Morris, now known as Allison Walsh, appeals the physical care,

child support, and property distribution provisions of the decree dissolving her

marriage to Matthew Morris. She first contends the district court erred in placing

the parties’ two children in Matthew’s physical care. Allison also maintains the

court erred in denying her request to reopen the record to present additional

evidence. She challenges the court’s valuation of the marital residence, its

failure to require Matthew to refinance the debt on the house, and its calculation

of her child support obligation. Upon our de novo review, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Matthew and Allison were married in August 2001. Both were twenty-six

years old at that time. It was the first marriage for both parties. They had two

children, a son, J.M., born in January 2004, and another son, H.M., born in

September 2005.

Matthew is in good health and has no physical limitations. Matthew grew

up in Fort Madison. He attended college after graduating from high school;

worked at a bank in Florida in 1997; and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he

worked for two years. Matthew later lived in Coralville, Iowa, and worked for

Brenton Bank and then Wells Fargo as a mortgage agent. After the parties

married in 2001, they moved to Des Moines while Allison worked on her

certification to be a physician’s assistant (PA). Matthew continued to work as a

mortgage agent for Wells Fargo. The parties moved to Fort Madison in 2002

where Matthew began his employment with the Fort Madison Bank & Trust.

Matthew was promoted to bank president in 2006. In 2011, Matthew’s gross 3

annual income was $179,777, about $150,000 of which is salary, the remainder

being benefits and a bonus. He has an employer-sponsored health benefit plan

available; the monthly cost to cover the children for medical and dental insurance

is $599.

Allison finished her undergraduate degree requirements in southeast Iowa

and earned a Bachelor of Science in 1998. In 2003, Allison became a PA. In

August 2003, she went to work as a PA at Fort Madison Physicians & Surgeons

and was employed there until October 2004. She then worked at Infinity Medical

Clinic in Fort Madison until December 2007, when the clinic closed. Allison

returned to Fort Madison Physicians & Surgeons in January 2008. However,

Allison resigned in March 2010. At that time, she was covered by a two-year,

sixty-mile-radius, non-compete clause that prohibited her from working as a PA in

the Fort Madison area. From May 2010 to January of 2011, Allison worked in

sales for Tri-Medical Solution.

In 2010, Allison began experiencing severe emotional problems.1 In

November 2010, Allison began outpatient counseling with Dr. Janeta Tansey.

Her condition became severe enough that for ten days during January 2011 she

entered an inpatient program at Mercy Hospital in Iowa City. Allison was

diagnosed with anorexia nervosa and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

After leaving Mercy, Allison’s condition worsened, and she began inpatient

treatment at the University of Iowa Hospitals from February 2 through 21, 2011.

She left that program against medical advice. Her physical health worsened in

1 Allison had some history of emotional issues, including an undiagnosed eating disorder and a suicide attempt during her teenage years and an episode of suicidal ideation when in college. 4

late February. Allison entered a long-term inpatient program at a Denver,

Colorado, hospital in March 2011. Allison stated she completed the program;

Matthew felt she had not because she had not filled out her wellness plan prior to

discharge. She returned home to Fort Madison in mid-May 2011.

Still covered by the non-compete agreement, Allison began working in

September 2011 at the University of Iowa Community Medical Services office in

Coralville, Iowa. She worked approximately three ten-hour days per week and

was paid forty dollars per hour. Allison would spend one or two nights per week

in Coralville, staying at a motel or with relatives.

Before her hospitalizations, Matthew and Allison were both actively

involved in the children’s care. Matthew became the boys’ sole caregiver for

several months in early 2011. Upon Allison’s return, both parents again provided

care for the children, although Matthew was necessarily the primary caregiver

when Allison was at work in Coralville.

Matthew filed a dissolution petition in March 2012. Following several

motions and orders related to the temporary care and support of the children

(including Matthew’s request for a temporary injunction to prohibit Allison from

moving the boys from Fort Madison and enrolling them in school in Iowa City),2

the court sua sponte appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL) for the children. After

an extensive investigation, the GAL recommended the children remain enrolled

in their Fort Madison school.

2 After the parties separated, they alternated living in the marital residence for one-week periods caring for the children. In July 2012, Allison’s parents purchased a residence for Allison in the Coralville area. 5

On August 9, 2012, the district court entered a ruling granting Matthew’s

application for a temporary injunction prohibiting Allison from registering the

children for school at an elementary school in Coralville. To provide a “modicum

of stability” for the children, the court enjoined the parties from removing the

children from their current school system until further order of the court.

On September 5, 2012, the GAL filed a supplemental report in which she

noted the children were “very bonded to both of their parents and are comfortable

in both of their homes. Both parties love these boys very much, but are having a

difficult time shielding the children from the divorce process as emotions are

running on overdrive during this time.” The GAL recommended the court order

temporary physical care of the children with Matthew:

Taking all things into consideration, I believe the most important factor to look at is the continuity and routine of the boys. It is a fact that the boys like their home in Fort Madison and the boys are comfortable there. They have many friends and a huge support system in the Fort Madison area to include both Matt and Allison’s families. The boys have attended and been involved with the Holy Trinity School system since they were [two] years old.

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