In re the Marriage of Nelson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 2021
Docket20-1610
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Nelson (In re the Marriage of Nelson) 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 Nelson, (iowactapp 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 20-1610 Filed October 20, 2021

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JULIE M. NELSON AND MICHAEL D. NELSON

Upon the Petition of JULIE M. NELSON, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning MICHAEL D. NELSON, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, James C. Ellefson,

Judge.

A father of three appeals an order denying his application to modify child

support and ordering him to pay orthodontia costs for the youngest child.

AFFIRMED.

Amanda Hassid of Pasley & Singer Law Firm, L.L.P., Ames, for appellant.

Jessica Shannon of Baer Law Office, Des Moines, for appellee.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., Greer, J., and Carr, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2021). 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

A 2005 divorce decree ordered Michael (Mick) Nelson to pay $873.14 per

month to support his three children: L.N., M.N., and S.N. The decree also directed

the support “shall be recalculated” when each child was no longer eligible based

on “the then current Child Support Guidelines.” Mick contends that “step-down

provision is “self-executing.” And now that all three children have graduated from

high school, he claims his child support obligation should end. Mick appeals the

district court’s denial of a retroactive reduction. He also contests an order that he

pay a portion of uncovered orthodontia expenses for S.N., the youngest child.

Because the district court properly handled the child support and medical support

issues, we affirm.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Mick and Julie Nelson married in 1993, had three children, and divorced in

2005. The divorce decree placed physical care of the children with Julie and

ordered Mick to pay support for each child until the age of majority or high school

graduation.1 The oldest, L.N., graduated in 2015; M.N. in 2017; and S.N. in 2020.

Although the decree anticipated a change in Mick’s child support obligation as

each child left home, he did not seek recalculation until 2020.

That year, Mick filed a pro se request to end his obligation because the

children no longer qualified for support. Julie answered and counterclaimed,

asserting that she initiated a collection action because Mick “had missed or made

1 Along with the decree, the court issued an order to Mick’s employer requiring income withholding for the child support obligation. The court updated the income- withholding order when Mick’s employer changed in 2008, 2011, and 2018. 3

incomplete child support payments.” She argued his obligation should not be

terminated until he paid his back support of over $16,000.2 Julie also applied for

a rule to show cause why Mick should not be held in contempt. In an

accompanying affidavit, she alleged that Mick owed her $3144.90 for S.N.’s

orthodontics treatment.

Through counsel, Mick answered Julie’s counterclaim. In that filing, he

alleged that his monthly support obligation dropped to $819.63 in 2015, and to

$602.91 in 2017. He based those calculations on the parties’ 2005 incomes. In

June 2020, the court ordered Mick’s support obligation for S.N. to terminate. The

court clarified:

There is an additional set of issues revolving around whether support for the first two children should have terminated automatically or not, and, if the amount of support should have been changed, which set of guidelines should have been used and what incomes should have been used. .... . . . Determination of whether there was a back child support obligation and, if so, what the amount of that back support obligation is presents both legal and factual issues that are too complex to be submitted in the limited amount of time that the court has on a court service day. That issue must be set for trial.

After that order, Julie filed her own clarification:

2 In 2018, Mick—who had moved to California—petitioned to modify the decree to change then sixteen-year-old S.N.’s physical care from Julie to him. But he voluntarily dismissed that modification petition in 2019 before the court considered it. Julie testified that during mediation for that modification action they ran the numbers through the child support guidelines and “determined that he would actually have to pay more with both our incomes.” But she did not pursue an increase in support because she “didn’t have the money to start that course of action.” In her June 2020 brief resisting the termination of child support, Julie asserted that Mick’s salary had doubled since the decree was entered in 2005. As proof, she attached a 2018 statement from the University of California, San Diego, showing his gross annual earnings as $91,250. The 2005 decree showed Mick’s gross annual earnings as $43,000. 4

[H]ad [Mick] sought a modification of child support when each of the prior children became ineligible, the guidelines at that time, along with the parties income in 2015 and 2017, would have been used to determine child support, which might have been higher or lower than the current amount of $873.14. Unfortunately, that was never done.

The district court set trial for October 2020. Two months ahead of that, Mick

launched discovery. In response, Julie filed a notice stating that she had served

her answers by email. About two weeks before trial, Mick moved to strike all

objections to his discovery requests, to deem all matters admitted, to compel

discovery responses, and for summary judgment on the contempt action. The

motion complained that Julie’s unsigned email responses violated Iowa Rule of

Civil Procedure 1.422(1). Julie resisted those requests. The court considered the

discovery fight at a brief hearing on October 19. Afterward, the court denied Mick’s

motions to strike all objections, to deem all matters admitted, and to compel, but

reserved specific discovery matters for the October 22 trial.3 At that trial, Mick

and Julie were the only witnesses. Mick testified that he believed he had overpaid

$1,219.62 based on the “step-downs” as the children graduated from high school.

He alleged that when L.N. graduated in 2015, he and Julie agreed that his support

payment would be “around 700 and something dollars for two children.” But he

agreed the billed amount remained $873.14 as stated in the decree. Julie testified

that Mick owed a balance of $16,243.69 on his child support. She also asserted

that Mick should reimburse his share of S.N.’s orthodontic treatment.

3 On the eve of trial, Mick filed a brief resisting the contempt action. Mick acknowledged he was sometimes in arrears in his child support. But he claimed, “When his older children became ineligible to receive child support, . . . he continued paying the same amount as before in order to close the gap between what he owed and what he had paid.” 5

The district court ruled that Mick owed $16,243.69 in delinquent child

support. It rejected his argument that the child-support reduction provision in the

decree was “self-executing.” The court also found Mick liable for $2,501.40 in

uncovered medical expenses for S.N.’s orthodontia. Offsetting those sums, Julie

owed Mick $3,689.45 in missed payments toward student loan debt. So the court

ordered Mick to pay Julie a net amount of $15,055.64. The court declined to hold

Mick in contempt for failure to timely pay his child support, instead requiring income

withholding to recoup the back support.

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