In re Petition for Adoption of Z.H.

2022 Ohio 3926
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 2022
DocketWM-22-002
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 3926 (In re Petition for Adoption of Z.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 Petition for Adoption of Z.H., 2022 Ohio 3926 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Petition for Adoption of Z.H., 2022-Ohio-3926.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WILLIAMS COUNTY

In re Petition for the Adoption Court of Appeals No. WM-22-002 of Z.H. Trial Court No. 20225002

DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Decided: November 3, 2022

*****

John S. Shaffer, for appellants.

Austin C. Buchholz, for appellee.

MAYLE, J. I. Introduction

{¶ 1} At issue in this appeal is a petition to adopt Z.H., filed by the minor child’s

paternal grandmother, T.M.W. (“grandmother”) and her husband, T.L.W. (“grandfather”), the appellants herein.1 On June 2, 2022, the Williams County Court of

Common Pleas, Probate Division found that, under R.C. 3107.07(A), the consent of the

child’s biological mother, K.L.V.D. (“mother”), was necessary for adoption.

{¶ 2} For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

II. Background

{¶ 3} Mother was married to K.H., (“father”), and the couple have two children

together: Z.H., born in 2013, and A.H., born in 2015. This case involves Z.H. only.

{¶ 4} Z.H. began living with her paternal grandparents when she was five years

old. One year later, grandmother filed an application in the probate court to be appointed

as Z.H.’s guardian. Mother and father both consented to the guardianship. On

March 2, 2020, grandmother was named “the guardian over the child’s person until her

18th birthday.” (June 2, 2022 J.E. at ¶ 13).

{¶ 5} Mother and father divorced in July of 2021. An excerpt from mother and

father’s Shared Parenting Plan was made part of the record in this case.

{¶ 6} On February 9, 2022, grandparents filed a petition to adopt Z.H., then aged

eight. Father consented to the adoption. Grandparents amended the petition on

February 17, 2022 to allege that, pursuant to R.C. 3107.07(A), mother’s consent was not

necessary because she had failed to provide more than de minimis contact with, or to

1 We refer to the minor herein as “Z.H.” and note that the case is captioned In the Matter of the Adoption of Z.H. Although the parties refer to the minor as “Z.L.W.” in their briefs, that name—proposed by grandparents in their petition to adopt—was denied by the probate court and is the subject of this appeal.

2. provide maintenance and support to, Z.H. in the preceding year. Mother objected to the

petition. On March 30, 2022, the court held a hearing to determine whether mother’s

consent is required for adoption.

{¶ 7} At the hearing, grandfather testified that Z.H. has lived with them for “most

of her life on and off but full time * * * since January [of 2019].” After the guardianship

took effect, grandparents and mother had “little to no contact,” and when the parties did

communicate, it was always between mother and grandfather, never grandmother.

{¶ 8} In preparation for the hearing, grandfather reviewed his text messages with

mother, and prepared a written summary of all contacts between himself and mother

since March of 2020, when the guardianship took effect. According to grandfather, there

were no other communications, except for those set forth in the written document, which

includes the following chronology:

January-19 [Z.H.] began to live with us

March-20 Awarded Legal Guardianship ([mother] did not attend hearing with Judge Byrd)

June-20 Attended [Z.H.’s] K-Grad party.

10-7-20 [Father] and [mother] Text to take [Z.H.] to park.

10-19- 20 Text me to tell [Z.H.] Happy Birthday

3. 10-14-21 Text if [Z.H.] was allowed to come to a birthday party

10-19-21 On or near her birthday, [mother] was invited to attend by [father] (we agreed) and she did not show and did not communicate she was not coming 10-19-21 Text me to tell [Z.H.] Happy Birthday

10-26-21 Text to have [Z.H.] for the weekend

11-4-21 Text to have [Z.H.]

11-8/9-21 Text if I had a chance to speak with [grandmother] on seeing [Z.H.]

11-10-21 Text to see [Z.H.]. Stated she hadn’t seen her in a year, but during that year did NOT request to see her.

11-10-21 Text to meet and get GS cookie order placed with [father], but no request to see [Z.H.].

11-22-21 Visitation filed with court (dismissed w/ prejudice)

No Requests

{¶ 9} Grandfather’s chronology indicates that mother’s last in-person visit with

Z.H. was in June of 2020. Between that time and the March 30, 2022 hearing—a period

of 22 months—mother requested to visit Z.H. six times: once in October of 2020 and five

times in October of 2021. All of mother’s requests were denied. Mother also texted

grandfather on Z.H.’s birthday in 2020 and again in 2021, asking that he convey her

birthday wishes, which grandfather did do.

4. {¶ 10} The trial court questioned grandfather extensively as to why mother’s

requests to visit Z.H. were denied. Grandfather testified that, for example, grandparents

denied mother and father’s joint request to take Z.H. to a park because they did not think

it would be “prudent,” having witnessed the parents use their other child “as an

instrument in their divorce proceedings.” Another request by mother to take Z.H. to a

party was denied because grandparents “didn’t feel it was in [Z.H.’s] best interests.”

They denied mother’s request to “have [Z.H.] for the weekend” because of a scheduling

conflict, but grandfather admitted that he did not suggest that mother “pick another

weekend.” A subsequent request by mother “to have [Z.H.]” was denied without any

offer to reschedule. After those requests were denied, mother twice asked grandfather “if

[he] had a chance to speak with [grandmother yet about] seeing [Z.H.].” Both times,

grandfather told mother that he had not talked to grandmother yet, without further follow

up. Mother’s final request to see Z.H. on November 10, 2021 was denied by grandfather.

According to grandfather’s summary for that day, mother complained to him that “she

hadn’t seen [Z.H.] in a year.”

{¶ 11} According to grandfather, mother provided no financial support, directly or

indirectly, to Z.H. That is, mother did not pay, nor was she asked to pay, for any

expenses related to Z.H.’s care. Likewise, mother was not subject to any court order that

required her to support Z.H.

5. {¶ 12} Grandmother testified next. She described for the court how Z.H. came to

live with her and grandfather in 2019:

I moved [from out-of-state] to my home on * * * January 1, 2019. *

* * I didn’t have my luggage out of the vehicle and they were there with

[Z.H.] * * * [I said] of course, I will take her, you know, but it wasn’t an

agreement that I was going to [keep] her because they said that [Z.H.] was

[not] going to stay at my house because she was going to start kindergarten.

* * * [B]ut I kept her the entire time. I transported her daily to school and

from school to Montpelier. * * * I guess I don’t know why it happened, it

just, it just happened.

{¶ 13} Grandmother testified that she had “zero” contact with mother for “almost

two (2) years” prior to the hearing. Grandmother said that while she never “reached out”

to mother to discuss matters concerning Z.H.—including, for example, [Z.H.]’s mental

health counseling or her extracurricular activities—grandmother also “never said ‘you

can’t come to our [home].’” That is, grandmother “never unwelcomed her.”

{¶ 14} Grandmother cited a number of reasons for wanting to adopt Z.H. She said

that Z.H. “is at the age now where she realizes.

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2022 Ohio 3926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petition-for-adoption-of-zh-ohioctapp-2022.