In re S.R.

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 2026
Docket2025-CA-20
StatusPublished

This text of In re S.R. (In re S.R.) 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 S.R., (Ohio Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

[Cite as In re S.R., 2026-Ohio-2427.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT CHAMPAIGN COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF: S.R. : : C.A. No. 2025-CA-20 : : Trial Court Case No. 2024 JG 06 : : (Appeal from Common Pleas Court- : Juvenile Division) : : FINAL JUDGMENT ENTRY & : OPINION

...........

Pursuant to the opinion of this court rendered on June 26, 2026, the judgment of the

trial court is affirmed.

Costs to be paid as stated in App.R. 24.

Pursuant to Ohio App.R. 30(A), the clerk of the court of appeals shall immediately

serve notice of this judgment upon all parties and make a note in the docket of the service.

Additionally, pursuant to App.R. 27, the clerk of the court of appeals shall send a certified

copy of this judgment, which constitutes a mandate, to the clerk of the trial court and note

the service on the appellate docket.

For the court,

ROBERT G. HANSEMAN, JUDGE

TUCKER, J., and EPLEY, J., concur. OPINION CHAMPAIGN C.A. No. 2025-CA-20

AARON D. LOWE, Attorney for Appellant CATHY J. WEITHMAN, Attorney for Appellees

HANSEMAN, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Father, appeals from the judgment of the Juvenile Division of the

Champaign County Common Pleas Court that granted appellees, Maternal Grandfather and

Maternal Grandfather’s wife, D.N., legal custody of Father’s minor son, S.R. For the reasons

outlined below, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

Facts and Course of Proceedings

{¶ 2} Mother and Father are the biological parents of five-year-old S.R. There is no

dispute that Father met Mother while she was a resident at a Christian ministry drug

rehabilitation facility for women called New Beginnings. While in New Beginnings, Mother

worked at a McDonald’s restaurant that Father frequented when he was on the road working

as a truck driver. Father visited Mother at McDonalds for six months, and he then took a

drug test and received permission from New Beginnings to take Mother out on dates and to

his home in North Carolina. During that time, Father was in his 50s with four adult biological

children and two adult stepchildren, and Mother was in her 20s with four minor children.

Mother’s then-seven-year-old daughter, A.N., was the only child in her custody at the time.

{¶ 3} Around 2017 or 2018, Mother and A.N. moved into Father’s home in North

Carolina. Mother thereafter became pregnant with S.R., who was born in 2020. When S.R.

was five months old, Mother left Father and took the children with her to Ohio without notice.

Mother left Father owing to alleged emotional and physical abuse. Mother was pregnant with

her sixth child, S.N., when she left Father.

2 {¶ 4} After leaving Father, Mother continued to struggle with drug addiction and went

to her mother, Maternal Grandmother, for help. As a result of Mother relapsing, Maternal

Grandmother took A.N. and S.R. into her care and placed S.N. with Mother’s sister. Shortly

after taking the children, Maternal Grandmother asked Maternal Grandfather and his wife,

D.N., if they would be willing to take in S.R. They agreed, and Maternal Grandfather and

D.N. began caring for S.R. just before he turned two years old in August 2022. S.R. has

been in Maternal Grandfather and D.N.’s care ever since.

{¶ 5} On February 5, 2024, Maternal Grandfather and D.N. filed a complaint for legal

custody of S.R. in Champaign County. After receiving notice of the complaint, Father filed a

motion for legal custody of S.R. and for a determination of paternity. In response to Father’s

motion, genetic testing was performed, and it was confirmed that Father was S.R.’s

biological father. The trial court thereafter scheduled an evidentiary hearing on the legal

custody matter.

{¶ 6} On February 5, 2025, Mother, who was incarcerated in a community-based

corrections facility called the STAR program, appeared at the evidentiary hearing via the

video-conferencing platform Zoom. The purpose of Mother’s appearance was not for her to

formally testify but to state her position on the legal custody matter. Mother told the trial court

that she was in favor of the trial court granting legal custody of S.R. to Maternal Grandfather

and D.N. and that she was opposed to Father having legal custody or any contact with S.R.

Mother stated that she did not want Father to have contact with S.R. because Father had

physically abused A.N. Mother also told the trial court that she and Father had fought for

custody of S.R. in Catawba County, North Carolina. According to Mother, Father did not get

custody of S.R. because he had lied to the court about some of his background information.

3 Mother also claimed that she had obtained a civil protection order (“CPO”) against Father in

Ohio.

{¶ 7} After Mother referenced the North Carolina custody action and the Ohio CPO,

the trial court asked counsel for both parties whether they believed it was important for the

trial court to attempt to find the court documents relating to those matters. In response, both

parties agreed that it was important to find the court documents in question and did not

object to the trial court taking a recess for that purpose.

{¶ 8} Following a recess, the trial court advised the parties that it was able to find a

final order dismissing the custody action filed by Father against Mother in Catawba County,

North Carolina. The trial court explained that the order in question indicated that Father had

filed a verified complaint on January 8, 2021, in which Father had “made a variety of false

statements which he knew or should have known to be false in violation of Rule 11 of the

North Carolina Rules of Procedure.” Feb. 5, 2025 Hearing Tr. 14. The order also indicated

that one of the false allegations made by Father in the complaint was that he was “retired

with the rank of first sergeant from the US Marine Corp in 2009, after 20 years of service . . .

[, and had] two associate’s degrees, one from Georgia Tech in electrical engineering and

one from Florida State in history and computer science.” Id. The order further indicated that,

as a result of Father’s failure to produce any documentary proof of the aforementioned

allegations, the court in North Carolina dismissed Father’s action.

{¶ 9} As for the Ohio CPO, the trial court advised the parties that it had found a

consent agreement and CPO that had been signed and filed by Mother and Father on

June 29, 2022, that protected Mother and A.N. from Father. The trial court indicated that the

CPO expired on April 22, 2023.

4 {¶ 10} After the trial court reviewed with the parties the final dismissal order from

North Carolina and the Ohio consent agreement and CPO, it asked whether the parties had

any objection to the court considering those court documents as exhibits in the legal custody

matter. Neither party objected, and the trial court admitted the court documents into evidence

as Court’s Exhibits 1 and 2.

{¶ 11} Although the trial court indicated that it did not typically permit parties to give

testimony over Zoom, the trial court allowed Mother to testify at the evidentiary hearing to

learn more about her allegation of Father physically abusing A.N. After Mother gave her

testimony on that matter, the trial court continued the evidentiary hearing to May 8, 2025.

On that date, the trial court heard testimony from Maternal Grandfather, D.N., Father, and

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