In re M.L.E.

2015 Ohio 3647
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 2015
Docket2015-P-0007 2015-P-0010 2015-P-0011 2015-P-0012 2015-P-0013 2015-P-0014 2015-P-0015 2015-P-0016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 Ohio 3647 (In re M.L.E.) 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.L.E., 2015 Ohio 3647 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as In re M.L.E., 2015-Ohio-3647.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

PORTAGE COUNTY, OHIO

IN RE: : OPINION M.L.E. and C.I.E., NEGLECTED/ABUSED/ : DEPENDENT CHILDREN CASE NOS. 2015-P-0007, : 2015-P-0010, J.T.E., A.C.E., N.C.E., 2015-P-0011, H.J.E., L.M.E., J.R.E., : 2015-P-0012, NEGLECTED/DEPENDENT 2015-P-0013, CHILDREN : 2015-P-0014, 2015-P-0015, : and 2015-P-0016

Appeals from the Portage County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, Case Nos. 2014 JCC 00619, 2014 JCC 00620, 2014 JCC 00621, 2014 JCC 00622, 2014 JCC 00623, 2014 JCC 00624, 2014 JCC 00625, and 2014 JCC 00626.

Judgment: Affirmed.

Victor V. Vigluicci, Portage County Prosecutor, and Brandon J. Wheeler, Assistant Prosecutor, 241 South Chestnut Street, Ravenna, OH 44266 (For Portage County Department of Job and Family Services).

William T. Whitaker and Andrea Whitaker, 54 East Mill Street, Suite 301, Akron, OH 44308 (For Appellants).

Gerrit M. Denheijer, Guilitto Law Office, L.L.P., 222 West Main Street, P.O. Box 350, Ravenna, OH 44255 (Guardian ad litem).

THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.

{¶1} These consolidated appeals are from judgments in eight juvenile proceedings before the Portage County Court of Common Pleas. In each judgment, the

trial court upheld the magistrate’s conclusion that all of the subject children should

remain in the temporary custody of appellee, the Portage County Department of Jobs

and Family Services, because each child was either a neglected and dependent child,

or an abused child. Appellants, Jessica M. and James T. Earley, primarily assert that all

eight judgments must be reversed because the magistrate’s underlying findings are not

supported by the evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

{¶2} Appellants own and maintain a small farm in Brimfield Township, Portage

County, Ohio. As of July 2014, they lived in a two-story home on the farm with eight of

their nine children. In conjunction with the maintenance of the farm, appellants harbor a

number of animals, including dogs, cats, and at least one goose. Some of the animals

are permitted to enter the home and sleep with the children.

{¶3} The ages of the eight children range from fifteen years old, M.L.E., to one

year, C.I.E. Three of the children have conditions requiring some form of medical

treatment. M.L.E. has a history of depression often causing her to engage in violent

behavior against her siblings. M.L.E. also has suicidal tendencies and has been

prescribed specific medication. N.C.E has been diagnosed as autistic and needs

specialized educational services. J.R.E. has been diagnosed with ADHD.

{¶4} On the morning of July 27, 2014, M.L.E. became involved in an altercation

with her younger brother, J.T.E. This altercation led to a confrontation between M.L.E.

and James T. Earley, her father. During the confrontation, M.L.E. sustained at least one

blow to her head. As a result, M.L.E. called 9-1-1 on her cellphone, and Officer Crystal

Casterlin of the Brimfield Police Department was dispatched to appellants’ home, along

2 with the emergency squad.

{¶5} Upon exiting her cruiser, Officer Casterlin initially spoke to the father in the

driveway regarding the basis for his daughter’s 9-1-1 call. According to the officer, the

father appeared to be intoxicated. When Officer Casterlin asked whether he had been

drinking, the father replied that “it was from the night before.” The officer then asked if

one of the children had been injured that morning. In response, the father indicated that

it was possible M.L.E may have been hit by his bedroom door as he was closing it after

the altercation between her and J.T.E. ended.

{¶6} Officer Casterlin was able to locate M.L.E. in the basement of the Earley

residence. After M.L.E. gave a brief description of the underlying incident involving her

father, the officer asked her if she had any evidence of an actual injury to her head. The

officer was then taken to the basement bathroom, where M.L.E. showed her a piece of

“wadded-up” toilet paper that was sitting inside the toilet bowl. According to the officer,

there was fresh blood on the paper.

{¶7} While investigating M.L.E.’s complaint against her father, Officer Casterlin

had the opportunity to observe the other seven children. According to her, none of the

children were clean, despite the fact that she did not arrive at the Earley residence until

approximately 11:45 a.m. In regard to appellants’ youngest child, C.I.E., the officer saw

that the child’s diaper was so full that it was hanging around her knees. The officer also

noted that C.I.E. had a substantial injury to her right foot that caused her to walk on the

outside edge of the foot.

{¶8} In addition, Officer Casterlin was able to observe the general condition of

the inside of the home. The officer gave the following summary regarding the home’s

3 condition:

{¶9} “It was deplorable. Um, the home was absolutely filthy. The floor had,

um, feces on it, urine. The couch had, um, you know how if you put something on

upholstery on something with a liquid it will dry up and you can see the fabric. The

entire couch was like that from the bottom where you could see that it had drawn up like

moisture. It smelled like urine. The smell was like animal feces and urine and was

unbearable. There were flies all throughout the house. Um, every room was filthy. The

walls were filthy. Holes in the wall. The beds didn’t have, um, coverings on them. The

mattresses were filthy. There was like a wild goose in one (1) of the rooms that was in

a dog, what appeared to be a smaller dog cage. Um, the entire bottom of it was

covered in, um, goose feces, urine that had leaked out onto the floor in the little boy’s

room. His bed was right next to the goose cage and it had all spilled out onto the floor

around it. Um, there were animals everywhere. The door was open, um, and the like

the animals just walked in and out. But there were dishes piled up in the sink, um, that

appeared to have some old food on them and bugs crawling in them. I mean every

room was just absolutely filthy.”

{¶10} Based upon her observations of the eight children and the Earley home,

Officer Casterlin immediately took temporary custody of the children so that they could

be transported to the Akron Children’s Hospital for examination by Dr. Adarsh Gupta, a

specialist in pediatric emergency medicine. In relation to C.I.E., the doctor found three

splinters near the heel of her right foot. The doctor also found a dark spot on the bottom

of the foot, where a blister had formed. According to Dr. Gupta, upon lancing the blister,

he determined that the foot was infected, but could not locate the specific splinter which

4 led to the blister. The doctor concluded that the wound had never been treated before,

and that the splinter was inside the child’s foot for so long that her body had dissolved

the foreign object.

{¶11} In examining M.L.E., Dr. Gupta could not find any physical indication that

she was hit in the face/head. However, during an interview with a social worker at the

hospital, M.L.E. gave a lengthy description of the alleged confrontation with her father.

According to M.L.E., she and her younger brother, J.T.E, were arguing in their parents’

bedroom when she pushed him onto their bed. Upon witnessing this, the father hit her

in the back multiple times with his fist. Once M.L.E.

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2015 Ohio 3647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mle-ohioctapp-2015.