In re the Marriage of Schultz ( 2020 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-1256
    Filed August 5, 2020
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JACQUELYN SCHULTZ
    AND JOEL SCHULTZ
    Upon the Petition of
    JACQUELYN SCHULTZ,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    And Concerning
    JOEL SCHULTZ,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Buchanan County, Monica L. Zrinyi
    Wittig, Judge.
    Joel Schultz appeals from the decree dissolving his marriage. AFFIRMED
    AS MODIFIED.
    Benjamin M. Lange of Swisher & Cohrt, P.L.C., Independence, for
    appellant.
    Timothy D. Ament of Timothy D. Ament Law Firm, P.L.C., Waterloo, for
    appellee.
    Considered by Tabor, P.J., and May and Greer, JJ.
    2
    GREER, Judge.
    The district court dissolved the twenty-seven-year marriage of Jacquelyn
    and Joel Schultz in 2019. Joel appeals certain factual findings made by the district
    court and argues for an entitlement to spousal support. Jacquelyn found the
    decree acceptable and asks that we affirm. We review the issues raised by Joel.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The parties married in February 1992 and separated in January 2017. At
    the time of trial, Joel was sixty years old and Jacquelyn was fifty-one years old.
    The trial occurred in May 2019, but Joel applied for temporary spousal support and
    received $4000 per month from December 2018 until the June 2019 decree was
    entered. The district court determined that spousal support was “not appropriate,”
    made several factual findings Joel now disputes, and divided the marital assets.
    With the assets divided, the district court required Joel to pay an equalization
    payment to Jacquelyn of $125,000. Joel asked the court to reconsider the ruling,
    and the district court denied his motion. Joel appeals only the denial of spousal
    support.
    As is often the case, the facts developed by Jacquelyn and Joel at trial
    diverged. Facts undisputed were that after separation Joel moved to the family
    vacation home in Wabasha, Minnesota, and Jacquelyn remained in the family
    home in Winthrop, Iowa. They spilt the real estate in that same manner. Then to
    help resolve other disputed matters, the parties stipulated to the marital asset and
    debt values and the intended designee. Except for determining the values of a
    boat and a motor, the district court’s charge was to decide whether an award of
    spousal support was warranted. In determining whether spousal support was
    3
    appropriate, the district court found the following facts. Two months after the
    marriage, Jacquelyn graduated from college with a Bachelor of Arts degree in
    psychology. She returned to college in 2006, graduating in 2008 with a master’s
    degree in social work. Jacquelyn testified that because she worked full-time and
    applied for a loan forgiveness program, no marital monies were used to pay for her
    master’s education.     Jacquelyn worked outside the home at various jobs
    throughout the marriage, except for an eight-month maternity leave after the birth
    of one of their two children.1 In 2011, Jacquelyn formed her own counseling
    service where she remains as a mental-health therapist treating clients along with
    other therapists in her employ. Her income climbed after this employment change.
    At the time of trial, Jacquelyn reported gross income of around $14,000 per month.
    As for Joel’s income, the parties conceded that for most of the years of the
    marriage Joel was the primary income earner. For background, Joel graduated
    with an associate degree in science. Because of an injury to his arm,2 Joel now
    receives Social Security disability (SSD) benefits and is unemployed. Before the
    injury, Joel’s last employment involved an eighteen-year stint as a retail territory
    manager for a food broker making $52,000 annually. That job ended with a layoff
    in May 2017 after a buyout of the company, for which Joel received nineteen weeks
    of severance pay. For many years before the food-broker job, Joel worked for a
    major grocery store, and the family relocated several times for his employment
    advances. Joel described both long-term jobs as requiring manual labor, which he
    1No dissolution issues are impacted by these adult children.
    2Joel fell at a restaurant, injuring his shoulder in March 2017. Disability benefits
    began in March of that year. After two years, he qualifies for Medicare health
    benefits.
    4
    can no longer do. At trial, the established SSD monthly payment to Joel equaled
    $2249 per month and his disability insurer paid him $470 per month in disability
    benefits. Shortly before trial, Joel’s insurer alerted him that the monthly long-term
    disability policy payment would terminate in July because they found that Joel
    could be employable in some job even if it different from his last job. He planned
    to appeal that determination. Joel also reasoned that when he reaches age sixty-
    seven, his SSD ends and he will receive a smaller regular social security benefit,
    which will be $100 less than he is currently receiving.
