In Re the Marriage of Jaime McManus and Thomas Ronald McManus Upon the Petition of Jaime McManus, and Concerning Thomas Ronald McManus ( 2014 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 13-1878
    Filed October 15, 2014
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JAIME MCMANUS
    AND THOMAS RONALD MCMANUS
    Upon the Petition of
    JAIME MCMANUS,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    And Concerning
    THOMAS RONALD MCMANUS,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clinton County, Mark J. Smith,
    Judge.
    A husband appeals from a decree of dissolution of his marriage.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
    R. Douglas Wells of Gomez May, L.L.P., Davenport, for appellant.
    Patricia Zamora of Zamora, Tylor, Woods & Frederick, Davenport, for
    appellee.
    Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ.
    2
    MULLINS, J.
    Thomas McManus appeals from a decree dissolving his marriage to Jaime
    McManus. Thomas argues the district court erred by awarding Jaime physical
    care of the minor children, awarding Jaime part of Thomas’s retirement account,
    failing to award Thomas an extraordinary visitation credit in calculating his child
    support obligation, and failing to order Jaime to pay uninsured medical expenses.
    We find the district court failed to apply Iowa Court rule 9.9 (2013) correctly to
    give Thomas an extraordinary visitation credit, and failed to apply rule 9.12(5)
    correctly to require Jaime to pay some uninsured medical expenses. We affirm
    the decree as modified.
    I.     BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS.
    Thomas, born 1971, and Jaime, born 1981, were married in 2003. They
    have two children, born 2004 and 2007. Thomas is employed as a deputy city
    assessor making approximately $61,000 per year. Jaime is employed as an
    intermediate school teacher making approximately $48,000 per year.
    Jaime filed for dissolution of the marriage in June 2012. Following trial,
    the district court filed a decree of dissolution in September 2013. In the decree
    the court ordered joint legal custody of the children with Jaime having physical
    care. Thomas has visitation every other weekend, from 5:15 p.m. on Friday to
    7:00 a.m. on Monday; every Tuesday from 5:15 p.m. to Wednesday 7:00 a.m.;
    alternate holidays;1 and two uninterrupted weeks of summer vacation. The court
    1
    Holiday visitation is 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on New Year’s Day, Easter, Memorial Day,
    Independence Day, Labor Day, and Thanksgiving (which is to be a four-day holiday.)
    The court also ordered the parties to alternate the Christmas holiday from when the
    3
    ordered Thomas to pay $963 per month in child support. The court also ordered
    the parties to divide the cost of the children’s uninsured medical expenses
    according to their income: fifty-six percent to be paid by Thomas and forty-four
    percent to be paid by Jaime.       The court next divided the marital property,
    awarding Thomas the marital home and splitting the parties’ retirement savings
    by awarding Jaime part of Thomas’s Iowa Public Employee Retirement Savings
    (IPERS) account. Thomas appeals.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW.
    We review dissolution proceedings de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. We
    give weight to the factual findings of the district court, especially concerning the
    credibility of witnesses, but are not bound by them. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g).
    III.   ANALYSIS.
    A.      Custody Arrangement.
    In matters of child custody, the first and governing consideration of the
    court is the best interest of the child. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(o). Prior cases
    have little precedential value, except to provide a framework for analysis; we
    must base our decision on the facts and circumstances before us. In re Marriage
    of Will, 
    489 N.W.2d 394
    , 397 (Iowa 1992).            The Iowa Code provides a
    nonexclusive list of factors the court shall consider in determining a custodial
    arrangement.    
    Iowa Code § 598.41
    (3) (2011).2        In addition to the statutory
    children are released from school until Christmas Eve at 8:00 p.m. and Christmas Day
    until New Year’s Eve at 8:00 p.m.
    2
    These factors are:
    a. Whether each parent would be a suitable custodian for the child.
