In Re Weaver

606 N.E.2d 1011, 79 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1630
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 1992
DocketNo. CA91-07-118.
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 606 N.E.2d 1011 (In Re Weaver) 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 Weaver, 606 N.E.2d 1011, 79 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1630 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Jones, Presiding Judge.

Appellants, Michael Tucker and Carmen Weaver, appeal an order of the Butler County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, granting permanent custody of appellants’ minor child, Demartez Weaver, to the Butler County Children Services Board (“BCCSB”) and divesting appellants of their parental rights, duties, and obligations.

Demartez Weaver was born on June 19, 1989, at Fort Hamilton-Hughes Hospital in Hamilton, Ohio. At birth, the child tested positive for symptoms of cocaine addiction as a result of Carmen Weaver’s use of crack cocaine during her pregnancy. On June 21, 1989, BCCSB filed a complaint alleging that Demartez Weaver was a dependent child. By this time, however, Carmen Weaver had removed the child from the hospital and neither she nor the child could be located.

Nearly three weeks later, on July 10, 1989, Weaver returned the child, who was now seriously ill, to the hospital, and simply disappeared. Upon the child’s release from the hospital, neither Weaver nor Michael Tucker, the child’s father, could be located. Because of the child’s chronic medical problems, BCCSB placed Demartez in a “therapeutic foster home,” a home where the foster parents were specially trained in dealing with high-risk children. Because of his medical condition, the child must be placed on a respiratory machine two times a day or, when especially congested, every two hours, and must also be placed on an inhaler four times a day. Because Demartez is susceptible to choking, the foster mother was required to perform CPR on the child on six different occasions over a two-year period.

On July 17, 1989, the juvenile court found Demartez to be a dependent child and awarded temporary custody to BCCSB. A case plan document was filed and BCCSB commenced attempts to reunify the child with appellants. Nearly two years later, on May 15, 1991, BCCSB moved for permanent custody, claiming that the child could not be placed with either parent within a *62 reasonable time and there was no treatment plan which would enable either parent to provide adequate parental care. The juvenile court conducted separate adjudicatory and dispositional hearings on BCCSB’s motion in June 1991. In a judgment entry dated June 27, 1991, the court found there was clear and convincing evidence that the child could not be placed with either parent within a reasonable period of time and that it was in the child’s best interest to grant permanent custody to BCCSB for purposes of adoptive placement. The court granted permanent custody to BCCSB and divested appellants of their parental rights.

Although represented by separate counsel on appeal, appellants raise identical assignments of error, which claim the following:

Assignment of Error No. 1:

“The trial court erred to the prejudice of [appellants] in finding that the Children’s Services Board had made a good faith effort to implement the reunification plan.”

Assignment of Error No. 2:

“The trial court’s finding that the minor child could not be placed with [appellants] within a reasonable length of time was against the manifest weight of the evidence.”

In their first assignment of error, appellants assert that BCCSB did not make a good faith effort to implement the reunification plan. Absent such a good faith effort, appellants submit, the juvenile court erred in granting permanent custody to BCCSB.

Carmen Weaver contends that the absence of good faith is demonstrated by the fact that she did not receive a copy of the case plan document until March 1991, and that the fifteen weeks between receipt of the plan and the hearing on the permanent custody motion was simply not enough time for her to comply with the plan’s provisions. The record reflects that BCCSB was unaware of Weaver’s whereabouts from July 1989 until November 1990, when Weaver was incarcerated at Marysville, Ohio, on criminal charges. Following her release from prison in November 1990, Weaver informed BCCSB that she had been admitted to Talbert House in Cincinnati for drug rehabilitation. The BCCSB caseworker decided not to send a copy of the plan document to Weaver at that time because she believed Weaver would not be able to comply with the plan requirements while completing her responsibilities in the Talbert House program.

BCCSB informed Weaver that a semi-annual review of the case plan was scheduled in December 1990, and advised Weaver she should attend. Weaver failed to appear at the semi-annual review. The plan required Weaver to *63 participate in a Development of Living Skills (“DLS”) Program designed to assist her in developing the requisite basic skills to care for Demartez. Weaver cancelled nine of her twelve scheduled appointments in the program. In addition, she failed to complete the psychological evaluation required by the reunification plan; Weaver left during one scheduled session, was one and one-half hours late for and left midway during a second session, and never appeared at a third scheduled session.

With respect to the child’s father, the record reflects that Michael Tucker is the father of Weaver’s other son, Damykle, and has fathered three other children by another woman. Tucker participated in the DLS program as required by the reunification plan and showed some progress. The program was suspended in December 1989, when Tucker was incarcerated, and resumed upon his release from prison. Another suspension occurred during a three-week period in July 1990, when Tucker was again incarcerated. The program was finally suspended in October 1990, due to Tucker’s prolonged absences; he never requested a resumption of the program.

That same month, Tucker was convicted of attempted trafficking in marijuana and placed on probation for five years. Tucker’s probation terms and the reunification plan both required his participation in a drug treatment program. In November 1990, Tucker called his probation officer and admitted he had been smoking crack cocaine; Tucker was placed in a care unit in Cincinnati but released himself two days later against the advice of a physician. Tucker was in jail from November 13 to November 29, 1990; altogether, he was incarcerated on four separate occasions while on probation. Upon his release, he was again ordered to continue drug counseling and therapy. Nevertheless, Tucker tested positive for cocaine on four separate occasions in April 1991, the last of which occurred only two months before the hearing on the permanent custody motion. On March 21, 1991, Tucker was cited for a probation violation after he was arrested in Hamilton for carrying a concealed weapon and handling weapons while intoxicated.

Tucker argues that BCCSB has not made a good faith effort to implement the reunification plan, pointing out that in another thirty-five weeks he could successfully complete the drug rehabilitation program required by the plan. However, as noted by the prosecutor in closing argument for the juvenile court, such seems an unlikely possibility since there has not been a thirty-five-week period since the child’s birth during which Tucker has managed to keep himself out of jail.

This court has previously held that a good faith effort to implement a reunification plan means an honest, purposeful effort, free of malice and the design to defraud or to seek an unconscionable advantage. In re Johnson

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re V.N.
2025 Ohio 5111 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
In re S.L.
2025 Ohio 4608 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
In re K.B.
2024 Ohio 491 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
In re L.C.
2024 Ohio 283 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
In re T.H.C.
2023 Ohio 1654 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
In re J.J.
2023 Ohio 1209 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
In re D.V.
2023 Ohio 238 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
In re J.N.
2022 Ohio 4373 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
In re T.S.
2020 Ohio 2972 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
In re J.H.
2020 Ohio 218 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
In re S.T.
2020 Ohio 8 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
In re D.R.
2018 Ohio 522 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2018)
In re R.M.
2017 Ohio 4325 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)
In re R.H.
2017 Ohio 4012 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)
In re R.E.P.
2011 Ohio 5376 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2011)
In re R.P.
2011 Ohio 5378 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2011)
In Re S. B., L-08-1453 (5-15-2009)
2009 Ohio 2290 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2009)
In Re Savannah J., L-08-1123 (10-7-2008)
2008 Ohio 5217 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)
In Matter of Wayne Y., L-07-1259 (1-25-2008)
2008 Ohio 245 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)
In Matter of D.S., 2007 Ca 57 (1-11-2008)
2008 Ohio 198 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
606 N.E.2d 1011, 79 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-weaver-ohioctapp-1992.