    With the spousal-support question at the forefront, Joel focused on the
    goals of his retirement plan. Joel described his retirement plan as one that he and
    Jacquelyn supported. Jacquelyn disagreed. As for the age disparity of the couple,
    Jacquelyn, at age fifty-one, will work another sixteen years producing income
    where Joel, at age sixty, is near retirement age. For the twenty-six years working
    at a grocery store in various roles—both before and during the marriage—Joel and
    his employer contributed to a retirement plan. While married, but after starting the
    retail manager job in 2001, Joel and Jacquelyn used the retirement monies from
    the employment with the grocer to fund the down payment and some
    improvements on the Winthrop home purchase. After paying the early withdrawal
    penalty and taxes, only half of the $190,000 balance of retirement funds were
    available to use. Under the current plan, Joel would retire at age seventy and one-
    half years to maximize his retirement plan benefits.        To reach his goal, he
    contributed maximum earnings to the retirement accounts while working at the
    food brokerage company. His plan involved allowing those retirement funds to
    appreciate to a value of one million dollars when he reached age seventy and a
    5
    half. Under Joel’s plan, at that point, the couple could access the funds for
    retirement and start investing more of Jacquelyn’s earnings. At trial, his retirement
    account equaled $593,920.
    We address Joel’s claims that certain factual findings made by the district
    court were in error and that he was entitled to spousal support.
    II. Standard of Review.
    A trial involving the dissolution of a marriage is an equitable proceeding.
    
    Iowa Code § 598.3
     (2018). As a result, our review is de novo. Iowa R. App. P.
    6.907; In re Marriage of Schenkelberg, 
    824 N.W.2d 481
    , 484 (Iowa 2012). While
    we give weight to the factual determinations made by the district court; its findings
    are not binding upon us. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g).
    When we review questions of spousal support, in our de novo review, we
    still “accord the trial court considerable latitude.” In re Marriage of Olson, 
    705 N.W.2d 312
    , 315 (Iowa 2005) (quoting In re Marriage of Spiegel, 
    553 N.W.2d 309
    ,
    319 (Iowa 1996)); see also Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d at 486. And we will disturb
    the trial court's findings “only when there has been a failure to do equity.” Olson,
    
    705 N.W.2d at 315
     (quoting Spiegel, 
    553 N.W.2d at 319
    ).
    III. Analysis.
    A. Were There Errors in the Factual Findings? Joel claims these facts
    from the decree are in error: (1) “no marital money was expended for [Jacquelyn’s]
    education”; (2) Jacquelyn’s net income is $9805 per month; (3) Joel’s retirement
    account is large because “his disposable income was diverted into the investment
    as opposed to being used by the parties”; (4) Joel should be able to work in the
    field of sales despite his social security administration disability determination; (5)
    6
    that the Wabasha real estate had rental income potential; (6) an award of alimony
    to Joel would require Jacquelyn to increase her monthly earnings given the new
    tax laws; (7) after Joel pays the balance of the furniture and boat loans his monthly
    expenses will be “almost non-existent”; and (8) the current asset distribution allows
    Joel to realize his retirement plan. We address each factual finding separately, but
    we realize that we need not correct every perceived error in the district court's
    findings of fact. “Since this is an equity case in which our review of both facts and
    law is de novo . . . we need not separately consider these assignments. We do
    not reverse an equity case upon such complaints as these but draw such
    conclusions from our review as we deem proper.” Lessenger v. Lessenger, 
    156 N.W.2d 845
    , 846 (Iowa 1968).
