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CourtListener opinion 9972944

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF LONNIE DALE NYE AND HEATHER MARIE NYE Upon the Petition of LONNIE DALE NYE
Extracted reporter citation
966 N.W.2d 630
Docket / number
23-0350
QDRO relevance 5/5Retirement relevance 5/5Family-law relevance 5/5gold label pending
Research-use warning: This page contains machine-draft public annotations generated from public opinion text. The headnote is not Willie-approved gold-label work product and is not legal advice. Verify the full opinion and current law before relying on it.

Machine-draft headnote

Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 9972944 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to pension / defined benefit issues. The current annotation is conservative: it identifies source provenance, relevance signals, and evidence quotes for attorney/agent retrieval. It is not a Willie-approved legal headnote yet.

Retrieval annotation

Draft retrieval summary: this opinion has QDRO relevance score 5/5, retirement-division score 5/5, and family-law score 5/5. Use the quoted text and full opinion below before relying on the case.

Category: pension / defined benefit issues

Evidence quotes

QDRO

Mr. Peabody and Sherman may have had the luxury of the "wayback machine," but that doesn't mean the courts can revisit decrees due to the supreme court's clarification. The amended 5 decree herein clearly sets forth the parties' intent. Furthermore, a QDRO was provided to the court as instructed. The marital property order, signed by the attorneys for both parties, identifies [Heather] as an alternate payee. The following language is included in the order prepared by [Lonnie]'s attorney: 1. The Alternate Payee is awarded a dollar amount of the monthly pension from the System to which the Member is otherw

retirement benefits

a chapter 411 ordinary disability benefit are income and not property and thus not subject to equitable division because they replace income that an individual would have earned if not for an injury causing the disability." According to Lonnie, "as [his] retirement account is a benefit [he] earned under [c]hapter 411, it is now classified as income and therefore no longer subject to distribution." Following a hearing, the district court entered an order denying Lonnie's petition for modification. Lonnie appeals. II. Standard of Review "A proceeding to modify . . . a marriage dissolution decree subsequent to its entry

pension

and Badding and Langholz, JJ. 2 BOWER, Chief Judge. Twelve years after a property settlement was reached between Lonnie Nye and Heather Gadue, Lonnie filed a petition for modification of the parties' decree, which awarded Heather half of his retirement pension. Lonnie claimed a change of circumstances stemming from his diagnosis with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and initiation of disability payments from his pension. Lonnie challenged Heather's receipt of half of the monthly disability benefit payments and sought to classify these payments as spousal support subject to modification. The district cou

alternate payee

reme court's clarification. The amended 5 decree herein clearly sets forth the parties' intent. Furthermore, a QDRO was provided to the court as instructed. The marital property order, signed by the attorneys for both parties, identifies [Heather] as an alternate payee. The following language is included in the order prepared by [Lonnie]'s attorney: 1. The Alternate Payee is awarded a dollar amount of the monthly pension from the System to which the Member is otherwise entitled: $501.00. The Alternate Payee shall not be entitled to a proportionate share of any increases in the Member's pension upon entry of this Ord

Source and provenance

Source type
courtlistener_qdro_opinion_full_text
Permissions posture
public
Generated status
machine draft public v0
Review status
gold label pending
Jurisdiction metadata
US
Deterministic extraction
reporter: 966 N.W.2d 630 · docket: 23-0350
Generated at
May 14, 2026

Related public corpus pages

Deterministic links based on shared title/citation terms and QDRO / retirement / family-law retrieval scores.

Clean opinion text

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

 No. 23-0350
 Filed May 22, 2024

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF LONNIE DALE NYE
AND HEATHER MARIE NYE

Upon the Petition of
LONNIE DALE NYE,
 Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning
HEATHER MARIE NYE, n/k/a HEATHER MARIE GADAU,
 Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

 Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lee (North) County, John M. Wright,

Judge.

 Lonnie Nye appeals the district court's denial of his petition for modification

concerning a property-distribution provision of the parties' decree. AFFIRMED.

 Kelly L. Grossman of The Law Shop by Skogerson McGinn LLC, Van Meter,

for appellant.

 William Monroe of Law Office of William Monroe, Burlington, for appellee.

 Heard by Bower, C.J., and Badding and Langholz, JJ.
 2

BOWER, Chief Judge.