    4
    factors, the court also must consider the factors identified in In re Marriage of
    Winter, 
    223 N.W.2d 165
    , 166-67 (Iowa 1974),3 in determining the award of
    b. Whether the psychological and emotional needs and development of
    the child will suffer due to lack of active contact with and attention from
    both parents.
    c. Whether the parents can communicate with each other regarding the
    child's needs.
    d. Whether both parents have actively cared for the child before and since
    the separation.
    e. Whether each parent can support the other parent's relationship with
    the child.
    f. Whether the custody arrangement is in accord with the child's wishes or
    whether the child has strong opposition, taking into consideration the
    child's age and maturity.
    g. Whether one or both the parents agree or are opposed to joint custody.
    h. The geographic proximity of the parents.
    i. Whether the safety of the child, other children, or the other parent will
    be jeopardized by the awarding of joint custody or by unsupervised or
    unrestricted visitation.
    j. Whether a history of domestic abuse, as defined in section 236.2,
    exists. In determining whether a history of domestic abuse exists, the
    court's consideration shall include but is not limited to commencement of
    an action pursuant to section 236.3, the issuance of a protective order
    against the parent or the issuance of a court order or consent agreement
    pursuant to section 236.5, the issuance of an emergency order pursuant
    to section 236.6, the holding of a parent in contempt pursuant to section
    664A.7, the response of a peace officer to the scene of alleged domestic
    abuse or the arrest of a parent following response to a report of alleged
    domestic abuse, or a conviction for domestic abuse assault pursuant to
    section 708.2A.
    k. Whether a parent has allowed a person custody or control of, or
    unsupervised access to a child after knowing the person is required to
    register or is on the sex offender registry as a sex offender under chapter
    692A.
    3
    These factors are:
    1. The characteristics of each child, including age, maturity, mental and
    physical health.
    2. The emotional, social, moral, material, and educational needs of the
    child.
    3. The characteristics of each parent, including age, character, stability,
    mental and physical health.
    4. The capacity and interest of each parent to provide for the emotional,
    social, moral, material, and educational needs of the child.
    5. The interpersonal relationship between the child and each parent.
    6. The interpersonal relationship between the child and its siblings.
    5
    physical care. See Will, 
    489 N.W.2d at 398
    . “The ultimate objective of a physical
    care determination is to place the child in the environment most likely to bring
    him to healthy mental, physical, and social maturity.”              McKee v. Dicus, 
    785 N.W.2d 733
    , 737 (Iowa Ct. App. 2010). The question of physical care must be
    determined based on what is in the best interest of the child, not on what is fair to
    the parents.     In re Marriage of Hansen, 
    733 N.W.2d 683
    , 695 (Iowa 2007).
    Stability and continuity in caregiving are primary factors in determining an award
    of physical care.      Id. at 969.      Past caretaking patterns, including primary
    caregiving, weigh heavily in custody matters. Id.; In re Marriage of Decker, 
    666 N.W.2d 175
    , 178-80 (Iowa Ct. App. 2003).
    The district court gave the parties joint legal custody and gave Jaime
    physical care.    Thomas contends the district court should have ordered the
    parties to have joint physical care. The district court found Jaime has been the
    primary caregiver throughout the children’s lives. It expressed concern about
    Thomas’s consumption of alcohol and his conduct while intoxicated. The court
    also was concerned about Jaime allowing her paramour to be present around her
    children.
    7. The effect on the child of continuing or disrupting an existing custodial
    status.
    8. The nature of each proposed environment, including its stability and
    wholesomeness.
    9. The preference of the child, if the child is of sufficient age and maturity.
    10. The report and recommendation of the attorney for the child or other
    independent investigator.
    11. Available alternatives.
    12. Any other relevant matter the evidence in a particular case may
    disclose.
    Winter, 
    223 N.W.2d at 166-67
    .
    6
    Both parties testified that Jaime has been the primary caregiver for the
    children throughout their lives.     Thomas claimed his involvement included,
    “everything since birth.”   However, when pressed for details, he enumerated
    birthday parties, chaperoning field trips, and taking the children to their first day
    of school. He admitted he rarely helped cook or feed them. He also admitted
    that Jaime ran the household for the nine years of their marriage, including doing
    the cooking, cleaning, laundry, and caring for the children. Jaime and Thomas
    both testified Thomas had become more involved with the children since she filed
    for dissolution.   The couple’s younger child has a severe peanut allergy.
    However, while Jaime testified she carries an emergency allergic reaction “pen”
    with her at all times, Thomas testified he does not.
