In re Z.L.

2025 Ohio 4852
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 2025
Docket114984, 114986, 114987
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ohio 4852 (In re Z.L.) 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 Z.L., 2025 Ohio 4852 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Z.L., 2025-Ohio-4852.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

IN RE Z.L., ET AL. : : Nos. 114984, 114986, Minor Children : and 114987 : [Appeal by C.G., Mother] :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: October 23, 2025

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Juvenile Division Case Nos. AD22906833, AD22906834, and AD22906835

Appearances:

Matthew O. Williams, for appellant.

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Joseph C. Young, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee.

MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, P.J.:

Appellant mother (“Mother”) appeals the juvenile court’s decision

terminating her parental rights and awarding permanent custody of her children,

Z.L. (d.o.b. 5/3/2012), H.L. (d.o.b. 2/18/2014), and A.L. (d.o.b. 6/26/2015)

(collectively known as “the children”), to the Cuyahoga County Division of Children and Family Services (“CCDCFS” or “the agency”). Mother claims that the juvenile

court’s decision to grant permanent custody to the agency was not supported by

sufficient evidence, was against the manifest weight of the evidence, and that the

agency failed to engage in reasonable efforts to reunify the family.

Our review of the record reflects that the juvenile court’s findings and

order granting permanent custody are not against the manifest weight of the

evidence and that sufficient evidence exists to support the juvenile court’s findings.

We also affirm the juvenile court’s finding that the agency made reasonable efforts

toward reunification.

I. Procedural History and Relevant Facts

A. Previous Involvement With the Agency

In January 2016, the agency filed a complaint for dependency and

temporary custody of Mother’s three children. The complaint alleged that Mother

had suffered a mental-health crisis and threatened to kill the children. The

complaint also noted that oldest child, Z.L., had previously been removed from the

parents’ care while residing in New Jersey because of concerns for Mother’s mental

health, as well as domestic violence occurring between Mother and the children’s

father, H.L. (“Father”). These facts prevented Mother from providing safe and

adequate care for the children. The complaint noted that the children had been

reunified with Mother in March 2014. The agency was granted temporary custody

of the children, and a case plan was developed toward reunification. Father was ultimately granted legal custody of the children on

January 28, 2018.

B. This Case

On June 5, 2022, Mother and Father engaged in an act of violence in

front of the children that required police intervention. Father was arrested as a

result. The agency was granted predispositional custody of the children on June 29,

2022.

In July 2022, the agency filed a complaint with the juvenile court

alleging the children to be abused and dependent. The agency also requested a

disposition of legal custody to Mother, with an order of protective supervision. The

complaint noted that Mother and Father have a domestically violent relationship.

The agency was granted predispositional-emergency-temporary

custody at a hearing on July 25, 2022, and ultimately temporary custody at a

subsequent hearing on October 11, 2022. These temporary custody orders were

extended on two separate occasions: once on August 24, 2023, and again on

February 15, 2024.

On September 12, 2024, the agency filed a motion to modify temporary

custody to permanent custody for the children. A hearing was held on this motion

on February 27, 2025.

C. Permanent-Custody Hearing and Appeal

Prior to the permanent-custody hearing, Father filed a motion for legal

custody of the children or, in the alternative, a motion for legal custody to Father with protective supervision. Mother was not present at the permanent-custody

hearing but was represented by counsel. Father and his counsel were present, along

with the children’s guardian ad litem (“GAL”) Jean Brandt and the children’s

counsel.

The agency’s extended services worker, Natasha Johnson

(“Johnson”), testified on behalf of the agency. She testified that she was assigned to

this case in July 2022. She stated that the agency first became involved with this

family in 2012 because of concerns with the oldest child, Z.L., with respect to neglect

and domestic violence. The other two children had not yet been born. Mother had

relocated from New Jersey to Cuyahoga County. Father was identified as the

aggressor in a domestic-violence incident in 2012 and was not supposed to be in the

home.

Z.L. was removed from the home and placed in the temporary custody

of the agency in the 2012 case. Mother and Father were required to participate in a

number of services in the 2012 case for substance abuse, domestic violence, and

parenting. After approximately a year, Z.L. was reunited with Mother.

Johnson stated that in 2016, the agency again became involved with

the family. The basis for the agency’s involvement concerned mental health and

domestic violence. All three children were removed from Mother’s care. After

approximately a year and a half, the children were reunified with Father. Prior to

reunification, Father had been required to participate and complete programs concerning domestic violence, substance abuse, and parenting. These objectives

were similar to the objectives in the 2012 case.

In 2022, the agency once again became involved with the family. The

complaint alleged that on June 5, 2022, Mother and Father engaged in an act of

violence in front of the children that required police intervention. They were

removed from Father and have been in the uninterrupted custody of the agency

since June 29, 2022. The children were ultimately adjudicated, with Johnson

testifying that this was the third adjudication for Z.L. and the second adjudication

for H.L. and A.L.

Johnson testified that the permanency plan for the children since their

removal from Father in June 2022 had been reunification. A case plan was created

to facilitate reunification and adopted by the juvenile court. Mother’s objectives on

the plan included domestic violence, mental health, housing, and substance abuse.

Father’s objectives included domestic violence, mental health, anger management,

parenting, family therapy, and substance abuse, and he was asked to maintain his

own independent housing.

When this case was initiated, criminal charges were pending against

Father and there was a no-contact order in effect protecting Mother and the

children. Specifically, there was a no-contact order between Mother and Father in

effect until September 2023. Johnson testified that there was also a protection order

in place for the children from Father “until November or December of 2022.” Johnson testified that Mother was referred for domestic-violence

services to The Journey Center for Healing, which she completed by August 2022.

Father was also referred for domestic-violence services. Johnson testified that,

including the 2012 and 2016 cases, Father had completed at least three domestic

violence programs and Mother had completed “at least two[.]”

In February 2024, another domestic-violence incident took place

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2025 Ohio 4852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zl-ohioctapp-2025.