In re J.G.
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Opinion
[Cite as In re J.G., 2020-Ohio-4701.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY
In re Adoption of J.G., K.W. Court of Appeals No. L-20-1023 L-20-1024
Trial Court No. 2018 ADP 000142 2018 ADP 000143
DECISION AND JUDGMENT
Decided: September 30, 2020
*****
John F. Potts, for appellant.
David T. Rudebock, for appellee
MAYLE, J.
{¶ 1} In this consolidated appeal, appellants, T.B. and D.B., appeal the January 6,
2020 judgments of the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, denying
their petition to adopt their great-grandchildren, J.G. and K.W. Appellee, Lucas County Children’s Services (“LCCS”), has filed a brief urging us to affirm the trial court
judgments. For the following reasons, we affirm, in part, and reverse, in part, and
remand this matter to the probate court for further proceedings.
I. Background
{¶ 2} J.G. (born in 2012) and K.W. (born in 2016) are the biological children of
Jo.G. On December 12, 2017, Jo.G.’s parental rights were terminated and permanent
custody of the children was granted to LCCS. The children have been in foster care with
a distant cousin, B.G, since August of 2016.
{¶ 3} On September 5, 2018, T.B. and D.B., the children’s maternal great-
grandparents, filed a petition for adoption. LCCS objected to their petition. It argued
that B.G. has taken good care of the children, has been a consistent, stable presence in
their lives, and has expressed an interest in adopting them, while T.B. and D.B. have
never held custody of them, have not maintained consistent contact, have not represented
a consistent, stable presence in their lives, have not approached LCCS to be studied for
adoption, and have not presented LCCS with an approved adoptive home study. It
maintained that the children’s placement with T.B. and D.B. would not be the “least
detrimental alternative” for the children and would not be in their best interest. LCCS
also expressed concern that T.B. and D.B. intended to return the children to their mother,
and it alleged that D.B. had at one time been approved to babysit J.G. with certain
restrictions, but she violated those restrictions and lied to the caseworker about it. LCCS
2. noted that T.B. and D.B. sought custody in the juvenile court case, but the juvenile court
granted custody to LCCS.1
{¶ 4} In a judgment journalized on January 3, 2019, the trial court granted LCCS’s
objection and dismissed the petition after T.B. and D.B. failed to appear for a pre-trial,
notify the court of their legal representation, provide a deposit for their home study, or
respond to LCCS’s objection. T.B. and D.B. moved to vacate the judgment and reinstate
their petition to its docket, and the trial court granted their motion. The matter proceeded
to hearing.
A. The Hearing
{¶ 5} A hearing took place on November 25-26, 2019, “on the issue of whether
[LCCS] is unreasonably withholding its consent” to T.B. and D.B.’s petition to adopt.
The following witnesses testified: D.B.; T.B.; B.G.; Danielle Stroble and Rick Mendieta,
LCCS ongoing caseworkers; Linda Baker, an LCCS adoption caseworker; attorney Mary
Clark, the children’s guardian ad litem (“GAL”); J.E., the children’s maternal
grandmother; A.H., the children’s half-sister; N.H., a family friend; N.M, the children’s
uncle; F.G., the children’s cousin; C.B., T.B.’s son and D.B.’s stepson; and C.R., a cousin
of D.B.
1. Danielle Stroble
{¶ 6} Danielle Stroble is employed by LCCS as an ongoing caseworker. She was
assigned J.G. and K.W.’s case on March 7, 2016, when it went from an investigation to
1 We affirmed the juvenile court judgment. In re J.G., 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-17-1311, 2018-Ohio-3981.
3. an ongoing case. She was taken off the case in May of 2016, because maternal family
members—A.H., specifically—made personal threats against her.
{¶ 7} J.G. and K.W. were removed from their home because of domestic violence
between Jo.G. and K.W.’s father, M.W. Once involved, LCCS became aware of drug
issues and instability in the household. J.G. was placed with J.E., her maternal
grandmother. Jo.G. was pregnant with K.W. at that time.
{¶ 8} When K.W. was born, the agency originally planned to place K.W. with J.E.
But the agency learned that J.E. had allowed J.G. to stay the night unsupervised at Jo.G.’s
home, and a new domestic violence incident occurred in J.G.’s presence. J.E. could no
longer be trusted at this point. The agency obtained an ex parte order for custody and
talked to the family about other relatives who could provide foster care. To Stroble’s
knowledge, T.B. and D.B. did not ask to be considered.
{¶ 9} When J.G. was living with J.E., Stroble spoke with D.B. about being a
support for J.E. This could include babysitting and overseeing visits between Jo.G. and
the children. D.B. and T.B. submitted fingerprints for a background check. The results
came back and arrangements were made for D.B. to babysit J.G. on April 3, 2016, at
J.E.’s home; J.E. would be attending a staffing meeting at the hospital following K.W.’s
birth. D.B. was not permitted to babysit in her own home because a sight and safety
check of D.B. and T.B.’s home was required and had not yet been performed.
{¶ 10} Instead of staying at J.E.’s home with J.G., D.B. showed up at the hospital
for the staffing meeting. Stroble asked D.B. where J.G. was, and D.B. told Stroble that
4. T.B. was watching J.G. at their home. Stroble said that D.B. knew that this was not
permitted because the home had not yet been approved.
{¶ 11} Despite this rule violation, LCCS continued to consider D.B. to be a
support for the family. Stroble explained to D.B. that they were trusting her to follow the
rules and procedures of the agency. She said that D.B., J.E., and Jo.G. all understood that
they needed to follow the rules. But a few days later, J.E. and Jo.G. waited for Stroble
outside court. Stroble asked who was with J.G. J.E. and Jo.G admitted that D.B. was
watching J.G. at D.B.’s home, which had still not been approved. Stroble called D.B. and
asked if J.G. had been to her home and D.B. said no. She did not tell Stroble the truth—
that J.G. was there and had spent the night—until Stroble told her that J.E. and Jo.G. had
already admitted that J.G. was there. At this point, LCCS concluded that D.B. could not
be trusted and could not provide oversight.
{¶ 12} After D.B. lied to Stroble, it was not determined that she could have no
further involvement with the kids; it was merely determined that she could not be
approved as an oversight or babysitter. T.B. and D.B. never asked Stroble about placing
the children with them, so she cannot say that they would not have been considered for
placement, but she acknowledged that an even greater level of trust would be required to
place the children with them.
{¶ 13} Stroble testified that she is not aware of D.B. or T.B. ever sending cards or
letters to the children. On cross-examination, she agreed that while D.B. could not take
J.G. to her own home, she would have been permitted to take her to a public place like
5. the zoo or COSI. Stroble emphasized that if the child was going to be taken to a private
home, this needed to be discussed with a supervisor.
2. Rick Mendieta
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[Cite as In re J.G., 2020-Ohio-4701.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY
In re Adoption of J.G., K.W. Court of Appeals No. L-20-1023 L-20-1024
Trial Court No. 2018 ADP 000142 2018 ADP 000143
DECISION AND JUDGMENT
Decided: September 30, 2020
*****
John F. Potts, for appellant.
David T. Rudebock, for appellee
MAYLE, J.
{¶ 1} In this consolidated appeal, appellants, T.B. and D.B., appeal the January 6,
2020 judgments of the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, denying
their petition to adopt their great-grandchildren, J.G. and K.W. Appellee, Lucas County Children’s Services (“LCCS”), has filed a brief urging us to affirm the trial court
judgments. For the following reasons, we affirm, in part, and reverse, in part, and
remand this matter to the probate court for further proceedings.