 Twelve years after a property settlement was reached between Lonnie Nye

and Heather Gadue, Lonnie filed a petition for modification of the parties' decree,

which awarded Heather half of his retirement pension. Lonnie claimed a change

of circumstances stemming from his diagnosis with post-traumatic stress disorder

(PTSD) and initiation of disability payments from his pension. Lonnie challenged

Heather's receipt of half of the monthly disability benefit payments and sought to

classify these payments as spousal support subject to modification. The district

court denied these arguments, and Lonnie appeals. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

 Lonnie and Heather married in 2003 and divorced in 2010.1 At the time of

their divorce, Lonnie was working as a firefighter and entitled to a pension through

the Municipal Fire & Police Retirement System of Iowa. The parties stipulated to

the terms of their dissolution decree, which awarded Heather half of the pension

that accumulated during their marriage.

 Lonnie worked as a firefighter for the next five years until he was diagnosed

with PTSD. He then qualified for an Iowa Code chapter 411 ordinary disability

retirement due to his PTSD. See Iowa Code §§ 411.6(3), .1A(1) (2022). This

waived any benefit in Lonnie's retirement pension, and he began receiving

disability benefit payments, half of which were paid to Heather.

 In 2022, Lonnie filed a petition for modification, claiming a substantial

change in circumstances pursuant to our supreme court's ruling in In re Marriage

1 A default judgment was entered against Heather in 2009, which was later set

aside, and an amended decree was entered in 2010.
 3

of Miller, 966 N.W.2d 630, 639 (Iowa 2021), which held "future payments from a

chapter 411 ordinary disability benefit are income and not property and thus not

subject to equitable division because they replace income that an individual would

have earned if not for an injury causing the disability." According to Lonnie, "as

[his] retirement account is a benefit [he] earned under [c]hapter 411, it is now

classified as income and therefore no longer subject to distribution."

 Following a hearing, the district court entered an order denying Lonnie's

petition for modification. Lonnie appeals.

II. Standard of Review

 "A proceeding to modify . . . a marriage dissolution decree subsequent to

its entry is triable in equity and reviewed de novo on appeal." In re Marriage of

Mullen-Funderburk, 696 N.W.2d 607, 609 (Iowa 2005). "[W]e give weight to the

findings of the trial court but are not bound by them." In re Marriage of Sjulin, 431

N.W.2d 773, 776 (Iowa 1988).

III. Analysis

 Lonnie argues because he was diagnosed with PTSD and began

withdrawing disability from his pension, the monthly payments to Heather have

morphed into a form of spousal support. He asserts this form of payment was not

provided by the decree and therefore the payments must be reclassified.

 "In dissolution-of-marriage cases, marital property is to be divided equitably,

considering the factors outlined in Iowa Code section 598.21[(5)]." In re Marriage

of McDermott, 827 N.W.2d 671, 678 (Iowa 2013) (citation omitted). An equitable
 4

distribution of property based upon these factors "does not require an equal

division of assets." Id. at 682 (citation omitted).

 At the time of their divorce Lonnie and Heather had been married for six

years. The parties stipulated to the decree awarding Heather half of Lonnie's

retirement pension that accumulated during their marriage. This was the status

quo for the last twelve years and would have been the arrangement had Lonnie

not started receiving disability payments. It is clear the parties agreed and

intended for Lonnie's pension to be divided in their separation. A property

distribution is not subject to modification after a dissolution. See Iowa Code

§ 598.21(7). As the district court found:

 The court concludes that the award to [Heather] of one-half of
 the marital portion of [Lonnie]'s pension is an equitable division of the
 marital assets at the time the Amended Decree was filed and not
 alimony.
 [Lonnie] had originally obtained a decree that preserved his
 pension as entirely his. Once the court set aside that decree,
 [Lonnie] had to negotiate with [Heather] to resolve the pension issue.
 The parties and their attorneys negotiated what became the
 Amended Decree. That decree even includes crossed-out
 sentences and handwritten changes. The parties and their counsel
 signed the document. The court signed it when presented.
 The decree clearly sets forth the parties' intentions regarding
 property distribution. They understood [Heather] was to receive the
 future benefit of a monthly payment once [Lonnie] began drawing his
 pension. But, before he did this, [Lonnie] chose to accept disability
 payments and not pension payments. Disability payments started
 far sooner than pension benefits would have begun.
 The Iowa Supreme Court has given courts and attorneys
 guidance on the issue in this case. In In re Marriage of Miller, 966
 N.W.2d 630 (Iowa 2021) the [c]ourt held that ordinary disability
 benefits are not marital property, while pensions are marital property.
 Practically speaking, the court cannot award a spouse a marital
 portion of the other's disability payments. The court can award a
 spouse his or her marital portion of the other's pension, however.
 Mr. Peabody and Sherman may have had the luxury of the
 "wayback machine," but that doesn't mean the courts can revisit
 decrees due to the supreme court's clarification. The amended
 5

