In re K.R.

2021 Ohio 495
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2021
Docket29815
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 495 (In re K.R.) 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 K.R., 2021 Ohio 495 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as In re K.R., 2021-Ohio-495.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SUMMIT )

IN RE: K.R. C.A. No. 29815

APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO CASE No. DN 20-01-075

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: February 24, 2021

CARR, Judge.

{¶1} Appellant Mother appeals from the judgment of the Summit County Court of

Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, that adjudicated her child dependent and placed him in the

temporary custody of appellee Summit County Children Services Board (“CSB” or “the agency”).

This Court affirms.

I.

{¶2} Mother is the biological mother of K.R. (d.o.b. 7/28/18) and K.T. (deceased).

Paternity for K.R. has been established, but Father has not participated in this appeal.

{¶3} When K.R. was 15 months old, he was taken into protective custody pursuant to

Juv.R. 6 based on the suspicious death of his five-month-old sister, K.T. On January 28, 2020,

CSB filed a complaint1 alleging that K.R. was a dependent child because his environment

1 CSB filed its original complaint in November 2019, but it dismissed that complaint based on statutory time limitations. The January 28, 2020 complaint was the agency’s first refiled complaint. 2

warranted the State in assuming his guardianship. Specifically, the agency alleged that K.T. had

died while in bed with Mother and K.R. The infant had been bleeding from the nose and a CT

scan indicated the presence of a subdural hemorrhage. Mother had earlier been participating in

voluntary case plan services with CSB based on Mother’s use of marijuana during her pregnancy;

serious mental health issues, including untreated depression and suicidal ideations; and Mother’s

attempts at physically harming herself and asking others to harm her in ways that would end her

pregnancy with K.T. After K.T. was born at 32 weeks’ gestation, the agency received a neglect

referral concerning K.T. Although K.R. did not present with any injuries when he was removed

after K.T.’s death, the agency also alleged that Mother had parenting issues, in that she would

allow K.R. to play with bottles of medication and would leave the child unrestrained in highchairs.

{¶4} At the shelter care hearing, Mother and Father stipulated, through counsel, that

there was probable cause for K.R.’s removal and that CSB had used reasonable efforts to prevent

the child’s removal from his home. Father was granted visitation as the parties might agree, while

Mother was limited to two hours per week of supervised visitation at the agency center.

{¶5} Due to illness of the magistrate assigned to the case, the adjudication was scheduled

for April 8, 2020, with the disposition to follow on April 20, 2020. The magistrate’s order further

stated: “All deadlines for adjudication have been waived until June [2020]. However, if all agree

then the proceeding can be conducted by teleconference.” Mother’s attorney was copied on the

order and did not move to set the order aside.

{¶6} At a status hearing attended by the parents’ attorneys on the date scheduled for

adjudication, the magistrate rescheduled the adjudication and disposition for June 12, 2020, and

June 19, 2020, respectively, due to Covid-19 restrictions. No party moved to set aside the order. 3

{¶7} The adjudicatory hearing took place as scheduled in June. The assistant prosecutor,

Mother’s attorney, and Father’s attorney all agreed without objection that the trial court would

accept the Medical Examiner’s Report of Autopsy regarding K.T. (“autopsy report”) as an exhibit.

In consideration of the testimony and exhibits admitted at the hearing, the magistrate found clear

and convincing evidence of K.R.’s dependency. Specifically, the magistrate found that the

condition or environment adversely affecting K.R. and warranting the State in assuming his

guardianship included (1) the dangers posed by Mother’s co-sleeping with her young children, and

(2) the unexplained origin of K.T.’s skull fracture. After the dispositional hearing, the magistrate

issued a decision adopting the agency’s case plan, finding that CSB had made reasonable efforts

to prevent the child’s continued removal from home, and placing K.R. in the agency’s temporary

custody. Mother filed timely objections to both the adjudicatory and dispositional decisions of the

magistrate.

{¶8} In challenging the adjudication, Mother argued the improper admission of

evidence, including inadmissible hearsay testimony by the agency caseworker and a police

detective, as well as the improper consideration of the autopsy report; the lack of clear and

convincing evidence to support the dependency finding; and the lack of a reasonable efforts finding

by the magistrate, as well as the lack of evidence to support any such finding. Although Mother

also objected to the dispositional decision, challenging solely the adoption of the agency’s case

plan and the magistrate’s reasonable efforts finding, Mother subsequently withdrew those

objections.

{¶9} Upon consideration of Mother’s supplemental objections to the adjudicatory

decision and CSB’s response thereto, the juvenile court sustained Mother’s objections in part, and

overruled them in part. Specifically, the juvenile court agreed that (1) the agency caseworker’s 4

testimony regarding the substance of unauthenticated agency records, and (2) both the

caseworker’s and police officer’s testimonies regarding the contents of the autopsy report were

inadmissible hearsay. In addition, the juvenile court agreed that the magistrate erred in failing to

make a reasonable efforts finding at adjudication. Nevertheless, because the judge found that the

evidence supported a reasonable efforts finding, she made such a finding in her judgment. In

overruling Mother’s remaining objections, the juvenile court found that the autopsy report was

properly admitted based on Mother’s broad stipulations that the medical examiner was qualified

as an expert and that the autopsy report should be admitted as a thorough report, the results of

which speak for themselves. Moreover, the judge noted that Mother’s attorney had cited

repeatedly to the autopsy report during his closing argument. Finally, the juvenile court found

clear and convincing evidence to adjudicate K.R. a dependent child.

{¶10} Mother filed a timely appeal. She raises four assignments of error for review. This

Court rearranges the assignments of error to facilitate review.

II.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR IV

THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE AND PLAIN ERROR IN NOT DISMISSING [CSB’S] COMPLAINT BECAUSE THE DISPOSITION WAS NOT COMPLETED WITHIN 90 DAYS OF THE DATE OF THE COMPLAINT.

{¶11} Mother argues that the juvenile court erred by failing to dismiss the agency’s

complaint when the dispositional hearing was not held within the statutorily required 90-day period

following the filing of the complaint. This Court disagrees. 5

{¶12} At the time relevant to this matter, both R.C. 2151.35(B)(1)2 and Juv.R. 34(A)

required the juvenile court to dismiss the agency’s complaint alleging dependency, neglect, and/or

abuse without prejudice if the initial dispositional hearing was not held within 90 days after the

date the complaint was filed. The Ohio Supreme Court relied on the plain language of both

provisions to hold that

R.C.

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2021 Ohio 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kr-ohioctapp-2021.