In Re the Marriage of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp and Cory J. Beauchamp Upon the Petition of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp, and Concerning Cory J. Beauchamp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 17, 2016
Docket15-0107
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp and Cory J. Beauchamp Upon the Petition of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp, and Concerning Cory J. Beauchamp (In Re the Marriage of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp and Cory J. Beauchamp Upon the Petition of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp, and Concerning Cory J. Beauchamp) 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 Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp and Cory J. Beauchamp Upon the Petition of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp, and Concerning Cory J. Beauchamp, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-0107 Filed August 17, 2016

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MELISSA A. GANSEN BEAUCHAMP AND CORY J. BEAUCHAMP

Upon the Petition of MELISSA A. GANSEN BEAUCHAMP, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning CORY J. BEAUCHAMP, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, James A. McGlynn,

Judge.

A former wife appeals financial aspects of the dissolution decree.

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

J.D. Hartung and Ashley A. Tollakson (until withdrawal) of Hartung &

Schroeder, Des Moines, for appellant.

Dorothy L. Dakin of Kruse & Dakin, L.L.P., Boone, for appellee.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Bower and McDonald, JJ. 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

Melissa (Missy) Gansen Beauchamp challenges economic provisions in

the decree dissolving her sixteen-year marriage to Cory Beauchamp.

Specifically, she argues the property distribution was inequitable and contends

she should not have to pay spousal support. From our de novo review of the

record, we disagree with the district court’s finding that Missy dissipated marital

assets. Accordingly, we modify the decree to require Cory to pay a portion of the

family’s credit card debt outstanding at the time of trial. In all other aspects, we

affirm the dissolution decree.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Missy and Cory were married in 1998 and have two daughters, born in

2004 and 2009. The couple separated in 2012. Missy filed a petition for

dissolution of the marriage in February 2014.

Both Missy and Cory worked outside the home throughout the marriage.

While attending Iowa State University, Missy landed a “coveted internship” with

Meredith Corporation. By the time of trial, she was forty-two years old and had

been with the company for almost twenty years. In her job as a senior associate

design director, she earned an annual salary of $87,758.

Cory was forty-four years old at the time of trial and operated motor

vehicles for Iowa State University, earning just over $42,000 per year. Cory has

a high school diploma. When he was younger, he completed most of the hours

necessary for a degree in auto mechanics. Cory testified he enjoyed his current

job, but because the tasks demanded much exertion and he had seen coworkers

experience physical “breakdown over the years,” he had considered pursuing a 3

managerial position with the university. But attaining such an advancement was

a velleity; he had not actually looked into the possibility of furthering his

education.

Because Missy worked in Des Moines and Cory worked in Ames, they

chose to build a house in Huxley as a midway point. When the parties separated

in August 2012, Missy stayed in the family home and Cory rented a residence in

Slater. The Huxley house needed maintenance and repairs. Missy borrowed

nearly $4000 during the separation to replace the furnace and air conditioner.

The parties entered a mediation agreement in May 2014. The agreement

included a fifty-fifty temporary parenting schedule. The agreement provided

neither party would pay temporary monthly support, but Missy was “solely

responsible for the girls’ shoes, clothing, school lunches and activities, and any

other child-related expenses” not otherwise assigned in the agreement. The

parties split extracurricular and daycare fees fifty-fifty.

The district court considered evidence presented at the dissolution trial on

October 28-30, 2014. In the decree issued on December 17, 2014, the court

awarded the parties joint legal custody and joint physical care. The court also

ordered Melissa to pay $439.30 in monthly child support. The parties do not

challenge the custody or child support provisions of the decree.

In deciding how to distribute the marital property, the district court

discussed the parties’ division of personal belongings and vehicles, before

setting out the following information:

Cory has retirement accounts with a value of approximately $145,000. Missy has a 401K with her employer with a balance of about $210,000 plus a cash balance plan with a balance of almost 4

$78,000. As discussed elsewhere, Missy claims a premarital contribution to her retirement plan of over $8000. Cory asserts that he brought assets into the marriage and that the parties jointly paid off Missy’s student loan debt. It is difficult, if not impossible, to arrive at a precisely equal division of assets which fully factors in all of the claims and arguments made by each party.

The court then found:

[T]hose claims substantially offset each other and that a fair and equitable division of property can be accomplished by using a qualified domestic relations order to set off an appropriate amount of Missy’s retirement account to Cory as set forth below and by distributing the net proceeds from the sale of the marital home as set forth below, without any further adjustment regarding personal property.

The district court ordered the parties to sell the house and equally divide

the proceeds. The court also held Cory responsible for half of the installation of

the new furnace and air conditioner.

The district court next discussed division of the parties’ other major assets,

their pensions and Missy’s life insurance policy:

Since Missy earns substantially more money than Cory, her pension plan is much larger . . . . Missy asserts that the retirement accounts should not be divided equally because she should be granted credit for the portion attributed to her premarital balance . . . . The court FINDS that it is not fair and equitable to set off to Missy the portion of her pension attributed to her premarital contributions, without considering the debt she brought into the marriage and the assets Cory brought into the marriage . . . . [T]he court FINDS that to arrange a fair and equitable division of marital assets the financial assets, including Cory’s Iowa State TIAA- CREFF plan, Missy’s Meredith Corporation 401K, Missy’s Meredith cash balance plan and the cash value of Missy’s life insurance policy should be divided equally between the parties. This will result in all of Cory’s pension remaining in his name and a qualified domestic relations order transferring an equalizing amount of Missy’s pension to Cory.

The district court noted the parties’ most significant dispute was not about

assets but debts. The court commented: “The evidence shows that at the time of 5

the separation the parties had virtually no debt other than the mortgage on the

house.” The court compared that situation to the parties’ debt load at the time of

the dissolution trial:

At the time of the divorce, Cory owed a few small amounts and agreed that he should be responsible for paying those amounts. However, Missy owed over $39,000 in credit card debt, over $14,000 of which had been incurred in the approximate six-month period from the mediation proceeding to the date of trial.

The court acknowledged some of the debt related to home improvements, for

which Cory bore equal responsibility. But the court stressed “that still leaves over

$30,000 of debt owed by Missy on a variety of credit cards.” Missy urged the

court to consider those to be “marital debts and counted in the division of assets.”

Cory objected to those debts being included in the distribution of marital property,

asserting Missy had dissipated assets by incurring the credit card debt. The

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In Re the Marriage of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp and Cory J. Beauchamp Upon the Petition of Melissa A. Gansen Beauchamp, and Concerning Cory J. Beauchamp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-melissa-a-gansen-beauchamp-and-cory-j-beauchamp-iowactapp-2016.