In re Larry

92 Ohio Law. Abs. 436
CourtCuyahoga County Juvenile Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1963
DocketNo. 199391
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 436 (In re Larry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Larry, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 436 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Whitlatch, J.

This cause came on for hearing on the petition of Mary E. Forbes, case worker for the Cuyahoga County Welfare Department, alleging that Larry and Scott H...., minors, ages five and four years, are dependent children, “in this that the condition or environment of the children is such as to warrant the State in the interest of the children in assuming their guardianship and that said children lack proper care by reason of the mental condition of their mother. ’ ’

Larry and Scott H.... are the illegitimate children of Norma H....; they live with her in a three-room apartment in the Central area of Cleveland. The paternity of the children has not been legally established and the whereabouts of Mr. J...., the alleged father, is unknown. Mrs. H____divorced her husband in 1954 and subsequently lived illicitly in Kansas City, Missouri with Mr. Jwho moved with her to Cleveland in 1956. Their association was discontinued in 1958; since that time, Mrs. H.... has apparently led a moral life. The petitioner testified that the housekeeping standards of Mrs. H.... were “fair.” Witnesses for Mrs. H.. ..testified that her home was clean, that she took good care of the boys and that they were generally neat and clean. The court interviewed the two boys who gave the appearance of being healthy, happy, outgoing children.

The only suggestion of improper care was the testimony of the petitioner that the mother had told her that on occasions, as punishment, she had sent the boys to bed without their dinner and that on these occasions she had given the boys vitamin pills in lieu of their meal. The mother also admitted that she had whipped the boys with a small strap; but this does not appear to have been excessive. Larry’s school report card shows him to be a well adjusted boy who is receiving better than average grades.

Three psychiatrists testified as to the mother’s mental condition. Dr. L...., the Court’s psychiatrist, testified that from his examination and from the records of the Mount Sinai Hospital Psychiatric Clinic that the mother was “a chronic paranoid schizophrenic and she should be considered as completely and totally inadequate and incapable of handling the two children now with her. ’ ’ Dr. G-...., who had seen the [438]*438mother when she was in psychotic episode in November 1961, likewise diagnosed the mother as a chronic paranoid schizophrenic. At the time of his examination, the mother manifested delusional symptoms. She said, among other things, that Scott had been a fetus in the time of Moses and that he was aborted in the fourth month and his soul was imprisoned until released in her womb. She further said that Larry came from a camel tribe and was destined to do great things in the world. At the hearing in June of 1962, the mother was apparently free from these delusions and denied that she had ever had them. When asked if the mother’s mental condition would prevent her from giving the children proper care, Dr. G.... answered that he did not know. Dr. G.... further testified that if the children were removed from the mother it might be necessary to hospitalize her since she might then become “an acute schizophrenic. ’ ’

The third psychiatrist, Dr. D....., who examined the mother at the request of counsel for the mother, originally reported that he found “no evidence of a psychosis, a character disorder or a neurosis which would make it physically or emotionally unsafe for her children to be reared by her.” However, after examining the medical records of Mount Sinai Hospital and conferring with Dr. L.... and Dr. G____, he reexamined the mother and found her partially recovered from a schizophrenic psychotic reaction. Dr. D.... testified that many who recover from such a psychosis are quite capable of caring for children but from his examination of the mother he had reason to doubt her capability. The mother did not take the witness stand but, with consent of counsel, the Court conferred with her privately. During this interview, the mother was completely rational although she did exhibit considerable tenseness. She denied ever having experienced the delusions reported by Dr. G...... The Court was unable to determine whether she was controlling enough not to mention the delusions, although possessed of them, or whether she was now free of the delusions and had no memory of ever experiencing them.

The Court also had available for consideration the recommendations of two professional social workers who were completely familiar with the psychiatric opinions related above and the social investigation relative to Mrs. H....’s background. [439]*439They were poles apart in their conclusions. One recommended immediate removal of the children from the mother’s home, maintaining that the mother’s mental condition made it dangerous for a social worker to visit her home. The other social worker advised leaving the children with the mother, with a social worker making periodic visits in the home to supervise the mother’s care of the children and to protect them from her if necessary.

The petitioner contends that in the best interest of the children they should be removed from their mother and since the mother’s condition is claimed to be “chronic” it is clearly implied that the separation should be a permanent one. If the children are adjudged dependent, the Court has the authority (Section 2151.35 [B], Revised Code), to commit them to the permanent custody of the County Welfare Department or another certified child-caring agency, which agency in turn would then be authorized to surrender them for adoption (Section 3107.06 [B] [1] & [D], Revised Code).

It is contended that the immediate removal of the children from the mother’s care is in the best interest of the children. “The Juvenile Court Judge may not make a disposition of a child just because it seems like a good thing to do.” Monrad Paulsen — Minn. Law Rev. Vol. 41, pg. 555. The Court is required by law to act in the best interest of the child but this requirement applies only to the child who has been legally determined to be within the Court’s jurisdiction. As was said in In re Coyle, 122 Ind. App., 217, 101 N. E. (2d), 192 (1951):

“Juvenile Court procedure has not been so far socialized and individual rights so far diminished that a child may be taken from its parents........simply because some court might think that to be in the best interests of the state........”

The abundance of authority giving a parent the paramount right to the custody of his child scarcely needs reiteration. This elemental proposition is succinctly stated in 39 American Jurisprudence, 603:

“Clearly, there is a point beyond which the state may not constitutionally go in interfering with the natural liberty of parents to direct the upbringing of their children. Parental authority, it is said, is an emanation from God, and every attempt [440]*440to infringe upon it, except from dire necessity, should be resisted in all well governed states...... In fact, it has been declared that the state has no higher welfare than to have children reared by their parents, free government being instituted for the protection and benefit of parenthood as one of the natural rights of citizenship.”

That Ohio cherishes this high concern for parenthood is clearly indicated in Section 2151.55, Revised Code, as follows:

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Related

In re M.
416 N.E.2d 669 (Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, 1979)
In Re JZ
190 N.W.2d 27 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1971)
Blore v. John Z.
190 N.W.2d 27 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Ohio Law. Abs. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-larry-ohjuvctcuyahoga-1963.