Sjulin v. Sjulin

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 2021
DocketA-21-318
StatusPublished

This text of Sjulin v. Sjulin (Sjulin v. Sjulin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sjulin v. Sjulin, (Neb. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

SJULIN V. SJULIN

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

RYAN SJULIN, APPELLANT, V.

MICKALA SJULIN, APPELLEE.

Filed December 21, 2021. No. A-21-318.

Appeal from the District Court for Otoe County: JULIE D. SMITH, Judge. Affirmed. Ryan K. McIntosh, of Brandt, Horan, Hallstrom & Stilmock, for appellant. Julie E. Bear, of Reinsch, Slattery, Bear, Minahan & Prickett, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.

PIRTLE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and WELCH, Judges. RIEDMANN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Ryan Sjulin appeals the amended decree entered by the district court for Otoe County, which dissolved his marriage to Mickala Sjulin, awarded custody and child support for their children, and divided the marital estate. Finding no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decisions, we affirm. BACKGROUND Ryan and Mickala were married in 1998. Their older child was born in 2003, and their younger child was born in in 2007. Ryan filed a complaint to dissolve the marriage in September 2019. The following month, the district court entered a temporary order awarding sole legal and physical custody of the children to Mickala and granting Ryan parenting time every other weekend and Tuesday evenings.

-1- Prior to trial, Mickala submitted discovery requests to Ryan, and in his responses, he indicated that he would supplement certain responses. When he failed to do so by February 2020, Mickala filed a motion to compel his responses, seeking information related to certain business debts. A few days later, Ryan’s counsel filed a motion to withdraw. The district court held a hearing on both motions in March. Ryan did not appear, and his counsel appeared telephonically. The court permitted his counsel to withdraw and granted Mickala’s motion to compel, ordering Ryan to produce certain documents within 15 days of the entry of the order. It appears the order granting the motion to compel was sent to Ryan’s counsel, who had been allowed to withdraw. The following month, when Ryan had still not produced the ordered documents, Mickala filed a motion for sanctions. The certificate of service indicates that the motion and notice of hearing were sent to Ryan via two separate email addresses. Ryan did not appear at the hearing, and the court granted the motion, ordered Ryan to pay $500 in attorney fees for Mickala, and prohibited him from claiming that any of the debts listed in the order to compel were marital debts or introducing evidence of them at trial. Ryan appeared at trial in January 2021 and represented himself. At the time of trial, Mickala had been employed as an educator for 22 years. She is an English teacher, the high ability learner facilitator, the drug education instructor, and the track coach. She works Monday through Friday, from 7:45 a.m. until 4 p.m. Ryan studied landscape architecture in college and operated a landscaping business during the marriage. It was a family business that Ryan began operating in 1996; thus, he had more than 20 years’ experience working as a landscape architect. His skill set involves planning, designing, installing, and maintaining landscaping, but because his business operates in a smaller town, in addition to landscaping work, his company also does concrete and other types of projects and snow removal in the winter. He employs both high school and adult workers, and he pays his adult employees $14 to $20 per hour, with the more skilled workers earning the higher pay. Mickala presented evidence from the Nebraska Department of Labor that the median annual salary for a landscape architect in Nebraska was $58,022. The parties owned a marital home in Nebraska City, Nebraska. An appraisal completed in March 2020 valued the home at $190,000. Mickala testified at trial that she believed that figure to be the current fair market value of the home. In conjunction with the appraisal, Mickala refinanced the mortgage on the home and took out $30,000, which she used to replace part of the roof on the marital home, pay off the loan on her vehicle, and pay off marital credit card debt. The December 2020 mortgage statement showed a balance of $127,360.40. After Ryan filed for divorce, Mickala and the children remained in the marital home, where each of the children has his own bedroom. Ryan moved out, and after renting part of a house for a few months, he moved to Hamburg, Iowa. Initially he lived in a camper parked near a cabin on land his family owns and near his grandparents’ home. Once the weather turned cold, he moved into the cabin. Thus, at the time of trial, he was residing in a 900-square-foot cabin comprised of four rooms, including one bedroom with two beds. When the children had parenting time with Ryan, they spent most nights at their great-grandparents’ home. Around the spring or summer of 2020, the older child started spending additional time in Hamburg. He would stay at his great-grandparents’ home, where he has his own bedroom, and acted as a caretaker for them. He continued to attend his senior year of high school in Nebraska

-2- City, which was a 25 minute commute from Hamburg. He was tardy to school numerous times, particularly to his first period class. His teacher contacted Mickala in October 2020 with concerns about his frequent tardiness and said that the child appeared very tired at school and had commented to her that he “is more like the parent at home” and that he felt “like the roles [were] reversed.” When Ryan was asked at trial what he had done to address the child’s tardiness, he replied, “You know, it’s going to be one of those things to where sometimes you have to be responsible for your own actions. I mean, the school is going to come down on him for that.” The older child was set to graduate from high school a few months after trial and had plans to attend college in the fall of 2021 and live with friends. Mickala testified that despite spending additional time in Hamburg, the older child continued to spend time at her house on a regular basis. She believed that awarding her sole legal and physical custody of both children was in their best interests because she has been their primary caregiver, and she believed that her background as a teacher allows her to assist the children with their academics and her work hours allow her time to be with them both after school and in the summertime. Mickala also expressed concerns about the children’s time with Ryan. She was concerned about a lack of supervision, explaining that they ride four-wheelers without helmets, driving fast and at times getting into accidents, and they are allowed to be on the lake without adult supervision. The lack of supervision scares her. She was additionally concerned about Ryan’s temper and the way he disciplines the children. She claimed that the children walk on eggshells around him and that he has a history of raging, fighting, and physical violence. Mickala had further concerns about Ryan’s alcohol consumption. She claimed that Ryan drinks on a daily basis and has a history of drinking and driving with the children in the car. Moreover, he was taking the older child’s ADHD medication on top of his own medication, such that the pharmacy ultimately would allow only Mickala, and not Ryan, to pick up the child’s medication. After trial was completed, the district court entered an amended decree. It found that both parties were fit parents but determined that awarding sole legal and physical custody of the children to Mickala was in the children’s best interests. The court adopted the parenting plan Mickala proposed, which mirrored the parenting time arrangement provided in the temporary order. The court found that Ryan worked as a landscape architect and was capable of earning $58,022 per year.

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Bluebook (online)
Sjulin v. Sjulin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sjulin-v-sjulin-nebctapp-2021.