    Jaime detailed the children’s daily routine, which aligns with her schedule
    as a schoolteacher. If Thomas has visitation the night before, he drops the
    children off at her home in the morning, and she gets them ready for school
    including dressing them, giving them breakfast, and packing their lunches. This
    is particularly important for the child with the peanut allergy. She takes them to
    her workplace at the intermediate school, where they board their bus for the
    elementary school.      After school, they take the same bus back to the
    intermediate school, meet Jaime, and go home with her. If Thomas has visitation
    that evening, he picks them up from Jaime’s home.
    Jaime and Thomas also testified about Thomas’sdrinking habits. Jaime
    stated Thomas is a binge drinker. She claims Thomas’sinvolvement with the
    children has been limited due to his social engagements that often involve heavy
    7
    drinking. In particular, she noted that during their marriage, after his Wednesday
    pool league nights, Thomas would come home very late or not at all. He also
    would occasionally miss the next day of work, claiming he was ill or that one of
    the children was ill. This became such a problem that Thomas’s boss gave him a
    list of all the days Thomas had missed work and asked him to explain whether
    they truly were due to illness or something else.
    Jaime described Thomas’s personality as volatile, explosive, and
    controlling and suggested alcohol exacerbated these attributes. She described
    numerous incidents involving Thomas’s heavy drinking.          On one occasion,
    Thomas had been drinking all day with friends when Jaime picked him up to drive
    home.    The children were in the car.       Thomas became angry, grabbed the
    steering wheel from Jaime, and caused the car to swerve off the road. He then
    punched and damaged the windshield and dashboard. Jaime also testified that
    on one occasion, Thomas got drunk, crashed his car, and hid from the police all
    night in a cornfield. Thomas testified this was in 2001 and not related to alcohol.
    In 2008, Thomas and his brother were in a bar and pushed the bartender through
    a window. Thomas pled guilty to assault causing injury, and was ordered to pay
    approximately $3600 in restitution. He also was ordered to participate in anger
    management classes.        In 2009, during the state high school baseball
    tournament, Thomas and a group of men were intoxicated in a downtown Des
    Moines hotel and attempted to push a piano up an escalator, destroying the
    piano and damaging the escalator. Thomas was charged with public intoxication
    and ordered to pay $8300 in restitution.        Thomas contends most of these
    8
    incidents occurred before the marriage and before the children were born. He
    insists he is not an alcoholic, only a social drinker.
    Jaime also testified about her new paramour. She stated they had been
    dating around eight months. She had introduced the paramour to her children
    five months prior. The paramour had spent the night at Jaime’s home, while the
    children were present, two or three times. She and the children had spent the
    night at the paramour’s home four or five times.         When asked whether she
    thought it was appropriate for the children to be introduced to her paramour,
    Jaime said, “I’ve been trying to get divorced for a year and a half, so I think it’s
    time we move on, yes.”
    Thomas contends the district court put too much weight on his alcohol
    issues because he had never harmed the children in any way. He argues the
    court should have awarded him joint physical care with Jaime, which would
    require adding only one night per week to the existing schedule.            He also
    requests that the drop-off time be changed from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00-8:15 a.m. and
    that he be allowed to drop the children off at school himself.
    Thomas has made dubious personal choices regarding his consumption of
    alcohol and his conduct while intoxicated. Thomas insists most of the incidents
    involving alcohol took place prior to his marriage or the birth of the children. Yet,
    the incident with the bartender and the incident in the hotel—both resulting in
    criminal charges—occurred after the children were born. It is also clear from the
    testimony that Thomas’s consumption of alcohol continued to affect their family
    life well after the children were born. The district court found Jaime’s testimony
    9
    regarding various incidents involving Thomas’s drinking was credible.      It further
    found Thomas’s alcohol abuse was an issue in his life that would adversely affect
    the children. The court was so concerned it ordered him not to consume alcohol
    six hours prior to or during his visitation.     We too are concerned about the
    choices Thomas has made and how they have affected his family.
    The testimony also makes clear Thomas was rarely involved in the
    children’s care prior to the dissolution action. Jaime has been the children’s
    primary caregiver throughout their lives. She and the children have established a
    routine for school days. Her work schedule fits directly with the children’s school
    schedule. In view of all the factors relevant to this determination, and giving
    deference to the district court’s credibility determinations, we find it is in the
    children’s best interest for Jaime to remain their primary caregiver. This is the
    environment most likely to bring the children to healthy mental, physical, and
    social maturity.      Thus, we affirm the district court order to maintain the care
    arrangement currently in place where Jaime has physical care and Thomas has
    liberal visitation.
