In re M.G.

2020 Ohio 3872
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 2020
Docket29596
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2020 Ohio 3872 (In re M.G.) 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 M.G., 2020 Ohio 3872 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as In re M.G., 2020-Ohio-3872.]

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

IN RE: M.G. C.A. No. 29596

APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO CASE No. DN 19 04 0376

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: July 29, 2020

CALLAHAN, Presiding Judge.

{¶1} Appellant, A.G. (“Mother”), appeals from a judgment of the Summit County Court

of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, that adjudicated her minor child abused and dependent and

placed the child in the temporary custody of the child’s father, M.G. (“Father”). This Court

affirms.

I.

{¶2} Mother and Father are the biological parents of M.G., born June 24, 2003.

Although Mother and Father are divorced, they were living together in the same home when this

case began. On April 29, 2017, M.G. was removed from the home pursuant to Juv.R. 6 because

Mother and M.G. got into an altercation during which Mother threatened and repeatedly fired a

gun at M.G. while he was barricaded in the family bathroom.

{¶3} Father was out of state on business at the time of the incident. When police

responded to the home, they removed M.G. pursuant to Juv.R. 6 and arrested Mother and took her 2

into custody. Summit County Children Services Board (“CSB”) filed a complaint the next day to

allege that M.G. was an abused, neglected, and dependent child. M.G. was placed in the

emergency temporary custody of CSB.

{¶4} The matter proceeded to adjudicatory and dispositional hearings. A magistrate

adjudicated M.G. as an abused, neglected, and dependent child and placed him in the temporary

custody of Father. The trial court initially adopted both of those decisions, pending the filing of

timely objections. The magistrate’s adjudicatory and dispositional decisions, and the trial court’s

orders that initially adopted them, included findings about how CSB had made reasonable efforts

to prevent the removal of M.G. from the home.

{¶5} Mother filed objections to the magistrate’s adjudicatory and dispositional decisions.

The trial court sustained Mother’s objections about the adjudication of neglect, the adjudication of

abuse pursuant to R.C. 2151.031(C) and (D)(1), and the adjudication of dependency under R.C.

2151.04(B). The trial court overruled the remainder of her objections, adjudicated M.G. an abused

and dependent child under R.C. 2151.031(B) and R.C. 2151.04(C), and placed him in the

temporary custody of Father.

{¶6} In its final judgment entry, the trial court did not again set forth findings that CSB

had made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of M.G. from the home. Mother appeals and

raises one assignment of error.

II.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE AND PLAIN ERROR IN FAILING TO MAKE FINDINGS REGARDING WHETHER [CSB] MADE REASONABLE EFFORTS. 3

{¶7} Mother’s assignment of error does not challenge the merits of the trial court’s

adjudication or disposition of M.G. Instead, Mother’s sole argument on appeal is that the trial

court committed reversible error by failing to reiterate its earlier “reasonable efforts” findings

when it overruled her objections to the magistrate’s decision and entered judgment. Assuming,

without deciding, that a trial court is required to reiterate prior reasonable efforts findings when it

rules on objections to the magistrate’s adjudicatory and/or dispositional decisions, Mother has

failed to demonstrate that reasonable efforts findings were required under the facts of this case.

{¶8} R.C. 2151.419(A)(1) requires that the trial court make reasonable efforts findings

in its judgments or orders following “any hearing held pursuant to * * * 2151.353 of the Revised

Code at which the court removes a child from the child’s home or continues the removal of a child

from the child’s home[.]” R.C. 2151.353(I) further provides that, “[t]he court shall not issue a

[post-adjudicatory] dispositional order * * * that removes a child from the child’s home unless

the court complies with section 2151.419 of the Revised Code and includes in the dispositional

order the findings of fact required by that section.”

{¶9} In other words, if the trial court did not remove the child from the “child’s home”

or continue the child’s removal, no reasonable efforts findings were required under R.C.

2151.419(A)(1) or R.C. 2151.353(I). The issue here is whether Mother has demonstrated that the

trial court’s judgment placing M.G. in the temporary custody of Father continued M.G.’s removal

from the “child’s home.”

{¶10} Although the requirements in R.C. Chapter 2151 and Chapter 5101:2 of the Ohio

Administrative Code repeatedly link reasonable reunification efforts to the child’s removal from

the child’s “home,” the term “home” is also not defined. When CSB filed its complaint in this

case, M.G. had been removed pursuant to Juv.R. 6 and was later placed in the emergency 4

temporary custody of the agency. M.G. was removed from the home in which he lived with both

Mother and Father.

{¶11} Because a child’s family may move from one physical residence to another,

reasonable reunification efforts do not normally focus on returning the child to that same location,

but instead focus on reuniting the child with his or her family. The term “family” and “household”

are defined in the Ohio Administrative Code. “‘Family’” means a group of people related by blood

or circumstances who may rely upon one another for sustenance, support, security, and or

socialization.” Ohio Adm.Code 5101:2-1-01(B)(113). Similarly “‘[h]ousehold’” means a private

residence including the members of the family living therein and/or unrelated individuals living in

the same residence and sharing common living areas.” Ohio Adm.Code 5101:2-1-01(B)(148).

The concept of “home” is generally understood to mean where the child’s family resides.

{¶12} This Court and the Ohio Supreme Court have long construed reasonable efforts to

return the child “home” as efforts to reunite the child with his family. See, e.g., In re C.F., 113

Ohio St.3d 73, 2007-Ohio-1104, ¶ 4 (“except for some narrowly defined statutory exceptions, the

state must make reasonable efforts to reunify the family before terminating parental rights.”); In

re S.R., 9th Dist. Summit No. 27209, 2014-Ohio-2749, ¶ 36-37 (emphasizing that reasonable

efforts are generally required to reunify a child with one or both parents because the parents have

a fundamental right to raise their children without state intervention and must be afforded every

procedural protection that the law allows).

{¶13} In In re C.F., at ¶ 27-29, the Ohio Supreme Court emphasized that, although the

concept of reasonable reunification efforts is not specifically defined in R.C. Chapter 2151, Ohio’s

child welfare laws were designed to balance the fundamental rights of parents to raise their own

children with the state’s interest in protecting the health and safety of its children. R.C. Chapter 5

2151 is to be construed so that children are separated from their parents “only when necessary for

the child’s welfare or in the interests of public safety.” Id. at ¶29, quoting R.C. 2151.01(A).

{¶14} Notably, Mother has failed to cite any legal authority to support her implicit legal

argument that the trial court’s dispositional order, which returned M.G. to the custody of Father

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2020 Ohio 3872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mg-ohioctapp-2020.