In Re Stacey S.

737 N.E.2d 92, 136 Ohio App. 3d 503
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1999
DocketTrial Court No. JC 96-7028. Court of Appeals No. L-98-1213.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 737 N.E.2d 92 (In Re Stacey S.) 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 Stacey S., 737 N.E.2d 92, 136 Ohio App. 3d 503 (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

Sherck, Judge.

This appeal comes to us from a judgment issued by the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division. It involves the termination of parental rights and granting of permanent custody of six minor children to a children’s services board. Because we conclude that the trial court improperly denied the children an attorney, we reverse.

Family Intervention

Appellants, James S. and Terri B., are the parents of six children: twelve-year-old Stacey S., ten-year-old Stephanie S., and two sets of twins: Jennifer and James B., age nine, and Rachel and Rebecca S., age eight.

In 1995, the family lived in an East Toledo house that they were purchasing on land contract. Although the house was in substantial disrepair, renovations were being performed as the family could afford.

In late 1995, Rachel, then age five, injured her arm and required surgery. This was the third time Rachel required medical treatment. She injured the same arm approximately one year earlier. She had also injured herself in another instance when, according to her parents, she had fallen while straddling the edge of a bathtub. The prior incidents had been investigated by appellee, Lucas County Children’s Services Board, but no action was taken.

Rachel’s 1995 surgery required follow-up care by the physician. The parents scheduled an appointment with the physician for this visit. They could not keep the appointment because, according to appellants, their car broke down and they could not afford to fix it. The parents testified that they called the physician’s office and rescheduled. They were, however, still unable to make an alternative time. It is not clear from the record whether appellants attempted to again reschedule or simply missed the follow-up appointment. Whatever the circumstances, the missed appointment resulted in a referral, apparently by the surgeon’s office, to children’s services.

*507 On January 5, 1996, appellee sent a social worker to appellants’ home to investigate the missed appointment. While the social worker was in the home, appellant James S., surmising that the physician’s office was responsible for the referral, called the doctor’s office and spoke to a receptionist in a threatening manner. The receptionist called 911 to report the call.

In the meantime, the social worker was interviewing five-year-old Rachel and six-year-old Jennifer, both of whom reported that their father drank beer and, on occasion, yelled at and hit their mother. By ex parte order, the children were removed from the home the same day.

On January 8, 1996, appellee filed a dependency and neglect complaint and moved for a shelter care order. The complaint listed as cause for the removal the missed doctor’s appointment, the children’s statement of domestic violence and alcohol in the home, the “suspicious * * * nature” of Rachel’s injuries, appellant father’s alleged cocaine abuse, his “diagnosed * * * antisocial personality disorder,” his “loud, defiant and bombastic manner,” and his “open hostility] toward L.C.C.S.B.” Appellant mother was alleged to be, “unable or unwilling to protect herself from [appellant father].” Additionally, the complaint reported that when examined upon removal from the home, one of the children had a genital abnormality which, “could be consistent with sexual abuse.” On the same day, at a shelter care hearing, appellant mother appeared without counsel and consented to appellee’s temporary custody of the children. Following the hearing, a magistrate appointed a guardian ad litem for the children and ordered a psychological evaluation for appellants and a sexual abuse screening for the children.

During the next week there was some negotiation between appellants and appellee. With the apparent agreement of appellee, appellant Terri B. persuaded her own mother to come from Texas and move into the family home, with the view that placement of the children might be made with her. On February 14, 1996, appellants consented to ah adjudication of neglect and dependency for all the children and further consented to their continued temporary custody with appellee.

Following certain repairs to the family home mandated by appellee, the children were placed with their maternal grandmother in the home. Appellants were ordered not to visit the family home and their access to the children was restricted to a one hour, once a week supervised visitation at children’s services.

The relationship between the family and appellee agency was never smooth. At the first supervised visitation, appellant father engaged in an obscenity-laced quarrel with an agency overseer because someone had cut one of the girl’s long hair. Later in the day, appellant father was arrested on outstanding misdemean- or warrants while attending a case-planning meeting. Some months later, *508 another loud and obscenity-laden confrontation occurred between appellant father and another visitation supervisor over a visit cut short to accommodate a foster parent. Appellant father’s language and loud and abrasive behavior are reoccurring themes in these proceedings.

The children’s maternal grandmother also clashed with children’s services when she accused them of reneging on a promise to provide her with respite assistance. When she complained to the agency’s ombudsman, the social worker assigned to the family told the ombudsman that the grandmother had declined services. The grandmother vehemently denied this assertion during the dispositional hearing. At issue was whether the grandmother had permitted appellant mother to visit the children in the home in violation of the case plan. According to the grandmother, she asked the agency to fulfill their promise for some part-time respite care or, in the alternative, to permit her daughter, appellant mother, to aid her. Only after the agency refused, according to the grandmother, did she let her daughter occasionally help at the family home. 1 When appellee discovered this, the children were removed from their grandmother’s care and placed in three different foster homes.

The Family

Appellant father is the son of a police officer and, by his account, a prostitute. He is an elementary school dropout who spent much of his youth in a county children’s home (where he reports he was sexually molested) or in the custody of the juvenile justice system for numerous delinquency offenses. This criminal activity continued into adulthood resulting in his being twice imprisoned for theft related offenses. Appellant father also has the uncanny ability to say the wrong thing and do the wrong thing at exactly the wrong time. Psychologists who spoke to him characterized this as an antisocial personality or an oppositional disorder. Appellant father calls it “going off’ and admits he has difficulty controlling these episodes.

This trait manifested itself frequently throughout the case. Initially, it was exhibited in the ill advised, threatening call to the physician whom appellant believed reported him for missing an appointment. This vocal bluntness continued in virtually every contact he had with the representatives of appellee agency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 N.E.2d 92, 136 Ohio App. 3d 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stacey-s-ohioctapp-1999.