    1. “No marital money was expended for [Jacquelyn’s] education.” The
    completion of Jacquelyn’s bachelor’s degree preexisted the marriage.            But,
    because there is no question Jacquelyn achieved her master’s degree during the
    marriage, we assume Joel provided some means to support that effort. “[M]arriage
    does not come with a ledger.” Fennelly, 
    737 N.W.2d 97
    , 103 (Iowa 2007). Likely
    each party contributed in ways financially and non-financially in this long-term
    marriage. For purposes of our analysis, we assume that Joel, in the years he was
    the primary provider, supplied economic resources, although not direct payments
    to the educational costs, to help Jacquelyn achieve her goals.3
    2. Jacquelyn’s net income is $9805 per month. Jacquelyn agreed at trial
    that her income was “at least $14,115.66 per month.” Joel arrived at that figure by
    3At a minimum, Jacquelyn accessed Joel’s health insurance benefits through his
    employer.
    7
    averaging Jacquelyn’s reported business income for the years 2015, 2016, and
    2017. Joel promulgated confusion by claiming that the number represents net
    income, when, in fact, the sum represents the gross income earned in those years.
    So the district court determined:
    Petitioner’s salary is reported on her financial affidavit as $14,166.00
    per month, but this does not take into consideration her operating
    expenses. She incurs on average, a monthly obligation for operating
    and other expenses in the amount of $4,361.00 leaving her a net of
    $9,805.00.
    After a review of the parties’ tax returns, we agree with the finding of the district
    court and find the net income attributable to Jacquelyn equals $9805 per month.
    3. Joel’s retirement account is large because “his disposable income was
    diverted into the investment as opposed to being used by the parties.”            Joel
    concedes the increased contributions of disposable income to his retirement
    account but resists the characterization of that effort as being “diverted” funds. He
    opines the term carries a negative connotation. Instead, he emphasizes that the
    goal to increase contributions was a joint plan and retirement strategy. Jacquelyn
    disagrees that it was part of her plan. But in this review, the enhanced funding is
    a reality and we only need address how it plays with the request for spousal
    support. Motive is a part of a history we may never know.
    4. Joel should be able to work in the field of sales in spite of his social
    security administration disability determination.     Without contest, the parties
    agreed that the Department of Social Security Disability determined that Joel was
    disabled from an injury he sustained after falling. And the court found that Joel
    “was on disability and essentially retired.” Joel described a shoulder injury that
    caused him throbbing pain while working on a computer for no longer than an hour.
    8
    He testified his condition limited any return to his previous line of work that required
    some manual labor. Noting that no one offered medical testimony or medical
    reports supporting Joel’s descriptions, the court offered that no medical support for
    Joel’s testimony was provided, no testimony explained whether recovery was
    ongoing over the past two years since injury, and only Joel opined he could no
    longer be a salesperson. Likewise, the court said, “The Court has no idea what
    [Joel] earned in sales or what his bonus schedule may have been as the Court
    was not provided his tax records prior to his injury.” The court also found that Joel
    intended to retire at the time of his injury in any event and so it was unlikely he
    would have sought future employment even without having fallen.
    Interestingly, during the trial, the district court observed Joel and made
    factual findings that “he has mobility in his arm and shoulder, especially when he
    demonstrated his movement to the Court. The Court is not clear how the shoulder
    injury would prevent him from future work in the field of sales.” One role of the
    factfinder is to assess the credibility of the witness on the witness stand by
    observing the witness’s conduct and appearance. Ruden v. Peach, 
    904 N.W.2d 410
    , 413 (Iowa Ct. App. 2017) (finding trial court improperly “became a witness”
    by relying on matters outside the trial record). The line between factfinder and
    witness can be crossed where observations by the judge are the basis for a finding
    on a disputed fact that must be proved and corroborated. See Dworkis v. Dworkis,
    
    111 So. 2d 70
    , 74 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1959) (“The effect of a trial judge’s
    observation of a party’s manner and demeanor in the court room should be limited
    to its bearing on the credibility to be accorded to the party’s testimony given under
    oath; and such observations by the judge should not be the basis for findings by
    9
    the court on disputed facts, to the contrary of that party’s position, because in so
    doing a judge may be said to have made himself a witness, unsworn and not cross-
    examined.”). Here, we have no basis for evaluating the court’s evaluation of Joel’s
    condition as there is no record of what he did or how he used his body from which
    to assess the findings. Without the medical evidence the district court seemed to
    seek, it instead made medical findings about a party. That left Joel with no
    opportunity to cross-examine, offer countervailing evidence, or know upon what
    evidence the court relied when making its decision.
