In Re the Marriage of Ryan Robida and Corina R. Robida Upon the Petition of Ryan Robida, and Concerning Corina R. Robida

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 22, 2017
Docket15-1872
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Ryan Robida and Corina R. Robida Upon the Petition of Ryan Robida, and Concerning Corina R. Robida (In Re the Marriage of Ryan Robida and Corina R. Robida Upon the Petition of Ryan Robida, and Concerning Corina R. Robida) 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 Ryan Robida and Corina R. Robida Upon the Petition of Ryan Robida, and Concerning Corina R. Robida, (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-1872 Filed February 22, 2017

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF RYAN ROBIDA AND CORINA R. ROBIDA

Upon the Petition of RYAN ROBIDA, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning CORINA R. ROBIDA, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Ian K. Thornhill,

Judge.

A father appeals the district court’s denial of his petition to modify the

physical care of the parties’ child. AFFIRMED.

Tara L. Hofbauer of Hudson, Mallaney, Shindler & Anderson, P.C., West

Des Moines, for appellant.

Corina R. Robida, Cedar Rapids, appellee pro se.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2

VOGEL, Presiding Judge.

Ryan Robida appeals the district court’s denial of his petition to modify the

physical care provision of the dissolution decree between himself and Corina

Robida involving the parties’ eight-year-old child. Ryan claims Corina’s lifestyle,

including her many moves and romantic relationships, is detrimental to the

parties’ child and he is able to provide a more stable, nurturing home. He also

claims the court abused its discretion in refusing to keep the record open for him

to provide testimony from a witness who was subpoenaed for trial but failed to

appear.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Ryan and Corina’s marriage was dissolved in 2009 by a court in Missouri.

The parties had one child during the marriage—a daughter, A.R.R., born in

2006—and the dissolution decree placed the child in Corina’s physical care with

visitation to Ryan.1 Ryan is in the military, and in 2011, he anticipated needing to

move again. He volunteered to be stationed in Iowa so that Corina and the child

would be close to Corina’s family. Both parties moved to the Cedar Rapids area

in 2011. Then in 2012, Ryan was promoted and transferred to Ankeny. Due to

Ryan’s move, the parties agreed to adjust Ryan’s visitation schedule to remove

his midweek overnight, and the parties agreed to meet midway between their

homes to exchange the child for weekend visitations. At the time of the

1 The Missouri dissolution decree called for “shared joint physical custody of the child,” but it provided Corina’s residence would be designated as the child’s residence for mailing and educational purposes, and it outlined a visitation schedule that amounts to physical care with Corina. Under the decree, Ryan had visitation with the child every other weekend and one overnight per week, and each party had three weeks of uninterrupted time in the summer. 3

modification trial, Ryan lived in Ankeny in a home he owns and shares with his

girlfriend of three years and the girlfriend’s nine-year-old daughter. Ryan

anticipated retiring from the military in January 2017, but he planned to remain in

Ankeny following his retirement.

Corina’s life since the dissolution decree has been marked by frequent

moves. In the five years since relocating to Iowa from Missouri, Corina has

moved nine times, though each move has occurred in the Cedar Rapids area.

Most of Corina’s moves have been the result of beginning or ending a romantic

relationship. In June 2011, when Corina first moved back to Iowa, she, A.R.R.,

and Corina’s child from a prior relationship,2 lived with Corina’s mother.3 Within

weeks of relocating to Iowa, Corina moved in with Josh Asmussen, a man who

Corina had known since she was a teenager. Corina soon became pregnant

with Josh’s child, who was born in the summer of 2012. Corina reported that

Josh’s behavior became erratic, and the relationship ended in early summer

2013. Corina eventually filed no-contact orders against Josh due to his behavior

during visitation exchanges and after police found marijuana in his home. Corina

denied Josh ever had drugs in his possession while the two lived together.4

After leaving her relationship with Josh, Corina, along with her three

children, moved back in with Corina’s mother for thirty days. Corina and the

children then moved into a friend’s residence for a couple of weeks until she was

2 Corina’s oldest child, a son, was eighteen at the time of the dissolution hearing. The child had lived with Ryan since he was six years old, and Ryan considered the child to be his son. 3 Corina and her mother testified guests are not allowed to stay in Corina’s mother’s mobile home park for longer than thirty days. 4 At the time of the modification trial, Corina and Josh had a pending custody action regarding the child they shared together. 4

approved for a mobile home in August 2013. Corina and the children remained

in her mobile home for approximately one year. In October of 2013, Corina went

to Missouri for the weekend. At the time, she had unpaid fines from a drunk

driving conviction in Missouri, and she was arrested in Missouri over the

weekend based on an outstanding warrant. A.R.R. remained with Ryan until

Corina could resolve the Missouri warrant.

In the summer of 2014, Corina met and moved in with Nicholas Viall, who

was married but separated from his wife. While Corina sent Ryan a notification

in June saying that she would move into Nicholas’s home as of August 30,

Corina admitted to staying overnight at Nicholas’s home with the children four to

five nights a week as soon as Nicholas moved into the home in July.

Ryan asserted during this time, he was informed A.R.R. had head lice. He

testified the lice reoccurred three more times over the next few months. He also

testified the child had an untreated infected ear due to earnings she was wearing

when she returned from spending three weeks with Corina during the summer

break. Ryan took the child to the doctor and discovered the ear was infected

with strep and MRSA. Corina testified the infection was due to “fake” earrings

given to the child by Ryan’s girlfriend with the instruction not to remove them.

In January 2015, Corina became pregnant with Nicholas’s child and

Nicholas filed a no-contact order against Corina. Nicholas testified an angry

physical exchange between the two prompted the filing of the no-contact order.

Nicholas stated Corina told him she would “end you and every chance you have

with your family,” which Nicholas believed meant she was going to destroy his life

in some way. Corina also shoved him three times with open hands and hid his 5

off-duty weapon in a laundry basket in a closet.5 Neither Nicholas’s nor Corina’s

children were present for this confrontation. Concerned for his career as a law

enforcement officer, Nicholas filed the no-contact order on the advice of his

superiors. While the no-contact order was pending, Corina stayed at her

mother’s house. A short while later, Nicholas had the no-contact order

dismissed, and Corina returned to Nicholas’s house. She moved out again in

April 2015, into a two-bedroom condo with the children.

In May 2015, Corina went to Nicholas’s wife’s house. Nicholas’s wife

testified Corina was yelling and screaming at her while Nicholas and her children

were in the house, prompting her to contact her neighbor and the sheriff’s

department for safety. During this confrontation, Corina informed Nicholas’s wife

that she was pregnant with Nicholas’s child. That was the last time that Nicholas

and his wife attempted to reconcile,6 and Nicholas’s wife testified Corina is not

welcome around her children.

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In Re the Marriage of Ryan Robida and Corina R. Robida Upon the Petition of Ryan Robida, and Concerning Corina R. Robida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-ryan-robida-and-corina-r-robida-upon-the-petition-of-iowactapp-2017.