    B.     Property Division.
    We examine the entire record and adjudicate anew the issue of property
    distribution. In re Marriage of McDermott, 
    827 N.W.2d 671
    , 676 (Iowa 2013).
    We will disturb the district court’s ruling only when there has been a failure to do
    equity. 
    Id.
     Marital property is divided equitably, considering the factors in Iowa
    Code section 598.21(5).         
    Id. at 678
    .4   “An equitable distribution of marital
    4
    These factors include:
    10
    property, based upon the factors in 598.21(5), does not require an equal division
    of assets.” 
    Id. at 682
     (quoting In re Marriage of Kimbro, 
    826 N.W.2d 696
    , 703
    (Iowa 2013)).   “Equality is, however, often most equitable,” and Iowa courts
    generally insist upon equal or nearly equal division of marital assets. 
    Id.
     “To
    achieve an equitable division, we apply the factors contained in section
    598.21(5), keeping in mind there are no hard and fast rules governing economic
    issues in dissolution actions.” 
    Id.
     Our decision depends on the particular facts
    relevant to each case. 
    Id.
    a. The length of the marriage.
    b. The property brought to the marriage by each party.
    c. The contribution of each party to the marriage, giving appropriate
    economic value to each party’s contribution in homemaking and child
    care services.
    d. The age and physical and emotional health of the parties.
    e. The contribution by one party to the education, training, or increased
    earning power of the other.
    f. The earning capacity of each party including educational background,
    training, employment skills, work experience, length of absence from the
    job market, custodial responsibilities for children, and the time and
    expense necessary to acquire sufficient education or training to enable
    the party to become self-supporting at a standard of living reasonable
    comparable to that enjoyed during the marriage.
    g. The desirability of awarding the family home or the right to live in the
    family home for a reasonable period to the party having custody of the
    children, or if the parties have joint legal custody, to the party having
    physical care of the children.
    h. The amount and duration of an order granting support payments to
    either party pursuant to section 598.21A and whether the property
    division should be in lieu of such payments.
    i. Other economic circumstances of each party, including pension
    benefits, vested or unvested.
    j. The tax consequences to each party.
    k. Any written agreement made the parties concerning property
    distribution.
    l. The provisions of an antenuptial agreement.
    m. Other factors the court may determine to be relevant in an individual
    case.
    11
    The district court awarded Thomas the marital home along with the debt
    on it and divided the remaining assets, awarding Jaime a portion of Thomas’s
    IPERS account through a Qualified Domestic Relations Order. Thomas filed a
    motion to amend and enlarge, contending the parties stipulated that each would
    retain its own IPERS account. The district court declined to alter its property
    division stating:
    In reviewing the Stipulation of Assets and Liabilities, it is indicated
    that the parties’ IPERS accounts shall be received by the parties.
    However, there is nothing in this joint statement, nor was there
    anything indicated at the time of trial, that the Court was not to
    make an equitable distribution of those assets if they do not
    equalize. The Court declines to change its award of the retirement
    benefits unless the parties agree that this was an oversight and
    agree that the parties stipulated that each would keep their own
    retirement accounts without the Court equalizing their values.
    Thomas contends the parties did stipulate that he would receive the marital home
    and all its debt, and they would each keep their own retirement assets. Jaime
    insists there was no stipulation, and the retirement accounts are listed as
    disputed in the parties’ joint statement of assets and liabilities. 5 Nonetheless, the
    court retains the power to reject the contents of a stipulation if they are unfair or
    contrary to law.     In re Marriage of Briddle, 
    756 N.W.2d 35
    , 40 (Iowa 2008).
    Further, we note the joint statement was more akin to a stipulation as to certain
    evidence and the claims each party expected to assert than to a stipulation
    settling the issues to be resolved by the court.           Here, the district court was
    5
    We note that the parties submitted in their appendix a copy of the Joint Statement of
    Assets and Liabilities that is not file stamped and does not match the original in the court
    file. We consider the original filing from the court file, not the appendix copy.
    12
    required by law to distribute the marital assets equitably. Thus, we review the
    court’s property division for failure to do equity.
