IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-2051 Filed February 7, 2024
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF LINDSEY SUE ROUTT AND FREDERICK MICHAEL ROUTT, JR.
Upon the Petition of LINDSEY SUE ROUTT, Petitioner-Appellee,
And Concerning FREDERICK MICHAEL ROUTT, JR., Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Davis County, Crystal S. Cronk,
Judge.
A father appeals the denial of his motion to quash an income-withholding
order entered by the Child Support Recovery Unit. AFFIRMED.
Ryan J. Mitchell of Orsborn, Mitchell & Goedken, P.C., Ottumwa, for
appellant.
Carly M. Schomaker of Gaumer, Emanuel & Goldsmith, P.C., Ottumwa, for
appellee.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Badding and Langholz, JJ. 2
TABOR, Presiding Judge.
“[T]here seems to be a complex history behind this obligation.” That
observation by an attorney for the Child Support Recovery Unit (CSRU) may have
understated the twists and turns in the post-divorce litigation between Frederick
“Ricky” Routt and Lindsey Routt. Ricky now contests the CSRU’s order for income
withholding of amounts he owed as current and back child support. But because
Ricky’s challenges to the district court’s denial of his motion to quash that order
are not properly raised or preserved for our review, we affirm without reaching the
merits of his claims.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Ricky and Lindsey married in 2011 and have two children: A.R. born in 2012
and L.R. born in 2013. The family was living in New Mexico when Ricky and
Lindsey divorced in 2014. The New Mexico decree ordered shared physical care
and directed Ricky to pay $553 per month in child support. After Ricky moved to
Ohio and Lindsey moved to Bloomfield, Iowa, Lindsey applied to modify the
decree. When Ricky did not appear for the modification hearing, the Iowa district
court entered a default order in August 2015 placing physical care with Lindsey.
The Iowa order left Ricky’s child-support obligation in place.
About two years later, Lindsey petitioned to have Ricky's parental rights
terminated under Iowa Code chapter 600A (2017). Ricky did not appear for the
hearing. In a June 2017 order, the Iowa juvenile court found that he had
abandoned the children and approved the termination petition.
About one year later, in July 2018, Ricky was looking to buy real estate in
Bloomfield. As part of that process, Lindsey signed a “release and satisfaction” in 3
which she stated that “[she] received all sums due to [her] including but not limited
to, child support and court costs” under the August 2015 custody modification
order. She also released “any and all liens with respect to child support which
[she] may have against the property described as” residential real estate in
Bloomfield. Ricky testified that his mortgage company filed that document, but it
was never confirmed by the court.1 That release and satisfaction was a prelude to
the couple’s temporary reconciliation. They lived together from September 2018
until January 2020, when Lindsey and the children moved out.
Two months later, Ricky moved to vacate the order terminating his parental
rights. Lindsey did not resist. So, in June 2020, the juvenile court “vacated and
set aside” its order terminating Ricky’s parental rights.2 That same month, Ricky
petitioned to modify physical care of the children. After a June 2022 modification
hearing, the district court decided the children, then ages eight and ten, would
remain in Lindsey’s physical care. Ricky appealed; we affirmed the modification
order. In re Marriage of Routt, No. 22-1351, 2023 WL 5601800, at *3 (Iowa Ct.
App. Aug. 30, 2023).
