In re the Marriage of Wang and Ye

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 2025
Docket24-0420
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Wang and Ye (In re the Marriage of Wang and Ye) 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 Wang and Ye, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0420 Filed March 5, 2025

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF ZHENZHEN WANG AND SHENGYI YE

Upon the Petition of ZHENZHEN WANG, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning SHENGYI YE, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, David Nelmark, Judge.

A father appeals the legal-custody and visitation provisions of the decree

dissolving the parties’ marriage. AFFIRMED.

Andrew B. Howie of Shindler, Anderson, Goplerud & Weese, P.C., West

Des Moines, for appellant.

Mark Simons of Simons Law Firm, PLC, West Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Greer, P.J., and Langholz and Sandy, JJ. 2

LANGHOLZ, Judge.

Zhenzhen Wang and Shengyi Ye were married in Iowa in 2008. They share

two children—a son and a daughter. In 2019, Shengyi took a job as a professor

in China, while Zhenzhen and the children remained in Iowa. Their relationship hit

a breaking point in 2022, when an argument led to Shengyi leaving his wife and

children stranded on the side of the road while they were visiting him in China.

Before they made it back to his apartment, he took their travel documents from

Zhenzhen’s backpack and refused to return them, forcing Zhenzhen and the

children to remain in China for six or seven months longer than they intended while

Zhenzhen worked to obtain new passports. Zhenzhen soon petitioned to dissolve

the marriage. And the district court eventually gave her sole legal custody of the

children and required Shengyi to exercise his visitation only in the United States.

Shengyi appeals, arguing that he should be able to take the children to

China for visitation and that joint legal custody is in the children’s best interests.

On our de novo review, we affirm. Because China is not a party to the Hague

Convention, Zhenzhen would have no recourse should Shengyi refuse to return

the children to the United States. And Shengyi has already once unilaterally kept

the children from leaving China for more than half a year. So the restriction on his

visitation prohibiting international travel is justified and in the children’s best

interests. As for legal custody, the district court identified a host of factors that

overcome the statutory presumption for joint legal custody, including Shengyi’s

actions to prevent the children from leaving China, his significant geographic

distance, his lack of active parenting, and his prior violence toward Zhenzhen. We

thus agree that sole legal custody best serves the children. 3

I. Factual Background and Proceedings

Zhenzhen and Shengyi met while attending an academic conference in

2005. They were both born, raised, and educated through college in China. And

they both attended graduate school in the United States—Zhenzhen received her

Ph.D. from the University of Iowa and Shengyi received his Ph.D. from Dartmouth.

They married in Iowa City in 2008 and share two children: a son born in 2013 and

a daughter born in 2015. Both children perform well in school, are active in

extracurricular activities, and are bilingual.

They moved from Iowa City to Johnston in 2015. During this time, Shengyi

worked as a research scientist for the University of Iowa and Zhenzhen

transitioned from her position at John Deere to a role with Wells Fargo. In early

2019, Shengyi was approached about teaching physics at a university in China.

They both believed the professorship was a great opportunity, so Shengyi

relocated to China in the summer of 2019 and Zhenzhen stayed with the children

in Johnston.

Around this time, Zhenzhen and Shengyi’s relationship began to

deteriorate. The two fought about whether Zhenzhen should relocate with the

children to China. During one fight, Zhenzhen credibly described Shengyi pushing,

strangling, and slapping her. Communication between the two also diminished

after Shengyi moved to China—Shengyi would call or video chat about once a

week but would usually only speak with the children. And when the COVID-19

pandemic took hold in 2020, Shengyi could no longer travel back to the United

States. 4

In May 2021, Zhenzhen arranged to travel to China with the children to visit

her parents and Shengyi. Though the trip was only planned for the summer,

Zhenzhen extended the trip through the end of the year. By early 2022, she

wanted to bring the children back to Iowa. Yet one day while driving in the car,

Shengyi and Zhenzhen started fighting, which resulted in Shengyi abandoning

Zhenzhen and the children on the side of the road. Zhenzhen took a taxi back to

Shengyi’s apartment, where she discovered Shengyi had removed the children’s

passports, travel documents, and birth certificates from her backpack. Though

Shengyi at first denied taking the documents, he later refused to give them back,

preventing Zhenzhen and the children from leaving the country.

It ultimately took Zhenzhen “six or seven months” to reorder all of the travel

documents and return to Iowa. During this time, Zhenzhen and the children were

living with her parents, but Shengyi never visited. He did speak with the children

on the phone, telling them that Zhenzhen’s actions were “illegal” and she was a

“criminal.”

Shortly after Shengyi took the children’s travel documents, Zhenzhen

petitioned to dissolve the marriage in Iowa district court. Shengyi then filed a

competing lawsuit in China, which was ultimately dismissed. Shengyi originally

contested whether Iowa had jurisdiction, but the supreme court denied his

interlocutory appeal of the district court’s ruling that it did have jurisdiction. See In

re Marriage of Wang & Ye, No. 22-0989 (Iowa June 20, 2022).1 And the matter

proceeded to a hearing in December 2023.

1 In this appeal, Shengyi no longer contests jurisdiction. And we are satisfied that the district court had jurisdiction. See Iowa Code § 598B.201(1)(a), (b) (2022). 5

The district court later issued a decree dissolving the parties’ marriage.

Relevant here, the decree placed the children in Zhenzhen’s sole legal custody

and physical care. As for Shengyi’s visitation, the court explored the difficult

question of where that visitation should occur—in China or in the United States.

After considering Shengyi’s prior conduct preventing the children from returning to

the United States and that China may not enforce a United States custodial order,

the decree required that Shengyi have visitation with the children only in the United

States. And it provided him up to ten consecutive weeks of visitation with the

children over the summer, and up to four weeks at a time should he travel to the

United States during the school year.

Shengyi now appeals both the legal-custody and visitation provisions of the

decree.

II. Visitation Outside of the United States

Shengyi does not contest placing the children in Zhenzhen’s physical care.

Instead, he challenges the decree’s limitation that bars him from having visitation

with the children outside of the United States. Because Shengyi and his extended

family reside in China, he wishes for the children to spend their summer vacations

with him in China.

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