Stephen Schoonover v. Megan Coulter
This text of Stephen Schoonover v. Megan Coulter (Stephen Schoonover v. Megan Coulter) 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.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 18-1921 Filed August 7, 2019
STEPHEN SCHOONOVER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
MEGAN COULTER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Fayette County, Richard D. Stochl,
Judge.
Megan Coulter appeals a district court decree awarding Stephen
Schoonover physical care of their child. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Jill A. Dillon of Dillon Law, P.C., Sumner, for appellant.
Stephen Schoonover, Maynard, pro se appellee.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2
VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.
Megan Coulter and Stephen Schoonover are the unmarried parents of a
child born in 2013. Schoonover filed a petition for custody and visitation in Fayette
County. Coulter followed with a similar petition in Woodbury County. The parents
agreed to a temporary custody and visitation arrangement, and the district court in
Woodbury County filed an order approving the arrangement. Schoonover moved
to incorporate the temporary order from Woodbury County in the Fayette County
case. The Fayette County district court granted the incorporation request.1
Under the temporary order, Schoonover received “temporary primary
physical care of the child” subject to visitation with Coulter “every weekend from
3:00 p.m. Fridays until noon on Tuesdays.” The order allowed either Coulter or
her mother to pick up and drop off the child. The parents operated under this order
for several months preceding trial.
At trial, neither party was represented by counsel. Following abbreviated
testimony, the district court granted Schoonover physical care of the child but
modified the visitation portion of the temporary order to limit Coulter’s visits to every
other weekend from Friday through Sunday. Coulter appealed the physical care
portion of the decree.2
Coulter argues the district court’s physical care decision did not serve the
child’s best interests. Our analysis of who should have physical care is the same
whether the parents are married or unmarried. Lambert v. Everist, 418 N.W.2d 40,
1 The Woodbury County action was apparently dismissed. 2 Schoonover’s brief was stricken because it was not timely filed and did not comply with the rules of appellate procedure. 3
42 (Iowa 1988). Specifically, we apply the factors set forth in our chapter on
dissolutions of marriage. Id.; see Iowa Code §§ 598.41(3), 600B.40(2) (2018).
Our de novo review of the limited record discloses the following facts.
According to Schoonover, the parents followed the temporary order “for the
majority of the time” but there were “hiccups along the way as far as
communication” on the part of both parents. The problems stemmed in part from
the fact that Coulter moved to the western part of the state and Schoonover
remained in the eastern part of the state. Coulter returned to eastern Iowa three
months before trial.
When asked what relief he was requesting, Schoonover responded that he
wanted the court “to amend the temporary order” to allow him to have the child if
she did not go with Coulter on weekends. He also pointed out the child had “been
in the same [pre]school for the last year, she “love[d] her teachers and her friends,”
and she was expected to start kindergarten in the fall. When asked why he should
be granted physical care of the child, Schoonover mentioned that Coulter declined
to send the child to school when she had magic marker on her face, put locks on
the child’s bedroom door, and did not take advantage of all the visitation time
afforded her under the temporary order.
Coulter’s testimony also was brief. She stated she left Schoonover
“because of several instances of physical and verbal and emotional abuse.” She
“basically begged him to spend time with” his daughter “for the next four to five
months,” but he demurred “until almost a year later.” By then, the child “was almost
three.” She stated the child was with her “every single day of her life since she
was fifteen months old until she was almost three when [Schoonover] finally 4
decided he wanted to spend time with her.” She also noted the locks on the
bedroom doors were to keep the dog out and the child was never locked in her
room.
On this record, we agree Coulter should have been granted physical care.
First, under the temporary order, she effectively exercised primary physical care
through “visitation” four overnights a week. See Iowa Code § 598.41(3)(e).
Second, Coulter was the child’s sole caretaker for almost two years preceding
entry of the temporary order. Third, her testimony that Schoonover domestically
abused her several times was uncontradicted and is a relevant factor in the
physical care determination. See id. § 598.41(3)(j). Finally, Coulter refuted
Schoonover’s assertion that she mistreated the child by locking her in her room.
Schoonover, in contrast, had little to say about his parenting time or skills.
He simply requested the opportunity to have the child on the weekends when
Coulter elected not to exercise visitation. While he mentioned the need to “keep
stability in [the child’s] life,” one can glean from his limited request for relief that the
temporary arrangement fostered that stability.
In concluding Coulter should have been granted physical care, we
acknowledge the general practice of giving weight to the district court findings in
light of the court’s unique ability to assess witness demeanor. See In re Marriage
of Vrban, 359 N.W.2d 420, 423 (Iowa 1984) (“We are denied the impression
created by the demeanor of each and every witness as the testimony is
presented.”). But here the court’s finding that the child was “well cared for” in
Schoonover’s home was not supported by testimony, and the court’s determination
that the “status quo” should be maintained pointed to Coulter as the primary 5
physical caretaker. Cf. In re Seay, 746 N.W.2d 833, 835–36 (Iowa 2008) (“While
joint physical care does require equal responsibility on routine, daily decision-
making, it does not require that the residential arrangements be determined with
mathematical precision.”). For these reasons, we modify the physical-care
determination and remand for proceedings consistent with the opinion.
Coulter requests $1500 in appellate attorney fees. An award of appellate
attorney fees rests within our discretion. In re Marriage of Berning, 745 N.W.2d
90, 94 (Iowa Ct. App. 2007). Because Coulter prevailed, we grant her request.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Tabor, J., concurs; Mullins, J., dissents. 6
MULLINS, Judge (dissenting)
Based on the extremely limited trial record and ignoring the non-record facts
asserted by Coulter in her brief on appeal, I would affirm.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Stephen Schoonover v. Megan Coulter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-schoonover-v-megan-coulter-iowactapp-2019.