Travis Glen McCoy v. Jessica Ann Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 1, 2025
Docket24-1807
StatusPublished

This text of Travis Glen McCoy v. Jessica Ann Smith (Travis Glen McCoy v. Jessica Ann Smith) 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
Travis Glen McCoy v. Jessica Ann Smith, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-1807 Filed October 1, 2025

TRAVIS GLEN MCCOY, Petitioner-Appellant,

vs.

JESSICA ANN SMITH, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Meghan Corbin,

Judge.

A father appeals the district court’s custody decree granting the mother

physical care of their minor daughter. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Jason S. Rieper of Rieper Law, P.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

Jessica Smith, Eldridge, self-represented appellee.

Considered without oral argument by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and

Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

Travis McCoy appeals the district court’s custody decree granting Jessica

Smith physical care of their minor daughter. On appeal, McCoy contends the

district court erred by sua sponte setting aside a previous order that found Smith

to be in default. Additionally, he contends the district court erred by placing

physical care of the child with Smith.

We elect to assume without deciding that the district court had authority to

set aside the default judgement and proceed to the merits of the appeal. We

reverse the district court’s ruling awarding physical care to Smith and instead

award physical care to McCoy. We remand for entry of an order consistent with

this opinion and direct the district court to establish a visitation schedule for Smith,

as well as a child support obligation for Smith.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

McCoy and Smith met via an online dating app and began a romantic

relationship in early 2022. Their relationship developed quickly, and Smith

subsequently moved in with McCoy at his home in Gladstone, Illinois during the

summer of 2022.1 The couple never married, but their relationship produced a

daughter—E.M., born in 2024.

According to Smith, her relationship with McCoy was “toxic.” As she

explained at the custody trial, “it was a toxic relationship between me and

Mr. McCoy and . . . it has ended because of its toxicity.” Their relationship was

marred by frequent heated arguments, with both parties admitting to destroying

1 At all times during the pendency of this case, McCoy has lived in Gladstone. 3

furniture during such arguments. Additionally, McCoy and Smith accused each

other of physical abuse. Smith testified that they “both played a role in being

abusive physically and mentally to each other.”

In November 2023, McCoy and Smith’s turbulent relationship came to an

abrupt end after an argument one evening at McCoy’s home. During this particular

argument, Smith threatened self-harm. Of note, this occurred while Smith was

pregnant with E.M. In response to Smith’s threat of self-harm, McCoy testified that

he “took her to the hospital in Burlington, and she committed herself to the

psychiatric ward, and then, I proceeded to go to the police station and file what I

thought was a report in regard to her safety.”2 Additionally, McCoy detailed in his

testimony that Smith has an extensive history of threatening self-harm and suicidal

ideations. According to him, she threatened self-harm at least four times during

the course of their relationship.3

McCoy recounted that Smith once attempted to retrieve a handgun from his

truck in an attempt to kill herself. As he explained:

The second time, we were in a fight. She ran out to my truck and grabbed a pistol out of the back of my truck, and I had to run out there and try to get it out of her hands while she was trying to load the magazine in it, and that was the first big time.

During her testimony, Smith conceded that she has struggled with suicidal

ideations in the past. Smith testified that while she was pregnant with E.M., she

2 In her testimony, Smith confirmed that she admitted herself for mental health

treatment at the hospital in Burlington. 3 Of relevance to us, trial testimony was provided by a Bettendorf Police Officer,

Eric Poirier, who found a suicide note from Smith dating back to 2019—years before Smith began a relationship with McCoy. Poirier had been responding to a call for a welfare check on Smith. 4

once held a knife to her stomach and threatened to harm the then-unborn child.4

According to her, she did this because she “was under mental distress.” She also

admitted to previously being hospitalized for her mental health “two other times.”

Smith disclosed that she suffers from depression, but she testified that she

currently takes her prescribed antidepressants “every single day.” She added that

she regularly sees a therapist to treat her depression.

According to McCoy, Smith only stayed in the psychiatric ward at the

hospital in Burlington for a “night or two.” After leaving the hospital, she moved

into her mother’s house in Davenport. She resided with her mother until E.M.’s

birth and for a brief period thereafter. While living with her mother following E.M.’s

birth, Smith would only permit McCoy to see the child for brief visits in the cab of

his truck. As she explained:

My mother runs an at-home childcare, and she does not like Travis, and it is her place of residence, she should not have somebody in her household that she does not want them to be there. So I tried to work around it as best as I could so that he could see E.M., and the best likelihood that I could think of was outside in his truck.

However, when E.M. was roughly three months old, Smith and the child moved in

with McCoy at his home in Gladstone. But this arrangement only lasted a week

because McCoy and Smith got into an argument over whether McCoy could take

E.M. to church with him. According to McCoy, it “was another big argument” and

the “cops were called.” Smith and E.M. subsequently moved out of McCoy’s home

and stayed one night at the home of one of Smith’s ex-boyfriends in Davenport.

4 In text messages between Smith and McCoy’s mother—which were admitted into

evidence—Smith wrote, “I did have a plan for after she was born to kill myself.” This text was April 4, 2024, three months after the child was born. 5

Smith and E.M. then lived with one of Smith’s cousins for two months in Eldridge.

Eventually, Smith was able to obtain a job and secure a two-bedroom apartment

in Eldridge, where she currently lives with E.M. and her seven-year-old daughter

from a previous relationship. Smith testified that she is currently employed as a

server at a small restaurant in Park View and earns roughly $2200 a month before

taxes.

At the time of the custody trial, McCoy still lived in his home in Gladstone.

He is currently employed at an industrial machine maintenance company in

Muscatine and earns thirty dollars per hour. His normal work schedule is 7:00 a.m.

to 3:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. He testified that he currently does not work

weekends. However, he testified that it generally takes him an hour and fifteen

minutes to drive from his home in Gladstone to his job in Muscatine.

Concerned with Smith’s mental health, McCoy filed a petition to establish

paternity, custody, and child support in February 2024. As part of his petition, he

requested that the parties be granted joint legal custody but that physical care of

E.M. be placed with him. Smith—representing herself pro se—did not file an

answer to the petition until May. Smith blamed her delay in filing an answer on

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