In re D.K.

2023 Ohio 4148
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 2023
DocketC-220587
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 Ohio 4148 (In re D.K.) 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 D.K., 2023 Ohio 4148 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as In re D.K., 2023-Ohio-4148.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

IN RE: D.K. AND D.K. : APPEAL NO. C-220587 TRIAL NO. F19-1553Z :

: O P I N I O N.

Appeal From: Hamilton County Juvenile Court

Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: November 17, 2023

Eppley Legal Group and Mark C. Eppley for Appellant Mother,

Stagnaro Hannigan Koop, Co., L.P.A., and Michaela M. Stagnaro for Appellee Father. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

W INKLER , Presiding Judge.

{¶1} In this legal-custody appeal, the juvenile court awarded legal custody

of twins D.K.1 and D.K.2 (“the Twins”) to father. Mother now appeals, raising seven

assignments of error, relating to issues including the use of an affidavit to remedy a

recording error, purportedly tainting the juvenile court’s independent review of the

magistrate’s decision and denying mother the due process of law. Following our

review of the record and applicable case law, we overrule all seven assignments of error

and affirm the judgment of the juvenile court.

Facts and Procedural History

I. Background

{¶2} This case has a long factual history1 replete with the contentiousness of

two parents that simply cannot get along. We begin in the fall of 2017 on the dating

app Tinder. There, mother and father matched and began a brief romance. For

approximately a month, the couple dated, eventually resulting in mother discovering

she was pregnant with the Twins. These children became the subject of a long-running

custody dispute that began in 2018 and culminated in this appeal.

{¶3} The evidence around the beginning of mother’s pregnancy is unclear.

Mother had informed father a few months after she discovered she was pregnant. At

that time, she told father that he was not the Twins’ father. Instead, mother told her

then-paramour that he was the Twins’ father, hoping that it would be him.

{¶4} Mother substantiated her claims by taking a DNA test while pregnant

and claimed the results showed her then-paramour was indeed the Twins’ father.

1 We note our task was made harder by the failure of appellant to cite to specific portions of the

record. See 1st Dist. Loc.R. 16.1(A)(3)(c).

2 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

Father requested the results of the test, but mother never produced them, claiming

that she have lost the results and could not locate the company that performed the test

to acquire a copy of the results.

{¶5} The Twins were born in June 2018, and mother initiated a child-

support proceeding as a condition of receiving government assistance. In 2019, a DNA

test was conducted as part of that proceeding that established father’s legal paternity

of the Twins and excluded mother’s then-paramour. By then, father had permanently

moved to Wisconsin where his family lives and got engaged to his fiancée. Father filed

a petition for custody of the Twins, and both parents secured counsel, beginning the

juvenile court proceedings that are the subject of this appeal.

II. The juvenile court proceedings

{¶6} Both mother and father sought legal custody of the Twins. The juvenile

court made efforts for mother and father to mediate and establish parenting time for

father. The juvenile court issued an interim parenting-time order, but communication

between the parents broke down as each parent accused the other of frustrating

parenting the Twins.

{¶7} The proceedings became mired with discovery disputes, repeated

recriminations, and long litigation. Mother accused father of making no effort to form

a relationship with the Twins before his paternity was established in 2019. Father

counters by accusing mother of frustrating his attempts to develop a relationship with

the Twins and not responding to his requests for parenting time.

{¶8} The magistrate’s report cites a planned trip to Perfect North Slopes, a

skiing resort in Indiana, as a representative example of the parents’ conflict. Father

and mother agreed to meet at Perfect North Slopes for the Twins to spend the day with

3 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

father and his other children. Mother initially said she and the Twins were on their

way, but after an hour, mother called and asked father to pick the Twins up. Father

left the resort to meet mother, but she never showed up and later contacted father and

apologized.

{¶9} After two years of litigation, the parties went before a magistrate for a

trial on the Twins’ custody on May 17, 2021. At trial, father put on his case-in-chief,

including testimony on direct-examination from father, father’s fiancée, and the

Twins’ paternal aunt, and testimony from mother as if on cross-examination. After

father’s case-in-chief, the magistrate recessed the court for lunch, pausing recording.

When the trial resumed, mother put on her case-in-chief consisting of mother’s

testimony only, but the magistrate did not resume the recording. Seven months later,

on January 22, 2022, the magistrate issued a decision summarizing all the testimony

presented, granting father legal custody of the Twins and designating father as the

residential parent. The magistrate set out a transition plan to move the Twins from

mother’s care to father’s care.

{¶10} While preparing objections to the magistrate’s report, mother

discovered the magistrate’s recording error. Thus, there was no recording of mother’s

case-in-chief or her direct-examination testimony for the juvenile court to review

when ruling on the objections while father’s case-in-chief was transcribed, including

mother’s extensive testimony as if on cross-examination.

{¶11} When mother discovered this recording error, she moved to vacate the

trial and requested that proceedings be reopened.2 Instead, the juvenile court ordered

2 The magistrate who heard the trial had since left the juvenile court, so reopening proceedings

would necessitate restarting with a new magistrate.

4 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

that mother submit an affidavit that contained her missing testimony so as to complete

the record. Mother did so and submitted 48 pages of testimony to support her

objections. The juvenile court overruled mother’s objections and adopted the

magistrate’s decision with additional analysis responding to the objections. Mother

timely appealed the juvenile court’s judgment.

Law and Analysis

{¶12} Mother raises seven assignments of error, relating to issues arising

from the juvenile court’s order to file an affidavit in lieu of the portion of the

proceedings that was not recorded and could not be transcribed as well as challenging

the juvenile court’s best-interest determination, the manifest weight of the evidence,

and requesting custody as a matter of law. For organizational clarity, we address the

assignments of error out of order.

{¶13} As a general matter, “custody issues are some of the most difficult and

agonizing decisions a trial judge must make. Therefore, a trial judge must have wide

latitude in considering all the evidence before him * * * and such a decision must not

be reversed absent an abuse of discretion.” Kane v. Hardin, 1st Dist. Hamilton No.

C-180525, 2019-Ohio-4362, ¶ 6, quoting Davis v. Flickinger, 77 Ohio St.3d 415, 418,

674 N.E.2d 1159 (1997).

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2023 Ohio 4148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dk-ohioctapp-2023.