I. Background
{¶ 2} J.G. (born in 2012) and K.W. (born in 2016) are the biological children of
Jo.G. On December 12, 2017, Jo.G.’s parental rights were terminated and permanent
custody of the children was granted to LCCS. The children have been in foster care with
a distant cousin, B.G, since August of 2016.
{¶ 3} On September 5, 2018, T.B. and D.B., the children’s maternal great-
grandparents, filed a petition for adoption. LCCS objected to their petition. It argued
that B.G. has taken good care of the children, has been a consistent, stable presence in
their lives, and has expressed an interest in adopting them, while T.B. and D.B. have
never held custody of them, have not maintained consistent contact, have not represented
a consistent, stable presence in their lives, have not approached LCCS to be studied for
adoption, and have not presented LCCS with an approved adoptive home study. It
maintained that the children’s placement with T.B. and D.B. would not be the “least
detrimental alternative” for the children and would not be in their best interest. LCCS
also expressed concern that T.B. and D.B. intended to return the children to their mother,
and it alleged that D.B. had at one time been approved to babysit J.G. with certain
restrictions, but she violated those restrictions and lied to the caseworker about it. LCCS
2. noted that T.B. and D.B. sought custody in the juvenile court case, but the juvenile court
granted custody to LCCS.1
{¶ 4} In a judgment journalized on January 3, 2019, the trial court granted LCCS’s
objection and dismissed the petition after T.B. and D.B. failed to appear for a pre-trial,
notify the court of their legal representation, provide a deposit for their home study, or
respond to LCCS’s objection. T.B. and D.B. moved to vacate the judgment and reinstate
their petition to its docket, and the trial court granted their motion. The matter proceeded
to hearing.
A. The Hearing
{¶ 5} A hearing took place on November 25-26, 2019, “on the issue of whether
[LCCS] is unreasonably withholding its consent” to T.B. and D.B.’s petition to adopt.
The following witnesses testified: D.B.; T.B.; B.G.; Danielle Stroble and Rick Mendieta,
LCCS ongoing caseworkers; Linda Baker, an LCCS adoption caseworker; attorney Mary
Clark, the children’s guardian ad litem (“GAL”); J.E., the children’s maternal
grandmother; A.H., the children’s half-sister; N.H., a family friend; N.M, the children’s
uncle; F.G., the children’s cousin; C.B., T.B.’s son and D.B.’s stepson; and C.R., a cousin
of D.B.
1. Danielle Stroble
{¶ 6} Danielle Stroble is employed by LCCS as an ongoing caseworker. She was
assigned J.G. and K.W.’s case on March 7, 2016, when it went from an investigation to
1 We affirmed the juvenile court judgment. In re J.G., 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-17-1311, 2018-Ohio-3981.
3. an ongoing case. She was taken off the case in May of 2016, because maternal family
members—A.H., specifically—made personal threats against her.
{¶ 7} J.G. and K.W. were removed from their home because of domestic violence
between Jo.G. and K.W.’s father, M.W. Once involved, LCCS became aware of drug
issues and instability in the household. J.G. was placed with J.E., her maternal
grandmother. Jo.G. was pregnant with K.W. at that time.
{¶ 8} When K.W. was born, the agency originally planned to place K.W. with J.E.
But the agency learned that J.E. had allowed J.G. to stay the night unsupervised at Jo.G.’s
home, and a new domestic violence incident occurred in J.G.’s presence. J.E. could no
longer be trusted at this point. The agency obtained an ex parte order for custody and
talked to the family about other relatives who could provide foster care. To Stroble’s
knowledge, T.B. and D.B. did not ask to be considered.
{¶ 9} When J.G. was living with J.E., Stroble spoke with D.B. about being a
support for J.E. This could include babysitting and overseeing visits between Jo.G. and
the children. D.B. and T.B. submitted fingerprints for a background check. The results
came back and arrangements were made for D.B. to babysit J.G. on April 3, 2016, at
J.E.’s home; J.E. would be attending a staffing meeting at the hospital following K.W.’s
birth. D.B. was not permitted to babysit in her own home because a sight and safety
check of D.B. and T.B.’s home was required and had not yet been performed.
{¶ 10} Instead of staying at J.E.’s home with J.G., D.B. showed up at the hospital
for the staffing meeting. Stroble asked D.B. where J.G. was, and D.B. told Stroble that
4. T.B. was watching J.G. at their home. Stroble said that D.B. knew that this was not
permitted because the home had not yet been approved.
{¶ 11} Despite this rule violation, LCCS continued to consider D.B. to be a
support for the family. Stroble explained to D.B. that they were trusting her to follow the
rules and procedures of the agency. She said that D.B., J.E., and Jo.G. all understood that
they needed to follow the rules. But a few days later, J.E. and Jo.G. waited for Stroble
outside court. Stroble asked who was with J.G. J.E. and Jo.G admitted that D.B. was
watching J.G. at D.B.’s home, which had still not been approved. Stroble called D.B. and
asked if J.G. had been to her home and D.B. said no. She did not tell Stroble the truth—
that J.G. was there and had spent the night—until Stroble told her that J.E. and Jo.G. had
already admitted that J.G. was there. At this point, LCCS concluded that D.B. could not
be trusted and could not provide oversight.
{¶ 12} After D.B. lied to Stroble, it was not determined that she could have no
further involvement with the kids; it was merely determined that she could not be
approved as an oversight or babysitter. T.B. and D.B. never asked Stroble about placing
the children with them, so she cannot say that they would not have been considered for
placement, but she acknowledged that an even greater level of trust would be required to
place the children with them.
{¶ 13} Stroble testified that she is not aware of D.B. or T.B. ever sending cards or
letters to the children. On cross-examination, she agreed that while D.B. could not take
J.G. to her own home, she would have been permitted to take her to a public place like
5. the zoo or COSI. Stroble emphasized that if the child was going to be taken to a private
home, this needed to be discussed with a supervisor.
2. Rick Mendieta
{¶ 14} Rick Mendieta is also employed by LCCS as an ongoing caseworker. He
was assigned to J.G. and K.W.’s case on May 24, 2017. Cristina Disilvis was the
children’s caseworker in between Stroble and Mendieta. By the time Mendieta was
assigned to the case, LCCS had already been awarded permanent custody of the children.
{¶ 15} J.G. and K.W. have been in B.G.’s home since August 5, 2016. Mendieta
conducts monthly home visits, some of which are unannounced. He talks with J.G.
alone, but K.W. is too young for an alone interview. J.G. has been tired lately and
refuses to talk, but they usually discuss school and any concerns she may have. Of the
approximately 30 times he has visited, J.G. has refused to talk to him only four or five
times. She has not relayed any concerns about her living environment.
{¶ 16} J.G. is in second grade. She is feisty and stubborn and has a mind of her
own. She has had minor issues with her peers, but overall she gets very good grades.
She is not involved in extracurricular activities. J.G. was in counseling, but that has been
successfully completed. J.G. sometimes talks about Jo.G. and J.E.; she talks more about
J.E. than Jo.G. Recently, they showed up at her school and that embarrassed her, but she
has also talked about them dropping off gifts for Christmas. B.G. has asked J.E. and
Jo.G. not to show up randomly at her house or at school. J.G. has not expressed any
feelings about A.H.
6. {¶ 17} K.W. is babied and loved by everyone in the house. B.G. sometimes
carries him around. K.W. was involved with Help Me Grow until he reached age three.
He has completed treatment with a pulmonologist. Mendieta described K.W. as fearless.
{¶ 18} B.G.’s 17-year-old daughter also lives in the house. She interacts with the
children like a typical sibling. Sometimes she wants to play with them, sometimes she
bickers with J.G., and sometimes she wants to stay in her room. B.G. has two medium
sized dogs. Mendieta has no concerns with the dogs. They are not dangerous and he has
not observed dog feces or urine in the home.
