In Re Nicholas P.

863 N.E.2d 1102, 169 Ohio App. 3d 570, 2006 Ohio 6213
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 2006
DocketNo. L-06-1051.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 863 N.E.2d 1102 (In Re Nicholas 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 Nicholas P., 863 N.E.2d 1102, 169 Ohio App. 3d 570, 2006 Ohio 6213 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Singer, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} This appeal comes to us from a judgment issued by the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, which terminated the parental rights of appellants to custody of their minor son. Because we conclude that the trial *572 court erred in its findings that were the basis for granting permanent custody to the children services agency, we reverse and remand.

{¶ 2} Appellants, Melissa P. and John P., are the parents of Nicholas P., born in August 2005. Prior to the child’s birth, Lucas County Children Services (“LCCS”) had notice that the couple had previously lost custody of two other children, one in Fulton County and one in Lucas County. On April 18, 2002, Kaylee, born February 6, 2002, was taken into temporary custody by the Fulton County Department of Job and Family Services (“FCDJF”) pursuant to allegations of serious injuries to the child. A case plan was created, requiring both parents to undergo psychological evaluations and to participate in various services. While the Fulton County case was still pending, Lauren was born to appellants on April 20, 2003. LCCS took Lauren into custody immediately following birth. On August 28, 2003, LCCS was granted permanent custody of Lauren because of the Fulton County allegations of abuse of the first child, Kaylee.

{¶ 3} In March 2004, FCDJF was granted permanent custody of Kaylee because appellants had lost custody of Lauren and had not completed their case-plan requirements. As a result of those proceedings, 17 months later, LCCS again sought and was granted temporary custody of Nicholas immediately following his birth in August 2005. He was removed from the custody of his parents at the time of his hospital discharge.

{¶ 4} In October 2005, at a combination pretrial and reasonable-efforts-bypass hearing, the juvenile court magistrate granted a motion by LCCS to be excused from making reasonable efforts at reunification of Nicholas and his parents. On December 19, 2005, and January 27, 2006, the court conducted the adjudicatory hearing as to the allegations of the complaint.

{¶ 5} The only witness called by LCCS at adjudication was Holly Matuszak, an LCCS assessment caseworker. She testified that she had interviewed the parents in the hospital immediately following Nicholas’s birth. They reported to her that even after Kaylee and Lauren were removed, they had continued attending and had completed parenting and anger-management classes at Unison Behavioral Health Group, Inc. (“Unison”) under the old case plan. The mother said that her most recent therapist had told her she had been misdiagnosed as bipolar, but instead was suffering from depression due to the loss of custody of her children. The mother reported that the therapist further said she did not need to continue counseling for bipolar issues. The father reported that the domestic-violence-class instructor said he could not attend the program because domestic-violence charges were no longer pending against him.

{¶ 6} Although a release had been issued to Unison, Matuszak did not obtain information from that services provider. She also acknowledged that she did not *573 know whether the parents had completed the case-plan services previously requested. The court admitted into evidence copies of the parents’ police records, as well as the entire court case records of the two children previously removed from the parents’ custody.

{¶ 7} The mother then testified that she and the father were married in April 2004. She stated that under the Fulton County case plan for Kaylee, she was to complete the following services: counseling, parenting classes, drug and alcohol assessment, and an anger-management assessment. She acknowledged that at the time FCDJF was granted permanent custody of Kaylee in March 2004, she had not fully completed all classes and required services. The mother said that she had completed the case-plan requirements well before Nicholas’s birth. The mother stated that although the father had been initially referred to domestic-violence classes, this was never an issue between her and the father. She further testified that the father had completed anger-management classes, but not the domestic-violence classes. The court then admitted into evidence a certificate of completion showing that the mother had completed parenting classes as of January 2003 and that she had attended both depression/anxiety-management classes and individual therapy sessions. Documents were admitted showing that the father had also attended parenting classes and anger-management group sessions.

{¶ 8} Ultimately, the trial court adjudicated Nicholas to be a dependent child and proceeded directly to disposition. At the disposition phase, LCCS again called only one witness. Kelly Crampton, an LCCS caseworker, testified that Nicholas has no special needs, that he is developmentally on target, and that the mother and father continue to visit him every week. She further stated that as requested for Nicholas’s case plan, the father had completed an assessment at Unison, a counseling and mental-health-therapy provider, on September 21, 2005. Crampton stated that the father had been referred for 24 individual sessions of batterer’s intervention therapy, but she had no further information, and she had never contacted Unison about his participation. She also stated that appellants had talked with a pastor once and had been regularly attending a church parent-counseling group.

{¶ 9} When asked specifically about former case-plan requirements, Crampton stated that she had “no idea” what those requirements were or whether appellants had completed them. It was her “understanding,” however, that appellants had not completed them, and that was why Kaylee and Lauren had been permanently removed from their custody.

{¶ 10} The guardian ad litem also stated on the record that the “mother and father seem like nice people. They really do.” She said, however, that she was bothered about the injuries to Kaylee in 2002, and did not know whether *574 appellants could “admit” anything about what had happened back then. She noted that she had also checked the father’s arrest record. The domestic-violence and assault charges referred to earlier in the proceedings had, in fact, been dismissed. Nevertheless, she stated that she did not think appellants were “ready to get their baby.”

{¶ 11} The court ultimately determined on disposition that permanent custody of Nicholas should be granted to LCCS. The court stated again that the reasons were because appellants “have lost custody of two older children involuntarily,” and they “have not sought out, successfully engaged in, or successfully completed any services that led to the termination of parental rights of their older children.”

{¶ 12} Appellants now appeal from that judgment, arguing the following two assignments of error: 1

{¶ 13} “1. In a permanent custody trial, clear and convincing evidence did not support the court’s termination of the parents’ parental rights solely on the basis of an uncompleted case plan in a prior case, where one or more of the parents had substantially completed case plan goals since the completion of the prior case.

{¶ 14} “2.

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Bluebook (online)
863 N.E.2d 1102, 169 Ohio App. 3d 570, 2006 Ohio 6213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nicholas-p-ohioctapp-2006.