Meanwhile, the CSRU entered an order for income withholding against
Ricky under Iowa Code section 252D.16A (2021). The CSRU records showed that
Ricky owed $28,130.84 in back child support as of September 2021. It required
1 In a brief Ricky filed without counsel before the motion-to-quash hearing, he
asserted that the release allowed him to close on a house in Bloomfield in July 2018 where he then lived with Lindsey and the children. 2 Our record includes only the order vacating the termination, not any motions or
arguments explaining the grounds for restoring parental rights. The order stated that it was “not a contested proceeding and was not reported.” Given this limited record and the issues presented here, we take no position on the propriety of the order vacating the termination of parental rights. 4
him to pay $553 in current support and $110.60 in back support each month. The
CSRU also gave Ricky notice that he could contest the withholding order by
moving to quash in the district court. He did so. Ricky’s motion pointed to
Lindsey’s July 2018 release and satisfaction. And he asked to the court to quash
the income-withholding order and to “set a hearing to determine the merits of any
alleged back child support claimed to be owned by [Ricky] to [Lindsey].”3
CSRU attorney Robert Forrest responded to Ricky’s motion to quash,
admitting that Lindsey had filed a release and satisfaction “with the caveat that the
satisfaction has never been approved by the court making it ineffective at this
point.” The response continued:
That is said with the further caveat that [Ricky] has not made a payment since 2017 meaning income withholding would still be collected at 100% of the current support obligation plus an additional 20% to address arrears pursuant to administrative rules even if the satisfaction is approved. Support is not assigned to the State and there seems to be a complex history behind this obligation. If the payee is agreeable to income withholding being quashed for now, the State would suspend its resistance.
But the payee was not agreeable to that plan. Lindsey resisted the motion
to quash. Her resistance asserted that Ricky needed to pay back child support for
the time when his parental rights were terminated because he chose to petition the
court to restore his rights. She argued that vacating the termination voided the
original order. She insisted the child support that accrued while Ricky’s rights were
terminated should not be discharged and the income-withholding order should not
3 The motion to quash asserted that the CSRU provided its withholding order to
Iowa Work Force Development as Ricky was receiving unemployment benefits. 5
be quashed. Missing from her resistance was any discussion of the effect of her
release and satisfaction on the child-support withholding.
Ricky responded to her resistance. He maintained that his child support
obligation was terminated from June 2017 through June 2020. He also
reemphasized the release and satisfaction signed by Lindsey. He reasoned that
“collectively” the termination of his parental rights and Lindsey’s signed release
and satisfaction zeroed out all back child support that he owed before June 2020.
He did not contest the accrual of child support from June 2020 to January 2022.
In April 2022, the court held a motion-to-quash hearing. In his testimony,
Ricky objected to “backdating” his child support to 2017 when his parental rights
were terminated. He also raised Lindsey’s release and satisfaction and noted that
she and the children lived with him from 2018 until 2020. An attorney for the CSRU
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-2051 Filed February 7, 2024
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF LINDSEY SUE ROUTT AND FREDERICK MICHAEL ROUTT, JR.
Upon the Petition of LINDSEY SUE ROUTT, Petitioner-Appellee,
And Concerning FREDERICK MICHAEL ROUTT, JR., Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Davis County, Crystal S. Cronk,
Judge.
A father appeals the denial of his motion to quash an income-withholding
order entered by the Child Support Recovery Unit. AFFIRMED.
Ryan J. Mitchell of Orsborn, Mitchell & Goedken, P.C., Ottumwa, for
appellant.
Carly M. Schomaker of Gaumer, Emanuel & Goldsmith, P.C., Ottumwa, for
appellee.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Badding and Langholz, JJ. 2
TABOR, Presiding Judge.
“[T]here seems to be a complex history behind this obligation.” That
observation by an attorney for the Child Support Recovery Unit (CSRU) may have
understated the twists and turns in the post-divorce litigation between Frederick
“Ricky” Routt and Lindsey Routt. Ricky now contests the CSRU’s order for income
withholding of amounts he owed as current and back child support. But because
Ricky’s challenges to the district court’s denial of his motion to quash that order
are not properly raised or preserved for our review, we affirm without reaching the
merits of his claims.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Ricky and Lindsey married in 2011 and have two children: A.R. born in 2012
and L.R. born in 2013. The family was living in New Mexico when Ricky and
Lindsey divorced in 2014. The New Mexico decree ordered shared physical care
and directed Ricky to pay $553 per month in child support. After Ricky moved to
Ohio and Lindsey moved to Bloomfield, Iowa, Lindsey applied to modify the
decree. When Ricky did not appear for the modification hearing, the Iowa district
court entered a default order in August 2015 placing physical care with Lindsey.
The Iowa order left Ricky’s child-support obligation in place.
About two years later, Lindsey petitioned to have Ricky's parental rights
terminated under Iowa Code chapter 600A (2017). Ricky did not appear for the
hearing. In a June 2017 order, the Iowa juvenile court found that he had
abandoned the children and approved the termination petition.