    Jacquelyn argues that despite the court’s observations, it never veered from
    the conclusion that Joel received social security payments based on a disability
    and could only receive SSD earnings. What is unclear from the record is what
    impact the court’s observations of Joel’s functioning played in the spousal support
    decision.4 Because no one challenges the disability finding and no one countered
    with vocational choices for Joel or what earnings he might reap, on this record we
    find it would be unlikely for Joel now with his shoulder injury to earn what he made
    at the height of his career.
    5. The Wabasha real estate had rental income potential. Joel disputes the
    district court’s finding that the Wabasha home had rental income potential.
    Apparently, based on past tax returns, the parties did recognize income from
    4   In the ruling on the posttrial motion, the court stated:
    The Court rendered its findings from the tax records and personal
    observations in the courtroom. [Joel] also indicated his status as a
    recipient of disability was coming on for review. The Court cannot
    speculate as to what that might mean for him, but the Court viewed
    a man capable of participating in trial, communicating with
    confidence and moving without severe limitation.
    10
    renting the lake home. But Joel’s point is well taken here; if the Wabasha house
    serves as his primary residence, the rental opportunity is unrealistic.
    6. An award of alimony to Joel would require Jacquelyn to increase her
    monthly earnings given the new tax laws.          Addressing tax ramifications and
    spousal support, the court noted, “With the new tax laws and the effect such has
    on alimony, [Jacquelyn] will have to increase her current income to meet a present
    day value to pay any alimony in order to maintain her business and her expenses.”
    Joel asserts the court erred by concluding that if Jacquelyn paid spousal support
    the new tax laws impacting deductibility of the payment would require Jacquelyn
    to increase her income. The practical impact of the tax changes is that there is an
    increased cost to the payor when a payment of spousal support is ordered. In re
    Marriage of Mann, 
    943 N.W.2d 15
    , 21 (Iowa 2020) (addressing the greater
    economic impact of paying spousal support on the payor because of changes in
    tax law deductibility). The payor pays the support amount and cannot deduct the
    payment on the tax return, so the payor is effectively taxed on the amount. But we
    address tax considerations, along with other factors, as a part of the overall
    fairness analysis if we determine spousal support is warranted.           
    Iowa Code § 598
    .21A(1)(g). The district court’s comments about tax laws do not impact our
    overall de novo review of the factual findings.
    7. After Joel pays the balance of the furniture and boat loans his monthly
    expenses will be “almost non-existent.”       We acknowledge that this comment
    “cherry picked” out of the decree is not an accurate reflection of Joel’s monthly
    expenses. Joel assumed the boat loan ($15,906.32 total with a $726.20 monthly
    11
    payment) and the furniture loan ($1208.77 with a$197 monthly payment).5 From
    his financial affidavit, Joel has other monthly expenses but these loans will be
    satisfied in short order. We consider the reasonable expenses of both parties as
    developed in this record.
    8. The current asset distribution allows Joel to realize his retirement plan.
    Much of the trial revolved around Joel’s retirement concerns. He rejects the district
    court’s conclusion the property distribution, which Joel did not appeal, solved his
    retirement goals. The court noted “[n]ow that awards of assets are made in this
    decree, [Joel] will be able to commence planning for distribution from his retirement
    account as was his plan given his station in life.” After an equalization payment to
    Jacquelyn of $125,000, Joel netted assets of $597,910. The $125,000 payment
    would be transferred from Joel’s retirement plan monies of $593,920, leaving him
    $468,920 in that account. On the other side of the ledger, Jacquelyn received net
    assets valued at $365,599. Joel did not appeal this property award.
    We recognize and agree that Joel’s plan to accumulate $1 million dollars
    before accessing the retirement monies at age seventy and one-half years was not
    achieved. Jacquelyn denies participation in the planning and instead noted that
    Joel’s testimony referenced only “my goal” and “my plan.” And with the dissolution
    of the marriage, it is not unrealistic to expect that previous goals and plans might
    require modification.
    We next address Joel’s spousal support request.
