In re the Marriage of Schmidt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 3, 2020
Docket19-0495
StatusPublished

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In re the Marriage of Schmidt, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-0495 Filed June 3, 2020

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JAMES C. SCHMIDT AND BEVERLY J. SCHMIDT

Upon the Petition of JAMES C. SCHMIDT, Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning BEVERLY J. SCHMIDT, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Palo Alto County, Nancy L.

Whittenburg, Judge.

James Schmidt appeals from the decree of separate maintenance entered

by the district court with regard to his marriage to Beverly Schmidt. AFFIRMED.

Willis J. Hamilton of Hamilton Law Firm, P.C., Storm Lake, for appellant.

Jennifer Bennett Finn of Pelzer Law Firm, LLC, Estherville, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Doyle and May, JJ. 2

VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.

James and Beverly Schmidt married in 1953. Sixty-five years later, the

district court overruled James’ petition for dissolution of the marriage and granted

Beverly’s request for separate maintenance. After appointing James a guardian

ad litem based on his dementia and after considering the testimony of multiple

witnesses, the court equally divided a farm, giving each spouse a life estate in the

other’s interest, and ordered James to pay Beverly alimony of “$1000 per month

. . . until the death of either of them.” The court also ordered James to “make the

premium payment on the health insurance coverage for Beverly available through

[his] federal pension.”

On appeal, James contends the district court should have (1) dissolved the

marriage, (2) characterized certain “financial benefits . . . from his mother” as

separate inherited or gifted property; (3) awarded less alimony; and (4) not ordered

him to pay attorney and guardian ad litem fees.

I. Dissolution versus Separate Maintenance

A dissolution decree “may be entered when the court is satisfied from the

evidence presented that there has been a breakdown of the marriage relationship

to the extent that the legitimate objects of matrimony have been destroyed and

there remains no reasonable likelihood that the marriage can be preserved.” Iowa

Code § 598.17(1) (2016). In the alternative, a court may file a decree for separate

maintenance without dissolving the marriage. See id. §§ 598.21(1), 598.28; In re

Estate of Whalen, 827 N.W.2d 184, 185 n.1 (Iowa 2013) (citing 2 Marlin M. Volz,

Jr., Iowa Practice Series, Methods of Practice § 31:31, at 869 (2012)). 3

James contends the court’s “financial rulings . . . would not have differed

from rulings made in a dissolution” and the court did not “explain” how a decree of

separate maintenance would place the parties in a better financial position in the

final years of their lives. To the contrary, the district court thoroughly explained the

benefits of a separate maintenance decree. The court found that Beverly had

“health insurance coverage through James’ pension and a dissolution of the

parties’ marriage would likely sever Beverly’s right to that coverage.” The court

also found that a separate maintenance decree would allow Beverly to receive

market-based income from the parties’ farm, which was cash-rented to family

members at discounted rates. The record fully supports the court’s findings.

We begin with James’ testimony. He agreed with his attorney that his

marriage relationship had broken down, but when asked whether he wanted to be

divorced, he responded, “Well, we’ve had some tough times in the past. So I don’t

know.” His equivocal testimony stood in marked contrast to the testimony of the

husband in In re Marriage of Morgan, 218 N.W.2d 552, 558 (Iowa 1974), cited by

James, who stated “he no longer loved his wife and did not want to be married to

her.”

We turn to the report of James’ guardian ad litem. She expressed “concern”

about his responses. She noted that he was “easily led into answers and positions

without truly understanding what [was] being asked.” She cited a pretrial interview

in which “he was adamant that Beverly had filed the divorce” action and “[h]e was

confused on the facts that led to the divorce, who his attorney was, and what his

assets were.” Nonetheless, he “repeated multiple times that even though he and

Beverly couldn’t live together anymore, he cared about her and wanted to make 4

sure she was being taken care of.” Cf. id. (concluding the husband’s “conduct in

openly living with [a woman other than his wife] under the circumstances described

in this record, his complete disregard of his responsibility as a father and express

dissatisfaction with his marriage to petitioner and his decision that he no longer

wished to remain married to his wife and his desire to get away from her sense of

duty and responsibility” established “a breakdown of the marriage”). The guardian

ad litem stated James “had little to no input into the pretrial stipulation or trial

preparation” and the “financial information” was prepared and provided by his

relatives who stood to gain from a dissolution of the marriage. She characterized

the case as “as a probate contest under the cloak of a dissolution of marriage.”

Beverly articulately corroborated many of the guardian ad litem’s

observations. She testified James suddenly moved out of the family home—a

decision instigated by their son after she applied to become James’ conservator.1

Her intent in filing the conservatorship action, she said, was not to have James

placed in a nursing home, as their son told James, but to address James’ inability

to handle their “money situations,” including receipt of cash rent from their farm.

She explained James also worked as “a mail carrier for 28 years” and had “a very

good retirement,” and it “didn’t make sense to” her that they “didn’t have enough

money all the time.”

Beverly attributed James’ flagging financial competence to his progressive

Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, for which “there was very little that could be

done.” She testified to certain family members’ efforts to usurp control over their

1 The action was subsequently dismissed. 5

assets and James’ failure to respond to those efforts. She described her dire

financial situation in the wake of these developments and her need for medical

insurance through James’ policy. With respect to the pending dissolution petition,

Beverly stated she “stopped to see [James] one time, and he thought” she was the

one who filed for divorce. She told him, “No. It was you.”

Beverly unequivocally stated she did “not want a divorce.” She explained

she had “been married to him for 63 years. And it’s unimaginable that anybody

would want a divorce after that time—amount of time.” See, e.g., id. at 560 (“It is

obvious that in making this determination [of a breakdown of the marriage] the

court must depend to a considerable extent upon the subjective state of mind of

the parties.”). The district court weighed her testimony against James’ brief and

controlled responses and credited Beverly’s version. This was the court’s

prerogative. See In re Marriage of Roberts, 545 N.W.2d 340, 343 (Iowa Ct. App.

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