In Re Harshey

341 N.E.2d 616, 45 Ohio App. 2d 97, 74 Ohio Op. 2d 120, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5796
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 31, 1975
Docket34210
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 341 N.E.2d 616 (In Re Harshey) 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 Harshey, 341 N.E.2d 616, 45 Ohio App. 2d 97, 74 Ohio Op. 2d 120, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5796 (Ohio Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

Jackson, J.

Appellants, Mr. and Mrs. William «I. Harshey, appeal from a judgment of the Probate Court of Cuyahoga County denying their petition for t'he adoption of Gary Harshey (hereinafter Gary).

Appellants had, on February 1, 1973, applied to the Cuyahoga County Welfare Department to adopt “a child.” Upon learning from a foster parent, Mrs. Kocsis, that one of her foster children, Gary Elledge, was available for *98 adoption, the Harsheys petitioned to adopt Gary Harshey. 1

Mrs. Kocsis, a distant relative of the Harsheys was an independent licensed foster mother. She had adopted Gary’s older half-brother, Nick, and renamed him “Freddy.” Gary’s mother had placed Gary in the physicial custody of Mrs. Kocsis, who had planned to adopt Gary also until she became pregnant with twins. At this time, she informed the Harsheys that Gary was available for adoption.

Mrs. Kocsis occasionally permitted the Harsheys to take Gary with them for short visits, including five days in April when Mrs. Kocsis was in the hospital having twins, and several subsequent weekends.

After taking Gary for these visitations, the Harsheys decided that they would like to adopt him. On August 9, 1973, appellants filed a petition for the adoption of Gary Harshey. Thereafter, on August 24, 1973, the Juvenile Court of Cuyahoga County found that Gary Elledge was a neglected child and committed him to the permanent care and custody of appellee, the Cuyahoga County Welfare Department, for the purpose of adoption.

Appellee then filed a motion to dismiss the Harsheys’ petition to adopt Gary. Without ruling on the suitability of the Harsheys to adopt Gary, the Probate Court granted appellee’s motion to dismiss appellants’ petition to adopt. The apparent rationale of the Probate Court’s decision was that since the Welfare Department had not consented to the adoption as required in R. C. 3107.06, the Probate Court was without jurisdiction to grant the adoption. Citing State, ex rel. Portage County Welfare Dept., v. Summers (1974), 38 Ohio St. 2d 144, we reversed this judgment of the trial court and ordered the cause remanded for a full hearing to be conducted in accordance with R. C. 3107.09, and our opinion, In re Harshey (1974), 40 Ohio App. 2d 157.

*99 Upon remand, in October of 1974, the Probate Court conducted a hearing on appellants’ petition for the adoption of Gary. At this hearing, employees of the Cuyahoga County Welfare Department did give some testimony indicating that the Harsheys were not suitable adoptive parents. Patricia Zaccaro, a social worker from the adoption department of the Cuyahoga County Welfare Social Services Division, made a home study of the Harsheys. This study was done in relation to t'he suitability of the Harsheys as adoptive parents for the subject child, Gary. Patricia Zaccaro expressed reservations as to whether the Harsheys were emotionally fit to be adoptive parents. Ann Cowan, Patricia Zaccaro’s supervisor was also of the opinion that the Harsheys were not suitable adoptive parents for Gary. Ann Cowan’s opinion was not based upon first hand observations, but upon the information related to her by Patricia Zaccaro.

The trial court rejected all of the negative testimony concerning the suitability of the Harsheys as adoptive parents. In its opinion, 2 the Probate Court made the following observations concerning the suitability of the Harsheys :

“The Court has heard a great deal of testimony regarding the quality of the suitability of the Harsheys. Applying that testimony to the standards of maturity, stability, financial ability and love of children, this young couple comes through with flying colors. Mr. Harshey is a fireman, served in the Marines handling delicate assignments and is well regarded in the community. Mrs. Harshey has shown great courage and resourcefulness in two situations, where, as a bank teller with a gun placed at her head she reacted immediately and calmly tripped the alarm; and in the other instance, took the automobile license number of the bank robber resulting in the capture of t'he armed robber. The other tests are met, as well. ’ ’

*100 In spite of this finding that the Harsheys met all the tests of adoptive parents, the trial court denied their petition for the adoption of Gary, and ordered the Harsheys placed on the Welfare Department waiting list of prospective adoptive parents “at such a position as they would now be had they been approved as adoptive parents in February of 1973.”

Appellee agrees, in its brief, that the rationale for the trial court’s decision is found in the portion of the court’s opinion titled “The Adoption Process,” which reads as follows:

“The petitioners, the Harsheys, stand in no different shoes than do those many couples now on the waiting list. The Court in deciding this case cannot ignore the love, concern and anxiety felt by these prospective parents who have been approved, for some time now, after the adoptive home-studies were made, and who have waited patiently for a child to be placed in their homes for what seems to them an eternity.
“An additional concern is the integrity of the entire program of adoption — to illustrate, if so-called baby sitting parents are permitted to adopt the child they care for, as the circumstance of this case, then a circumvention occurs of the rights of those deeply committed prospective adoptive parents who have long been on the existing, waiting list.
“The Court believes that adoptive children should not be up for grabs. Therefore, the total and complete integrity of the waiting list must be honored.”

The Harsheys have assigned five errors for review on appeal:

1. “The Probate Court erred in holding that the total and complete integrity of a social agency’s waiting list for adoptive couples must be honored, where no statutory basis exists for either such list or for the holding recognizing the list.”
2. “The Probate Court erred in basing its decision on matters not in evidence.”
3. “The Probate Court erred in failing to grant ap *101 pellants’ amended petition for adoption of the child Gary Elledge where the com t found, in terms, that by the ‘ * * * standards of maturity, stability, financial ability and love of children, this young couple comes through with flying colors,’ and that ‘ [t]he other tests are met, as well.’ ”
4. “The Probate Court erred in finding that the best interests of Gary Elledge would be promoted by slavish adherence to a waiting list without regard to the child’s relationship with appellants.”
5. “Having found it desirable for Gary Elledge to grow up in proximity with his half-brother Freddy (called Nick in the opinion), and 'having found that ‘. . . they should be reared in such a manner as to be associated with each other from time to time . .

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Bluebook (online)
341 N.E.2d 616, 45 Ohio App. 2d 97, 74 Ohio Op. 2d 120, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-harshey-ohioctapp-1975.