In re P.L.B.

2019 Ohio 1056
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket18CA19
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 1056 (In re P.L.B.) 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 P.L.B., 2019 Ohio 1056 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as In re P.L.B., 2019-Ohio-1056.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LAWRENCE COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF: : Case No. 18CA19 : P.L.B. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT : ENTRY ADOPTION : Released: 03/14/19

APPEARANCES:

Matthew F. Loesch, Portsmouth, Ohio, for Appellants.

Jenna J. Waldo, Ironton, Ohio, for Appellee.

McFarland, J.

{¶1} Appellants, the child’s biological mother and stepfather, appeal

the trial court’s judgment concluding that Appellee’s (the biological father)

consent to the adoption of the minor child is required and dismissing the

stepfather’s petition to adopt the minor child.

{¶2} In their sole assignment of error, Appellants contend that the trial

court’s finding that Appellee had justifiable cause for any failure to provide

more than de minimis contact with the child or to provide maintenance and

support for the child is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

Appellants claim that the evidence does not show that Appellee had any

justification for failing to have more than de minimis contact with the child

and for failing to provide maintenance and support for the child. Appellants Lawrence App. No. 18CA19 2

contend that Appellee’s failure to have more than de minimis contact with

the child is not justified because, although Appellee requested visits with the

child, he requested the visits at inconvenient times or on the same day as the

request. Appellants assert that Appellee’s failure to provide maintenance

and support for the child is not justified because he did not offer any

reasonable rationale for failing to do so. Appellants also allege that

Appellee failed to file a written objection to the adoption petition and that

this failure means that his consent is not required.

{¶3} We do not agree with Appellants. Instead, the record contains

some competent and credible evidence to support the trial court’s finding

that Appellee had justifiable cause for failing to have more frequent contact

with the child and for failing to provide maintenance and support for the

child. The evidence supports the court’s findings that the mother frustrated

Appellee’s attempts to visit the child and that the mother hindered

Appellee’s ability to provide maintenance and support for the child. Thus,

some evidence supports the court’s findings that Appellee had justifiable

cause for any failure to provide more than de minimis contact with the child

or to provide maintenance and support.

{¶4} Appellants failed to argue during the trial court proceedings that

Appellee’s consent is not required because he did not file a written objection Lawrence App. No. 18CA19 3

to the adoption petition. We will not consider the issue for the first time on

appeal.

{¶5} Accordingly, we overrule appellants’ sole assignment of error

and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. FACTS

{¶6} Approximately four months after the stepfather and the mother

married, the stepfather filed a petition to adopt the nearly three-year-old

child. The petition alleged that Appellee’s consent is not required for the

following reasons: (1) Appellee failed without justifiable cause to provide

more than de minimis contact with the child for a period of at least one year

immediately preceding the filing of the adoption petition or the placement of

the child in the petitioner’s home; (2) Appellee failed without justifiable

cause to provide for the maintenance and support of the child as required by

law or judicial decree for a period of at least one year immediately preceding

the filing of the adoption petition; and (3) Appellee failed to register with

Ohio’s putative father registry.

{¶7} In July 2018, the court held a hearing. The mother testified that

Appellee saw the child a few times in the year preceding the adoption

petition. She additionally stated that she asked Appellee to help pay for the

child’s diapers, the child’s babysitter, and one of the child’s medical bills. Lawrence App. No. 18CA19 4

The mother alleged that Appellee did not provide any of the financial

assistance that she requested.

{¶8} Appellee testified and explained that after the mother started

dating her now-husband, the mother curtailed Appellee’s involvement in the

child’s life and frustrated his attempts to visit the child. Appellee related

that he would text the mother to arrange a time when he could see the child,

but the mother often claimed to be busy at work or she would not respond at

all. Appellee also stated that he asked the mother if she needed him to send

any money. Appellee indicated that the mother responded that she did not

need him “to send anything” and that if Appellee wanted to have “anything

to do with [the child],” Appellee would “have to start taking care of him.”

{¶9} Appellee explained that during the year preceding the filing of

the adoption petition, he went to the child support office to attempt to

establish child support. He further stated that he has provided diapers for the

child on occasion and given the child some clothes and toys. Appellee also

indicated that he offered to pay for things the child needed. Appellee

testified that he offered to help the mother pay the medical bill she

requested, and she told him that he could not make any payments towards it

until an account was set up for Appellee. Appellee indicated that he did not Lawrence App. No. 18CA19 5

give the mother any money for the child, because “[i]t would be considered

a gift.”

{¶10} Appellee explained that in November 2017, the mother asked

him to give up his parental rights to the child. Appellee refused to give up

his parental rights.

{¶11} On August 13, 2018, the trial court found that Appellee did not

fail, without justifiable cause, to maintain more than de minimis contact with

the child or to provide maintenance and support during the one-year period

preceding the adoption petition. The court found that Appellee sought the

Lawrence County Child Support Enforcement Agency’s assistance to obtain

a child support order during the year preceding the adoption petition. The

court also found that the father had more than de minimis contact with the

child and attempted to have additional contact with the child. The court

determined that the mother did not facilitate visitation and that any failure

was therefore justifiable.

{¶12} The court additionally found that any failure to provide

maintenance and support for the child was with justifiable cause. The court

noted that a child support order did not exist and that the mother “informed

the father that she did not want cash from him.” The court further found that Lawrence App. No. 18CA19 6

the father “offered to buy whatever the child needed[,] including food and

clothes,” but “the mother refused his offers.”

{¶13} The court also observed that “[t]he mother notified [Appellee]

of a medical bill for which she sought his assistance in paying but also

notified him that no payment could be made until the provider contacted her

with a method of payment. The method of payment was never provided to

[Appellee].”

{¶14} The court found that “the issues between the mother and father

are more appropriate for consideration in a proceeding addressing orders for

visitation and child support.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 Ohio 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-plb-ohioctapp-2019.