In re M.P.

2015 Ohio 4417
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 26, 2015
Docket14CA010693
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 Ohio 4417 (In re M.P.) 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.P., 2015 Ohio 4417 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as In re M.P., 2015-Ohio-4417.]

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

IN RE: M.P. C.A. No. 14CA010693 M.P. E.K.

APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF LORAIN, OHIO CASE Nos. 13 JC 39792 13 JC 29793 13 JC 39794

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: October 26, 2015

SCHAFER, Judge.

{¶1} Appellant, Marsheen P. (“Mother”), appeals from a judgment of the Lorain

County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, that terminated her parental rights to three of

her minor children and placed them in the permanent custody of Lorain County Children

Services (“LCCS”). This Court reverses and remands.

I.

{¶2} Only three of Mother’s minor children are at issue in this case: M.P., a female

born January 28, 2005; M.P., a male born March 30, 2006; and E.K., born October 27, 2009.

The fathers of the children are not parties to this appeal.

{¶3} When LCCS initially became involved with this family on a voluntary basis,

Mother was living in her home with other adults and seven minor children, including these three

children, Mother’s older minor child, and Mother’s three young grandchildren. Mother had 2

agreed to care for her three young grandchildren because their mothers, Mother’s daughters, had

substance abuse problems. LCCS opened a voluntary case based on concerns that the children

while in Mother’s care were not adequately supervised and had been exposed to domestic

violence in the home.

{¶4} On August 9, 2013, LCCS filed dependency and neglect complaints, alleging that

Mother’s one-year-old grandchild had been found outside the home without adult supervision.

LCCS alleged continuing concerns about domestic violence between Mother and the father of

E.K., violence between Mother’s oldest adult daughter and the father of two of the

grandchildren, and that Mother was not adequately supervising her minor children and

grandchildren who were in her care. Mother would later concede that she was overwhelmed by

caring for seven minor children.

{¶5} Although LCCS initially requested an order of protective supervision of the

children, shortly before the adjudicatory and dispositional hearings, an incident of domestic

violence between Mother and her oldest daughter led to the children’s removal from the home.

M.P., M.P., and E.K. were adjudicated as neglected and dependent children and placed in the

temporary custody of LCCS. The trial court adopted the case plan, which was later amended to

reflect the children’s removal from the home, and focused on reuniting Mother only with her

own minor children.1 The reunification goals required Mother to engage in services to address

the instability and domestic violence in her home.

1 Mother’s oldest minor child was later placed in a planned permanent living arrangement and Mother did not appeal that dispositional order. 3

{¶6} On April 17, 2014, LCCS filed an amended case plan to terminate Mother’s visits

with the children. LCCS explained that the children had experienced increased behavioral

problems, which it attributed to Mother behaving inappropriately during the visits by being

argumentative with LCCS and inappropriately speaking to the children about the case. Although

Mother did not file timely objections to the amended case plan, she later moved the trial court to

reinstate her visits, but the trial court denied her motion.

{¶7} On May 22, LCCS moved for permanent custody of the children. Aside from

terminating Mother’s visits one month earlier, the requirements for Mother on the case plan had

remained essentially the same during the six months that she had been given to remedy the

conditions that caused the children to be removed from her home. Following a hearing on the

permanent custody motion and Mother’s request for a six-month extension of temporary custody,

the trial court found that the children could not be returned to Mother’s custody within a

reasonable time or should not be returned to her custody and that permanent custody was in their

best interests.

{¶8} Mother appeals and raises three assignments of error. This Court confines its

review to Mother’s second assignment of error because it is dispositive.

II.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. II

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT ALLOWED AND RELIED UPON TESTIMONY CONCERNING ALLEGED DISCLOSURES MADE BY THE MINOR CHILDREN RELATING TO ABUSE.

{¶9} Mother’s second assignment of error is that the trial court erred in admitting and

relying upon improper hearsay statements of the children in reaching its permanent custody

decision. The children did not testify at the hearing. Instead, LCCS repeatedly attempted to 4

admit testimony about statements that the children made to witnesses about acts of abuse or

inappropriate discipline that they experienced while living with Mother. Although the trial court

excluded some of that testimony based on hearsay objections, it admitted some witness

testimony that the children had reported being subjected to inappropriate and/or potentially

abusive treatment while living in Mother’s home.

{¶10} Although some of the children’s statements to their counselors about past trauma

may have been admissible under Evid.R. 803(4) as statements made for purposes of

psychological diagnosis or treatment, see In re A.R., 9th Dist. Summit No. 22836, 2006-Ohio-

1548, none of that testimony established that Mother had subjected any of the children to abuse.

The therapist who counseled E.K and the male M.P. testified that both children suffered anxiety

from past trauma, but she had been unable to determine the source of their anxiety.

{¶11} The counselor of the female M.P. merely testified that M.P. would get anxious

about visits with Mother and that she was afraid Mother would beat her. This testimony was not

a disclosure by M.P. that she had ever been beaten by Mother, but only the counselor’s

unexplained conclusion that the child feared being beaten.

{¶12} Moreover, before admitting a child’s statement under Evid.R. 803(4), the trial

court should consider the circumstances surrounding the child’s statement to the treatment

provider. State v. Dever, 64 Ohio St.3d 401, 410 (1992). It was not disputed that M.P. had

multiple mental health diagnoses that were so severe and unstable that she was in a residential

treatment facility and was often placed in physical restraints because she posed a threat to herself

and/or others. Even after her visits with Mother were terminated, M.P.’s mental health had not

stabilized. Doctors continued to adjust her psychiatric medications, she continued to have 5

behavioral outbursts that sometimes required that she be physically restrained, and she remained

institutionalized.

{¶13} In addition to testimony of the counselors, other witnesses testified about the

children’s out-of-court statements. None of that testimony fell within a recognized exception to

the rule against hearsay evidence. LCCS incorrectly argued at the hearing and again on appeal

that the testimony of the guardian ad litem about what the children told him fell within an

exception to the hearsay rule. This Court has explicitly recognized that the report and testimony

of the guardian ad litem may include out-of-court statements of people interviewed, given the

unique role of the guardian ad litem to investigate the circumstances and parties in the case and

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