In re the Marriage of Mills

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 30, 2022
Docket21-0454
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Mills (In re the Marriage of Mills) 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 Mills, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-0454 Filed March 30, 2022

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JASON DALE MILLS AND ERINN ANN MILLS

Upon the Petition of JASON DALE MILLS, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning ERINN ANN MILLS, n/k/a ERINN ANN PIERCE, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wapello County, Shawn Showers,

Judge.

A former wife appeals the denial of spousal support in a dissolution decree.

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED.

Ryan J. Mitchell of Orsborn, Mitchell, Goedken & Larson, P.C., Ottumwa,

for appellant.

Heather M. Simplot of Harrison, Moreland, Webber & Simplot, P.C.,

Ottumwa, for appellee

Considered by May, P.J., and Schumacher and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

This case is a study in contradictions. In assessing Erinn Mills’s request for

spousal support in this fourteen-year marriage, the district court found she was

credible in testifying that she could not work after an injury suffered while giving

birth to the parties’ only child in 2006. Yet the court determined spousal support

was “not appropriate,” in part because the court anticipated that Erinn would “either

qualify for disability in due course or seek employment.” Erinn appeals, claiming

the court’s refusal to award her spousal support was inequitable. We agree.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Erinn and Jason Mills married in May 2006. Just a few days before their

marriage, the parties signed a prenuptial agreement that generally provided their

present and future property would remain their separate property. In an

attachment to the agreement, Erinn disclosed a number of assets, the most

significant of which was anticipated proceeds from her grandfather’s trust—the

J.O. Sheets Trust. Erinn’s share of that trust was valued “at about $208,348,” with

half of that amount to be distributed to her when she turned thirty and the balance

at age thirty-five. Erinn also jointly owned a $140,000 four-acre farm with her

mother, which included a house, Morton building, and small barn, against which a

mortgage of $98,000 was owed.1

1Other assets included nine Arabian horses (valued together at $100,000) that Erinn owned jointly with her father, approximately $20,000 in horse-related gear, $25,000 in jewelry Erinn inherited from her grandmother, trophies from horse competitions, a $63,000 whole life insurance policy, and a $2000 painting Erinn owned with her brother. 3

Jason’s premarital assets were more modest, the largest being a 2002

Harley Davidson he valued at $15,000, a $30,000 401(k) retirement account, and

a house valued at $38,500, against which $32,000 was owed. Jason also listed

several antiques, multiple collectible items, musical instruments, and many

miscellaneous items of smaller value, like “[p]osters of various music icons”

including Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix, and a Cheech & Chong album.

When the parties married, Jason had a bachelor’s degree and was grossing

$40,899 per year. Erinn did not complete college, but she obtained a phlebotomy

certificate in 2005, which provided her with part-time employment at a lab where

she grossed $7024 the following year. The couple lived in the house Erinn owned

with her mother, who paid the taxes and insurance for the property until 2011 when

Jason took over the payments.

Erinn and Jason’s only child was born at the end of 2006. During his birth,

Erinn heard a “horrible” pop, immediately following which she was in “excruciating

pain.” After the birth, she wasn’t able to get dressed, go to the bathroom, or walk

without assistance. She went undiagnosed for several weeks until a trip to a

specialist in Iowa City determined that she had a “rupture of the pubic symphysis,”

or in layperson’s terms, a rupture between two of her pelvic bones. Because the

pain was unrelenting, Erinn sought further treatment at the Mayo Clinic. It was

there she learned more details about her injury, specifically that while she was

giving birth, “the left side of [her] pelvis broke away from the right in the front, and

in doing so, it rotated, and it ripped [the] muscles and tendons.” This rupture

causes muscle spasms that irritate and inflame the sciatic nerve. Erinn received

some short-term relief from treatments at the Mayo Clinic in the year after the birth, 4

but surgical repair was apparently not an option, so she has learned to live with

the pain.

In an attempt to return to normal life, Erinn went back to work part-time as

a phlebotomist about nine months after the injury. She generally worked

from 5:00 a.m. until 8:30 a.m., although she was chronically late. Erinn explained

that she “never knew from day to day getting up what [she] would feel like. So it

just—it was very hard.” Some days, according to Erinn, she “will wake up, and . .

. literally have to roll onto the ground before [she] can stand up.” Erinn eventually

quit working in 2014, a decision she said Jason encouraged, though he denied

that. The most that Erinn earned as a phlebotomist was $10,717. During this

same time, while Erinn’s employment was stagnant, Jason’s income was on the

rise. By the time of the trial in February 2021, he was earning $74,500 gross per

year as a product manager for a manufacturing company.

After Erinn stopped working in late 2014, Jason’s income paid for most, if

not all, of the marital expenses, though it does not appear the parties lived

extravagantly. Erinn described herself as “basically completely dependent on

Jason” from that point on. She did, however, receive $200 to $300 per month in

dividends from investments she made with the two distributions from her

grandfather’s trust. Erinn testified that she received the first distribution of

$108,969.94 in 2008, and the second distribution of $122,754.33 in 2013. She

used some of the proceeds from the first distribution to pay off the mortgage owed

on the house. The rest was invested in various mutual funds, stocks, and

securities, which were then transferred to her revocable trust, of which she was 5

the sole beneficiary and trustee. Erinn left most of the investments up to her father,

who was a financial advisor.

Erinn also received some income from boarding horses, although she

explained all of the horses that she boarded belonged to her father. Her receipts

for boarding horses totaled $6400 in 2016; $5200 in 2017; and $3600 in 2018.

Erinn stopped boarding in 2019 because her father’s horses had gotten old, and

he couldn’t afford to pay her to board them any longer. By the time of the trial,

Erinn only had two horses at her farm—a mare owned by her mother and a gelding

owned by a friend.

Much of Jason’s evidence at trial focused on his assertion that Erinn’s family

was “very wealthy” and would never let her want for anything. Erinn agreed that

her parents had paid for some things, like the property taxes and insurance for the

house she owned jointly with her mother and her cell phone bill. But she did not

agree her family was wealthy. Erinn’s father passed away in 2020, and Jason

offered the report and inventory from his estate as an exhibit at trial. The total

listed for the Iowa gross estate was $249,520.07, most of which came from Erinn’s

father’s one-half share in joint tenancy property owned with her mother. Jason

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Related

In Re the Marriage of Rhinehart
704 N.W.2d 677 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2005)
In Re the Marriage of Berning
745 N.W.2d 90 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2007)
In Re Marriage of Olson
705 N.W.2d 312 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2005)

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