In re T.M.M.

2017 Ohio 9219, 102 N.E.3d 558
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 2017
DocketNO. 17 CO 0025
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 9219 (In re T.M.M.) 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 T.M.M., 2017 Ohio 9219, 102 N.E.3d 558 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

JUDGES: Hon. Carol Ann Robb, Hon. Gene Donofrio, Hon. Cheryl L. Waite

OPINION

ROBB, P.J.

{¶ 1} Appellant Brian McCormack ("the father") appeals the decision of the Columbiana County Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division, denying his motion for shared parenting and his motion to hold Appellee Jennifer Lease ("the mother") in contempt for interfering with his parenting time. The father contends the court's failure to implement a remedy addressing his youngest child's refusal to visit him effectively deprived him of all parenting time with the child. He takes issue with various findings made by the court, including whether the mother should have been held in contempt and whether shared parenting was in the children's best interests. For the following reasons, the trial court's judgment is affirmed.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

{¶ 2} The parties have two children: Child A, born in 2002, and Child B, born in 2004. In 2007, the father filed a petition to recognize a parental relationship, establish parental rights and responsibilities, and formalize parenting time. An agreed entry established parenting time in an amount no less than the local standard schedule, which granted parenting time to the nonresidential parent every other weekend plus a midweek visit one week and two midweek visits the next week. (9/18/07 J.E.) The midweek visits were terminated during the school year by an agreed entry in 2009, and the standard schedule was reinstated in 2013. (6/15/06 J.E.); (9/13/13 J.E.) The midweek parenting time was reduced to one day a week in 2014. (8/5/14 J.E.)

{¶ 3} On August 5, 2016, the mother filed a motion to modify the father's parenting time. She sought to eliminate the midweek visit, claiming it interfered with school work and extracurricular activities, partly due to travel time from their house in Salem to the father's house in Poland. The mother also filed a motion to show cause against the father, alleging issues with summer parenting time and phone access.

{¶ 4} On the day the motions were to be heard, September 9, 2016, the father filed a "motion to modify the current allocation of parental rights and companionship" to shared parenting; he stated there were substantial changes of circumstances due to his new, less-demanding work schedule and described the current plan as disjointed. His proposed shared parenting plan sought alternating weeks of parenting time. He filed a motion to modify child support to reflect his desired additional time with the children. The father also filed a motion to show cause against the mother, alleging she manipulated the children's schedule to prevent his exercise of parenting time, interfered with communication, and refused to communicate with the father except by letter. As to Child B (who was twelve years old), the father also claimed the mother refused to require this child to visit with him.

{¶ 5} On the day the cross-motions were to be heard, in November 2016, the case was continued for the appointment of a guardian ad litem. The hearing proceeded before a magistrate on February 21, 2017. The mother testified she did not work as she was receiving permanent total workers' compensation for a back injury. The children live with her and her boyfriend, whom she described as fulfilling the role of a step-father for the children. The children have relatives living in the vicinity of her house. The mother acknowledged she and the father communicated poorly; she believed he did not listen when they talk and would not allow her to speak, even when she called about a simple issue. (Tr. 39). She used letters for most communication with the father.

{¶ 6} She did not consent to the father's shared parenting plan and opined it would be "too much of a hassle" for the children. For example, Child A stayed after school most days for weight-lifting, but the father's plan proposed he would pick up Child B from school during his week and wait until Child A was done with his activity. (Tr. 42). She believed even the midweek visit (during the school year) was hard on the children due to their schedules. (Tr. 11-12). Child A was about to begin baseball which would be followed by football. (Tr. 9-10, 13). Child B would have soccer in the summer and fall and talked about starting basketball thereafter. (Tr. 13). The mother pointed out that the father lives 40 to 45 minutes from the children's school. (Tr. 14). The father confirmed this estimate and said he would drop them off and pick them up at school on his way to and from work in Steubenville (from his home in Poland). Although the children live five minutes from their school, the father believed the children spent 30-35 minutes on the bus to school. (Tr. 62).

{¶ 7} The mother disclosed Child B began resisting visits with the father around Christmas of 2015. At that time, she said she spent three days talking Child B into spending the holidays with his father. She called the father to explain the delicate situation and lamented the father's refusal to listen to her while he complained about his own hurt feelings. (Tr. 32, 39). When the father was exercising two weeks of summer parenting time in June, the mother said the police assisted her in retrieving the children so she could exercise time with Child B on his birthday. Child B resisted returning to the father's house despite the mother's requests; however, her boyfriend was able to convince the child to return for the summer parenting time. (Tr. 26).

{¶ 8} When asked what she has done about Child B's refusal to visit, which began in July 2016, the mother said: "I have called the Sheriff's Department, nobody will get involved. They will not force the kid out of the car. I cannot get the kid to go. I have talked to him. I have pleaded with him. Nothing." (Tr. 36-37). The mother testified she never told the child he did not have to visit but rather encouraged him to visit his father. (Tr. 40-41). She said her boyfriend also tried to convince Child B to visit with the father. (Tr. 31). The mother testified the child has many reasons for his refusal that have "built up." She was unaware of some of the child's reasons, opining he is "holding in" some issues. (Tr. 41). She knew about other reasons, including: a threat to return the child's basketball hoop and keep his birthday money; money missing from the child's wallet; a threat to "bash his teeth in" after the child was disrespectful; the father said the mother failed to provide the child proper footwear in front of other parents; flea bites; animal waste in the child's bed; the girlfriend told the child about court proceedings involving her child's father; the girlfriend accused the mother of lying; they suggested they would put the mother in jail; the girlfriend's daughter scratched the child's neck; and the girlfriend's daughter threw a piece of wood at him causing a bruise on his back. (Tr. 32-33).

{¶ 9} The father lived with his girlfriend, who had shared parenting of her eleven-year-old daughter (one week on and one week off). They lived in a three bedroom, one bathroom rental house in Poland Village. His family did not live in the area. The father changed branches at his employment (from Pittsburgh to Steubenville) and stated his workload was reduced and can be partly performed at a local office or at home. (Tr. 110). The father and his girlfriend disputed knowledge of many of the issues outlined by the mother as to Child B. The father testified that he has been unable to exercise parenting time with Child B since he brought the child home on July 8, 2016.

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Bluebook (online)
2017 Ohio 9219, 102 N.E.3d 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tmm-ohioctapp-2017.