{¶ 19} B.G. is J.G.’s fourth home. She has had two foster homes and was placed
with J.E. K.W. went to one other foster home for about four months, then moved in with
B.G. the same date as J.G. The children are comfortable at B.G.’s home, they love B.G.
and her daughter, and they appear to be at ease. B.G. talks to the kids, helps with
homework, and cooks dinner. The children seem bonded with her and are doing well;
they appear well-adjusted. Mendieta has no concerns with B.G.’s home. It is small, but
it meets the children’s needs.
{¶ 20} The initial goal of the case plan was reunification, but there is now an
adoptive service on their case plan. The agency has not been looking for an adoptive
home because B.G. has expressed an interest in adopting the children; she has completed
pre-services and the adoption application and is licensed to adopt them. She has not filed
a petition yet because of the ongoing case. The adoption worker is Linda Baker.
7. {¶ 21} Mendieta has had no contact with T.B. or D.B. They have never emailed
or called with inquiries. They have never asked him how they might go about completing
an adoptive home study or be considered for adoption. To his knowledge, they have
never had contact with the children. Before permanent custody was awarded to LCCS,
the biological parents were visiting at the agency; T.B. and D.B. could have done this too.
Mendieta became aware of T.B. and D.B.’s adoption petition when legal counsel
provided him with the motion.
{¶ 22} T.B. and D.B.’s home study was not approved. Mendieta believes it is
because of their lack of bond with the children and an issue with them being less than
forthcoming during LCCS’s involvement. B.G.’s is the only approved adoptive home
study the agency has.
{¶ 23} Mendieta has concerns with T.B. and D.B. being permitted to adopt the
children. K.W. does not know them; B.G.’s home is the only home he has known and it
would be traumatic to remove him. J.G. does not have an active relationship with them
and has never mentioned them. His recommendation is that B.G. be permitted to adopt
the children. LCCS does not like moving children, especially after they have had
multiple moves and are in a home where they are safe, are getting their needs met, and
are someplace that may be a permanent solution.
{¶ 24} Mendieta has never told J.G. that her great-grandparents are interested in
adopting them and has never asked her what she thought of them. J.G. has some trust
issues because her mother and grandmother have made promises that did not come true,
8. so he would not want to get her anxious or raise her hopes until he knew for certain what
the plan was. T.B. and D.B. have not yet come back into their lives, so he does not know
how J.G. would feel or react.
3. D.B.
{¶ 25} D.B. testified that she is the children’s great-grandmother. She last saw
K.W. three years ago, when he was in the hospital after he was born. She does not know
the last time she saw J.G. The kids live with B.G., who is a distant cousin. D.B. has
never visited the children at B.G.’s home. She called B.G. once to ask if she could bring
Christmas presents for the kids, but B.G. would not allow it. She has not spoken to
anyone from LCCS to try to obtain visitation or contact with the kids, nor did she contact
LCCS to arrange to get gifts to the children—she said she did not know that she could do
that.
{¶ 26} D.B. says that B.G. is not “[her] kind of person.” She describes B.G. as
“too flighty” and “hormonal.” She maintains that J.G. never met B.G. before being
placed in her care. D.B. believes that B.G. has excluded her and her husband from the
children’s lives. She has never seen B.G. interact with the kids. She has never witnessed
interactions between B.G., J.E., and Jo.E.
{¶ 27} D.B. never contacted LCCS herself to get a home study; J.E. contacted the
home study assessor. D.B. first stated that she did not interpret the home study as
concluding that she was not recommended to adopt the children, but ultimately
acknowledged that the home study “was denied,” which she attributed to her age. She
9. did not contact anyone at LCCS after learning the results of the home study. D.B.
conceded that J.E. and Jo.G. have contributed toward the costs associated with trying to
obtain custody of the children. The GAL never contacted her or inspected her home.
{¶ 28} D.B. maintains that she and T.B. love their great-grandchildren and want
them in their home. She believes that she and T.B. can provide them with a loving,
nurturing home and it is in their best interest to be with their great-grandparents. She
describes herself as a young 63 with no significant health problems, and she insists that
she is physically able to raise a young child. She is confident that if the children adapted
to B.G.’s home, they will be able to adapt to her home.
{¶ 29} D.B. testified that J.E., who is her daughter and the children’s grandmother,
visits her home a few times a week. Jo.G., the children’s mother, comes for holidays and
visits occasionally. D.B. said that she did not know if she would allow J.E. and Jo.G. to
have contact with the children if her petition for adoption is granted. She supposed that
“in the beginning,” she would not. She would want the children to become settled and
relaxed in her home before she would allow contact with them, but after they were
settled, she would probably allow J.E. and Jo.G. to see them “if things were permitted.”
She denied that if allowed to adopt the children, she intends to return them to Jo.G.
{¶ 30} D.B. acknowledged that her 90-year old mother-in-law lived with her and
her husband for about five-and-a-half months, beginning in May of 2019. She was
bedridden and required a lot of care. They placed her in a nursing facility for respite care
that was initially supposed to last two weeks. It ultimately lasted four weeks and her
10. mother-in-law did not return to their home. Instead, she went to live with her daughter.
D.B. explained that this decision was made so that her mother-in-law could spend time
with her daughter, who was unable to visit her at T.B. and D.B.’s home because of lack
of transportation.
{¶ 31} D.B. said that she attended a staffing at Toledo Hospital after K.W. was
born. She acknowledged talking on the phone with LCCS caseworker, Danielle Stroble;
she said that Stroble hung up on her. D.B. denied that LCCS informed her of any
restrictions with respect to babysitting J.G., and she denies violating any LCCS
restrictions. She did not think it would hurt anything to let T.B. babysit J.G. because he
is her great-grandfather.
4. B.G.
{¶ 32} J.G. and K.W. have been in B.G.’s home since August 5, 2016. Jo.G. is the
one who asked her if the children could stay with her. They were in foster care with
LCCS and they were looking for somebody in the family that they could be with. The
process started in May of 2016. B.G. submitted her fingerprints. A home study was
performed and was approved.
{¶ 33} K.W. is three and very bubbly. He talks a lot and is full of life. When he
came to her, he had been diagnosed with asthma, hypothyroidism, and laryngomalacia—a
hole in the esophagus. He sees a pulmonologist, an endocrinologist, and his family
physician. He was involved with Help Me Grow until he was three and now he is in
Head Start. He had to wear special pants to keep his legs together when he first started
11. walking, and he wore special shoes. He had speech therapy, but his speech has
improved. He sees his doctors approximately every three months.
{¶ 34} J.G. is bubbly and princess-like. She loves attention, loves to learn new
things, is interested in math and science, and reads at a fourth-grade level even though
she is in the second grade. School is going well for her. J.G. has taken art classes at the
museum. Next year she may start soccer or basketball.
{¶ 35} J.G. and K.W. get along like normal siblings. They like to go to the park
and the library, and they like to take walks. B.G. also has a 17-year-old daughter, H.G.
J.G. and H.G. get along like sisters would—sometimes they get along; sometimes they
don’t.
{¶ 36} B.G. is willing to adopt the children. She has gone through the adoptive
home study process and was approved. She lives in a three-bedroom house, but it has
sufficient room for the children. She has two medium-sized dogs. They are loud but
gentle and they love the kids. There have been no negative interactions between the kids
and the dogs.
{¶ 37} In September, J.E. and Jo.G. came to give the kids some clothes. Jo.G. said
she was doing better and was in rehab. B.G. wanted to see some records from rehab or
speak with the counselor to verify that Jo.G. was doing better, but this never happened.
