In Re Benoit, Unpublished Decision (11-2-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 2000
DocketNo. 76128.
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Benoit, Unpublished Decision (11-2-2000) (In Re Benoit, Unpublished Decision (11-2-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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In Re Benoit, Unpublished Decision (11-2-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY and OPINION
Appellant Jessie Benoit appeals the decision of the Cuyahoga Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division granting permanent custody of his five children to appellee Cuyahoga County Department of Children and Family Services (CCDCFS). Benoit assigns the following four errors for our review:

I. BY COMMITTING FIVE CHILDREN TO PUBLIC AGENCY CUSTODY WHEN RELATIVES OFFERED SUITABLE, PERMANENT HOMES, THE JUVENILE COURT FAILED TO SERVE THE CHILDREN'S BEST INTERESTS.

II. THE COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN COMMITTING FIVE CHILDREN TO THE PERMANENT CUSTODY OF A PUBLIC AGENCY WITHOUT MAKING FINDINGS REQUIRED BY STATUTE AND CONTROLLING CASE LAW.

III. THE JUVENILE COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN FAILING TO DETERMINE WHETHER APPELLEE MADE REASONABLE EFFORTS TO ELIMINATE THE REMOVAL OF APPELLANT'S CHILDREN FROM THEIR HOME, AS REQUIRED BY JUVENILE RULE 27(B)(1).

IV. THE COURT'S ACCEPTANCE OF THE GUARDIAN AD LITEM'S REPORT SEVEN DAYS AFTER TRIAL VIOLATED APPELLANT'S DUE PROCESS RIGHTS AND THE STATUTORY REQUIREMENT OF 2151.414(C) THAT THE GUARDIAN'S WRITTEN REPORT BE FILED PRIOR TO OR AT THE TIME OF THE DISPOSITIONAL HEARING IN A CASE INVOLVING ABUSE, NEGLECT OR DEPENDENCY.

Having reviewed the record and the legal arguments of the parties, we affirm, in part, and reverse, in part, the judgment of the trial court. The apposite facts follow.

Appellant Jessie Benoit is the legal father of Kunhwa and Jacques Benoit, and Cynthia, Henry and Jessie Blade. Kunhwa and Jacques' mother, Jin Suk Parks, left the children in Benoit's care prior to November 1987. Parks' whereabouts are unknown. Similarly, Cynthia, Henry, and Jessie's mother, Plushette Blade, left the children in Benoit's care. Her whereabouts are also unknown.

The children were committed to the temporary custody of CCDCFS in July 1996, after Benoit left them at home, unsupervised, with no food. In July 1998, CCDCFS moved for permanent custody of the children. The court set trial on CCDCFS' motion for January 25, 1999.

At trial, CCDCFS presented two witnesses Paula Risdale, a foster care social worker with Family Connections the 12, Inc. and Amanda McElhinny, the CCDCFS social worker assigned to the Benoit case. Amanda McElhinny testified her involvement with the case began in May 1998. However, she testified CCDCFS first opened a case with Benoit in October 1989, when police responded to a call from Benoit stating someone attempted to break into his home. When the police arrived, they found the children living in deplorable conditions. According to McElhinny, Benoit lacked working utilities, and the police found dog feces, vomit and garbage throughout the house. Based on these conditions, the CCDCFS removed the children from Benoit's care. McElhinny testified CCDCFS provided Benoit with services to assist him in getting his utilities turned on and getting the house cleaned up. Additionally, CCDCFS assisted Benoit in getting beds for the children. CCDCFS returned the children to Benoit and closed the case in January 1990.

CCDCFS re-opened the Benoit case in July 1996 when Benoit left the children in the house without adult supervision. At the time, the oldest of the five children was twelve years old. Again, the police found Benoit's house in deplorable condition. McElhinny reported the house contained broken windows with broken glass on the floors, one mattress for the five children to share, and no food. Upon further investigation, CCDCFS discovered Benoit frequently left the children alone.

McElhinny testified CCDCFS removed the children from Benoit's care and developed a case plan for reunification. The case plan provided Benoit with a parent's aide to work with Benoit on keeping the house clean, budgeting, making grocery lists, and developing appropriate parenting skills. The case plan also required Benoit to attend parenting classes and submit to a drug and alcohol assessment and to follow through with all recommendations made as a result of the assessment. CCDCFS included the alcohol and drug assessment in Benoit's case plan based on information indicating Benoit received a discharge from the army because of his abuse of alcohol.

McElhinny testified the parent's aide began working with Benoit in September 1996. According to McElhinny, Benoit established a good working relationship with the parent's aide and cooperated with the aide's recommendations. Nevertheless, the parent's aide discontinued contact with Benoit in April 1997, preferring to continue his involvement when CCDCFS returned the children to Benoit's care. Regarding the alcohol and drug assessment, McElhinny testified Benoit participated in the assessment as required and that the assessment did not result in treatment recommendations. However, Benoit failed to successfully complete his parenting classes as required. McElhinny stated Benoit possessed a poor attendance record and failed to cooperate with instructors on the occasions when he came to class. McElhinny testified Benoit stopped attending parenting classes in June 1997 when he fled to Louisiana to avoid a pending rape charge in Ohio. The parenting class provider dropped Benoit from the class in August 1997 for lack of participation.

McElhinny testified law enforcement apprehended Benoit in Louisiana staying with relatives. However, McElhinny indicated the relatives appeared to have been unaware of Benoit's fugitive status. Law enforcement returned Benoit to Ohio in September 1997. McElhinny testified Benoit has been incarcerated since his return to Ohio.

McElhinny testified that when CCDCFS removed the children from Benoit's care in 1996, they placed them in foster care. At the time of the initial foster care placement, CCDCFS investigated placing the children with Plushette Blade's relatives. However, Blade's mother stated she could not care for the children. Blade's sister volunteered to care for the children; however, CCDCFS considered her home inappropriate because she had a child of her own and only has a two bedroom house for six kids. No other maternal relatives came forward.

While in foster care, the three youngest children made disclosures that suggested Benoit subjected the children to sexual abuse. The children made the first disclosures in September 1996. According to McElhinny, Cynthia, who was six years old at the time, alleged Benoit touched her vagina and she touched his genitals. McElhinny revealed information disclosed by the minor child Jessie. In the disclosures, Jessie indicated he had been whooped by Benoit when Jessie refused Benoit's sexual advances. Jessie also told McElhinny that when he was four years old, he touched Benoit. McElhinny testified the two oldest children made no disclosures of sexual abuse. Based on the younger children's allegations, CCDCFS facilitated additional interviews and medical examinations of the children. McElhinny stated the medical examination found no evidence to support the children's claims. Nevertheless, the CCDCFS social worker assigned to the case in 1996 considered the children's allegations credible. McElhinny testified CCDCFS referred the matter to the police for further investigation; however, the police brought no charges against Benoit with regard to the children.

McElhinny testified CCDCFS placed all five children in counseling to address issues of sexual acting out behavior, physical abuse (based on Henry's statement that dad whooped me), and abandonment. Additionally, CCDCFS asked that Henry be assessed as a sexual offender. Further, CCDCFS required the three younger children to sleep in separate rooms.

McElhinny also testified regarding the children's experience in foster care.

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In re William S.
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Bluebook (online)
In Re Benoit, Unpublished Decision (11-2-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-benoit-unpublished-decision-11-2-2000-ohioctapp-2000.