In re the Marriage of: Ryan Russell Preusse v. Amanda Jayne Preusse

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 19, 2025
Docketa240363
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Ryan Russell Preusse v. Amanda Jayne Preusse (In re the Marriage of: Ryan Russell Preusse v. Amanda Jayne Preusse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota 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 Russell Preusse v. Amanda Jayne Preusse, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A24-0363

In re the Marriage of:

Ryan Russell Preusse, petitioner, Appellant,

vs.

Amanda Jayne Preusse, Respondent.

Filed May 19, 2025 Affirmed in part and remanded Larson, Judge

Dakota County District Court File No. 19AV-FA-22-400

Ryan Russell Preusse, Rosemount, Minnesota (self-represented appellant)

James S. Carlson, Carlson Law Office, PA, Burnsville, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Slieter, Presiding Judge; Cochran, Judge; and Larson,

Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

LARSON, Judge

Self-represented appellant Ryan Russell Preusse (husband) appeals the district

court’s decision to award respondent Amanda Jayne Preusse (wife) $1,600 per month in

temporary spousal maintenance for six years. Husband challenges the district court’s

calculation of both parties’ income and reasonable budgets, and findings regarding his ability to pay spousal maintenance. Because we conclude the district court made clearly

erroneous findings when it calculated husband’s reasonable budget and determined

husband’s ability to pay spousal maintenance, we remand in part. We otherwise affirm.

FACTS

Husband and wife were married on February 27, 2010, and have two joint minor

children. After roughly 12 years of marriage, husband petitioned for dissolution. The

parties agreed that April 6, 2022, was the valuation date for the dissolution. The parties

resolved many issues by stipulation, and the district court entered a November 16, 2022

partial judgment addressing those issues. The partial judgment awarded the parties equal

parenting time. The district court then held a bench trial to decide the remaining issues;

specifically, the division of marital property and debt obligations, spousal maintenance,

child support, and attorney fees. Six witnesses testified at the bench trial: husband, wife,

husband’s vocational expert, husband’s financial expert, wife’s financial expert, and

husband’s mother (mother). Mother owned Mobile Electronic Fingerprinting (MEF),

where wife was previously employed. Following the bench trial, the district court entered

its judgment and decree in October 2023, and an amended judgment and decree in January

2024. The district court made the following relevant findings and determinations.

With respect to husband’s income, the district court found that husband worked as

a captain at the local fire department, earning approximately $8,636 per month. 1 Husband

used to be a member of the Air Force Reserves, earning approximately $740 per month,

1 Testimony reflects that husband was promoted to captain in July 2019, and this calculation reflected the accompanying pay increase.

2 but voluntarily terminated his employment in September 2022. The district court

determined that husband terminated his employment in bad faith to reduce his income

during the dissolution proceedings. Husband also received non-taxed Department of

Veterans Affairs (VA) disability pay at $1,164.44 per month. In addition, husband worked

extra jobs during the marriage. Based on this, the district court imputed an additional $475

per month in income to husband. Therefore, the district court found husband’s gross

monthly income totaled $10,275.

With regard to wife’s income, the district court noted that wife does not have a post-

secondary degree. During the marriage, wife worked at MEF earning $33 per hour. Wife

had a flexible work schedule to accommodate husband’s work and childcare, which did not

impact her wages. The district court found wife testified credibly that her work involved

fingerprinting and simple office work, such as inserting tracking information on a

spreadsheet. The district court determined that wife “technically resigned from her

employment” after a conflict at work. 2 But the district court discredited mother’s testimony

that wife could return to work at MEF, explicitly finding the testimony “disingenuous”

given the deterioration in the relationship between wife and mother. Thus, the district court

concluded it was “reasonable that [wife] would not continue to work at MEF” with mother.

The district court found that, following her resignation from MEF, wife applied for

multiple positions and, ultimately, obtained a job as an assistant teacher at a local school in

2 Wife returned from a leave-of-absence, and mother’s attorney told her to leave and escorted her from the office—causing wife to believe she was terminated.

3 July 2022. 3 As an assistant teacher, wife made $17.10 an hour and worked around 35 hours

per week (but she could work up to 40 hours per week). Based on wife’s current

employment, the district court found that she earned a gross monthly income of $2,961.72

when working full time. The district court also found that mother gave wife preferential

treatment at MEF and, therefore, it was not reasonable that wife could obtain a job earning

the same amount of money—even if she worked in the same field.

Moving to budgets, the district court determined that the parties “enjoyed a

comfortable middle-class marital standard of living.” Husband’s budget claimed monthly

expenses of $6,912, including, as relevant here: (1) $850 for food ($600 for groceries and

$250 for meals out/lunches at work) and (2) $300, in part, under “recreation” ($100 for

“entertaining” and $200 on vacations). Wife’s budget claimed monthly expenses of $5,803

that included, as relevant here: (1) $2,200 for rent; (2) $700 for credit-card payments

attributed to her removal from the marital home in April 2022; (3) $850 for food ($450 on

groceries, $150 on lunches, and $250 on meals out); (4) $200 for recreation; and (5) $283

for medical and dental expenses. The district court found husband’s food costs “inflated

and unnecessary,” and reduced husband’s budget to $6,600 per month. The district court

found wife’s expenses “reasonable,” but reduced her budget to $5,720 per month by

removing the medical and dental costs—ordering husband to keep wife on his health

insurance—and including an additional $200 per month for automobile insurance.

3 Wife is considering returning to school to obtain her teaching degree.

4 Given wife’s gross income of $2,962 per month and her monthly budget of $5,720,

the district court determined wife had a shortfall of around $2,758 to meet her needs. The

district court also determined husband could afford spousal-maintenance payments because

he “traditionally . . . earn[ed] over three times as much income as [wife],” his “monthly

budget [was] somewhat overstated and unreasonable,” and he had “additional imputed

‘side work’ income.” Therefore, based on its determinations on the parties’ budgets,

income, wife’s reasonable needs and her need for further education to become self-

sufficient, and husband’s ability to meet his own needs while also contributing to wife’s

needs, the district court ordered husband to pay wife temporary spousal maintenance for

six years (half the length of the marriage) in the amount of $1,600 per month. The district

court also ordered husband to pay wife a $130,881.20 cash equalizer for the division of

marital property.

Husband appeals the spousal-maintenance award.

DECISION

Husband challenges the district court’s decision to award wife $1,600 per month in

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