They came a few times and wanted to see the kids on Halloween of 2018. There was a
bad interaction at J.G.’s school. Jo.G. was “bouncing around” and the police had to get
involved to escort J.G.’s bus home. The police believed Jo.G. was under the influence
12. and may have wanted to take J.G. The principal called her and wanted to talk to her
about the situation and the police spoke with her. Because of this, B.G. ended up not
spending Halloween with J.E. and Jo.G.; instead she took the kids trick-or-treating with a
friend. After that, B.G. stopped answering Jo.G.’s phone calls. She is not aware of any
criminal charges being filed against Jo.G. in connection with this incident.
{¶ 38} B.G. knows T.B. and D.B.—T.B. is her cousin. D.B. called her around last
November to ask if the children could come for Thanksgiving or Christmas. B.G. did not
allow it because she was concerned that D.B. was going to let Jo.G. take them. She had
no further interaction with T.B. and D.B. after this. B.G. has always gotten along with
T.B. and D.B. They are polite, friendly, clean, set a good example, and she has no reason
to believe that they would be bad adoptive parents.
{¶ 39} When Jo.G. still had visitation rights, B.G. spoke with her a lot. She would
call periodically to speak with the kids and wanted to come to see them as much as
possible. But LCCS did not want J.E. and Jo.G. to see the kids outside of visitation, so
she tried to keep them at bay and allow only telephone contact. Jo.G. would call about
twice a week, then might not call again for six or eight weeks. Since the agency obtained
permanent custody, Jo.G. would pop in demanding to see them. She behaved volatilely.
The interaction with J.E. was similar. It would go really well or really badly. She no
longer has phone communications with them because if J.E. or Jo.G. disagreed with her,
it would end up in a fight.
13. {¶ 40} A.H. stopped by three or four times and would sit outside on the porch with
her and visit with J.G. She stopped coming around when she got pregnant. Usually those
visits were okay, but the last time she was there, she showed up with a car full of men. It
was dark out and B.G. did not know A.H. was coming, so she did not answer the door. A
man got out of the car and started beating on the door.
{¶ 41} J.E. and Jo.G. have given the kids gifts. T.B. and D.B. never have, and
they have not seen the kids since they have been in B.G.’s care. If they were to see the
kids, B.G. thinks it should be monitored because she is concerned they will hand the kids
over to Jo.G. and J.E. because “[she has] heard them all say it.” Jo.G. told her at one time
that she knew a woman who was planning to adopt the children she was caring for and
return them to their biological mother. Jo.G. wanted B.G. to do this for her. B.G. does
not know if T.B. and D.B. would go along with Jo.G.’s desire to return the children to
her.
{¶ 42} B.G. wants to adopt the kids because they are like her babies. She thinks it
is in their best interest. It is concerning to her that T.B. and D.B. do not know the
children. J.G. never speaks of them. She showed J.G. a picture of them and she didn’t
know who they were. J.G. misses Jo.G. but has expressed that she is scared sometimes
and not trusting when she is with her. She mentions J.E. once in a while. She does not
mention A.H.
{¶ 43} N.H. has dropped off gifts for the kids before from J.E., Jo.G., and A.H.
B.G. did not have a problem with A.H. visiting until it got “nasty,” then she just stopped
14. communicating with A.H. B.G. blocked her phone calls in October of 2018, after she
swore at her and made demands. She thinks monitored visits with A.H. would be
appropriate. B.G. believes A.H. is a bad influence on the kids. She thinks A.H. parties,
drinks, and does drugs. She also believes that A.H. has sung vulgar raps songs to the
children and taught them gang signs. She demonstrated some of the hand gestures she
has seen them make but does not know what the signs mean. She and A.H. fought
because B.G. would not let her take the kids with her.
{¶ 44} Around a month or two ago, while driving, B.G. saw A.H.’s car in
Rossford. She (or perhaps someone else in her vehicle) followed B.G., passed her, then
turned around and came at her head-on. B.G. called the police, then followed A.H. onto
I-75 to get her license plate number. She does not think that A.H. was coming to see the
children because it was around noon on a weekday, when J.G. was in school.
{¶ 45} B.G. volunteers at Maumee Valley Save-a-Pet. She used to work at
Northwood Club Pet Resort. She was employed there for six months. She does some
painting work. The last time she had a full-time job was when the kids came to live with
her. She stopped working at that point and her ex-boyfriend helped support her. They
broke up in October of 2017.
{¶ 46} B.G. gets child support of $500 for H.G., until next year when she turns 18,
and she gets support for the other children. The state pays for K.W.’s health care. She
receives no compensation for taking him to appointments. She denied that she has an
economic interest in keeping the kids. At first she received no income for the kids, but
15. this changed around the end of the summer of 2019. Since signing the adoption papers,
she gets a subsidy of $700. Before the $700 subsidy, she received $400 from Ohio
workforce. She would still be willing to adopt even without the subsidy.
{¶ 47} B.G. believes H.G., J.G., and K.W. are well-adjusted. She agrees that it is
a healthy thing for kids to maintain a relationship with grandparents and aunts and uncles
and it would be a good thing for the kids to have a relationship with their sister.
5. Linda Baker {¶ 48} Linda Baker is employed by LCCS as an adoption caseworker. When
LCCS decides to pursue permanent custody, there is an adoption referral made. She
monitors the case until there’s a permanent custody decision and then she works with the
prospective adoptive family towards finalization by monitoring the adjustment of the
child and the family in the home. She was assigned to J.G. and K.W.’s case in May of
2017.
{¶ 49} After permanent custody is granted to the agency, Baker is in contact with
the family every other month until an adoptive placement agreement is signed, then
monthly. Barker has been to B.G.’s home and has observed the children. B.G. lives in
the Rossford school district. Her home is small but adequate, with a large side yard. The
children are well-adjusted and Barker has no concerns about their interactions. B.G. is
loving, nurturing, and patient. The children have food and shelter and J.G. is in school.
J.G. likes school and is healthy. K.W. had some issues early on but seems healthy now.
16. {¶ 50} Barker has no concerns about B.G.’s dogs. B.G. is willing to adopt and the
agency has consented. There was a home study and a pre-finalization assessment report
approving B.G.’s home.
{¶ 51} The agency holds a matching conference, mandated by the state, where it
looks at the home study of families interested in adopting. There is also a child
characteristic check that goes along with it that takes into account the children’s behavior,
any special needs, ages, number of children, whether there has been juvenile court
involvement, whether psychiatric services are needed, the children’s level of bonding,
school services, continuity of care, and whether siblings would stay together. A matching
conference took place here.
{¶ 52} Barker has had no contact with T.B. and D.B. They never contacted her for
a home study. She did not know who they were until the adoption petition was filed. She
did not receive an approved home study for them. T.B. and D.B. were not evaluated
because she did not know about them.
{¶ 53} B.G.’s is the only home Barker has investigated or examined. Because
Barker does not know T.B. or D.B., she cannot comment on whether they would be good
adoptive parents. She does not know A.H. and has no opinion whether it would be good
for her to have regular contact with J.G. and K.W.
{¶ 54} J.G. has expressed excitement at being adopted by B.G. She wants
certainty as to where she is going to be and she is happy where she is. Barker has not
17. discussed with her whether she would be happier if she were adopted by her great-
grandparents.
6. Mary Clark
{¶ 55} Clark was appointed as the children’s GAL. She has completed an
investigation. She does monthly home visits, some announced, some unannounced. She
plays with the children when she visits. B.G.’s home has three bedrooms. She has two
dogs, but they are usually outside or behind a gate when Clark comes because Clark has
allergies.