About one year later, in July 2018, Ricky was looking to buy real estate in
Bloomfield. As part of that process, Lindsey signed a “release and satisfaction” in 3
which she stated that “[she] received all sums due to [her] including but not limited
to, child support and court costs” under the August 2015 custody modification
order. She also released “any and all liens with respect to child support which
[she] may have against the property described as” residential real estate in
Bloomfield. Ricky testified that his mortgage company filed that document, but it
was never confirmed by the court.1 That release and satisfaction was a prelude to
the couple’s temporary reconciliation. They lived together from September 2018
until January 2020, when Lindsey and the children moved out.
Two months later, Ricky moved to vacate the order terminating his parental
rights. Lindsey did not resist. So, in June 2020, the juvenile court “vacated and
set aside” its order terminating Ricky’s parental rights.2 That same month, Ricky
petitioned to modify physical care of the children. After a June 2022 modification
hearing, the district court decided the children, then ages eight and ten, would
remain in Lindsey’s physical care. Ricky appealed; we affirmed the modification
order. In re Marriage of Routt, No. 22-1351, 2023 WL 5601800, at *3 (Iowa Ct.
App. Aug. 30, 2023).
Meanwhile, the CSRU entered an order for income withholding against
Ricky under Iowa Code section 252D.16A (2021). The CSRU records showed that
Ricky owed $28,130.84 in back child support as of September 2021. It required
1 In a brief Ricky filed without counsel before the motion-to-quash hearing, he
asserted that the release allowed him to close on a house in Bloomfield in July 2018 where he then lived with Lindsey and the children. 2 Our record includes only the order vacating the termination, not any motions or
arguments explaining the grounds for restoring parental rights. The order stated that it was “not a contested proceeding and was not reported.” Given this limited record and the issues presented here, we take no position on the propriety of the order vacating the termination of parental rights. 4
him to pay $553 in current support and $110.60 in back support each month. The
CSRU also gave Ricky notice that he could contest the withholding order by
moving to quash in the district court. He did so. Ricky’s motion pointed to
Lindsey’s July 2018 release and satisfaction. And he asked to the court to quash
the income-withholding order and to “set a hearing to determine the merits of any
alleged back child support claimed to be owned by [Ricky] to [Lindsey].”3
CSRU attorney Robert Forrest responded to Ricky’s motion to quash,
admitting that Lindsey had filed a release and satisfaction “with the caveat that the
satisfaction has never been approved by the court making it ineffective at this
point.” The response continued:
That is said with the further caveat that [Ricky] has not made a payment since 2017 meaning income withholding would still be collected at 100% of the current support obligation plus an additional 20% to address arrears pursuant to administrative rules even if the satisfaction is approved. Support is not assigned to the State and there seems to be a complex history behind this obligation. If the payee is agreeable to income withholding being quashed for now, the State would suspend its resistance.
But the payee was not agreeable to that plan. Lindsey resisted the motion
to quash. Her resistance asserted that Ricky needed to pay back child support for
the time when his parental rights were terminated because he chose to petition the
court to restore his rights. She argued that vacating the termination voided the
original order. She insisted the child support that accrued while Ricky’s rights were
terminated should not be discharged and the income-withholding order should not
3 The motion to quash asserted that the CSRU provided its withholding order to
Iowa Work Force Development as Ricky was receiving unemployment benefits. 5
be quashed. Missing from her resistance was any discussion of the effect of her
release and satisfaction on the child-support withholding.
Ricky responded to her resistance. He maintained that his child support
obligation was terminated from June 2017 through June 2020. He also
reemphasized the release and satisfaction signed by Lindsey. He reasoned that
“collectively” the termination of his parental rights and Lindsey’s signed release
and satisfaction zeroed out all back child support that he owed before June 2020.
He did not contest the accrual of child support from June 2020 to January 2022.
