In Re Grant, Unpublished Decision (2-8-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 2001
DocketNo. 00AP-431.
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Grant, Unpublished Decision (2-8-2001) (In Re Grant, Unpublished Decision (2-8-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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In Re Grant, Unpublished Decision (2-8-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations, Juvenile Branch, granting permanent custody of DeJuan Grant, born March 16, 1996, to Franklin County Children Services.

Testimony at the hearing before the trial court established that DeJuan was removed from the care of his mother, Shamika Grant, and placed in foster care in June 1997, after unsuccessful efforts by Franklin County Children Services ("FCCS") to forestall placement by improving the child's family circumstances. FCCS received temporary custody of DeJuan and his younger half-sister Leseanda in September 1997. Although subsequent proceedings addressing placement and custody of the two children have often been contemporaneous, determinations concerning Leseanda are not at issue in the present appeal.

After obtaining temporary custody of DeJuan, FCCS prepared a reunification case plan and filed it with the court. The proposed case plan required Ms. Grant to address her documented substance abuse problems, obtain and maintain adequate housing, acquire and demonstrate parenting skills, eliminate domestic violence situations in her home, and address her own mental health difficulties. Progress on the reunification plan was interrupted when Ms. Grant was incarcerated until November 1998 on an attempted felonious assault conviction. After her release from prison, Ms. Grant did not make further progress on the case plan according to her FCCS caseworker at the time, and in fact, only visited DeJuan three times between November 1998 and the June 7, 1999 date of hearing on FCCS's permanent custody motion. Ms. Grant had last visited DeJuan on January 22, 1999 and did not attend the permanent custody hearing.

It is uncontroverted that appellant Marvin Parker, the putative father of DeJuan, was not given notice prior to the September 11, 1997 dependency determination. At the permanent custody hearing, however, FCCS presented evidence that appellant was not identified as the putative father of DeJuan until February 1998, and in fact no paternal involvement by anyone had been invoked in the agency's prior dealings on behalf of DeJuan. After finally being advised by Ms. Grant that appellant was the putative father, FCCS served notice of the motion for permanent custody on appellant who was, at the time, incarcerated. While still incarcerated, appellant contacted a caseworker and expressed a desire to establish a case plan addressing reunification with DeJuan. Appellant has at no time, however, moved for a legal determination of paternity of DeJuan or otherwise taken steps to demonstrate that he is actually DeJuan's father. Upon his release from prison appellant did visit regularly with DeJuan in the months of August and September 1998, and the caseworker believed that appellant was beginning to build a positive relationship with DeJuan. Appellant was, however, re-incarcerated in September 1998, and in March 1999 sentenced to a three-year term for a robbery conviction. FCCS introduced at the hearing appellant's records showing a total of fifteen convictions for various crimes.

After the permanent custody hearing, the magistrate filed on August 31, 1999, a decision finding that parental rights should be terminated and DeJuan should be permanently committed to the custody of FCCS. The magistrate found that DeJuan could not be reunited with his parents within a reasonable time as required by R.C. 2151.414(E), and that permanent custody was in the best interests of the child because the parents had failed to make progress to remedy the conditions that caused the child to be placed outside the home.

Appellant filed objections to the magistrate's decision. In a decision and judgment entry entered on March 28, 2000, the juvenile court overruled appellant's objections and adopted the magistrate's decision granting permanent custody of DeJuan to FCCS. The court found that there was overwhelming evidence that DeJuan could not be placed with either parent within a reasonable time, and furthermore, that it was not in the child's best interest that he be placed with either parent under the circumstances. The court noted the lack of contact between DeJuan and his parents, the absence of relatives willing or able to care for DeJuan until his parents improved their position, and DeJuan's close bond with his sister Leseanda who was already in the permanent custody of FCCS, thus improving the prospect of the children staying together. The court noted testimony that DeJuan and Leseanda were doing well in their common foster home and had a good relationship with their foster parents. The court also noted the agreement between the FCCS caseworker and the guardian adlitem supporting the magistrate's conclusion. Finally, the court found that appellant had not been prejudiced by his failure to receive notice of the 1997 dependent child determination.

Appellant has timely appealed and brings the following assignments of error:

I. The Trial Court erred in not vacating the dependency judgment entry filed September 11, 1997 and in not dismissing Franklin County Children Services' motion for permanent custody of the child, DeJuan Grant, for lack of jurisdiction on the basis that Appellant, Marvin Parker, the father of the child, was not provided notice and the opportunity to be heard in violation of Appellant's fundamental rights pursuant to the First and Ninth Amendments of the United States Constitution and the Ohio Constitution, Article I, Bill of Rights, Sections One, Three, and Twenty and the Due Process and Equal Protection provisions of the United States and the Ohio Constitutions with regard to the following grounds: (1) Denial of Appellant's fundamental expression of speech and right of association; (2) Denial of Appellant's fundamental right to notice and the opportunity to be heard; (3) fundamental unfairness; and (4) Denial of the Equal Protection of the laws.

II. The Trial Court erred in admitting Appellant's convictions occurring prior to the birth of the child, DeJuan Grant, that were irrelevant, substantially prejudicial, and misleading in violation of Ohio R. Evid. 401, 402, and 403 and Appellant's fundamental rights pursuant to the First and Ninth Amendments of the United States Constitution and the Ohio Constitution, Article I, Bill of Rights, Sections One, Three, and Twenty and the Due Process and Equal Protection provisions of the United States and the Ohio Constitutions with regard to the following grounds: (1) Denial of Appellant's fundamental expression of speech and right of association; (2) fundamental unfairness; and (3) Denial of the Equal Protection of the laws.

III. The Trial Court erred in denying Appellant's Motion setting forth two (2) requests (a) a trial by an impartial jury and (b) declaring Ohio R. Juv. P. 27 (A) and Ohio Rev. Code § 2151.35 (A), which requires the Juvenile Court to hear and determine all cases of children without a jury, unconstitutional and therefore void in violation of Appellant's fundamental rights pursuant to the First, Seventh, and Ninth Amendments of the United States Constitution and the Ohio Constitution, Article I, Bill of Rights, Sections One, Three, Five, and Twenty and the Due Process and Equal Protection

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455 U.S. 745 (Supreme Court, 1982)
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Bluebook (online)
In Re Grant, Unpublished Decision (2-8-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grant-unpublished-decision-2-8-2001-ohioctapp-2001.