{¶ 56} K.W. was born positive for methadone and had withdrawal in the
beginning. B.G. has met all of his medical, social, and emotional needs. J.G. did not
have much structure when she was living with her grandmother. She had more structure
at her first foster home and adjusted well, but she still experienced trauma. J.G.
transitioned nicely into B.G.’s home. B.G. is very loving and open with communication.
When J.G. was seeing her mother at the agency, it was chaotic for her. Visitation had to
be terminated because it was not in J.G.’s best interest.
{¶ 57} J.G. is very talkative. K.W. is also talkative but sometimes difficult to
understand. Clark talks with J.G. about school, her friends, her favorite colors, and
dancing. J.G. always has things to show her and talk to her about. She loves reading and
reads at a fourth-grade level. She likes art. Clark told B.G. about scholarships for
programs at the art museum. J.G. participated and loved it. J.G. says she wants B.G. to
adopt her. She does not talk about her mom much. Living with her mom scared J.G.
18. because Jo.E. and M.W. fought. She does not talk about J.E. or her great-grandparents
and it has been a very long time since she has talked about A.H.
{¶ 58} Clark was present during the permanent custody trial. Her opinion at the
permanent custody hearing was that LCCS should be awarded permanent custody of the
children. She saw T.B. and D.B. at the permanent custody hearing but does not know
them and has had no contact with them. They did not seek custody in the permanent
custody case. They have not contacted her. She knows about their history with the
agency and the lack of trust. She knows Jo.G. really wants to get the kids back and B.G.
has been good at saving the children from that drama. She is not sure T.B. and D.B.
could do this.
{¶ 59} Clark recommends that B.G. be permitted to adopt the children. B.G. is a
relative who was recommended by Jo.G. in the first place, J.G. has been with B.G. half
her life, and K.W. has been there all his life. They are bonded with B.G., there is
structure, they are loved, they are part of the family, and their needs are being met.
While she is certain that T.B. and D.B. are a nice family and want what is best for the
children, Clark sees no reason for J.G. and K.W.’s situation to be disrupted. She believes
it is in their best interest that they remain with B.G.
{¶ 60} There was no reason to independently investigate T.B. and D.B., especially
after Clark saw the home study. She agrees that the home study was not approved
because of the lack of a prior relationship. Since she has been involved with the children,
she has not heard of them having a relationship. She has done no comparative analysis
19. between B.G. and T.B. and D.B. and she sees no reason to do one. She believes it would
be traumatic and detrimental to disrupt the bond the children currently have with B.G.
They are thriving where they are.
{¶ 61} Clark at one point was A.H.’s GAL. Initially A.H. tried to stay above the
drama of the family, but she ultimately dropped out of twelfth grade, got pregnant, and
now has two children. Clark thinks it has been hard for her to be a functioning adult
because there were a lot of countervailing forces. After A.H. became emancipated, Clark
no longer had contact with her. Clark trusts B.G., so she trusts when B.G. expresses
concerns about A.H.’s influence. Generally speaking, Clark believes it is good for minor
siblings to maintain regular contact with their older siblings if the older sibling is
appropriate. She trusts that B.G. will someday allow A.H. to come back into their lives.
7. J.E.
{¶ 62} J.E. is the maternal grandmother of J.G. and K.W. She is the daughter of
T.B. and D.B. She testified that when LCCS obtained custody of J.G., she was initially
allowed visitation at the agency. She would generally be there with her daughter, Jo.G.,
and her granddaughter, A.H., J.G.’s older sister. She approximates that she visited with
the kids four to five times. She testified that the second to last time she visited, she
noticed a creamy discharge in J.G.’s underwear, which she reported to caseworker
Christina Disilvis. About a month later when she visited with J.G., J.G. told her that her
“pee pee hurts.” The left lip of her vagina appeared to have “a little burn” and there was
“a really bad discharge.” She reported this to a number of people, including “the mayor,
20. the commissioner, the FBI, * * * even the sister at Rosary Cathedral.” She also spoke
with Robin Reese, an LCCS ombudsman. She claims that no action was taken, but on
cross-examination she acknowledged that Disilvis told her that her allegation of sexual
abuse was determined to be unfounded.
{¶ 63} J.E. claims that after making these complaints, she was no longer able to
see J.G. J.G. was living with B.G. at this time. She claimed that her relationship with
B.G. was good until she made this report. After that, B.G. denied access to J.G.
{¶ 64} Before LCCS obtained custody of J.G., J.G. had a good relationship with
her great-grandparents. They saw each other at least every couple of weeks, but maybe
two to three times a week during the summer because they went swimming there. She
also spent the holidays with her great-grandparents. She said J.G.’s great-grandparents
were important to J.G. and she was close to them. Several family photos were shown to
J.E. and she identified them.
{¶ 65} The last time J.E. saw J.G. was October 30, 2018. B.G. allowed J.E. and
Jo.G. to see the children for Halloween. She let them give the kids candy and costumes
and take them trick-or-treating. She said K.W. hugged Jo.G. and wrapped his arms and
legs around her.
8. A.H.
{¶ 66} A.H. is the great-granddaughter of T.B. and D.B. She is the sister of J.G.
and K.W. She is 20 years old. She has two children, both of whom have the same father.
She was emancipated at age 17 and left school her senior year. She plans to get her GED,
21. then she wants to go to beauty school and become an aesthetician. A.H. is employed.
When she works, her children are watched by their father. He sometimes works
installing furnaces. She has a car and makes the car payments.
{¶ 67} Before she was emancipated, A.H. lived with her grandmother, J.E. She
spent holidays at T.B. and D.B.’s home, was very close with them, and would see them a
few times a week. Her great-grandparents are important to her and have always taken an
interest in her. This is also true for J.G.
{¶ 68} J.G. was three years old when she was taken from her home. J.G. was like
a daughter to A.H. She last saw her a year ago. B.G. will not let J.G. see her or talk to
her on the phone. B.G. changed her phone number. Before last year, B.G. would let her
come by to visit one or two times a week and would let her call. A.H. noticed a sudden
change in B.G.’s attitude. B.G. eventually said it was getting to be too much for her. She
denied that she went to B.G.’s home with a bunch of guys in her car. She did not teach
J.G. gang signs or teach her any songs with offensive lyrics.
{¶ 69} Three to five months ago, B.G. followed A.H. in her car and it scared her.
She went the wrong way down a one-way street to avoid a confrontation with her. B.G.
took her phone out and recorded A.H. B.G. then followed her down the expressway.
The Rossford police never called to question her. She never tried to smash B.G.’s car.
{¶ 70} A.H. met B.G. for the first time when she was about 16, then again when
B.G. came to get J.G. from LCCS. She had no prior relationship with B.G.
22. {¶ 71} A.H. got to meet K.W. but never got to build a relationship with him. She
has not been able to see him since he has learned to walk and talk. It makes her
emotional and depressed and she feels a loss not being able to see her brother and sister.
J.G. would always be excited to see her.
{¶ 72} A.H. denies that she uses drugs or alcohol. When she is not at home with
her kids, she goes on dates with their dad. She would like to be a part of her siblings’
lives again.
{¶ 73} A.H. acknowledged that she was charged with a safe school assault,
disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and obstruction of official business. She was
sentenced to jail time, suspended on the condition of probation. She has a theft
conviction for stealing merchandise at Macy’s. Her last arrest was approximately a year
ago. She denies that she has a bad temper or that she is a bad influence on J.G. She has
never lost her temper with B.G., J.G., or K.W.
