Krepps v. Krepps

234 S.W.3d 605, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1281, 2007 WL 2700580
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 2007
DocketWD 66750, WD 66772
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 234 S.W.3d 605 (Krepps v. Krepps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krepps v. Krepps, 234 S.W.3d 605, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1281, 2007 WL 2700580 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

HAROLD L. LOWENSTEIN, Judge.

Sharlene Krepps (“Wife”) appeals a judgment and decree of dissolution claiming error associated with the trial court’s award of custody of minor children, the award of maintenance and child support, the division of marital property, and the award of attorneys’ fees. Richard Krepps (“Husband”) cross-appeals the award of child support and maintenance. Wife’s motions to dismiss Husband’s cross appeal and to compel Husband to pay one-half the cost of the transcript were taken with the case.

I. Facts

Husband and Wife were married in 1992. Both spouses worked as engineers. After the birth of their first child, Wife, then earning $65,000 per year as an engineer, became a stay-at-home mother. The couple decided that Wife would raise their daughter, Alexis, and Husband would work toward his professional engineer’s license. They agreed to later switch roles so that Wife could work toward her license and Husband would care for the child. However, two years later a second child, Brock, was born. Brock was diagnosed at an early age with Asberger’s Syndrome, a form of high-functioning autism. Wife never returned to her career. At the time of the dissolution, Alexis was ten years old and Brock was eight years old.

Husband was employed by Aquila as an engineer at a contract rate of $79,000 per year. 1 Until the separation, he evinced little interest in the children. Wife was the caregiver for the children, seeking care and treatment for Brock and managing the children’s school and recreational activities. Wife instituted a gluten-free and casein-free diet, nutritional supplements, and therapy to allow Brock to function more normally. Wife stopped taking Brock to his local pediatrician and instead sought treatment, via webcam, from a homeopath doctor licensed in Wisconsin. 2 At the time of the dissolution, Brock had been mainstreamed into his class at his local elementary school.

*609 In November 2003, Wife left the marital home and moved with the children into a condominium her parents had purchased. The condominium was located near the marital home so the children remained in the same school. Husband and Wife agreed the children should continue to attend that school rather than change to the school associated with Wife’s address. Husband had limited access to the children during the separation.

In October 2004, Wife filed for dissolution. Her proposed parenting plan provided for joint legal custody but she asked for the bulk of the parenting time. She requested child support, maintenance, and attorneys’ fees. She wanted final authority over major decisions for the children, especially as to Brock’s treatment. Husband filed a counterpetition and proposed an alternate parenting plan.

In March 2005, the couple agreed on a temporary custody schedule pending the disposition of their dissolution. The children lived with Wife, and Husband had the children Wednesday evenings and every other weekend. Wife required that Husband agree to continue Brock’s special diet and nutritional supplements. Husband agreed to maintain the diet but did not agree to follow the supplement regimen.

Wife did not obtain full-time employment until a year and a half after the November 2003 separation. Husband had been encouraging Wife to find employment in her previous career as an engineer and had been sending her notices of job openings, but Wife was reluctant and did not actively pursue a position as an engineer. She worked part-time in retail clothing sales for a short time but spent more on clothes than she earned in income. Wife began to look for full-time employment in May of 2005. She secured full-time employment in June 2005 selling nutritional supplements, earning $31,200 per year.

II. Procedural Posture

A. Evidence at Trial

At trial, Wife asked for primary physical custody of the children. She asked that the holidays be divided between the parents. She asked that Husband be ordered to follow Wife’s instructions regarding the supplement and diet regimen. Wife wanted final decisions as to the children, including medical decisions.

Husband asked for joint physical and legal custody on an alternate week schedule. He claimed the supplements were unnecessary but was willing to continue the gluten-free and casein-free diet. Husband was also concerned that Wife was not taking the children to their local pediatrician but, rather, they were seeing, via webcam, a homeopath not licensed in Missouri. Husband asked that the court order that the children discontinue their treatments with the homeopath and return to their pediatrician. He asked that major decisions for the children be made jointly between the parents.

Wife presented the court with a great deal of evidence about the benefits to Brock of the supplements, special diet, and therapy. The children’s former pediatrician testified that the diet and supplements were not proven beneficial, but there was no evidence that they caused harm, either. The trial court indicated great skepticism about Wife’s supplement program and the children’s treatment by an out-of-state homeopath. The trial court, in its findings, questioned the credibility of both parents.

Husband argued that Wife was underemployed in retail sales and could make significantly more in income as an engineer. He testified that he had forwarded her a number of open positions with Aquila upon which she refused to follow up. He *610 also questioned her job search and her contention that, because she had been out of the workforce for nine years, she was not able to find a chemical engineering position. He presented evidence that an inexperienced chemical engineer or chemist could earn between $40,000 and $60,000.

B. TRial Court’s Judgment

The judgment of dissolution granted the parents joint physical and legal custody of the children. The court ordered that the parents alternate custody from week to week and designated Husband’s address as the mailing address of the children. The trial court found that there was no credible scientific evidence as to the medical value of the supplement treatments but, likewise, there was no evidence that the supplements were harmful. The court ordered that Husband need not provide the supplements but ordered that the gluten-free, casein-free diet be continued. Treatments by the homeopath were to be discontinued and the children returned to the care of their local pediatrician.

The court found, further, that Wife was underemployed and that she did not diligently seek employment in the career for which she was best qualified. The court found that Wife could make $48,000 per year as an engineer. The trial court rejected the Form 14’s proffered by both spouses and created its own, inputting $4,000 as Wife’s monthly gross income, and $7,900 as Husband’s monthly gross income.

The court awarded the marital home to Husband, the balance to be split evenly. Wife received marital assets valued at $184,699 3 and was allocated $829 of marital debt. Husband received marital assets valued at $285,002 and was allocated $75,565 of the marital debt.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W.3d 605, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1281, 2007 WL 2700580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krepps-v-krepps-moctapp-2007.