    The parties submitted a joint statement of assets and liabilities containing
    their estimates of the value of the marital home.         Both parties agreed the
    mortgage on the house was $155,000. Thomas estimated the house was worth
    $130,000. He testified the house was upside down by about $20,000. Jaime
    estimated the house was worth $159,000 and agreed it was upside down by
    about $20,000. She testified the house was appraised at $160,000 and indeed,
    when Thomas attempted to sell the home, he listed it at $155,000. The district
    court found it was “unable to ascertain the value of the residence, due to the lack
    of proof thereon.” Accordingly, it found that the mortgage was equal to the value
    of the home, i.e. $155,000. The district court ordered that Thomas retain the
    home and assume the mortgage. In its calculations, therefore, the value of the
    asset it awarded to Thomas was offset by the amount of debt attached the
    asset.6
    The court further divided the parties’ property as follows: Jaime was
    awarded the First Trust & Savings checking account ($100), half of the children’s
    savings accounts, her IPERS pension ($18,000), the children’s playhouse
    ($1800), a television ($2200), and part of Thomas’s IPERS account pursuant to a
    Qualified Domestic Relations Order in the amount of $25,575. The court ordered
    6
    The same was true of the swimming pool installed in the back yard of the marital
    home—although the court awarded the swimming pool to Thomas, the debt on the
    installation of the swimming pool ($2200), neutralized its value as an asset. The same
    was also true of the parties’ two cars—each one was encumbered with enough debt to
    neutralize it as an asset in the calculation of the property division.
    13
    her to pay the debts on the Capital One credit card ($8500) and the Discover
    Card ($2600.) Thus, Jaime received net $36,575 in the property division.
    Thomas was awarded the First Central State Bank checking account
    ($40), half of the children’s savings accounts, his IPERS account in the amount
    of $14,425 ($40,000 – $25,575), his 457B retirement account in the amount of
    $24,000, the savings bonds ($200), four tractors ($2500), and the golf cart
    ($500).7 Thus, Thomas received net $41,665. If Thomas had retained his full
    IPERS account, he would have received $67,240, and Jaime would have
    received $11,000, clearly an inequitable result. Thus, the court’s equalization of
    the retirement assets was consistent with law and equity. Accordingly, we affirm
    the district court’s distribution of the marital property, including the transfer of
    $25,575 of Thomas’s IPERS to Jaime.
    C.     Extraordinary Visitation Credit.
    Courts are required to apply the Iowa Child Support Guidelines set out in
    Chapter 9 of the Iowa Court Rules.         Rule 9.11 proscribes variance from the
    guidelines unless the court makes “a written finding that the guidelines would be
    unjust or inappropriate.” Rule 9.9 provides, “If the noncustodial parent’s court-
    ordered visitation exceeds 127 days per year, the noncustodial parent shall
    receive a credit to the noncustodial parent’s share of the basic support
    7
    There were a number of debts the court did not consider as marital debts. The court
    did not consider the debt on Thomas’s Capital One card marital debt because it primarily
    reflected the debt from the restitution he was ordered to pay for damaging the piano and
    escalator. The court did not consider Jaime’s student loans as marital debt, there being
    insufficient evidence to determine whether it was acquired during the marriage.
    14
    obligation.”   The rule adds, “For the purposes of this credit, ‘days’ means
    overnights spent caring for the child(ren).”
    When the district court in its original decree failed to apply this credit,
    Thomas filed a motion to amend and enlarge. The court explained its failure to
    apply the credit in the following manner:
    Thomas [has] the children on alternate weekends from 5:15 p.m. on
    Friday until 7:00 a.m. on Monday. This is a total of 2.5 days for 26
    weekends [2.5 x 26 = 65 days]. The Court also ordered [Thomas]
    to have visitation from Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. until Wednesday at
    7:00 a.m. [0.5 x 52 = 26.] The court considered this one-half day,
    with both weekday and weekend visitation totaling 91 days [65 + 26
    = 91]. The Court further ordered three holidays per year, with
    Thanksgiving being a four-day holiday [at most 7 days]. In addition
    to the above, each party was awarded two uninterrupted weeks per
    year for summer vacation for a total of 14 days. [91 +7 + 14 = 112.]
