In Re the Marriage of Sarah L. Pourroy and Jared M. Pourroy Upon the Petition of Sarah L. Pourroy, N/K/A Sarah L. Close, and Concerning Jared M. Pourroy ( 2017 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 16-1391
    Filed March 22, 2017
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF SARAH L. POURROY
    AND JARED M. POURROY
    Upon the Petition of
    SARAH L. POURROY, n/k/a SARAH L. CLOSE,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    And Concerning
    JARED M. POURROY,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Louisa County, John G. Linn,
    Judge.
    A father appeals the court’s ruling that modified the child support and
    visitation provision of the dissolution decree. AFFIRMED.
    Jacob R. Koller and Rae M. Kinkead of Simmons Perrine Moyer Bergman
    PLC, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
    Lori L. Klockau of Bray & Klockau, P.L.C., Iowa City, for appellee.
    Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Vaitheswaran, JJ.
    2
    VOGEL, Judge.
    Jared Pourroy appeals the district court’s decision modifying the child
    support and visitation provisions of the decree that dissolved his marriage to
    Sarah Pourroy, n/k/a Sarah Close.        Jared claims the district court incorrectly
    ordered a retroactive increase in his child support obligation, in contravention to
    the parties’ stipulated decree. He also claims the court incorrectly calculated the
    new child support amount. Finally, he contends the court’s modification of the
    visitation schedule is not in the best interests of the children.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The parties dissolved their marriage by a stipulated decree in October
    2011. The parties’ two children—born 2004 and 2007—were placed in Sarah’s
    physical care, and Jared had visitation six overnights every two weeks. The
    parties agreed to a substantial downward deviation of Jared’s child support.1
    Jared was ordered to pay $200.00 per month during the school year and $275.00
    for each of the three months of summer, which averaged out to $218.75 per
    month.2 The parties also agree to share equally a number of expenses for the
    children, including: daycare, school supplies, activities fees, equipment, winter
    clothing, and haircuts. In the stipulation, the parties agreed the reasons for the
    downward departure in child support to be: “(1) Jared is providing health
    insurance for the children; (2) the parties have agreed to a comprehensive
    1
    Attached to the parties’ stipulation was a child support guidelines worksheet that
    indicated Jared’s support obligation under the guidelines would have been $619.00 per
    month. Thus, under the stipulation, Jared was paying approximately $400 per month
    less than would have been ordered.
    2
    The support obligation was increased during the summer because Sarah provided child
    care for the children when they were not in school. She had summers off from her work
    as an elementary school special education teacher.
    3
    shared expense provision relating to the children’s expenses; and (3) Jared has
    care of the children for six overnights every 14 days.” In addition, the stipulation
    stated the parties agree the child support amount “shall not be modifiable for five
    years from the date of the decree.”           The district court’s decree noted the
    deviation from the guideline amount and approved of the deviation “for the
    reasons set forth in the stipulation,” and the court found the stipulation to be
    equitable.
    Sarah filed a petition to modify the decree in January 2015, seeking to
    adjust the visitation schedule and the child support. The matter proceeded to
    trial in March 2016, and the district court issued its decision in June 2016. The
    court removed Jared’s midweek overnight visitation during the summer and
    increased his child support obligation from $218.75 to $880.00 per month,
    retroactive to May 2015. Jared filed a posttrial motion, which the district court
    denied. He now appeals.
    II. Scope and Standard of Review.
    Our review of a modification proceeding is de novo, but we give weight to
    the district court’s findings of fact, especially its credibility determinations. In re
    Marriage of Harris, 
    877 N.W.2d 434
    , 440 (Iowa 2016). However, we review the
    district court’s decision to make an increase in child support retroactive for abuse
    of discretion. In re Marriage of Thede, 
    568 N.W.2d 59
    , 62–63 (Iowa Ct. App.
    1997).
    III. Child Support.
    On appeal, Jared challenges the court’s modification of his child support
    obligation, both the retroactivity of the increase and the calculation of the amount.
    4
    A. Retroactivity. Jared asserts the court should not have made the new
    child support obligation retroactive to May 2015 since the stipulated decree
    provided the parties would not modify the support obligation for five years. He
    asks that we make his new support obligation commence in October 2016.
    In the stipulated decree, the reduction in child support was justified
    because Jared agreed to pay for one-half of the children’s expenses and agreed
    the children would be in his care six overnights every fourteen days. At trial,
    Sarah testified that while the stipulated decree called for Jared to pay one-half of
    most of the children’s expenses, she stopped asking for reimbursement because
    he would argue about the amount she spent on the children and she felt it was
    not worth the argument.
    In addition, the stipulated decree referenced Jared’s care of the children
    six overnights every fourteen days as a justification for the reduced child support.
    Sarah testified Jared rarely keeps the children for the midweek overnight
    visitation. She entered into evidence a calendar she had kept over the previous
    five years that noted the children regularly slept at her home on nights they were
    supposed to be staying with Jared. Even though Jared was designated to have
    forty percent of the overnights every month, he rarely exercised forty percent and
    had the children as little as ten percent of the overnights in the summer months.
    Even when Jared did keep them overnight during the week, Sarah was asked to
    pick up the children at his house to transport them to school, provide lunch for
    the children, and furnish the clothing for the children to wear to school. Jared
    admitted at trial that he had not transported the children to school for three years.
    During these exchanges on school mornings at Jared’s home, the parties do not
    5
    speak to each other; in fact Sarah testified it has been five years since the parties
    have spoken a word to each other face to face, preferring to communicate via
    text message or email.3
    In ordering the retroactive support, the district court noted Jared has had a
    substantial increase in his income and he has not contributed to paying one-half
    of the shared expenses of the children as anticipated by the stipulated decree.