9. N.H. {¶ 74} N.H. is a friend of T.B. and D.B.’s family. He and J.E. went to B.G.’s
home several times to visit the kids. The first time, it was very cordial. J.E. and B.G.
smoked a cigarette in the backyard while the kids played. The next time, a few weeks
later, things were tense. B.G. went outside while J.E. visited with the kids. N.H. went
back a couple more times to deliver gifts for the children. He chatted with B.G. while the
kids opened their gifts. He described that B.G.’s house was in “pretty decent order,” but
the odor of her three dogs bothered him.
23. {¶ 75} N.H. has known B.G. for a long time. Her ex-husband was one of N.H.’s
students. The last time he saw B.G. was the Christmas before last. He went with J.E. and
Jo.G to deliver presents. J.E. knocked, but nobody answered. After they left, they were
pulled over by two Rossford police officers who said that they had been notified that they
were at the property and there was an order prohibiting them from being there. The
officers contacted B.G. and B.G. agreed to allow N.H. to drop off the gifts. He left them
on the porch because no one answered the door when he knocked.
{¶ 76} N.H. often had contact with J.G. before she was placed with B.G. He has
observed J.G. with her great-grandparents at holidays. J.G. would run up and give her
great-grandparents hugs.
10. N.M.
{¶ 77} N.M. is the grandson of T.B. and D.B., the son of J.E., the brother of Jo.G.,
and the children’s uncle. He lives with J.E. He spent a lot of time with A.H. and J.G.
when they were growing up because they lived on the same street. He would see J.G.
almost daily. J.G. spent “a pretty good amount” of time with her great-grandparents.
They would go to their home for holidays and family gatherings.
{¶ 78} N.M. described T.B. as a good, respectful man. He and his grandfather
enjoyed outdoors activities together, like fishing, and T.B. would help N.M. with school
projects. D.B. is a good cook. She loves the kids and is very motherly toward them.
T.B. and D.B. have a big yard; J.G. liked to play and run around in the yard.
24. 11. F.G.
{¶ 79} F.G. is the great-granddaughter of T.B. and D.B. Before J.G. was placed in
foster care, she saw her twice a week. F.G. goes to T.B. and D.B.’s home approximately
twice a week. She described it as very calm and family-oriented. Her great-grandparents
are dependable and were a big part of J.G.’s life. J.G. was always excited to see them
and she would run to them. F.G. has never met K.W.
12. C.B.
{¶ 80} C.B. is the son of T.B. and the stepson of D.B. He described his father as
an outdoorsman who is good with kids. C.B. lived with T.B. and D.B. after separating
from his girlfriend, so he would see J.G. when Jo.G. brought her over. He said that D.B.
has been very good to him and he loves her. She is patient with her grandchildren and
makes cookies for them. It has been approximately 15 years since T.B. and D.B. have
cared for a child under the age of ten. T.B. had his rotator cuff repaired so he does not
fish much lately. He was hospitalized within the last three years for a respiratory issue.
C.B.’s grandmother lived with T.B. and D.B. for a couple of months and nurses came to
the home to assist in her care. C.B. has a couple of theft convictions and convictions for
driving under suspension.
13. C.R.
{¶ 81} C.R. is D.B.’s first cousin. She spends time at T.B. and D.B.’s home for
holidays and cookouts and sees them at funerals and other family gatherings. She has
seen J.G. at T.B. and D.B.’s home. J.G. was close with T.B. and D.B. and loves them.
25. They are good with kids and are physically able to take care of them despite their age.
T.B. has had surgeries in the past but no “health issues.” C.R. has not seen J.G. in three
years. She described B.G. as “not right,” but she conceded that she has never met her or
been to her home.
14. T.B.
{¶ 82} T.B. testified that he and D.B. are retired. They have been married for 43
years and have one child together. He has three children from a previous marriage.
{¶ 83} T.B. testified that he is under no physical limitations that would impair his
ability to raise young children. He described himself as active. He hunts, fishes, and
cares for his three-acre yard. He looks forward to having young children around and said
that they keep him young. He wants to teach J.G. how to raise livestock.
{¶ 84} T.B. does not like B.G.; he believes she is flighty and “her morals aren’t
exactly up to [his] standards.” He believes she behaves in a sexually provocative way.
He never contacted LCCS about the concerns he had with B.G. and he never filed
charges.
{¶ 85} T.B. disagrees that it would be too traumatic to remove the children from
B.G.’s care. He and his wife have always been close with J.G. and the children should be
with their maternal family. They always had fun together and she was always active with
them. J.G. came from “a family with drugs,” so he imagines that the transition to B.G.’s
home was positive, but he believes it would be easier for her to transition to being in their
home. He is certain she will remember them.
26. {¶ 86} T.B. denied that their petition for adoption is just a sham to give the
children back to their mother. He claims that he would not let anyone—including his
own children—be around the children if they were on drugs or not in their right mind.
He and D.B. are able to take care of the children financially.
{¶ 87} Jo.G. and J.E. have helped pay the costs associated with petitioning to
adopt the children, but T.B. stated that the entire family has contributed to the costs. He
said they could afford to pay themselves but it made the family feel good to help.
{¶ 88} Two years ago, T.B. had rotator cuff surgery. His mother lived with them
for five or six months. They paid for most things for his mother until “social security
kicked in,” but she also had aides. It has been 15 years since he and D.B. cared for
children under the age of 10 for an extended period of time. He let D.B. handle speaking
with LCCS about the home study, but insisted that he would not rely on her to provide
care for the children. He never contacted LCCS to arrange to visit with the children.
B. The Trial Court Judgment
{¶ 89} In judgments journalized on January 6, 2020, the trial court denied T.B.
and D.B.’s petitions for adoption. It found that the evidence was uncontroverted that the
children are currently in a stable family relationship and have adjusted well to their
current home, school, and community. It observed that J.G. experienced negativity while
with her birth parents and the juvenile court acknowledged this negativity by terminating
parental rights. The court noted that J.G. has had four placements, none of which were
with T.B. and D.B., and has expressed a desire to be adopted by her current caregiver. It
27. recognized that the GAL recommends that the children remain together in their current
placement and expressed concerns that a new placement could very likely be
problematic. The court was persuaded that the agency has “real and significant” concerns
that if the petition for adoption is granted, the children will have contact with their birth
parents.
{¶ 90} T.B. and D.B. appealed the trial court judgments and assign the following
errors for our review:
I. IT CONSTITUTED ERROR FOR THE PROBATE COURT TO
FIND APPELLANTS DID NOT HAVE “AN APPROVED HOME
STUDY ASSESSMENT.”
II. IT CONSTITUTED ERROR TO FIND THAT LCCS WAS NOT
UNREASONABLY WITHHOLDING CONSENT TO APPELLANTS’
PETITIONS FOR ADOPTION.
III. IT CONSTITUTED ERROR NOT TO BIFURCATE THE
PROCEEDINGS.
II. Law and Analysis {¶ 91} In their first assignment of error, T.B. and D.B. argue that the trial court
erred when it found that they did not have an approved home study assessment under
R.C. 3107.031. In their second assignment of error, they argue that the trial court erred
when it concluded that LCCS did not unreasonably withhold its consent to adoption
under R.C. 3107.07(H). And in their third assignment of error, they argue that the court
erred in failing to bifurcate the hearing on the issues of (1) whether the agency
28. unreasonably withheld its consent to adoption, and (2) whether adoption of the children
by T.B. and D.B. would be in the children’s best interest under R.C. 3107.161. We
address each of these assignments in turn.
