In re Adoption of N.I.B.

2019 Ohio 4412
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 2019
Docket2019-A-0050
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 4412 (In re Adoption of N.I.B.) 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 N.I.B., 2019 Ohio 4412 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Adoption of N.I.B., 2019-Ohio-4412.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ASHTABULA COUNTY, OHIO

IN THE MATTER OF THE : OPINION ADOPTION OF: N.I.B. : CASE NO. 2019-A-0050 :

:

Civil Appeal from the Ashtabula County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, Case No. 2018 AD 0018.

Judgment: Affirm.

David J. Sternberg, Sternberg & Zeid Co., L.P.A., 7547 Mentor Avenue, #301, Mentor, OH 44060 (For Appellant, Daniel Bosna).

Jon D. Axelrod, Axelrod Law Offices, 7976 Tyler Boulevard, Mentor, OH 44060 (For Appellee, Scott Burt).

MARY JANE TRAPP, J.

{¶1} Appellant, Daniel Bosna (“Mr. Bosna”), appeals from the judgment of the

Ashtabula County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, finding that his consent to

the adoption of his child was not required. The trial court found that while Mr. Bosna had

provided child support during the year preceding the filing of the adoption petition, there

was no justifiable cause for Mr. Bosna’s failure to have any contact with his son for at

least one year before the adoption petition was filed.

{¶2} After our careful review of the evidence, we find that the trial court’s findings

were supported by the weight of the evidence and by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Bosna’s failure to contact was without justifiable cause. There was no question that

Mr. Bosna did not have any contact with his son after 2015. While the evidence

demonstrated the child’s mother failed to respond to his emails sent via the prison system

and failed to provide her new phone number and address when she and the child moved

during the summer of 2016, there was also no question that despite having actual

knowledge of mother’s address for six months before the filing of the petition, Mr. Bosna

failed to contact or attempt to contact his son. Mr. Bosna failed to present a facially

justifiable cause for this failure to communicate. Thus, we must affirm the decision of the

court below.

Substantive and Procedural Facts

{¶3} Mr. Bosna is the biological father of N.I.B., born February 22, 2010. N.I.B.’s

biological mother is Samantha Burt (“Mrs. Burt”).

{¶4} On April 17, 2018, appellee, Scott Burt (“Mr. Burt”), Samantha Burt’s

husband and N.I.B.’s stepfather, filed a petition for adoption of N.I.B. The petition alleged

that Mr. Bosna’s consent to adoption was not required since he had failed to have more

than de minimis contact with the child over the past year and did not pay support during

that time. Samantha Burt filed a Consent to Adoption on the same date.

{¶5} Mr. Bosna filed objections to petition for adoption, and an evidentiary

hearing was held. Pursuant to the App.R. 9(C), “Reconciled Statement of the Evidence,”1

the following testimony was presented:

{¶6} Mrs. Burt testified that Mr. Bosna went to prison in the spring of 2012 for

1. A transcript was unavailable due to the malfunction of the trial court’s recording equipment. In order to supplement the record, the parties submitted a proposed statement of the evidence and amendments, the trial court issued a statement of the evidence on July 29, 2019, summarizing the testimony pursuant to App.R. 9(C), and the judge made his handwritten notes a part of the record.

2 burglary and drugs. She, Mr. Bosna’s mother, Laura Vidmar (“Ms. Vidmar”), and N.I.B.

visited Mr. Bosna in prison twice between May 2012 and June 2015. She and Mr. Bosna

had a “J-Pay” account which allowed email communication while he was incarcerated.

She began communicating with Mr. Bosna via this account in 2013 but stopped

responding to his emails in June 2015, although he continued to send her messages.

The record does not reflect how long Mr. Bosna continued to send email messages after

she “stopped responding.”

{¶7} Mrs. Burt discussed moving in with Ms. Vidmar in the summer of 2015,

although this did not occur. She met Scott Burt in November 2015, moved in with him in

June 2016, and married him in September 2016. She changed her phone number in July

2016 and did not give the new phone number to Ms. Vidmar or Mr. Bosna. She testified

that Ms. Vidmar contacted her via Facebook Messenger, but she did not respond. Her

last contact with Ms. Vidmar was in February 2016.

{¶8} Mrs. Burt testified that Mr. Bosna “was aware she got her mail at her

parents’ house” and that this was “her mailing address” but Mr. Bosna never sent mail to

her or N.I.B. In October 2017, she wrote a letter to Mr. Bosna asking him to consent to

adoption and included a consent form with her new address, but received no response.

She testified that prior to the filing of the adoption petition in April 2018, she had not heard

from Mr. Bosna since 2015.

{¶9} Mr. Bosna testified that he had been incarcerated since May 2012, and his

3 last contact with Mrs. Burt and N.I.B. was in 2015.2 He mailed no cards or

correspondence since that time because he did not have Mrs. Burt’s address. Although

“[h]e could have gotten [Burt’s parents’] address, and that was not difficult * * * he felt that

if he sent a letter there, it would be thrown away.” He received the consent form in

October 2017 but did not sign it.

{¶10} Ms. Vidmar testified that Mrs. Burt and Mr. Bosna lived with her beginning

in 2009 when Mrs. Burt became pregnant. Mrs. Burt and N.I.B. lived with her “on and off”

for several years until 2014. She continued to have contact with Mrs. Burt and N.I.B., but

in September 2015 that contact became limited. Around Christmas 2015, Ms. Vidmar no

longer had Mrs. Burt’s current phone number. Ms. Vidmar contacted a common friend

and requested for Mrs. Burt to call her, but no contact occurred. Ms. Vidmar saw Mrs.

Burt’s parents at a store and inquired about N.I.B. They told her they would have Mrs.

Burt contact her, but this did not occur. Mrs. Burt’s mother, Maureen Bauer, testified that

she and her husband did not pass along the message since they believed Ms. Vidmar

was not “sincere or genuine.”

{¶11} On May 10, 2019, the court issued a judgment entry ruling that Mr. Bosna’s

consent to the adoption was not required under R.C. 3107.07. The court found that he

failed to maintain more than de minimis contact with N.I.B. for the year preceding the filing

of the adoption petition given that his last communication with Mrs. Burt and N.I.B. was in

2015. The court further found no justifiable cause for the lack of communication because,

2 The dissent cites a “lack of clarity” in the record regarding Mr. Bonsa’s testimony as to the date of his last attempt to contact N.I.B. Both the judge’s handwritten notes and the App.R. 9(C) statement indicate Mr. Bosna testified that his last contact occurred in 2015 and “that is accurate.” The notes taken by the trial court during Mr. Bosna’s testimony read “last contact 2015-accurate” and a later note reads, “February 2017-probably right last.” It is only speculation that the latter note concerned a contact attempt and the trial court is in the best position to interpret its notes. Moreover, Mr. Bosna did not raise any issue with the App.R. 9(C) statement on appeal.

4 although Mrs. Burt did not respond to 2015 email communications, Mr. Bosna did not mail

other communications, such as cards or written correspondence, although he conceded

“it would not have been difficult” to get Mrs. Burt’s parents’ mailing address. After he had

actual knowledge of Mrs. Burt’s mailing address in October 2017, he still did not attempt

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In re Adoption of A.L.S.
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In re J.W.
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In re Adoption of Holcomb
481 N.E.2d 613 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1985)
In re Adoption of Masa
492 N.E.2d 140 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1986)
In re Adoption of Bovett
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In re Hayes
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