In April 2022, the court held a motion-to-quash hearing. In his testimony,
Ricky objected to “backdating” his child support to 2017 when his parental rights
were terminated. He also raised Lindsey’s release and satisfaction and noted that
she and the children lived with him from 2018 until 2020. An attorney for the CSRU
appeared at the hearing but did not present any evidence or make any legal
arguments to the court. In November 2022, the court issued a two-paragraph order
denying the motion to quash. Ricky appeals that order.
II. Scope and Standards of Review
In general, we review equitable actions concerning support orders de novo.
In re Marriage of Griffin, 525 N.W.2d 852, 853 (Iowa 1994). But when the appeal
involves undisputed facts and statutory interpretation, we review for the correction
of errors at law.4 In re Marriage of Carr, 591 N.W.2d 627, 628 (Iowa 1999).
4 On appeal, Lindsey argues that “Iowa Code section 598.22A(1) requires the court
to confirm the validity of a release prior to it being recorded as satisfaction of child support.” But we do not address that statutory interpretation argument because Ricky does not offer any authority in support of his position. 6
III. Analysis
Ricky attacks the district court’s ruling on two fronts. First, he argues that
the court erred by not recognizing and enforcing the release and satisfaction
signed by Lindsey. Second, he contends that the court should have reduced his
child-support obligation for the sixteen months—from September 2018 until
January 2020—when they cohabitated in Bloomfield. Because neither issue is
properly before us, we decline to disturb the district court’s denial.
We start with a primer on error preservation. Ricky’s appellate counsel
contends that both issues were preserved for review by filing a notice of appeal.
Missing an opportunity for careful appellate advocacy, Lindsey’s counsel agrees
that error was properly preserved by filing a notice of appeal. But as we have
repeated—more than sixty times since our published opinion of State v. Lange,
831 N.W.2d 844, 846–47 (Iowa Ct. App. 2013)—the filing of a notice of appeal
does not preserve error for our review. See Thomas A. Mayes & Anuradha
Vaitheswaran, Error Preservation in Civil Appeals in Iowa: Perspectives on Present
Practice, 55 Drake L. Rev. 39, 48 (2006) (“However error is preserved, it is not
preserved by filing a notice of appeal. While this is a common statement in briefs,
it is erroneous, for the notice of appeal has nothing to do with error preservation.”
(internal footnote omitted)).
Amendments to the appellate rules—effective April 1, 2024—codify this
long-standing authority. The revised rule states: “Filing a notice of appeal does
not preserve an issue for appeal,” and citing to the notice does not satisfy the
requirement to include a statement in the appellant’s brief “with references to the
places in the record where the issue was raised and decided in the district court.” 7
Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(a)(8)(1). Although the revised rule is not yet in effect,
Ricky’s appellant’s brief does not satisfy the existing standards.
Release and Satisfaction. On Ricky’s first issue, even if we were to overlook
his failure to assert on appeal how error was preserved, his appellant’s brief
features a more fundamental flaw. It cites no authority in support of his position.
Because he offers no case, statute, or rule to back his arguments, we need not
consider their merits. “[U]nder our rules and our precedents they have been
waived in this appeal.” State v. Short, 851 N.W.2d 474, 479 (Iowa 2014) (citing
Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(g)(3)).
Cohabitation. As his second issue, Ricky argues: “The doctrine of
promissory estoppel should be applied to preclude Lindsey from denying
satisfaction of all child support payments through January 2020.” But as noted,
Ricky does not point to a place in the record where error was preserved on this
argument. And we find none. Even considering our de novo review of equity
matters, “it is our responsibility to review the facts as well as the law and determine
from the credible evidence rights anew on those propositions properly presented,
provided [the] issue has been raised and error, if any, preserved in the trial
proceedings.” See In re Marriage of Full, 255 N.W.2d 153, 156 (Iowa 1977)
(emphasis added). Ricky’s promissory estoppel argument was not preserved for
our review because it was not raised or ruled on by the district court. See In re
Marriage of Hoffmeyer, No. 19-1427, 2020 WL 1887954, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Apr.
15, 2020) (“Because Carl’s due process argument was not raised or ruled on by
the district court, it was not preserved for our review.”). 8
So we affirm the district court’s denial of Ricky’s motion to quash the income
withholding order.
AFFIRMED.