A. The Home Study
{¶ 92} In their first assignment of error, T.B. and D.B. argue that it was contrary to
law for the probate court to find that they did not have an approved home study
assessment. They maintain that the section of the home study assessment entitled
“Disposition of Adoption Parties” is left blank and, therefore, does not express one of the
permissible recommendations required under Ohio Admn. Code 5101:2-48-12(T).
{¶ 93} R.C. 3107.031 requires that a home study be conducted “for the purpose of
ascertaining whether a person seeking to adopt a minor is suitable to adopt.” A written
report of the home study must be filed with the court stating “the opinion of the assessor
as to whether the person who is the subject of the report is suitable to adopt a minor.”
R.C. 3107.031. Under Ohio Admn. Code 5101:2-48-12(T), “[t]he assessor shall make
one or more of the following recommendations at the completion of the adoption
homestudy: (1) [a]pprove the applicant(s) as adoptive parent(s)[;] (2) [a]pprove the
applicant(s) as adoptive parents and recommend the applicant(s) for certification as a
foster caregiver(s) simultaneously[;] (3) [d]eny the adoption application.”
{¶ 94} T.B. and D.B. are correct that the disposition section of the home study
assessment is left blank. But as they acknowledge, in the section of the assessment
29. entitled “Family Strengths and Needs,” the assessor provided a narrative, stating that she
is not recommending an adoptive placement with T.B. and D.B. She explained:
I am not recommending an adoptive placement with this family at
this time. [T.B. and D.B.] are good people who have reared their children
and were involved with grandchildren. I believe they want [J.G. and K.W.]
to be reared with family and are making this gesture out of love.
However, they do not have any direct experience with these
children. I am uncomfortable placing them permanently if they have not
had a chance to develop a relationship and see if they are up to the demands
of two young children. In other situations like this, the family has had, at
the least, supervised visitations at LCCS and have an established
relationship with the children. It is unclear why [T.B. and D.B.] have not
had this opportunity. They told me they were denied by LCCS.
During my three month involvement with [T.B. and D.B.], it has
appeared stressful for them to complete the homestudy process.
Communication with them was difficult and it appeared that caring for
[T.B.]’s mother was an additional stressor. They also indicated that their
children’s support would be limited because they would not visit in the
inclement weather. I also have questions about their health and stamina
and believe it was difficult for them to be open with me about issues that
could impact their parenting.
30. {¶ 95} T.B. and D.B. maintain that the home study assessment did not conclude
that their home was unsuitable; rather it “essentially described [their] personal
characteristics and their home in more-or-less glowing terms.” It also described that T.B.
and D.B. met the applicable criteria for maturity, responsibility, financial capability, and
love of the children. Nevertheless, “out of the blue,” the assessor declined to recommend
them as an adoptive placement based on their lack of direct experience with the children
and the absence of an opportunity to “develop a relationship and see if they are up to the
demands of two young children.” They counter that it is untrue that they have had no
direct experience with the children, and they emphasize that while K.W. was taken from
his biological mother shortly after birth, J.G. spent every major holiday with them until
being placed with B.G.
{¶ 96} Regardless of whether T.B. and D.B. agree with the assessor’s conclusions,
their first assignment claims error in the trial court’s conclusion that they lack an
approved home study. They argue that this conclusion was contrary to law given that
“the report itself fails to conform to the requirements of law.” We must disagree. It may
have been preferable for the assessor to have completed the section of the form entitled
“Disposition of Adoption Application” and to have checked one of the two boxes
provided: (1) adoption application denied; or (2) adoption application approved. But the
assessment makes clear that the assessor recommended that T.B. and D.B. not be
approved for adoptive placement. As such, the assessment included one of the
recommendations required under Ohio Admn. Code 5101:2-48-12(T).
31. {¶ 97} We, therefore, find T.B. and D.B.’s first assignment of error not well-taken.
B. Withholding of Consent
{¶ 98} Generally speaking, an agency that has permanent custody of a minor must
consent in writing to the adoption of the minor before a petition to adopt may be granted.
R.C. 3107.06(D). But under R.C. 3107.07(H), consent to an adoption is not required of
“[a]ny legal guardian or lawful custodian of the person to be adopted, other than a parent,
who * * *, after examination of the written reasons for withholding consent, is found by
the court to be withholding consent unreasonably.” In their second assignment of error,
T.B. and D.B. argue that the trial court erred in concluding that LCCS did not
unreasonably withhold its consent to their petition for adoption.
{¶ 99} In order to dispense with the consent requirement, it must be shown by
clear and convincing evidence that the agency unreasonably withheld its consent to the
adoption. In re Adoption of I.C., 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-10-1157, 2011-Ohio-1145, ¶ 32,
citing Matter of Jeffrey A., 6th Dist. No. L-08-1006, 2008–Ohio–5135, ¶ 9. “Clear and
convincing evidence” is “‘that measure or degree of proof which will produce in the mind
of the trier of facts a firm belief or conviction as to the allegations sought to be
established.’” Id., quoting Cross v. Ledford, 161 Ohio St. 469, 477, 120 N.E.2d 118
(1954). It is an intermediate burden of proof—more than a preponderance of the
evidence, but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
{¶ 100} “[A]n adoption proceeding is a two-step process involving a ‘consent’
phase and a ‘best-interest’ phase.” (Internal citation omitted.) In re Jeffrey A. at ¶ 4. If
32. “the court finds that the required consents have been obtained or excused and that the
adoption is in the best interest of the person sought to be adopted as supported by the
evidence, it may issue * * * a final decree of adoption or an interlocutory order of
adoption * * *.” R.C. 3107.14(C). We review a trial court’s determination of the
reasonableness of the agency’s withholding of consent under an abuse-of-discretion
standard. In the Matter of Adoption of Shortridge, 4th Dist. Pike No. 387, 1985 WL
9478, *4 (May 30, 1985) (“[W]e believe the proper focus is upon whether the court
below, in determining the withholding of consent to adoption was reasonable, abused its
discretion.”). An unreasonable decision is one that lacks sound reasoning to support the
decision. Hageman v. Bryan City Schools, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 17AP-742, 2019-
Ohio-223, ¶ 13.
{¶ 101} Here, the court found that LCCS did not unreasonably withhold consent to
T.B. and D.B.’s petition for adoption. It reasoned that (1) J.G. has had four placements
and a fifth placement would likely be problematic for her; (2) the children are currently in
a stable family relationship and are well-adjusted to their home and community; (3) J.G.
is well-adjusted to school; (4) J.G. is of the age that she has expressed a desire to be
adopted by her current caregiver and has expressed that she experienced negativity while
with her birth parents; (5) there is a “real and significant” concern that the children would
once again have contact with their birth parents if T.B. and D.B. are allowed to adopt;
and (6) the GAL recommends that the children remain together in their current
placement. Compare In re Jeffrey A. at ¶ 11 (finding that LCCS unreasonably withheld
33. consent when it relied on only one factor—that petitioners were not blood relatives of the
children—and ignored numerous other factors, including the children’s relationship with
the petitioners, the nurturing home environment, the relationships between the children
and petitioners’ biological children, and the developmental progress the children
achieved under petitioners’ primary care). While the court acknowledged that T.B. and
D.B. are genuinely concerned with the children’s best interests, it found that those
interests would be best served by the children remaining in their current placement.
{¶ 102} Having reviewed the record in its entirety, including the transcripts from
the two-day hearing, we conclude that it was not shown by clear and convincing evidence
that the agency unreasonably withheld its consent to the adoption. We find that the trial
court’s decision is supported by sound reasoning, and it did not abuse its discretion in
concluding that LCCS did not unreasonably withhold its consent.
{¶ 103} Accordingly, we find T.B. and D.B.’s second assignment of error not
well-taken.
