In Re the Marriage of Sara M. Nicola and Robert G. Nicola Upon the Petition of Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley, and Concerning Robert G. Nicola, ----------------------------------------------------- Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Appeal From And

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 2016
Docket15-1210
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Sara M. Nicola and Robert G. Nicola Upon the Petition of Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley, and Concerning Robert G. Nicola, ----------------------------------------------------- Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Appeal From And (In Re the Marriage of Sara M. Nicola and Robert G. Nicola Upon the Petition of Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley, and Concerning Robert G. Nicola, ----------------------------------------------------- Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Appeal From And) 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 Sara M. Nicola and Robert G. Nicola Upon the Petition of Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley, and Concerning Robert G. Nicola, ----------------------------------------------------- Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Appeal From And, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-1210 Filed March 9, 2016

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF SARA M. NICOLA AND ROBERT G. NICOLA

Upon the Petition of SARA M. NICOLA, n/k/a SARA M. STOLLEY, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning ROBERT G. NICOLA, Respondent-Appellee. ----------------------------------------------------- SARA M. NICOLA, n/k/a SARA M. STOLLEY, Plaintiff,

v.

IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR SCOTT COUNTY, Defendant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from and certiorari to the Iowa District Court for Scott County,

John D. Telleen, Judge.

Stolley appeals the district court’s denial of her modification application

and seeks review of the district court’s rulings on the parties’ respective contempt

applications. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED; WRIT ANNULLED.

Robert S. Gallagher and Peter G. Gierut of Gallagher, Millage &

Gallagher, P.L.C., Bettendorf, for appellant.

Nathan M. Legue of Cartee & McKenrick, P.C., Davenport, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ. 2

MULLINS, Judge.

Sara Stolley appeals the district court’s denial of her application for

modification of the dissolution decree and seeks review of the parties’ respective

contempt applications. Stolley claims the decree should be modified to require

supervised visitation for her ex-husband, Robert Nicola, with their minor children.

She further claims the district court wrongfully found her in contempt for

interfering with Nicola’s visitation rights and failed to find Nicola in contempt for

improperly claiming one of the children as an exemption on his 2014 tax return.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Stolley and Nicola were divorced on August 28, 2014. They have two

minor children: A.N., born in 2011, and L.N., born in 2013. Pursuant to the

decree, the court awarded the parents joint legal custody of the children, and

Stolley was awarded physical care. Nicola received visitation with the children

twice per week on his days off of work, with the location of pick-up and drop-offs

stipulated in the decree. He was also responsible to inform Stolley of his work

schedule so visitations could be arranged. The decree forbade either party from

threatening or generally harassing the other party and restricted contact between

the parties to text or email communications about the children unless an

emergency regarding the children were to arise.

Pursuant to the decree, each parent was entitled to claim one child as an

income tax dependency exemption, unless Nicola failed to remain current in his

child support obligation, at which point Stolley could claim both children. On

September 18, 2014, the decree was modified by a nunc pro tunc order, which

entitled Stolley to claim both children for the 2014 tax year. 3

From the entry of the decree until September 29, 2014, Nicola did not

exercise his right to visitation. On September 30, Nicola requested a visitation

arrangement that was not in accordance with the decree, which Stolley declined.

In the following four months, Nicola requested visitation six more times—all of

which Stolley granted and all but one of which Nicola exercised. According to

Stolley, at one of these custody exchanges, when Nicola returned, L.N. was not

properly buckled into the car seat. Stolley further reported that, at two

subsequent visitation exchanges, Nicola failed to secure L.N.’s car seat to the car

and, on one of these occasions, improperly buckled A.N. into the car seat.

From January 23 until March 6, Nicola did not contact Stolley regarding

visitation. Nicola testified he quit texting Stolley because it irritated her. He

indicated first that he continued to show up for visitations during this time period,

but later stated that he did not physically show up at the designated pick-up

locations because it was not necessary.

On March 6, Nicola requested to see the children the following day.

Stolley responded she already had plans with the children. She then stated that

any future arrangements could be discussed in court. Stolley informed Nicola

she intended to seek contempt findings based on Nicola’s wrongful claim of A.N.

on his 2014 tax return and his failure to properly secure the children in their car

seats. She further stated she intended to seek court intervention to prevent

Nicola’s girlfriend from having access to the children because of the girlfriend’s

“history.” With regard to his 2014 tax filing, Nicola responded he was unaware

that Stolley was entitled to claim both children, and he was willing to refund

Stolley for any resulting monetary losses. Shortly thereafter, Nicola contacted 4

one of Stolley’s coworkers by Facebook, seeking his input on what action he

should take based on Stolley’s refusal to allow him visitation.

On March 13, Nicola attempted to schedule visitation with the children the

following day. Stolley indicated it was not his scheduled visitation day and that

she had to work. Instead, she offered to bring the children one time that week to

visit with him at a designated restaurant. On March 19, Nicola again attempted

to schedule visitation with the children the following day; Stolley informed Nicola

she would not allow him to drive the children and that she needed two weeks’

notice to schedule a visitation. On March 21, Nicola requested visitation with the

children on April 4. Stolley declined, citing a work schedule conflict. Nicola

attempted to move the visitation to April 3. No visitation with the children

resulted. On March 25, Nicola filed his application for order to show cause based

upon Stolley’s withholding of visitation.

On April 6, Nicola again requested to see the children. Through

coordination of counsel, Nicola had visitation with his children on April 11, 2015,

which Stolley supervised. Stolley filed her application to modify the dissolution

decree on April 14. On May 11, the parties met to exchange custody, and Stolley

appeared with a uniformed, on-duty police officer. When Nicola refused to allow

Stolley to inspect the car seats in his vehicle, the police officer assisted Nicola in

properly securing the children. Stolley testified visitation was attempted the

following day, but that she left with the children when Nicola refused her

admission to his vehicle. On May 18, Nicola appeared for a visitation but Stolley

never showed. Stolley testified there was some confusion between the parties,

as she had appeared on May 17 instead. She also claimed she had not been 5

informed where the visitation was to take place on May 18. The parties

attempted at least three more visitation exchanges in May, all of which were

denied when Nicola refused to allow the individual dropping off the children to

inspect the car seats in his vehicle.

A settlement conference took place on May 28. At trial, Stolley testified it

was her understanding Nicola had agreed at the settlement conference to allow

her to check the car seats at the next exchange. On May 29, Nicola refused the

inspection, stating he already had the car seats inspected by—and upon

inspection tightened by—the fire department. Based on his refusal, Stolley

withheld visitation. On May 28, Stolley filed an application for rule to show

cause. The parties’ disputes came before the district court for trial on June 19,

2015.

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In Re the Marriage of Sara M. Nicola and Robert G. Nicola Upon the Petition of Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley, and Concerning Robert G. Nicola, ----------------------------------------------------- Sara M. Nicola, N/K/A Sara M. Stolley v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Appeal From And, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-sara-m-nicola-and-robert-g-nicola-upon-the-petition-iowactapp-2016.