    In addition to the above, the Court ordered every Mother’s Day to
    be with Jaime and every Father’s Day with Thomas. The above-
    stated schedule does not exceed the 127 days required for
    extraordinary visitation credit. Under the Child Support Guidelines
    Rule 9.4, the Court may adjust child support upward or downward,
    and Rule 9.9 under the Child Support Guidelines allows the Court
    discretion concerning the definition of “days,” which can mean
    overnights spent caring for the child, but does not require the Court
    to give 24 hours credit just because the children spent an overnight
    with the noncustodial parent.
    Thomas contends that by his calculation he has 142 overnight visits per
    year, and the court should have given him an extraordinary visitation credit or
    made written findings justifying its departure from the child support guidelines.
    Rule 9.9 provides that if “court-ordered visitation exceeds 127 days per year, the
    noncustodial parent shall receive a credit.”             Rule 9.9 defines “days” as
    “overnights spent caring for the child(ren).”8 Notwithstanding the district court’s
    8
    The court does have a limited discretion to modify the percentage credit due to “[f]ailure
    to exercise court-ordered visitation.” See Iowa Ct. R. 9.9.
    15
    logical explanation, the express terms of the rule do not provide for discretion in
    defining “days.” Thus, Thomas has, on every other weekend, Friday, Saturday,
    and Sunday night (3 days x 26 weeks = 78); every week Tuesday night (52 days
    – 3 days during the weeks of Christmas and summer break = 49); two weeks in
    the summer (9 additional days (14 days – 1 weekend and 2 Tuesdays)); three
    holidays not including Thanksgiving (no overnights, thus 0 days); alternate four-
    day holiday Thanksgivings (3 days, or on average 1.5 days); one week during
    Christmas (7 days); and Father’s Day (not overnight). This is a total average of
    144.5 overnights which, for the purpose of the credit, are “days.” Therefore,
    Thomas is entitled to a fifteen percent credit on his child support obligation. See
    Iowa Ct. R. 9.9 (stating 128-147 days receives a fifteen percent credit). Applying
    the credit to Thomas’s child support obligation, we modify the decree to order
    Thomas to pay $818.55 per month ($963 – (963 x 0.15)).
    D.     MEDICAL EXPENSES.
    The district court ordered that “the noncovered health care expenses for
    the children shall be divided by the petitioner paying 44 percent and the
    respondent paying 56 percent.” Thomas contends, and Jaime agrees, that this is
    in error. The Iowa Court rule 9.12(5) provides
    The custodial parent shall pay the first $250 per year per child of
    uncovered medical expense up to a maximum of $800 per year for
    all children. Uncovered medical expenses in excess of $250 per
    child or a maximum of $800 per year for all children shall be paid by
    the parents in proportion to their respective net incomes.
    The court made no finding justifying its variance from this rule. See Iowa Ct.
    R. 9.11. Thus, we modify the dissolution order to provide Jaime must pay the
    16
    first $250 per year per child of uncovered medical expenses.           Expenses in
    excess of that amount shall be divided by Jaime paying forty-four percent and
    Thomas paying fifty-six percent.
    E.     ATTORNEY FEES.
    “Attorney fees are not a matter of right, but rather rest in the court’s
    discretion.” In re Marriage of Okland, 
    699 N.W.2d 260
    , 270 (Iowa 2005). Factors
    the court considers include “the needs of the party seeking the award, the ability
    of the other party to pay, and the relative merits of the appeal.” 
    Id.
     (quoting In re
    Marriage of Geil, 
    509 N.W.2d 738
    , 743 (Iowa 1993)). We may also consider
    “whether the party making the request was obligated to defend the trial court’s
    decision on appeal.” In re Marriage of Castle, 
    312 N.W.2d 147
    , 150 (Iowa 1981).
    Accordingly, we order each party to pay their own attorney fees in this appeal.
    III.   CONCLUSION.
    We find the district court correctly ordered joint custody and awarded
    Jaime physical care of the children. We further find the court made an equitable
    division of the marital property, including transferring part of Thomas’s IPERS
    account to Jaime. We find the court should have given Thomas an extraordinary
    visitation credit as set out in rule 9.9 and modify the decree to reflect a fifteen
    percent credit in his child support obligation. We also find the court should have
    required Jaime as the custodial parent to pay the uninsured medical expenses as
    set out in rule 9.12(5), and we modify the decree accordingly. We affirm the
    decree as modified.
    17
    Costs on appeal are assessed eighty percent to Thomas and twenty
    percent to Jaime.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.