C. Bifurcation
{¶ 104} In their third assignment of error, T.B. and D.B. argue that the trial court
erred in failing to bifurcate the proceedings with respect to the issues of consent and the
best interest of the children. They maintain that the trial court began the hearing by
announcing that the November 25, 2019 hearing would be dedicated to the issue of
whether LCCS unreasonably withheld its consent to adoption, but the court nevertheless
went on to deny their adoption petition, concluding that a new placement would not be in
34. the children’s best interest. They insist that this was error because they were denied the
opportunity to be heard on the issue of the children’s best interests.
{¶ 105} Before the hearing began, the trial court announced its intent to limit the
hearing to the issue of consent and to hold a second hearing on the issue of the children’s
best interest, perhaps with an agreement by the parties that certain evidence presented in
the first hearing may be stipulated to in the second hearing. It recognized the difficulty in
separating the two issues, particularly given that LCCS had withheld its consent because
it felt that adoption by T.B. and D.B. would not be in J.G. and K.W.’s best interest. But
the court led the parties to believe that a second hearing would take place:
The court discussed with counsel in chambers the difficulty in this
kind of case of separating the consent – reasonableness of withholding
consent issue from the actual best interest hearing which is, those factors
are found in Section 3107.161 and very difficult to bifurcate these hearings
because I guess obviously the agency has failed to consent to these petitions
because the agency feels they are – it’s not in the best interest of the
children so it’s very difficult to bifurcate those.
However, we are proceeding today to hearing on the issue of
whether the agency is unreasonably withholding its consent and then based
up the outcome of this hearing, the court will make a determination as to
whether or not the court can make a determination whether the parties
could possibly agree as to whether or not any of the evidence obtained at
35. this hearing could be stipulated to for further hearing if necessary regarding
the best interest.
{¶ 106} As we observed above, “‘an adoption proceeding is a two-step process
involving a “consent” phase and a “best-interest” phase.’” In re Jeffrey A., 6th Dist.
Lucas No. L-08-1006, 2008-Ohio-5135, at ¶ 4, quoting In re Adoption of Jordan, 72 Ohio
App.3d 638, 645, 595 N.E.2d 963 (12th Dist.1991). The consent and best-interests
portions of the proceedings may be considered in one hearing. In re Adoption of Walters,
112 Ohio St.3d 315, 2007-Ohio-7, 859 N.E.2d 545, ¶ 21 (“One hearing to address both
requirements is sufficient.”). Conversely, a court may hold separate hearings for the
consent and best-interests portions of an adoption proceeding. Id.
{¶ 107} Despite stating that the issues of consent and best interest would be
bifurcated, the trial court concluded in its judgment entries that it would be in the
children’s best interest to remain in their current placement and it denied T.B. and D.B.’s
petition without engaging in further proceedings:
In consideration of these factors, all other factors contained in ORC
3107.161, and in consideration of the least detrimental available alternative,
this court is unable to find that the agency is unreasonably withholding its
consent from this petition. This court agrees with the assessment of the
guardian ad litem that the child[ren] should remain in [their] current
placement.
36. Accordingly, this court hereby finds that the agency is not
unreasonably withholding its consent from this petition and therefore the
petition is hereby denied and dismissed.
{¶ 108} The trial court essentially concluded that because it is in the children’s
best interest to remain in their current placement, LCCS did not withhold its consent
unreasonably. And because LCCS did not withhold its consent unreasonably, T.B. and
D.B.’s petition must be denied. This is not the proper analysis. “The reasons for the
refusal to consent are simply part of the evidence weighed by the court.” (Emphasis
added.) Matter of Adoption of Crabtree, 4th Dist. Jackson No. 482, 1984 WL 5626, *2
(Aug. 31, 1984). Even where the refusal of the agency is not unreasonable, it is still
within the final authority of the probate court whether to grant or deny the adoption
petition based on its own independent analysis of the best interests of the child. In re
Haun, 31 Ohio App.2d 63, 68, 286 N.E.2d 478, 481 (8th Dist.1972). See also In re
Dickhaus, 41 Ohio Misc. 1, 5, 321 N.E.2d 800, 803 (C.P.1974) (“Where substantial
reasons exist for withholding the answer and consent, and the court is satisfied that it is
not in the best interest of the child to require it, the petition for adoption will be denied.”).
{¶ 109} Frankly, it is difficult to imagine what additional evidence T.B. and D.B.
could put forward in a separate hearing on the issue of best interest. It presented nine
witnesses who testified to the couple’s love for the children, the closeness the couple
once had with J.G., the couple’s ability to care for the children, B.G.’s role in alienating
the couple from their great-grandchildren, the couple’s intentions with respect to allowing
37. contact between the children and their biological mother and grandmother, among
various other issues.
{¶ 110} It is also difficult to understand why the trial court would purport to
bifurcate hearings on issues that, under the circumstances, were so inextricably
intertwined. But this is the procedure the court told the parties it planned to employ. The
Ohio Supreme Court held in In re Adoption of Walters, 112 Ohio St.3d 315, 2007-Ohio-
7, 859 N.E.2d 545, ¶ 10, that “R.C. 3107.11(A) does not require the notice of a hearing
on an adoption petition to include language that both the consent and best-interests
requirements will be addressed at the hearing.” But where the court expressly advises the
parties that it intends to bifurcate hearings on these issues, we believe the parties should
be able to rely on the court’s explanation of how the proceedings will be conducted so
they can prepare accordingly.
We, therefore, find T.B. and D.B.’s third assignment of error well-taken. We
remand this matter to the probate court for a best-interests hearing at which the parties
may present any evidence pertinent to the issue of the best interests of the children that
was not already presented during the consent hearing. The court must then independently
analyze whether, under R.C. 3107.161, adoption by T.B. and D.B. is in the best interests
of J.G. and K.W.
III. Conclusion
{¶ 111} We find T.B. and D.B.’s first assignment of error not well-taken. The
probate court properly concluded that the home study had not been approved. While the
38. appropriate box on the form was not checked, the assessment specifically stated that an
adoptive placement with T.B. and D.B. was not being recommended.
{¶ 112} We find T.B. and D.B.’s second assignment of error not well-taken. The
probate court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that LCCS’s consent for T.B. and
D.B. to adopt the children was not withheld unreasonably.
{¶ 113} We find T.B. and D.B.’s third assignment of error well-taken. The
probate court told the parties that it was bifurcating the issues of consent and best
interests, but then denied their adoption petition without permitting them to submit
additional evidence pertaining to the best interests of the children. The court was
required to independently consider the best-interests factors despite finding that LCCS
did not withhold its consent to adoption unreasonably.
{¶ 114} We affirm, in part, and reverse, in part, the January 6, 2020 judgments of
the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division. We remand this matter to
the probate court for a best-interests hearing at which the parties may present any
evidence pertinent to the issue of the best interests of the children that was not already
presented during the consent hearing. The court must then independently analyze
whether, under R.C. 3107.161, adoption by T.B. and D.B. is in the best interests of J.G.
and K.W.
{¶ 115} LCCS is ordered to pay the costs of this appeal under App.R. 24.
39. Judgment affirmed, in part, and reversed, in part.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to App.R. 27. See also 6th Dist.Loc.App.R. 4.
Thomas J. Osowik, J. _______________________________ JUDGE Christine E. Mayle, J. _______________________________ Gene A. Zmuda, P.J. JUDGE CONCUR. _______________________________ JUDGE
This decision is subject to further editing by the Supreme Court of Ohio’s Reporter of Decisions. Parties interested in viewing the final reported version are advised to visit the Ohio Supreme Court’s web site at: http://www.supremecourt.ohio.gov/ROD/docs/.
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