Reynolds v. White, Unpublished Decision (9-23-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 1999
DocketCase No. 74506
StatusUnpublished

This text of Reynolds v. White, Unpublished Decision (9-23-1999) (Reynolds v. White, Unpublished Decision (9-23-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Reynolds v. White, Unpublished Decision (9-23-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION Defendant-appellant Claude White appeals from a domestic violence civil protection order. He contends that the court below erred when it found that he committed an act of domestic violence against his minor daughter. We find his assignments of error to be without merit, so we affirm.

Plaintiff-appellee Jessica Reynolds commenced this proceeding on March 18, 1998 by filing a petition for a domestic violence civil protection order pursuant to R.C. 3113.31. The Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division, issued anex parte civil protection order that day and temporarily transferred parental rights and responsibilities over Valerie White from Claude White to Jessica Reynolds. The matter was scheduled for a full hearing, which went forward on April 15, 1998.

The record discloses that White and Reynolds were married on or about March 12, 1988 and were divorced in Cuyahoga County on or about January 26, 1990. A daughter, Valerie, was born on August 6, 1988. For the three years preceding the events that resulted in this proceeding, Valerie lived with White in Elyria, Ohio.

The incident at issue occurred on either Wednesday, March 11, 1998 or Thursday, March 12, 1998.1 Valerie testified that her father became angry with her when he saw some breakfast cereal behind Valerie's bed that her pet ferret had left there. (Tr. 123-124; 151.) White set her down on her bed and "popped," that is, spanked, her several times on her buttocks with his hand. (Tr. 122, 124-126.) Valerie sustained bruising and later showed her injuries to White. (Tr. 152-153.) White apologized to Valerie the day after the spanking. (Tr. 152, 155.)

White told Valerie that she should not tell or show anyone what he had done to her because they would think that he abused her. (Tr. 126; 145.) "He said not to tell — not to show my mom or anybody or tell anybody about it because then if I told somebody then he would — then he would hit me a little bit more." (Tr. 153.) White told Valerie that he would hit her again if her closet was not cleaned before she left for her scheduled weekend visit with her mother on Friday, March 13, 1998. (Tr. 127, 153.)

Valerie further testified that White had spanked her previously but never as hard as on this occasion. (Tr. 141.) Valerie said she was afraid that her father might hit her again:

Q. Okay. Why do you believe he will hit you more?

A. Because I disobeyed him.

Q. What do you mean, you disobeyed him?
A. He told me not to tell anybody and I told somebody. (Tr. 133.)

Jessica Reynolds, Valerie's mother and the petitioner herein, testified that she first learned of the incident at or about 6:00 p.m. on Friday, March 13, 1998. (Tr. 22.) Reynolds testified that within thirty minutes after Valerie's arrival for a scheduled weekend visit, Valerie told Reynolds that White had hit her and caused bruises to her buttocks. (Tr. 8-9.) Valerie showed the bruises to Reynolds and said her dad told her that she was "going to get it twice as bad" if she told anybody. (Tr. 9, 17.) Reynolds worked her regular shift at the United States Post Office from 11:00 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. on March 14, 1998, and thereafter contacted the Parma police because that was where she lived. The Parma police referred Reynolds to the Elyria police where the incident occurred. (Tr. 10.) On the way to see the Elyria police, Reynolds and Valerie stopped at a medical clinic, which declined to provide treatment in a case of suspected child abuse. (Tr. 10.)

For his part, White admitted that he spanked Valerie seven times on her buttocks with his hand. (Tr. 64, 66, 193.) He conceded that this was "[a] punishment too severe," but disputed that it was a "beating." (Tr. 69.) White said he spanked Valerie for lying to him when she told him that she had completed her homework for school and her chores at home and because she had violated a rule prohibiting cereal in her room. (Tr. 65-66, 189-191.) When Valerie told White the following day that she had bruises, White looked at her buttocks and saw red marks. (Tr. 69-70, 188, 195-196.) White testified that he cried and told Valerie that he did not mean to do that. (Tr. 70, 196-197.) White admitted that he told Valerie not to tell her mother about the incident: "I told her not to show her mother or her mother would think that I beat her all the time." (Tr. 67, 197.) White testified that he had spanked Valerie on about four prior occasions, but acknowledged that this spanking was the most severe. (Tr. 63, 181.) White also offered the testimony of an intake officer for Lorain County Children's Services who investigated the abuse allegations but declined to take further action because she could not substantiate that the discipline administered, though excessive, was part of a pattern of abuse. (Tr. 103, 110-112.)

At the conclusion of the full hearing, the court found that there was a "reasonable basis" to continue the temporary protection order.2 White appeals from that ruling and presents two assignments of error:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT APPELLANT ENGAGED IN DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST HIS MINOR DAUGHTER, VALERIE WHITE, AS DEFINED IN O.R.C. SECTION 3113.31(A) WHERE THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE WAS TO THE CONTRARY.

II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN USING ITS OWN PERSONAL OPINION AND PHILOSOPHY REGARDING CORPORAL PUNISHMENT AS A BASIS FOR FINDING THAT APPELLANT HAD VIOLATED O.R.C. SECTION 3113.31 WHEN THE PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE ESTABLISHED THAT APPELLANT HAD SIMPLY EXERCISED HIS RIGHT AS A PARENT TO USE CORPORAL PUNISHMENT AS A FORM OF DISCIPLINE.

Because the assignments of error are related, we will address them jointly. We find that they are not well taken.

Protection orders issued under R.C. 3113.31 are an "appropriate and efficacious method to prevent future domestic violence * * *."Felton v. Felton (1997), 79 Ohio St.3d 34, 41. Because the domestic violence statutes assign to the courts the responsibility for issuing protection orders, "the courts have an obligation to carry out the legislative goals to protect the victims of domestic violence." Felton, 79 Ohio St.3d at 44-45. The Felton court observed:

The General Assembly enacted the domestic violence statutes specifically to criminalize those activities commonly known as domestic violence and to authorize a court to issue protection orders designed to ensure the safety and protection of a complainant in a domestic violence case. Accordingly, R.C. 3113.31 authorizes a court in an ex parte hearing to issue a temporary protection order when the court finds there to be an "[i]mmediate and present danger of domestic violence to the family or household member." R.C. 3113.31(D). Subsequent to this, the court proceeds as in a normal civil action and grants a full hearing. R.C. 3113.31(D).

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Reynolds v. White, Unpublished Decision (9-23-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-white-unpublished-decision-9-23-1999-ohioctapp-1999.