In re M.H.

2022 Ohio 48
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 2022
DocketCA2021-08-047 CA2021-08-048 CA2021-08-049
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 48 (In re M.H.) 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.H., 2022 Ohio 48 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as In re M.H., 2022-Ohio-48.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

CLERMONT COUNTY

IN RE: :

M.H., et al. : CASE NOS. CA2021-08-047 CA2021-08-048 : CA2021-08-049

OPINION 1/10/2022

APPEAL FROM CLERMONT COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS JUVENILE DIVISION Case Nos. 2017 JC 04951, 2017 JC 04952, and 2017 JC 05024

Mark J. Tekulve, Clermont County Prosecuting Attorney, and Nicholas Horton, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee, Clermont County Children Services

CASA for Clermont Kids, and Nathan Bell, for appellee.

The Law Office of Wendy R. Calaway, Co., LPA, and Wendy R. Calaway, for appellant.

HENDRICKSON, J.

{¶1} Appellant, the biological mother ("Mother") of M.H., I.H., and D.H., appeals

from a decision of the Clermont County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, granting

permanent custody of her children to appellee, Clermont County Department of Job and

Family Services ("CCDJFS"). The children's biological father ("Father") has filed a separate

appeal and is not a party to the instant action. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm Clermont CA2021-08-047 CA2021-08-048 CA2021-08-049

the juvenile court's decision.

{¶2} On March 22, 2017, CCDJFS filed a neglected child complaint and requested

protective supervision of four-year-old M.H., born June 5, 2012, and three-year-old I.H.,

born July 2, 2013. The complaint alleged that CCDJFS had been working voluntarily with

the family since September 2016 due to the unsanitary and unsafe condition of their home.

CCDJFS reported that the family's trailer was infested with fleas, lice, and other bugs, and

that the children had fleas and lice in their hair along with visible bite marks on their arms

and legs. CCDJFS also stated that the family was removed from their home for a brief

period because it was soiled with dog, cat, and rabbit feces. CCDJFS further alleged that

the trailer had holes in the floor through which the ground was visible.

{¶3} CCDJFS indicated that Mother and Father were able to clean their home and

make it free from environmental hazards. However, as CCDJFS alleged, Mother and Father

soon regressed to the same issues of cleanliness. This included allegations that the trailer

was still infested with fleas. CCDJFS alleged that an agency employee who visited the

home found it cluttered and dirty, with feces on the ground. During the same visit, the

employee fell through a soft spot of the trailer's floor. During another visit, the agency

employee found smeared, dried dog feces in the children's bedroom.

{¶4} CCDJFS stated that it had obtained vouchers for the family to repair their

home and provided them with lot rent. Mother and Father, however, were slow to engage

with CCDJFS or to correct the safety problems with their home. Despite adequate income,

Mother and Father repeatedly struggled to pay bills due to their frivolous spending.

CCDJFS also alleged Mother had not engaged in mental health treatment. CCDJFS noted,

however, that the family had just recently started services with a parenting educator.

{¶5} On April 27, 2017, the magistrate adjudicated M.H. and I.H. as neglected

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children. Following this adjudication, M.H. and I.H. remained in the custody of Mother and

Father, but were subject to protective supervision by CCDJFS. The juvenile court

subsequently adopted the magistrate's recommendation on May 16, 2017.

{¶6} Throughout the pendency of this case, CCDJFS implemented multiple case

plans. These plans included requirements that Mother and Father maintain a clean and

safe living environment. In addition, Mother and Father were required to receive parenting

education, marriage counseling, mental health services for Mother, and budgeting and

household financial management. The record reveals that Mother and Father made efforts

to comply with the case plan requirements, but were ultimately unable to make the changes

necessary to keep the children in their home.

{¶7} On September 26, 2017, CCDJFS moved to change protective supervision to

emergency custody. To support its motion, CCDJFS alleged that Mother and Father had

not been able to maintain consistent compliance with the agency regarding the cleanliness

of their home, parent education, or Mother's mental health. CCDJFS stated that M.H. and

I.H. had been residing with their aunt and uncle, A.S. and M.S., since September 5, 2017,

due to safety concerns and to provide Mother and Father with time to clean the home.

CCDJFS reported that most of the floors in Mother and Father's trailer had been reinforced,

but that the trailer remained extremely cluttered and infested with bed bugs. CCDJFS also

stated that the current status of the trailer was unacceptable for an exterminator to complete

an effective extermination. Finally, CCDJFS stated that Mother was currently pregnant and

due to have her third child, D.H., in nine weeks. The juvenile court granted CCDJFS's

request for temporary custody and set the case for a dispositional hearing.

{¶8} Following the dispositional hearing, the magistrate continued the temporary

custody order. The juvenile court then adopted the magistrate's disposition decision of

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temporary custody on November 6, 2017. D.H. was adjudicated dependent on December

21, 2017, shortly after his birth. Following a dispositional hearing, D.H. was also placed in

the temporary custody of CCDJFS.

{¶9} While in the temporary custody of CCDJFS, the children resided with their

aunt and uncle, A.S. and M.S., from September 26, 2017, until July 6, 2018, when the family

was required to move to Kansas due to M.S.'s military assignment.1 The children were then

placed in a foster home from July 6, 2018, through August 13, 2018. The children's paternal

grandmother ("Paternal Grandmother") then had her home study approved and the children

were placed in her care from August 13, 2018, until May 28, 2019.

{¶10} On May 28, 2019, Mother and Father regained custody of the children under

protective supervision. In August of 2019, Mother and Father were evicted from their trailer.

Mother and Father ended their relationship at that point. Father then took the children to

live with him and Paternal Grandmother while Mother lived with a friend. On February 25,

2020, Paternal Grandmother stated that Father and the children could no longer stay with

her. That same day, Mother and Father agreed to place the children in the temporary

custody of CCDJFS. Following their placement with CCDJFS, the children were then

placed with a foster family.

{¶11} After being asked to leave Paternal Grandmother's house, Father, now back

in a relationship with Mother, was able to pay off the back rent for the lot and moved back

into the trailer. Mother and Father continued to reside in the trailer for the remainder of the

proceedings. Then, in early 2021, the children's aunt and uncle, A.S. and M.S., returned to

Ohio following M.S.'s medical discharge from the military. The children were then placed

1. D.H. was placed with A.S. and M.S. on December 4, 2017, following his birth.

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back with A.S. and M.S. on January 8, 2021, where they have remained.

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2022 Ohio 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mh-ohioctapp-2022.