 decree herein clearly sets forth the parties' intent. Furthermore, a
 QDRO was provided to the court as instructed.
 The marital property order, signed by the attorneys for both
 parties, identifies [Heather] as an alternate payee. The following
 language is included in the order prepared by [Lonnie]'s attorney:
 1. The Alternate Payee is awarded a dollar amount of the
 monthly pension from the System to which the Member is otherwise
 entitled: $501.00. The Alternate Payee shall not be entitled to a
 proportionate share of any increases in the Member's pension upon
 entry of this Order or following the Member's retirement.
 [Heather]'s equitable portion of the couple's marital property
 included her share of [Lonnie]'s pension. The QDRO states she is
 to receive $501.00 per month unless [Lonnie] takes his money before
 he is eligible. Then, [Heather] would receive a specific lump sum and
 no monthly payments. To now change this arrangement everyone
 agreed to would be outside the trial court's authority because it is a
 property distribution and it is not modifiable. The court concludes the
 parties did not intend for the monthly benefits to be alimony. They
 were a property division.

 Lonnie attempts to bolster his argument, claiming "the disability benefit must

be considered alimony as it is characterized as income as directed by the Iowa

Supreme Court in In re Marriage of Miller." However, he misses a key difference

between Miller and this case. In Miller, the husband's disability benefits began

prior to the finalization of the parties' dissolution. See 966 N.W.2d at 634–35. In

that situation, the court found the husband's "chapter 411 ordinary disability

benefits replace income that [he] would have earned if not for an injury causing the

disability and should be treated as income and not property." Id. at 635.

 Here, however, Lonnie's disability benefits were not in place at the time the

decree was entered. As the district court noted, a court can only consider the

property at the time of the decree, and the court does not have a magic mirror to

look into the future to see how the property might change.

 In this case, these funds stem from Lonnie's pension, which the parties

agreed to divide. Had Lonnie not begun drawing his pension until retirement,
 6

Heather would have begun receiving payment then, per the decree. To now

suggest she not entitled to her portion of retirement benefits simply because

Lonnie's benefit is being paid by an alternative method would be inequitable and

contrary to the parties' original agreement.

 Lonnie also asks the court to grant his petition to modify the original decree

based on the factors laid out in Iowa Code section 598.21C, which applies to

modification of child, spousal, or medical support orders. However, because we

have found the distribution of Lonnie's pension to be part of the parties' agreed-

upon property division rather than spousal support, there is no need for us to

evaluate whether there should be a modification. It is worth noting, however, a

change of the law does not necessarily equate to a change in circumstance.

VI. Trial Attorney Fees

 Lonnie challenges the district court's order that he pay $3630 toward

Heather's trial attorney fees. An award of trial attorney fees rests in the sound

discretion of the district court. In re Marriage of Michael, 839 N.W.2d 630, 639

(Iowa 2013). The key factor to be considered is "the parties' respective abilities to

pay." Id. We do not disturb a ruling on attorney fees unless the court abused its

discretion. In re Marriage of Wessels, 542 N.W.2d 486, 491 (Iowa 1995).

 Here, the district court noted, "But for [Lonnie]'s request to terminate

[Heather]'s right to a portion of his pension, now disability payment, she would not

have incurred her attorney fees." The court further found Heather's attorney's time
 7

spent to be "reasonable except for the assistant's time of [three] hours and the time

spent developing the fee request." We find no abuse of the court's discretion.

V. Appellate Attorney Fees

 Heather requests appellate attorney fees. "Appellate attorney fees are not

a matter of right, but rather rest in this court's discretion." In re Marriage of Okland,

699 N.W.2d 260, 270 (Iowa 2005). We consider the needs of the party and the

ability of the other party to pay, and the relative merits of appeal. Id. We observe

Heather has been required to defend the district court's ruling, which we have

affirmed in her favor, and both parties have the ability to earn income. Based on

the record before us, we determine Lonnie should pay $2000 in appellate attorney

fees. The costs of the appeal are assessed to Lonnie.

 AFFIRMED.