In re I.B-C.

2019 Ohio 1464
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 2019
Docket18CA3647 18CA3648 18CA3649 18CA3650 18CA3651 18CA3652 18CA3653 18CA3654 18CA3655 18CA3656 18CA3657
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 1464 (In re I.B-C.) 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 I.B-C., 2019 Ohio 1464 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as In re I.B-C. , 2019-Ohio-1464.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ROSS COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF : Case Nos. 18CA3647 18CA3648 I.B-C. : 18CA3649 J.B-K. 18CA3650 N.M.K. : 18CA3651 N.C.D.B-K. 18CA3652 R.E.K. : 18CA3653 T.A.B.K. 18CA3654 : 18CA3655 18CA3656 : 18CA3657 :

ADJUDICATED DEPENDENT CHILDREN : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY : RELEASED: 04/03/2019

APPEARANCES:

Matthew P. Brady, Grove City, Ohio, for appellant mother.

Chase B. Bunstine, Chillicothe, Ohio, for appellant father.

Matthew S. Schmidt, Ross County Prosecuting Attorney, and Jennifer L. Ater, Ross County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Chillicothe, Ohio, for appellee.

Hess, J. {¶1} After the Ross County Juvenile Court granted permanent custody of their

six children1 to the county Children’s Services Division (“agency”), the mother and father

appealed. The father’s sole assignment of error is that the trial court erred when it found

that the agency made reasonable efforts towards reunification. The record reflects that

the trial court made reasonable-efforts findings at several stages of the proceedings.

1The mother is the biological parent of all six children. The father is the biological parent of all the children except I.B-C. I.B-C.’s biological father is serving a 16-year prison term. Ross App. Nos. 18CA3647, 18CA3648, 18CA3649, 18CA3650, 18CA3651, 18CA3652, 18CA3653, 18CA3654, 18CA3655, 18CA3656, 18CA3657 2

Therefore, the agency established that reasonable efforts had been made prior to the

hearing on the motion for permanent custody. Where the court has made earlier findings

that the agency made reasonable reunification efforts, it need not do so at a hearing on

a motion for permanent custody. Nonetheless the trial court made such a finding, and

the record supports it. We overrule the father’s sole assignment of error.

{¶2} The mother raises three assignments of error. First she contends that the

trial court’s finding that J.B-K. could not be placed with her within a reasonable time and

should not be placed with her was not supported by clear and convincing evidence. She

contends that the trial court did not make specific findings under the applicable statute.

However, no party filed a request for findings of fact and conclusions of law. The failure

to request findings of fact and conclusions of law ordinarily results in a waiver of the right

to challenge the trial court’s lack of an explicit finding concerning an issue. Thus we

presume that the trial court considered all the factors and all other relevant facts. The

evidence supports a finding that the mother repeatedly and continuously failed to

substantially remedy her substance abuse issue, which was one of the conditions that

caused J.B-K.’s removal. We overrule mother’s first assignment of error.

{¶3} Next she contends that the trial court erred in not determining and

specifically addressing the statutory best interest factors. Specifically, she argues that the

trial court did not consider the wishes of the children. Again, because no party requested

specific findings, the trial court had no obligation to make them. Nevertheless, we find

that the trial court considered all the enumerated best interest factors, including the Ross App. Nos. 18CA3647, 18CA3648, 18CA3649, 18CA3650, 18CA3651, 18CA3652, 18CA3653, 18CA3654, 18CA3655, 18CA3656, 18CA3657 3

children’s wishes as expressed by the guardian ad litem, and set forth these findings even

though no party requested them. We overrule the mother’s second assignment of error.

{¶4} Last mother contends that the trial court’s determination that permanent

custody was in the best interest of the children was against the manifest weight of the

evidence. However, after weighing the evidence and all reasonable inferences,

considering the credibility of the witnesses after according the requisite deference to the

trial court’s determinations, we conclude that the trial court did not clearly lose its way or

create a manifest miscarriage of justice. We overrule the mother’s third assignment of

error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. FACTS

{¶5} The agency filed dependency actions and received temporary custody of

five of the children in September 2016. In December 2016, the trial court adjudicated the

children dependent. That same month the father pled guilty to domestic violence and

endangering children involving his six-year old child, T.A.B-K.; he received a sentence of

seven months in prison. When the sixth child, J.B-K., was born in January 2017, the

agency received temporary custody. In March 2017 the trial court adjudicated J.B-K.

dependent. In June 2017 prior to the father’s release from prison, the trial court ordered

him not to have any contact with his children until further order. In January 2018, the

agency sought permanent custody of all six children under R.C. 2151.413. The guardian

ad litem recommended that the agency have permanent custody of all six children.

{¶6} The permanent custody hearing occurred over a two-day period on May 21,

and July 2, 2018. Both parents tested positive for illegal drugs at the end of the first day Ross App. Nos. 18CA3647, 18CA3648, 18CA3649, 18CA3650, 18CA3651, 18CA3652, 18CA3653, 18CA3654, 18CA3655, 18CA3656, 18CA3657 4

of the hearing. Neither parent attended the July hearing date. The court proceeded with

the hearing in their absence, as neither had spoken with their attorney since the last

hearing and their whereabouts were unknown.

{¶7} Social worker Martha Grear testified that she was a participant with the

Ross County Family Drug Court and first began working with the mother in the summer

of 2016. Grear diagnosed the oldest child, I.B-C., with autism and attempted to help the

mother find stable housing and employment. Grear testified that the mother never

succeeded in obtaining stable housing or employment, her whereabouts became

unknown, and the drug court eventually terminated her case.

{¶8} Cheri Smitley, the coordinator for the Ross County Family Drug Court,

testified that the mother was admitted to the drug court program but she did not

successfully complete drug counseling services, stopped coming to drug court, was found

in contempt of the drug court orders, and was terminated for non-compliance with the

drug court rules and regulations. In August 2017, the court terminated the mother from

its program “for ongoing non-compliance with treatment, continued use of illegal

substances, ongoing non-compliance with RCFDC Rules, failure to appear for RCFDC

hearings without just cause, and failure to comply with child welfare case plan.”

{¶9} After the mother was terminated from drug court in August 2017, she

entered an inpatient drug treatment program for opiate dependency in October 2017. The

program administrator testified that the mother left the facility with the father on a six-hour

pass in March 2018 and never returned. The mother did not successfully complete the

drug treatment program. Ross App. Nos. 18CA3647, 18CA3648, 18CA3649, 18CA3650, 18CA3651, 18CA3652, 18CA3653, 18CA3654, 18CA3655, 18CA3656, 18CA3657 5

{¶10} Tracy Hathaway, a court liaison with a substance abuse treatment center,

testified that she saw the father while he was in the Ross County jail in January 2018 and

provided him with information about drug treatment services in Pike County where he

resided.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re K.B.
Ohio Court of Appeals, 2026

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 Ohio 1464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ib-c-ohioctapp-2019.