Linn v. Utt

2024 Ohio 3097
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 14, 2024
Docket2023 CA 00034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ohio 3097 (Linn v. Utt) 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
Linn v. Utt, 2024 Ohio 3097 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as Linn v. Utt, 2024-Ohio-3097.]

COURT OF APPEALS FAIRFIELD COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

KAY LINN n.k.a. DILLEY JUDGES: Hon. W. Scott Gwin, P.J. Plaintiff-Appellee Hon. William B. Hoffman, J. Hon. Andrew J. King, J. -vs- Case No. 2023 CA 00034 DEREK J. UTT

Defendant-Appellant OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Appeal from the Fairfield County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, Case No. 2008 DR 355

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY: August 14, 2024

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant

ANGELA SEIMER, ESQ. LAUREL A. KENDALL Seimer Law Kendall Legal Services, LLC 437 North Broad Street 1709 Spielbusch Avenue, Suite 110 Lancaster, Ohio 43130 Toledo, Ohio 43604 Fairfield County, Case No. 2023 CA 00034 2

Hoffman, J. {¶1} Defendant-appellant D.U. (“Father”) appeals the July 25, 2023 Judgment

Entry entered by the Fairfield County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations

Division, which terminated the shared parenting plan between him and plaintiff-appellee

K.D. (“Mother”) and granted sole custody of the parties minor children to Mother.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE AND FACTS

{¶2} Mother and Father are the biological parents of two minor children (“Child

1” and “Child 2,” individually; “the Children,” collectively). The parties were never married.

The parties ended their relationship prior to the birth of Child 2, in the summer of 2008.

The trial court issued its initial order allocating the parties’ parental rights and

responsibilities via Judgment Entry/Shared Parenting Decree filed February 2, 2016. The

judgment entry incorporated the parties’ agreed shared parenting plan, which named both

Mother and Father as the residential parent and legal custodian of the Children.

{¶3} On November 5, 2021, Mother filed a Motion for Ex Parte Emergency

Custody as well as a Motion for Reallocation of Parental Rights and Responsibilities, in

which she requested the trial court terminate the parties’ shared parenting plan and grant

her sole custody of the Children. Mother moved for emergency custody due to increasing

concerns about Father’s abuse of the Children with the final straw occurring when Father

broke Child 1’s phone and kicked her to the ground. Via Order filed November 8, 2021,

the magistrate granted emergency ex-parte temporary custody of the Children to Mother

and suspended Father’s parenting time pending further order. Father filed a Motion to

Modify Custody Order as to the Allocation of Parental Rights and Responsibilities on

November 19, 2021. Like Mother, Father requested the trial court terminate the shared

parenting plan and name him sole legal custodian and residential parent of the Children. Fairfield County, Case No. 2023 CA 00034 3

The trial court appointed a guardian ad litem (“GAL”) for the Children. The trial court

ordered the parties to undergo drug testing.

{¶4} On February 24, 2022, Mother filed a motion seeking an order refraining

Father from posting on social media. Therein, Mother asserted Father had “made multiple

posts on Facebook that include derogative statements regarding the Court and judicial

system and that have contained posted photographs of Court documents and pleadings.”

Motion for Sanctions and for an Order Restraining Defendant from Posting on Social

Media at p. 1, unpaginated. Mother added, on February 7, 2022, Father posted a

recording of audio from a status conference, and on February 19, 2022, he posted a

recording of audio from the ex-parte emergency custody hearing. Father filed a

memorandum contra on March 8, 2022.

{¶5} Via Magistrate’s Order filed March 9, 2022, the magistrate granted Mother’s

motion. The magistrate found “the acts of posting pleadings, surreptitiously recording

proceedings, posting those recordings to the internet, and posting information about the

litigation to be contrary to maintaining decorum in the administration of justice and

reasonably likely to prejudice the proceedings.” March 9, 2022 Magistrate Order at p. 1,

unpaginated. The magistrate ordered:

During the pendency of this case, including appeals, the adult

parties, their attorneys, their agents, and witnesses are enjoined from

discussing or disseminating any information, statement, public comments,

recordings, pleadings or materials about this pending cause, the status of Fairfield County, Case No. 2023 CA 00034 4

the litigation, or about the minor children to any public communications

forum or media, regarding these causes or the minor children herein. * * *

All future hearings in this matter shall be held in person and on the

record. The adult parties, their attorneys, their agents and witnesses are

enjoined from recording proceedings in any manner. No recordings of any

proceedings in this matter shall be made except for the official court

recording system. No transcripts, excerpts, recordings or partial recordings

of the proceedings shall be posted or remain posted to social media, or used

for any purpose other than the litigation herein without an order of this Court

permitting the dissemination.

Id. at pp. 1-2, unpaginated.

{¶6} On April 20, 2022, the magistrate conducted a hearing to review the

emergency ex-parte order of temporary custody. Via Amended Magistrate Order filed the

same day, the magistrate continued the order of emergency temporary custody. The

magistrate ordered Mother and Father to enroll in and complete a positive parenting class

and file certificates of completion with the court. The magistrate further ordered Father’s

parenting time with Child 1 be at the direction of the GAL with input from Child 1’s

counselor and the family counselor, and Father’s parenting time with Child 2 be held at

the Fairfield County Visitation Center. In a separate entry, the magistrate ordered Mother,

Father, and the Children undergo psychological evaluations, as well as child custody and

companionship evaluations. Fairfield County, Case No. 2023 CA 00034 5

{¶7} After the trial court permitted Father’s second attorney to withdraw on

September 13, 2022, Father proceeded pro se and filed various motions including, inter

alia, motions to disqualify Mother’s attorney, the GAL, and the magistrate; a motion to

release all police, sheriff, and fire department records as well as records from Fairfield

County Children Protective Services; a motion to hold Mother, the magistrate, and the

trial court in contempt; a motion to dismiss gag orders; a motion to order Mother to

complete an appropriate rehab program; and a motion to drug test Mother and her

husband and order Mother and her husband to wear alcohol monitors.

{¶8} The parties appeared before the trial court on March 13, 2023, for a GAL

conference and a settlement conference. The parties entered into an agreed judgment

entry relative to Father’s parenting time with the Children. As of the hearing, Father had

not responded to Mother’s First Set of Interrogatories and Request for Production of

Documents, which were propounded on him on November 23, 2021, and which the trial

court had previously ordered him to complete on or before April 25, 2022. The trial court

extended the deadline until March 31, 2023, and warned Father his failure to fully comply

could result in the trial court limiting the evidence he would be permitted to introduce at

trial.

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Related

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2025 Ohio 29 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 3097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linn-v-utt-ohioctapp-2024.