    5   Debt balances come from Jacquelyn’s financial affidavit.
    12
    B. Was Joel entitled to an award of spousal support? In the history of
    this marriage, Joel carried the mantle of primary breadwinner for many years of
    the union. Now he is on the verge of his retirement years, and Jacquelyn arguably
    has another decade or more in the labor market. After this long-term marriage and
    with the disability Joel experiences, he argues that spousal support is mandated
    under these facts. He lobbies for a payment of $4391.46 per month to support his
    pre-dissolution lifestyle. While the length of this marriage meets the durational
    threshold used to consider a spousal award, our inquiry does not stop there. See
    In re Marriage of Gust, 
    858 N.W.2d 402
    , 410–11 (Iowa 2015) (concluding
    marriages lasting over twenty years “merit serious consideration for traditional
    spousal support”).
    But the central question comes down to the analysis of need and ability to
    pay. 
    Id. at 411
    . The “yardstick” for determining need is whether the spouse can
    “become self-sufficient at ‘a standard of living reasonably comparable to that
    enjoyed during the marriage.’” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted); see also 
    Iowa Code § 598
    .21A(1)(f).     We also review the earning capability of the spouses, not
    necessarily just the actual income. See In re Marriage of Wegner, 
    434 N.W.2d 397
    , 399 (Iowa 1988) (“We have consistently examined the earning capacity [of
    the parties] beyond simply ascertaining present income.”). We also look at the
    case avoiding a prism defined by gender. Generally the historical record of the
    spouse’s earnings provides a starting point to determine earning capacity, but we
    only have a one-year history for Joel and a three-year history for Jacquelyn. With
    little evidence about Joel’s earning capacity, we are left with testimony and a
    review of the 2017 joint tax return. We glean that Joel receives SSD of $2249 plus
    13
    a long-term insurance disability payment of $470, which may or may not be
    continued. And there was no vocational rehabilitation information about any return
    to work given his disability. On the flip side, the tax returns support Jacquelyn’s
    three years of substantial earnings in her counseling endeavor, with a monthly
    average gross income of $14,115. The disparity between earnings equals $11,396
    each month.
    Yet “[s]pousal support ‘is not an absolute right, and an award thereof
    depends upon the circumstances of a particular case.’” Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d
    at 486 (citation omitted). Those important circumstances are incorporated into a
    statutory checklist of factors to review. Those factors relevant here include: (a)
    length of the marriage, (b) the age and physical and emotional health of the parties,
    (c) the property distribution, (d) the education level of each party, (e) the earning
    capacity of the party seeking maintenance, including educational background,
    training, employment skills and work experience, (f) the feasibility of the party
    seeking maintenance becoming self-supporting at a standard of living reasonably
    comparable to that enjoyed during the marriage, and (g) tax consequences to each
    party. Id.; see also 
    Iowa Code § 598
    .21A(1). Our cases applying the statute have
    identified three kinds of support: traditional, rehabilitative, and reimbursement.
    See In re Marriage of Becker, 
    756 N.W.2d 822
    , 826 (Iowa 2008); In re Marriage of
    Francis, 
    442 N.W.2d 59
    , 63–64 (Iowa 1989). The categories may overlap in some
    cases. See, e.g., Becker, 
    756 N.W.2d at 827
     (involving spousal support award the
    court could not characterize as strictly rehabilitative or traditional). Traditional
    spousal support is often used in long-term marriages where “life patterns have
    been largely set, [and] the earning potential of both parties can be predicted with
    14
    some reliability.” Francis, 
    442 N.W.2d at
    62–63; see also In re Marriage of Kurtt,
    
    561 N.W.2d 385
    , 388 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997). “The purpose of a traditional or
    permanent alimony award is to provide the receiving spouse with support
    comparable to what he or she would receive if the marriage continued.” In re
    Marriage of Hettinga, 
    574 N.W.2d 920
    , 922 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997).
    Under the statutory checklist, the length of this marriage meets the
    threshold period for an award of spousal support. See Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 411.
