Marlowe v. Marlowe

2023 Ohio 1417
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 2023
DocketWD-22-063
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 1417 (Marlowe v. Marlowe) 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
Marlowe v. Marlowe, 2023 Ohio 1417 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as Marlowe v. Marlowe, 2023-Ohio-1417.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WOOD COUNTY

Christopher Marlowe, Jr. Court of Appeals No. WD-22-063

Appellee Trial Court No. 2018 DR 0147

v.

Jennifer Marlowe DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: April 28, 2023

*****

Elizabeth B. Bostdorff and Frederic E. Matthews, for appellee.

Martin E. Mohler and Theodore B. Tucker, III., for appellant.

***** MAYLE, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Jennifer Marlowe, appeals the September 9, 2022 judgment of the

Wood County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, granting her and

appellee, Christopher Marlowe, a divorce and designating Christopher as the residential

parent and legal custodian of the parties’ minor children. Because the trial court did not abuse its discretion by determining that custody with Christopher was in the children’s

best interests, we affirm the trial court’s decision.

I. Background and Facts

{¶ 2} Christopher and Jennifer were married in 2011 and have two minor children

together: W.M. (“child 1”) and B.M. (“child 2”). In August 2018, Jennifer took the

children (then ages 4 years and approximately 8 months) and moved out of the family’s

home in Perrysburg. Approximately one month later, Jennifer moved to Florida with the

children, where she established a residence with her boyfriend, Denis Waibel. Jennifer

left the home and took the children without giving any notice to Christopher.

A. The emergency hearing

{¶ 3} In November 2018, after Jennifer moved to Florida, Christopher filed his

complaint for divorce and an emergency motion for custody of the children. On

November 9, 2018, the magistrate granted an emergency ex parte temporary order giving

Christopher custody and Jennifer supervised visitation.

{¶ 4} Three weeks later, the magistrate held a hearing on the emergency motion.

At the hearing, Christopher presented the testimony of Heidi Strobel, an investigator from

Wood County Job and Family Services (“JFS”), and testified in his own behalf. Jennifer

presented the testimony of Susan Greener, her mother, and testified in her own behalf.

1. Strobel’s testimony

{¶ 5} Strobel testified about a report of abuse that Jennifer made in March 2018.

Jennifer reported concerns about Christopher being physical with child 1. When Strobel

2. interviewed child 1—who was four years old—he said that Christopher had pulled his

hair and “punched him in the nuts.” Strobel described her conversation with child 1 as “a

very difficult interview * * *.” During Strobel’s interview with Jennifer, Jennifer denied

any domestic violence in the home.

{¶ 6} When Strobel interviewed Christopher, he was emotional and upset about

the allegations. He denied punching child 1. He admitted that he had pulled child 1’s

hair to “get his attention” because child 1 had hurt child 2—who was only a couple of

months old—and had “forcefully pull[ed]” child 1 out of the car because he wasn’t

listening. In her notes, Strobel recorded that Christopher said that he pulled child 1’s hair

and pulled him from the car as disciplinary measures, not to hurt him. Christopher was

receptive to Strobel’s suggestions and said that he wanted to be a better parent.

{¶ 7} Strobel suggested that child 1 attend counseling and Christopher get an

assessment. Jennifer also required that Christopher have no unsupervised contact with

the children. When Strobel followed up with the family about a month later, JFS decided

to close the case because the parties had followed through with her recommendations and

Jennifer seemed able and willing to protect the children, if necessary. Strobel described

the case as an alternative response case, so it did not result in a finding regarding

Christopher’s treatment of child 1. She did not elevate the case from an alternative

response to a traditional response case because she “didn’t have a preponderance of

evidence to show the concerns to be true.” She also said that she had no further contact

with the family after sending them a letter closing the case.

3. 2. Christopher’s testimony

{¶ 8} During his testimony, Christopher said that he filed his motion for

emergency custody because he had not seen his children for months and had not “even

had a chance to talk to them * * *.” Although Christopher and Jennifer occasionally

spoke on the phone, Jennifer had not cooperated in allowing Christopher to speak with

the children.

{¶ 9} Christopher and Jennifer had talked about moving to Florida, but

Christopher was against it because both parties had family in Ohio. According to

Christopher, Jennifer moved while he was in the hospital on two occasions in September.

The first time Christopher was hospitalized, Jennifer told him that she had cleaned things

out of their condo because someone was interested in purchasing it. The second time

Christopher was hospitalized, Jennifer told him to look at houses that they could buy.

None of the houses was in Florida. As part of the house hunting, Jennifer told

Christopher that she needed money for a down payment. Christopher wrote a check from

his account, but Jennifer did not use the money to purchase a home for the couple. When

Christopher realized that Jennifer was in Florida, he stopped payment on another large

check written on the account.

{¶ 10} When Jennifer left for Florida, she told Christopher that she had left the

parties’ vehicles near Perrysburg, but forgot to leave the keys, and that someone had

mailed Christopher’s keys to him. Christopher discovered Jennifer’s Florida address

when an identity-theft-monitoring company informed him that his address had been

4. changed. He believed that mail forwarding began on September 1, despite Jennifer not

moving to Florida until early October. He also claimed that Jennifer had thrown his

diabetes supplies in the trash. When he retrieved them from the dumpster, he put them in

the garage, where they remained when he went to the hospital for the second time in

September. While he was in the hospital, he asked Jennifer to bring the supplies from the

house, but she claimed that the supplies were “locked in a trailer and that she had lost the

keys.”

{¶ 11} The parties’ health conditions came up during Christopher’s testimony.

Initially, Jennifer told him that she went to Florida for a job interview, but then said that

she was there for cancer treatment. Christopher did not recall Jennifer providing any

details about her cancer or treatments beyond telling him that she had “stage IV cancer

and * * * she was getting chemo at this time.” He offered to come to Florida and asked

Jennifer to come home so that he could help care for her and the children. Jennifer told

him that the children went somewhere in the hospital while she received her treatments,

but she never mentioned hiring babysitters or enrolling child 1 in school.

{¶ 12} Christopher has type 1 diabetes, which required insulin injections. When

he attempted to refill his prescription after Jennifer moved, he learned that his health

insurance through Jennifer’s employer was terminated effective September 30. However,

at that time, Jennifer told him that she was still employed at her job in Ohio. He did not

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 1417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlowe-v-marlowe-ohioctapp-2023.