In Re Kristen v. Ot-07-031 (6-20-2008)

2008 Ohio 2994
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 2008
DocketNo. OT-07-031.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 2994 (In Re Kristen v. Ot-07-031 (6-20-2008)) 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 Kristen v. Ot-07-031 (6-20-2008), 2008 Ohio 2994 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
{¶ 1} This appeal comes to us from a judgment issued by the Ottawa County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, which awarded temporary custody of three children to their paternal grandfather. Because we conclude that the evidence supported the trial court's findings, we affirm. *Page 2

{¶ 2} Appellant, Jerry V. ("father"), is the biological father of Kristen V., Autumn V., and Carley V., and the stepfather of Brianna G., whose birth mother is father's wife, Stacey V. On April 19, 2007, Ottawa County Department of Job and Family Services ("OCDJFS") filed a complaint alleging that Kristen, then age 13, Autumn, age 12, and Carley, age 9, were abused and dependent children. Brianna, then also age 12, was alleged to be a dependent child in a separate complaint. The allegations stemmed from incidents involving alleged physical abuse of Kristen by her father and emotional abuse by father and stepmother. Reports of abuse made by two schools and a court employee resulted in a charge of domestic violence against father. Consequently, Kristen, Autumn, and Carley were removed from the household on a temporary emergency basis, and placed with their paternal grandfather.

{¶ 3} The court conducted an adjudication hearing on May 14, 2007, regarding all four children. Kristen testified that on April 1, 2007, her father took her into her bedroom by herself, and disciplined her by hitting her on the buttocks many times with a rubber "car part." She said he instructed her to bend over the bed before striking her. After hitting her on the buttocks, he then allegedly put her on a bunk bed and struck her several more times across the chest area. Kristen stated that the punishment was for taking food from the kitchen without permission and for having candy wrappers and a dirty cereal bowl under her bed.

{¶ 4} Kristen said the next morning, she took the car part from where her father kept it in the house, took it to school, and reported the incident to her school counselor. *Page 3

She said that other incidents of corporal punishment had occurred before this, but that she reported this time because she had "had enough" and was afraid to go home.

{¶ 5} The school counselor testified that, the morning after the incident, Kristen came to her office as soon as she was at school. The counselor described Kristen as usually being very "even" in demeanor. That morning, the counselor said she "knew something was wrong the minute I saw her" and that Kristen was very upset. The counselor stated that Kristen told her about being hit with the car part by her father, which she had brought to school and placed in her locker. Kristen confirmed that there were marks left by the alleged beating. The counselor contacted children services at OCDJFS and continued to talk with Kristen about what had happened. The counselor also noted that Kristen had not been a discipline problem at school and received A, B, and C grades, averaging about a B.

{¶ 6} Officer Ralph Edmonds, a Port Clinton police officer, met Amy Woody, an OCDJFS caseworker, at Kristen's school after the school counselor reported the suspected abuse. Kristen related the incident to Officer Edmonds, who then made a police report. He also took into evidence the black rubber car part that Kristen had brought to school. He stated that the part was a "black rubber thing and had a handle and a round part on top." The officer said that Kristen appeared to be upset and angry about the incident. She told him that her father had hit her with the car part 15 to 20 times on the "butt" and eight to ten on the chest. He also said that Kristen ultimately made a written statement which was consistent with what she had told him verbally. *Page 4

{¶ 7} The officer then identified state's Exhibit 1 as the part he had taken into custody. He stated that, based on the report, he had other officers pick up Jerry V., Kristen's father, to place him under arrest and to question him. Jerry told the officers that Kristen had stolen a cell phone from her grandmother, lied about it, and that he had "swatted her on the butt" with his hand for stealing and lying about the phone. He said that the car part was actually a gas pedal cover to an old car he owned. He could not explain Kristen's bruises or how the marks left on her chest area matched the grooves from the car part.

{¶ 8} B.J. Surovjak, a counselor with the Intervention Court FACT (Families and Court Together) program then testified that she had met Kristen, her father, and her stepmother during Kristen's attendance in the FACT program. Kristen had been placed in the program in December 2006, after her parents had filed "unruly" charges against her. As a result of information revealed at counseling sessions, Surovjak had expressed concern to the parents about the methods of discipline being employed by father and stepmother. The counselor determined that problems also existed with the parents, and the whole family needed counseling. Surovjak noted that during a follow-up visit at school, Kristen appeared happy and relaxed, unlike her demeanor when she was with her parents at the FACT sessions.

{¶ 9} Surovjak testified that she had been called by the school and went there to talk with Kristen on the morning that the abuse report had been made. Kristen said she had been beaten for stealing food and showed the counselor the rubber object that she had *Page 5 placed in her locker. The counselor also described Kristen as not crying, but being very upset and terrified to go home. She believed that because Kristen felt safe while in the school setting, she had been very open with her about the incidents in the home.

{¶ 10} When Surovjak later talked with father and stepmother after the abuse charges were filed, they appeared very angry. Father admitted that he had hit Kristen but not with any object. Father and stepmother claimed that she "stole food from the kitchen." The counselor then questioned them how family members could steal food from each other or the household in general. Stacey told her that the children were not allowed to eat anything unless she gives them permission to eat it. She said that she found food wrappers and bowls under the bed, which is what caused the beating. Surovjak said that father stated that he would not allow Kristen back in his home. After discussions with the parents, Surovjak remained concerned about placement for all the children because Kristen had been very nervous and feared being beaten again if she went home. She further noted that she had never known Kristen to lie to her during the counseling sessions.

{¶ 11} Amy Woody, OCDJFS caseworker, then testified that her first contact with Kristen and the family was on April 2, 2007, the day that the abuse complaint was reported. She said she had also gone to the child's home with her father in December 2006, as a result of a referral when the children disclosed in counseling that they were being hit with boards. When she spoke with the children, they told her they had changed *Page 6 their minds and that they had lied because Brianna missed seeing her father and Autumn missed her mother.

{¶ 12}

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 2994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kristen-v-ot-07-031-6-20-2008-ohioctapp-2008.