    Next, at trial, Joel was sixty years old and Jacquelyn was fifty-one years old. Both
    parties are well educated but Jacquelyn has attained a master’s degree. And while
    the parties acknowledged that Joel served as the primary breadwinner for many
    years of the marriage, he now is disabled and out of the workforce. In contrast,
    Jacquelyn has moved into the peak of her career, with another sixteen years of
    earning power until reaching a traditional retirement age of sixty-seven. Turning
    to the property division, the district court found that given Joel’s “current
    circumstances” he should receive most of the retirement account. Joel received
    about 63.9% of the net marital assets, leaving Jacquelyn with 36.1%. Generally in
    marriages of long duration, the property award is substantially equal. Id. With
    retirement savings now equaling $468,920, Joel only has his SSD income to meet
    expenses and will be required to dip into that savings. If required to pay spousal
    support, Jacquelyn suggested at trial that she would rather transfer more assets
    to Joel than be saddled with a monthly alimony payment.6 And it appears the
    6The court noted Jacquelyn would forgo her half share in Joel’s retirement plan to
    avoid an alimony payment.
    15
    district court heeded that proposal. But even with the disparate award favoring
    Joel, Jacquelyn improves her ability to live at the lifestyle the parties maintained.
    The district court considered the couple’s lifestyle and said this:
    The Court did not receive any information about the family’s lifestyle.
    The Court did not hear about expensive family vacations. The Court
    did not hear about expensive or elaborate homes or vehicles. The
    family carried balances on loans for larger purchases. There was no
    testimony offered to indicate that either gambled, over imbibed or
    haphazardly spent money. They seemed to enjoy time in Wabasha.
    It can be gleaned that the Petitioner enjoys horses and Respondent
    enjoys fishing. Both will be able to continue these recreational
    pursuits given the division of the assets herein.”
    We recognize the trial court was in the best position to balance the parties’
    needs, and we should intervene on appeal only where there is a failure to do equity.
    See Olson, 
    705 N.W.2d at 315
    . Arguments for spousal support for Joel are (1) his
    disability, (2) his age of sixty years, and (3) Jacquelyn’s substantial earnings. The
    compelling argument against a spousal support award to Joel is the award of
    63.9% of the parties’ property. “We consider alimony and property distribution
    together in assessing their individual sufficiency.     They are neither made nor
    subject to evaluation in isolation from one another.” Hettinga, 
    574 N.W.2d at 922
    .
    Because Joel received a greater share of the marital property, it is important
    to weigh that factor against his request for spousal support. Indeed, Jacquelyn’s
    earnings allow her to afford a spousal support award.          Her financial affidavit
    estimated her monthly expenses at $2591.17. In an earlier filed affidavit, Joel first
    described his monthly expense at $1727.42 but then at trial provided a more
    detailed statement showing expenses of $6839.32 per month. Jacquelyn opined
    16
    the estimate was high.7 Thus, when we access the “yardstick” of whether Joel can
    achieve a standard of living reasonably comparable to that enjoyed during the
    marriage, even with the greater balance of assets in his pocket, we do not believe
    he can. Unlike the district court, we find the evidence supports a comfortable
    lifestyle with two homes, boats, and the ability to save significant monies for
    retirement.   And while Joel can access the retirement monies to support his
    lifestyle, Jacquelyn will support her lifestyle without having to reduce her net worth.
    Thus, Joel makes a compelling argument that Jacquelyn can afford to help support
    that similar pre-dissolution lifestyle for him. See Hettinga, 
    574 N.W.2d at 922
    (noting that spousal support “provide[s] the receiving spouse with support
    comparable to what he or she would receive if the marriage continued.”).
    Noting that there is no magic formula for calculating spousal support, we
    look to the specific facts of the case and apply the statutory factors addressing the
    award. Mann, 943 N.W.2d at 20. With consideration of those factors, including
    the property award and the potential tax consequences to the parties, we award
    Joel spousal support of $2500 per month until he reaches age seventy. After that
    date, the spousal support shall be reduced to $1500 per month and the spousal
    support obligation shall terminate when either party dies or Joel remarries.
    IV. Disposition.
    We affirm the district court dissolution order as modified in this opinion.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
    7 Jacquelyn offered that Joel would soon qualify for Medicare/Medicaid and the
    $910 health insurance premium would no longer be an expense. She also pointed
    to two loans (the boat and the furniture), that would be satisfied soon, again
    reducing Joel’s monthly obligations.