    Because both of the justifications for the reduced support in the stipulated
    decree—the shared expenses and the extensive visitation—failed almost
    immediately after the decree was entered, we conclude the court did not abuse
    its discretion in ordering a retroactive increase in child support to begin in May
    2015 instead of October 2016. See Thede, 
    568 N.W.2d at 62
     (noting the trial
    court has board discretion to order retroactive child support).
    B. Amount. Jared also asserts the amount of the new support obligation
    was improper because the court did not consider the income Sarah receives for
    her data entry work and the court calculated the incorrect health insurance
    deduction.
    With respect to the health insurance deduction, the testimony at trial
    established Jared provides health insurance for the children through his
    employer’s “employee/child(ren)” plan.          The difference in cost between the
    employee only plan and the plan that Jared maintains to cover the children is
    $42.90 per week.        The court entered this amount into the child support
    3
    Sarah described the morning pick up as an awkward situation that the children are
    anxious about. In the modification order, the court ordered this practice to stop. The
    court stated it was Jared’s responsibility to get the children up, dressed, and fed, and to
    pack their lunches and transport them to school on the mornings that they wake up at his
    house.
    6
    calculation. However, Jared asserts the language of the child support guidelines
    rules requires the court to use the “family” health insurance plan amount and not
    the “employee/child(ren)” plan amount, even though he does not pay the higher
    “family” plan premiums.
    Iowa Court Rule 9.14(5) provides that “[i]n calculating child support, the
    health insurance premium for the child(ren) is added to the basic support
    obligation and prorated between the parents as provided in this rule.” The rule
    advises, “The amount of the premium for the child(ren) to be added is the amount
    of the premium cost for family coverage to the parent or stepparent which is in
    excess of the premium cost for single coverage, regardless of the number of
    individuals covered under the policy.” Iowa Ct. R. 9.14(5)(b). While the verbiage
    of the rule does say “family coverage,” the intent of the rule is to prorate the
    actual cost of children’s health insurance premium between the parties, not to
    manipulate the child support amount by using health insurance premiums that
    are never paid. We determine the district court correctly calculated the cost of
    the health insurance for the children by subtracting the single plan from the plan
    that Jared maintains to provide coverage for the children.
    With respect to Jared’s claim regarding Sarah’s income, apart from
    Sarah’s teaching job, she testified she recently started doing data entry work at
    home. She testified the hours varied greatly based upon the work that was
    available to her, but her 2015 tax filings indicated she earned $4600. Jared
    asserts this amount should be added to her income for the purpose of calculating
    child support. While the district court noted Sarah’s extra contract work in its
    decision, the court did not rule on Jared’s claim that this amount should increase
    7
    Sarah’s monthly income for child support purposes. Jared did not include this
    claim in his posttrial motion. “It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that
    issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided by the district court before we
    will decide them on appeal.” Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa
    2002). Because the district court did not rule on this issue and Jared did not
    include this issue in his posttrial motion to amend or enlarge, we decline to
    address this claim due to a lack of error preservation. 4 We affirm the amount of
    child support ordered by the court.
    V. Visitation.
    Next, Jared maintains the district court should not have modified his
    visitation schedule for the summer months. The district court removed Jared’s
    midweek overnight visitation along with his Sunday overnight for the summer
    months. Instead, the court granted him visitation with the children 5 p.m. to
    8 p.m. every Wednesday night and every other Thursday night, and on the
    weekends Jared has visitation, the court ordered the children be returned to
    Sarah’s home by 8 p.m. on Sunday nights, rather than 8 a.m. Monday morning.
    While he concedes this is the visitation schedule the parties had informally
    agreed to for the summer months in the years preceding the modification, Jared
    asserts the reasons for this informal change no longer exist. Jared asserts he
    agreed to allow the children to sleep at Sarah’s home more during the summer
    4
    Even if such claim was preserved, we conclude no error occurred. While Sarah earned
    $4600 from her data entry work in 2015, she testified the availability of this work was not
    consistent and she had been working for the company for less than one year. We
    conclude this income is, at this time, too uncertain or speculative to include in the child
    support calculations. See In re Marriage of Nelson, 
    570 N.W.2d 103
    , 105 (Iowa 1997)
    (“All income that is not anomalous, uncertain, or speculative should be included when
    determining a party’s child support obligations.”).
    8
    because Sarah provided care for the children when they were not in school and
    allowing them to sleep at Sarah’s house during the week allowed them to sleep
    in longer. However, Jared asserts Sarah revealed at trial that she works for her
    father on the farm in the summer; thus, he believes the children do not actually
    gain the intended benefit of sleeping in when at Sarah’s house.
    Sarah estimated she worked ten to fifteen hours per month for her father,
    working with his detasseling crew or on landscaping jobs. The amount of work
    depended on her father’s needs. Despite this work, Sarah testified the children
    still usually get to sleep in during the summer, though the children do not typically
    sleep past 8:00 a.m. This schedule has worked informally for the parties for the
    four summers preceding the modification trial.       Establishing this schedule by
    order gives certainty and predictability to the parties and the children, which the
    district court concluded was in the children’s best interests. We affirm the district
    court’s modification of the summer visitation schedule.
    V. Appellate Attorney Fees.
    Both parties request an award of appellate attorney fees in the amount of
    $5000. Iowa Code section 598.36 (2015) provides the court may award attorney
    fees to the prevailing party in a modification action. We have discretion to award
    appellate attorney fees under this section. In re Marriage of Maher, 
    596 N.W.2d 561
    , 568 (Iowa 1999). We consider the needs of the party making the request,
    the ability of the other party to pay, and whether the requesting party was
    obligated to defend the district court’s decision on appeal. 
    Id.
     We award Sarah
    $5000 in appellate attorney fees.
    AFFIRMED.