In re Adoption of M.M.

2023 Ohio 397
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 2023
DocketH-22-016
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 397 (In re Adoption of M.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Adoption of M.M., 2023 Ohio 397 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Adoption of M.M., 2023-Ohio-397.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT HURON COUNTY

In re Adoption of M.M. Court of Appeals No. H-22-016

Trial Court No. AD0202200007

DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Decided: February 10, 2023

***** Brian J. Lamb, for appellee.

Anthony J. Richardson, II, for appellant.

*****

MAYLE, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, B.J., appeals the September 30, 2022 judgment of the Huron

County Probate Court finding that his consent to the adoption of his natural child, M.M.,1

by appellee, D.M., was not required. For the following reasons, we affirm.

1 We note that the parties refer to the child as “M.M.” in their briefing, which is consistent with the case caption herein, In re Adoption of M.J.M. It appears, however, that the child’s current initials are M.J.J., as the request to change the child’s legal name to one with the initials M.J.M. remains pending in the probate court. Nonetheless, we I. Background and Facts

{¶ 2} M.M. was born on May 27, 2011, to M.M. (“mother”) and B.J. (“father”).

Mother and father were never married. Mother is married to D.M. (“stepfather”), the

petitioner herein. Father is married to C.J., with whom he shares one daughter, A.J.

Father and C.J. do not have custody of their daughter—instead, A.J. has been living with

mother, stepfather, and her half-brother, M.M., since 2018. Father and C.J. have engaged

in court-ordered visitation with A.J. during that time.

{¶ 3} On April 13, 2022, stepfather filed a petition to adopt M.M., with mother’s

express consent. The petition alleged that father’s consent was not required because he

had “failed without justifiable cause to provide more than de minimis contact with the

minor for a period of at least one year immediately preceding the filing of the adoption

petition” and “failed without justifiable cause to provide for the maintenance and support

of the minor as required by law or judicial decree for a period of at least one year

immediately preceding the filing of the adoption petition.”

{¶ 4} By order dated June 27, 2022, the probate court bifurcated the issues of

father’s consent and whether adoption would be in the best interests of the child, and set a

hearing for September 2, 2022, to determine whether father had waived his consent to the

adoption.

will refer to the child as M.M. to be consistent with the case caption and the parties’ briefing.

2. {¶ 5} At the beginning of the September 2 evidentiary hearing, stepfather’s

attorney clarified that because “[t]here has been some child support payments made

within the last year,” stepfather intended to proceed solely on the theory that father failed

without justifiable cause to provide more than de minimis contact with M.M. during the

relevant one-year time period. The following witnesses testified at the hearing: mother,

stepfather, father, his wife C.J., and his grandmother, S.S.

{¶ 6} Mother testified that she is the biological mother of M.M., and she is

married to stepfather. Mother and stepfather live with four children in their household—

their two biological children plus M.M. and A.J., the biological daughter of father and his

wife, C.J. Father and mother were never married and never lived together after she had

M.M.

{¶ 7} Mother says that father’s involvement with M.M. has been very

“inconsistent” since M.M. was born, meaning that he “could be there for a month and

then two months not be there,” and “he doesn’t really visit [M.M.] or really make calls to

[M.M.]” In 2012—when M.M. was one year old—father served some time in jail, and

wrote a letter to mother from jail stating that he was prepared to “sign” over his “rights”

as M.M.’s father.2 Mother claimed that father changed his mind when he learned of the

2 Father repeatedly objected to any testimony or evidence regarding occurrences outside the relevant one-year time period preceding the adoption petition—i.e., April 13, 2021 to April 13, 2022. The court overruled these objections because it found that “a history of evidence of a relationship between the parties” is relevant to the “subjective” element of “justifiable cause.” Indeed, a probate court is authorized to consider evidence outside the one-year statutory period when determining whether parental consent is required under

3. adoption petition. Mother testified that she has never denied father any request to visit

with M.M., but she acknowledged that she has been giving M.M. the choice of whether to

“go” with father since he was ten years old. She said that even though father regularly

contacts her for visits with A.J., he only contacts her regarding M.M. on his birthday—

May 27—every year.

{¶ 8} Mother identified a screen shot of all text messages that she had with father

between August 21, 2020 and April 11, 2022. There is a single text message from father

on May 27, 2021 regarding M.M. in which he states, “[c]an I talk to [M.M.] today and

tell him happy birthday[?]” Mother did not respond to the text, but she testified that she

“gave [M.M.] an option” to speak with his father, but he did not have a conversation with

his dad that day.

{¶ 9} Mother confirmed that—other than the birthday text on May 27, 2021—

father did not text, call, or message mother regarding M.M. at any other time during the

relevant one-year period preceding the adoption petition. Father knows where she lives,

and knows her phone number. Mother is also available for contact on social media.

{¶ 10} Father does, however, regularly contact mother regarding visitation with

his biological daughter A.J., who has been in the custody of mother and stepfather since

2018. After A.J. was initially placed in mother’s home, father would visit A.J. on a

weekly basis at mother’s home—and, given that M.M. also lived there, father would see

R.C. 3107.07(A). See In re Petition for Adoption of Z.H., 6th Dist. Williams No. WM- 22-002, 2022-Ohio-3926, ¶ 46.

4. M.M. during those visits. Father and C.J. would also pick up A.J. for visits, and they

would occasionally take M.M. for visits along with A.J. Mother, however, does not

remember how long that arrangement lasted, but she does remember that M.M. spent a

week with father in 2018. Mother testified that at a certain point, father began picking up

A.J. but not M.M. When asked if she knew why M.M. stopped going on these visits, she

said, “I was not asked for [M.M.]”

{¶ 11} Since 2021, the parties have exchanged custody of A.J. every other

weekend at the sheriff’s station. Mother estimates that there were approximately five to

ten exchanges of A.J. at the sheriff’s station between April 2021 and April 2022. Mother

says that father never asked to speak with or visit M.M. during any of their exchanges at

the sheriff’s station, although father did mention M.M. during a conversation in April

2022. According to mother, father told her that he was putting A.J. into a demolition

derby and “if [M.M.] wanted to go, he could go, but he did not ask if [M.M.] could go, he

just made a statement that [M.M.] could go.” She also believes that it was during this

same conversation that father was informed that stepfather had just filed a petition to

adopt M.M.

{¶ 12} Stepfather testified next. He said that he is not aware of any requests by

father to see M.M. between April 13, 2021 and April 13, 2022, nor is he aware of any

gifts or cards or correspondence from father to M.M.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re B.
2025 Ohio 2801 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
In re Adoption of G.A.J.-K.
2025 Ohio 1276 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
In re C.N.
2023 Ohio 659 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-mm-ohioctapp-2023.