In re F.G.

2024 Ohio 5709
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 2024
Docket114025
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ohio 5709 (In re F.G.) 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 F.G., 2024 Ohio 5709 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as In re F.G., 2024-Ohio-5709.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

IN RE F.G., ET AL. : : No. 114025 [Appeal by the State] :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: December 5, 2024

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Juvenile Division Case Nos. AD22905807, AD22905809, AD22905814, AD22905815, AD22905816

Appearances:

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Joseph C. Young, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellant.

Wegman Hessler Valore, Dean M. Valore, and Matthew O. Williams, for appellee.

MARY J. BOYLE, P.J.:

This appeal involves a child-protection matter relating to five

children, who are siblings, before the Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court in Case Nos.

AD22905807, AD22905809, AD22905814, AD22905815, AD22905816.1 Plaintiff-

1 Because the filings in all five cases are nearly identical, citations to the record will

be to Case No. AD22905807 unless a more specific citation is warranted. appellant, the Cuyahoga County Division of Children and Family Services (“the

agency”), appeals the decisions of the trial court denying the agency’s motions for

permanent custody and ordering the five children be placed in the legal custody of

their Mother with protective supervision. The agency raises one assignment of error

for our review:

The trial court’s judgments denying [the agency’s] motion for permanent custody in favor of an order of legal custody to Mother with an order of protective supervision are contrary to the evidence presented at trial.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I. Facts and Procedural History

On June 7, 2022, Mother’s six children were removed from her home

pursuant to an ex parte telephonic order.2 The next day the agency filed a complaint

alleging that the children were abused, neglected, and dependent and requested a

dispositional order of temporary custody to the agency, which was granted after a

hearing that same day. The crux of the complaint was that the children witnessed

domestic violence between Mother and Father.3

At a hearing in September 2022, Mother stipulated to amended

allegations of the complaint and the children were adjudicated abused, neglected,

2 Mother’s oldest child who was eight years old at the time of removal, has a

different father, and is not subject to this appeal. The children at issue in this appeal were between the ages of one and seven when they were removed.

3 Father was assigned an attorney, but Father did not participate in the case plan

or the proceedings. and dependent and were ordered to be placed in the temporary custody of the

agency. The stipulations of fact indicated that Mother and Father have repeatedly

engaged in “behaviors” in the presence of their children, one of which required law

enforcement intervention, and that Mother has contact with their Father despite his

propensity for violence. (Agency Motion, R. 101.) In addition, two of the children

had been adjudicated neglected in 2015, and dependent in 2018, due in part to

domestic violence between Mother and Father.

In March 2023, the agency sought and was granted an extension of

the temporary custody orders because, although Mother had completed domestic

violence services, additional work was needed, and Father had “made no efforts to

address the anger management and domestic violence concerns which led to the

children’s removal.” (Agency Motion, R. 112.) The trial court noted in its entries

that “there has been some progress on the case plan by Mother but more progress

needs to be made in alleviating the cause for the removal of the child[ren] from the

home.” (Journal Entry, May 22, 2023, R. 137.)

In May 2023, the agency filed a case plan amendment seeking, in part,

to progress to unsupervised visits for Mother. That plan was rescinded, however,

after the now nine-year-old alleged that their Father was in Mother’s kitchen when

the children arrived for their first unsupervised visit. Then on October 25, 2023, the

agency filed a motion to modify temporary custody to permanent custody. The

motion alleged that Mother had continued to maintain a relationship with the

Father despite their long-standing pattern of domestic violence and despite Mother’s completion of domestic violence services and that Mother’s ongoing

relationship with the Father “has caused a regression in the children’s clinical

progress.” (Agency Motion R. 149.)

Trial commenced upon the agency’s motions on April 12, 2024, and

May 17, 2024. The following is a summary of evidence that was presented at trial.

The agency established, by way of stipulated exhibits, that the two

oldest children were adjudicated as neglected and placed in agency custody in 2015

due in part to the domestic violence between Mother and Father. In 2018, another

incident led to the same two children being adjudicated dependent due in part to

domestic violence. In both cases, Mother was required to address issues of domestic

violence and mental health. Both times Mother completed the case plan, and the

children were reunified with Mother. (Agency trial exhibits Nos. 11-15, R. 109.)

The agency worker Sydney Petroski (“Petroski”) testified that she was

assigned to the case from August 2022 to July 2023, after another worker had the

case for a short period of time. She testified that she did not believe Mother

benefited from her previously completed domestic violence classes because she

continued her relationship with the children’s Father and had three more children

with him who were now the subject of these proceedings. Petroski testified the

current case was opened in May 2022, once again due to concerns of domestic

violence in the home between Mother and Father. Petroski alleged that in June

2022, the police responded to Mother’s home and Father was hiding in the house and “the domestic violence concerns included using a weapon and strangulation.”

(Tr. 22.)

Petroski testified that following the children’s removal, the agency

developed and implemented a case plan in an effort to promote the permanency plan

of reunification. The case plan included services to address Mother’s issues with

domestic violence and mental health. Petroski testified that although Mother

completed the mental health assessment, Petroski felt that the Mother minimized

the effect domestic violence had on her life and did not provide true and accurate

information during the assessment. Petroski opined that because Mother had

expressed no concerns during the assessment, it did not include any

recommendations for her. Petroski testified that Mother needed counseling to

determine why there is a “pattern of domestic violence.” (Tr. 26, 45.)

Petroski testified that Mother maintained that she had no contact

with Father throughout the pendency of this case. Petroski, however, did not believe

Mother and claimed that she continued to hide her involvement with the children’s

Father. Petroski based this on the incident that led to the children’s removal in June

2022, and allegations from the nine-year-old that their Father was in their Mother’s

kitchen when the children arrived two hours early for an unsupervised visit in 2024.

Petroski testified that on the date of the alleged incident she dropped off the ten-

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 5709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fg-ohioctapp-2024.