In re J.K.M.

2016 Ohio 7799
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 2016
Docket27183
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 7799 (In re J.K.M.) 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.M., 2016 Ohio 7799 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as In re J.K.M., 2016-Ohio-7799.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT MONTGOMERY COUNTY

IN RE: J.K.M. : : : Appellate Case No. 27183 : : Trial Court Case No. 2015-3553 : : (Appeal from Domestic Relations : Court-Juvenile Division) : :

...........

OPINION

Rendered on the 18th day of November, 2016.

KATHYRN SHIELDS, Atty. Reg. No. 0091924, Montgomery County Support Enforcement Agency, 117 South Main Street, Suite 400, Dayton, Ohio 45422 Attorney for Appellee c/o Herlinda Perez, Texas Attorney General’s Office, Division of Child Support

J.S.M., Westerville, Ohio Appellant-Pro Se .............

WELBAUM, J. -2-

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, J.S.M., appeals pro se from a decision of the

Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, overruling his objections

to the magistrate’s decision establishing him as the biological father of a minor, J.K.M.,

and ordering him to pay child support. For the reasons outlined below, the judgment of

the juvenile court will be affirmed.

Facts and Course of Proceedings

{¶ 2} On June 9, 2015, the Montgomery County Child Support Enforcement

Agency (“MCCSEA”) filed a complaint against J.S.M. pursuant to the Uniform Interstate

Family Support Act (“UIFSA”) for purposes of requesting the juvenile court to establish

J.S.M.’s paternity of J.K.M. and the payment of child support. The complaint was filed

after MCCSEA received a UIFSA petition from a child support enforcement agency in

Texas seeking to have Ohio (J.S.M.’s resident state) establish his paternity and child

support on behalf of J.K.M.’s mother. A hearing on the complaint was scheduled for

August 6, 2015.

{¶ 3} MCCSEA arranged for the complaint and notice of the hearing to be served

to J.S.M. at his address in the city of Miamisburg, Montgomery County, Ohio, by process

server. In July 2015, the court received a notice of service failure indicating that J.S.M.

was avoiding service. The same day, MCCSEA requested that service be reissued to

the same address by the sheriff’s office. Despite multiple attempts, the sheriff’s office

was also unable to perfect service on J.S.M. As a result, on August 11, 2015, MCCSEA

requested that service of the complaint and notice of the hearing, which had been -3-

continued to October 22, 2015, be reissued by certified mail. Thereafter, on September

29, 2015, the certified mailer was returned as “unclaimed,” but was successfully reissued

by ordinary mail later the same day.

{¶ 4} On November 3, 2015, the juvenile court issued a capias for J.S.M.’s arrest

after he did not attend the October 22, 2015 hearing on the complaint. A couple weeks

later, J.S.M. was apprehended on the capias and confined in jail. While confined, J.S.M.

submitted to DNA testing, the results of which confirmed him as the biological father of

J.K.M.

{¶ 5} The hearing on the UIFSA complaint was continued to January 21, 2016.

Prior to that, J.S.M. filed numerous pro se notices and motions demanding dismissal of

the action. However, at the January 21st hearing, MCCSEA moved to have all of

J.S.M.’s prehearing motions stricken due to J.S.M.’s failure to serve them on the parties

of record. The trial court granted the motion and struck J.S.M.’s prehearing motions as

requested.

{¶ 6} While J.S.M. appeared at the January 21st hearing, he was ordered by the

presiding magistrate to leave the courtroom after he failed to properly identify himself and

continued to disrupt the court proceedings with matters immaterial to the establishment

of paternity and child support. Once J.S.M. left the courtroom, the magistrate continued

with the proceeding. During the remainder of the proceeding, the magistrate discussed

the DNA test results and J.S.M.’s income information that was submitted to the court by

MCCSEA.

{¶ 7} The same day of the hearing, the magistrate issued a written decision

establishing J.S.M. as the biological father of J.K.M. and ordering him to pay child support -4-

in the amount of $765.52 per month, plus a processing fee. J.S.M. was also ordered to

pay an additional $112 per month in medical support if no private health insurance was

provided.

{¶ 8} On February 1, 2016, J.S.M. filed pro se objections to the magistrate’s

decision. All of J.S.M.’s objections are difficult to decipher, but appear to raise the

following arguments:

1. MCCSEA does not represent the best interest of the children as it is

required to do under law.

2. The DNA test confirming J.S.M.’s paternity of J.K.M. is inadmissible

because the testing was performed while J.S.M. was wrongfully confined in

jail under the capias.

3. The magistrate’s decision incorrectly identified J.S.M. as a party to the

action because, according to J.S.M., a “party” is defined as a “person

concerned or having to take part in any affair, matter, or transaction or

proceeding” and J.S.M. claims he is not a “person” as that term is defined

by law.

4. The magistrate knowingly and intentionally violated Rule 2.3 of the Ohio

Code of Judicial Conduct by exhibiting bias and prejudice against J.S.M.

when ordering him to leave the courtroom at the January 21st hearing and

conducting the proceedings without him.

{¶ 9} On February 25, 2016, the juvenile court judge issued a written decision

overruling J.S.M.’s objections upon finding that they all lacked merit. In so holding, the

juvenile court judge noted that instead of asserting a mistake of fact or error of law in the -5-

magistrate’s decision, J.S.M. instead asserted a variety of accusations that are

unsupported by law and irrelevant to the establishment of paternity and child support.

Accordingly, the juvenile court adopted the magistrate’s decision in its entirety.

{¶ 10} J.S.M. now appeals from the juvenile court’s judgment overruling his

objections and adopting the magistrate’s decision, raising three assignments of error for

review.

First Assignment of Error

{¶ 11} Although difficult to discern, J.S.M.’s First Assignment of Error appears to

argue that the juvenile court’s decision establishing paternity and child support violates

his constitutional right to due process of law because:

1. He was not properly served with the notice to appear at the October 22,

2015 hearing on the UIFSA complaint.

2. The magistrate ordered him to leave the courtroom at the January 21,

2016 hearing and based its paternity and child support order solely on the

DNA test results and the statements of MCCSEA’s attorney.

3. The DNA testing was inadmissible and involuntary because it was

performed as a condition of his release while he was wrongfully

apprehended for failing to appear at the October 22, 2015 hearing.

4. There was a conflict of interest between the judiciary and the State of

Ohio when child support orders are made because child support payments

fund State employee salaries and pensions.

5. The statements of MCCSEA’s attorney at the January 21, 2016 hearing -6-

are hearsay.

{¶ 12} At this juncture, we reiterate that the instant appeal is from the juvenile

court’s decision overruling J.S.M.’s objections to the magistrate’s decision that

determined he was the biological father of J.K.M. and established and ordered the

payment of child support. The fourth and fifth arguments cited above were not raised as

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