In re J.K.

2014 Ohio 5502
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
Docket14 CA 899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2014 Ohio 5502 (In re J.K.) 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 J.K., 2014 Ohio 5502 (Ohio Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[Cite as In re J.K., 2014-Ohio-5502.]

STATE OF OHIO, CARROLL COUNTY

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

SEVENTH DISTRICT

IN THE MATTER OF: ) CASE NO. 14 CA 899 ) J.K., ) OPINION ) A MINOR CHILD. ) )

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Civil Appeal from Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division, Case No. 20134052.

JUDGMENT: Reversed and Remanded.

APPEARANCES: For Plaintiff-Appellant: Attorney Vincent Slabaugh P.O. Box 836 Malvern, Ohio 44644

For Defendant-Appellee: Beverly Close, Pro se 1201 Scott Avenue Ashtabula, Ohio 44004

JUDGES: Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich Hon. Gene Donofrio Hon. Mary DeGenaro

Dated: December 15, 2014 [Cite as In re J.K., 2014-Ohio-5502.] VUKOVICH, J.

{¶1} Appellant-father appeals the decision of the Carroll County Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division, naming appellee-mother as the residential parent of the unmarried parties’ young child. The father’s first assignment of error asserts that the trial court misapplied the law for an original custody decree by concluding: “The Court further finds no evidence to support a change of custody away from the mother.” The father thus proposes that the court did not apply the governing best interests test and did not place the parties on equal footing as statutorily-required. He notes that the court did not make findings and conclusions regarding the best interests factors and did not even use the term “best interests.” In his second assignment of error, the father urges that naming the mother as residential parent was not in the child’s best interests and was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence presented at trial. {¶2} For the following reasons, appellant’s first assignment of error is sustained as the language of the decree indicates that the court did not place the parties on equal footing and did not proceed as if this was an original allocation of parental rights and responsibilities. We thus cannot review the merits of the custody decree under the second assignment of error at this time. This case is hereby reversed and remanded for the trial court to reconsider the child’s custody under the proper best interests test with additional instructions for the court to explain the reasons underlying its judgment. STATEMENT OF THE CASE {¶3} The parties’ male child was born in May of 2012. The family lived with the father’s grandparents for a couple months and then moved into a trailer on the grandfather’s property. The father owns the trailer. Around Halloween of 2013, when the child was eighteen months old, he went to visit his maternal grandparents in Ashtabula and was expected to return on November 17. As that time drew near, the mother moved out of the trailer and joined the child at her parents’ house. {¶4} On November 21, 2013, the father filed a complaint for custody in the juvenile court, stating that the mother failed to return the child to the house on -2-

November 17 as agreed and she said he could not see the child. The complaint urged that it was in the child’s best interests to be placed in the father’s custody as the child resided in his house since birth and he was the primary caregiver. {¶5} At the December 12, 2013 pretrial, the father was represented by counsel and the mother appeared pro se. The father pointed out that he had still not seen his son since the end of October and asked for substantial visitation until the full hearing. (Tr. 7). On the same day, the court issued an order stating that the mother was designated residential parent and the father was granted reasonable companionship rights. The court listed a schedule of visitation dates up until the February 12, 2014 pretrial, which was essentially a repeating schedule of two nights with the father and four nights with the mother, with extra days around Christmas. Child support was not ordered as the father did not work and was on SSI. {¶6} At the February 12, 2014 pretrial, the court was asked to change the visitation to one week on and one week off, so the father did not have to drive to Ashtabula as often since he was the only party with a vehicle and was doing all the driving. An order was entered that same day, providing a repeating companionship schedule of four nights for the father and ten nights for the mother, until the full evidentiary hearing. {¶7} The trial proceeded on April 17, 2014. The father testified that he lived with the child since birth and he took care of the child when the mother worked. (Tr. 7). He explained that both parents could have been considered the primary caregiver for the first six months of the child’s life but the mother then started withdrawing from the family. (Tr. 8-9). He stated that the mother bought an X-box and started playing it online with friends in the bedroom with the door shut, leaving the child in the living room with the father. (Tr. 9). He testified that he fed, bathed, and played with the child. He brought the child to all doctor appointments with the mother coming to half of them (but to none of the visits requiring shots). (Tr. 8, 13). He also stated that he put the child to bed every night. (Tr. 10). {¶8} The father mentioned that when the mother first moved out, he tried to call her parents’ house but there was screaming in the background. He pointed out -3-

that he went without seeing his child from Halloween until mid-December due to the mother’s actions. (Tr. 24). He added that he has not missed a visitation, has done all the driving to and from Ashtabula, and is never late. (Tr. 24-25). {¶9} The father then expressed his concerns with various injuries he discovered on the child. The first time he received the child, his legs were covered in bruises, there were bruises on his arms, he had two knots on his head, and he vomited in the car. (Tr. 25). The father called Children’s Services and brought the child to the emergency room and then to follow-up with a doctor. (Tr. 25-26). An investigation was conducted, and it was concluded that the bruises were from normal play. (Tr. 26, 31). The hospital discharge papers and photographs of the child (from this and other days) were submitted as exhibits. {¶10} When the father exercised his third scheduled visitation, the child had bruising on the inner thigh and the back of his legs, a bruise on his head, bug bites (in winter), and scratches. (Tr. 33). Then, during the week of Valentine’s Day, the mother told him the child had a bruise on his head from falling. When the father thereafter noticed a second bruise on the child’s head, he called the mother and she added that he also fell in the bathtub and hit his head on the faucet. (Tr. 36). During both visits, he called Children’s Services and took photographs. (Tr. 33, 37). {¶11} On picking the child up on March 13, 2014, his face was scratched and his feet were blistered and bleeding; the father opined it looked like his feet had been scalded. The photographs support his concern. (Tr. 38). The father also disclosed that the mother has not provided him with the child’s medical card, even though she told the court at the December 12 hearing that she would provide it to the father the next day. {¶12} Finally, the father testified that he had recently witnessed the child performing “full force” head-butts against walls, doors, and floors and punching himself in the head with toys. (Tr. 40). From this, the parents decided that the child should be checked for autism, and an appointment was scheduled for the next week. (Tr. 41). The father concluded that he had an established ability to take care of the child and expressed concern that the mother could not, noting that she was -4-

previously living with her parents but was now in an apartment without a vehicle. (Tr. 47-48). {¶13} The father then called two friends to testify that the mother starting secluding herself in the bedroom instead of interacting with the child and that the father did most of the caregiving. (Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 Ohio 5502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jk-ohioctapp-2014.