In re the Marriage of Schultz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 5, 2020
Docket19-1256
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Schultz (In re the Marriage of Schultz) 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 Schultz, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-1256 Filed August 5, 2020

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JACQUELYN SCHULTZ AND JOEL SCHULTZ

Upon the Petition of JACQUELYN SCHULTZ, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning JOEL SCHULTZ, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Buchanan County, Monica L. Zrinyi

Wittig, Judge.

Joel Schultz appeals from the decree dissolving his marriage. AFFIRMED

AS MODIFIED.

Benjamin M. Lange of Swisher & Cohrt, P.L.C., Independence, for

appellant.

Timothy D. Ament of Timothy D. Ament Law Firm, P.L.C., Waterloo, for

appellee.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and May and Greer, JJ. 2

GREER, Judge.

The district court dissolved the twenty-seven-year marriage of Jacquelyn

and Joel Schultz in 2019. Joel appeals certain factual findings made by the district

court and argues for an entitlement to spousal support. Jacquelyn found the

decree acceptable and asks that we affirm. We review the issues raised by Joel.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The parties married in February 1992 and separated in January 2017. At

the time of trial, Joel was sixty years old and Jacquelyn was fifty-one years old.

The trial occurred in May 2019, but Joel applied for temporary spousal support and

received $4000 per month from December 2018 until the June 2019 decree was

entered. The district court determined that spousal support was “not appropriate,”

made several factual findings Joel now disputes, and divided the marital assets.

With the assets divided, the district court required Joel to pay an equalization

payment to Jacquelyn of $125,000. Joel asked the court to reconsider the ruling,

and the district court denied his motion. Joel appeals only the denial of spousal

support.

As is often the case, the facts developed by Jacquelyn and Joel at trial

diverged. Facts undisputed were that after separation Joel moved to the family

vacation home in Wabasha, Minnesota, and Jacquelyn remained in the family

home in Winthrop, Iowa. They spilt the real estate in that same manner. Then to

help resolve other disputed matters, the parties stipulated to the marital asset and

debt values and the intended designee. Except for determining the values of a

boat and a motor, the district court’s charge was to decide whether an award of

spousal support was warranted. In determining whether spousal support was 3

appropriate, the district court found the following facts. Two months after the

marriage, Jacquelyn graduated from college with a Bachelor of Arts degree in

psychology. She returned to college in 2006, graduating in 2008 with a master’s

degree in social work. Jacquelyn testified that because she worked full-time and

applied for a loan forgiveness program, no marital monies were used to pay for her

master’s education. Jacquelyn worked outside the home at various jobs

throughout the marriage, except for an eight-month maternity leave after the birth

of one of their two children.1 In 2011, Jacquelyn formed her own counseling

service where she remains as a mental-health therapist treating clients along with

other therapists in her employ. Her income climbed after this employment change.

At the time of trial, Jacquelyn reported gross income of around $14,000 per month.

As for Joel’s income, the parties conceded that for most of the years of the

marriage Joel was the primary income earner. For background, Joel graduated

with an associate degree in science. Because of an injury to his arm,2 Joel now

receives Social Security disability (SSD) benefits and is unemployed. Before the

injury, Joel’s last employment involved an eighteen-year stint as a retail territory

manager for a food broker making $52,000 annually. That job ended with a layoff

in May 2017 after a buyout of the company, for which Joel received nineteen weeks

of severance pay. For many years before the food-broker job, Joel worked for a

major grocery store, and the family relocated several times for his employment

advances. Joel described both long-term jobs as requiring manual labor, which he

1No dissolution issues are impacted by these adult children. 2Joel fell at a restaurant, injuring his shoulder in March 2017. Disability benefits began in March of that year. After two years, he qualifies for Medicare health benefits. 4

can no longer do. At trial, the established SSD monthly payment to Joel equaled

$2249 per month and his disability insurer paid him $470 per month in disability

benefits. Shortly before trial, Joel’s insurer alerted him that the monthly long-term

disability policy payment would terminate in July because they found that Joel

could be employable in some job even if it different from his last job. He planned

to appeal that determination. Joel also reasoned that when he reaches age sixty-

seven, his SSD ends and he will receive a smaller regular social security benefit,

which will be $100 less than he is currently receiving.

With the spousal-support question at the forefront, Joel focused on the

goals of his retirement plan. Joel described his retirement plan as one that he and

Jacquelyn supported. Jacquelyn disagreed. As for the age disparity of the couple,

Jacquelyn, at age fifty-one, will work another sixteen years producing income

where Joel, at age sixty, is near retirement age. For the twenty-six years working

at a grocery store in various roles—both before and during the marriage—Joel and

his employer contributed to a retirement plan. While married, but after starting the

retail manager job in 2001, Joel and Jacquelyn used the retirement monies from

the employment with the grocer to fund the down payment and some

improvements on the Winthrop home purchase. After paying the early withdrawal

penalty and taxes, only half of the $190,000 balance of retirement funds were

available to use. Under the current plan, Joel would retire at age seventy and one-

half years to maximize his retirement plan benefits. To reach his goal, he

contributed maximum earnings to the retirement accounts while working at the

food brokerage company. His plan involved allowing those retirement funds to

appreciate to a value of one million dollars when he reached age seventy and a 5

half. Under Joel’s plan, at that point, the couple could access the funds for

retirement and start investing more of Jacquelyn’s earnings. At trial, his retirement

account equaled $593,920.

We address Joel’s claims that certain factual findings made by the district

court were in error and that he was entitled to spousal support.

II. Standard of Review.

A trial involving the dissolution of a marriage is an equitable proceeding.

Iowa Code § 598.3 (2018). As a result, our review is de novo. Iowa R. App. P.

6.907; In re Marriage of Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d 481, 484 (Iowa 2012). While

we give weight to the factual determinations made by the district court; its findings

are not binding upon us. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g).

When we review questions of spousal support, in our de novo review, we

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