Short v. Rhodes

2021 Ohio 1845, 173 N.E.3d 806
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 2021
DocketWD-20-066
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 1845 (Short v. Rhodes) 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
Short v. Rhodes, 2021 Ohio 1845, 173 N.E.3d 806 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as Short v. Rhodes, 2021-Ohio-1845.]

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

Tonya Short Court of Appeals No. WD-20-066

Appellee Trial Court No. 2014-DR-0120

v.

Mark J. Rhodes DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: May 28, 2021

*****

Stephen M. Szuch and Patricia Hayden Kurt, for appellant.

PIETRYKOWSKI, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Mark Rhodes, appeals the judgment of the Wood County Court

of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, denying his motions for a reallocation of

parental rights and responsibilities and to modify child support. Appellee, Tonya Short,

has not filed a brief in response. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. Facts and Procedural Background

{¶ 2} On January 22, 2015, the parties entered into a consent judgment entry of

divorce. In the consent entry, appellee was designated the residential parent and legal custodian of the two minor children, L.R. (born in 2007), and E.R. (born in 2010).

Appellant was granted parenting time with the children for three evenings each week, as

well as Friday overnight, and alternating weekends. Appellant was also ordered to pay

$1,600 per month in child support.

A. History of Post-Divorce Litigation

{¶ 3} On July 18, 2016, appellant reopened the case by filing a motion to show

cause, and for a reallocation of parental rights and responsibilities. In his motion,

appellant alleged that appellee had begun a new job which made the previous parenting

schedule impractical. Appellant also alleged that appellee had unilaterally curtailed his

parenting time with the children. Appellee responded by also seeking certain

modifications to the parenting schedule.

{¶ 4} The hearing on appellant’s motions was vacated and rescheduled several

times, and was ultimately held on June 9 and August 17, 2017. During the intervening

period, the parties filed additional motions including motions to show cause, to relocate

the children, and to prevent the children from being dis-enrolled from a particular school,

among others.

{¶ 5} Following the hearing, the magistrate found that appellee unilaterally

deprived appellant of parenting time on numerous occasions. Appellee also unilaterally

withdrew the children from the private school they had been attending, and enrolled them

in public school. Records from the private school show that the children were tardy

approximately 25 days, and absent 7 days over the course of the 2015-2016 school year,

all of which occurred while appellee was responsible for the children. Around April

2. 2017, the guardian ad litem recommended that the parties try a “week-on/week-off”

schedule with a midweek overnight visit. Following the end of the 2016-2017 school

year, appellee unilaterally suspended the midweek overnight visits. At the hearing,

appellee stated that she could not remember exercising midweek overnight visits after the

parties started the “week-on/week-off” schedule, which the magistrate found not credible

since the parties had exercised midweek visits for approximately five weeks in April and

May 2017.

{¶ 6} The magistrate also found that appellee had filed for a domestic violence

civil protection order against appellant, and included the children as desired protected

persons. Appellee’s petition listed several dates on which appellant was at her house, but

the magistrate found that appellant had legitimate reasons involving his parenting time

for being there, noting that appellant could have handled some of the times better to avoid

upsetting appellee. In addition, the magistrate found that appellee had contacted

appellant’s pastor to make disparaging remarks about appellant. The magistrate also

found that after a referral to children’s services about appellee’s boyfriend, appellee

decided to have a police escort attend all exchanges of the minor children, which she

claimed was necessary to protect her safety, and was not a retaliatory action. Finally, the

magistrate found that both parties had made inappropriate comments to the children about

the pending case.

{¶ 7} In light of her findings, the magistrate ordered that there was no change of

circumstances to cause the court to modify the residential parent status. However, the

magistrate ordered that the parenting time should be modified so that the parties alternate

3. weeks of parenting time with the children, with exchanges to occur on Fridays at 5:15

p.m. The magistrate further ordered that the parties shall encourage frequent phone

contact with the other parent, and to allow video-call access at least two times per week.

As to child support, the magistrate ordered that appellant shall be responsible to pay the

sum of $600 per month. On January 5, 2018, the trial court denied the parties’ respective

objections, and affirmed and adopted the magistrate’s decision.

{¶ 8} On June 15, 2018, appellee reopened the case, seeking to modify the parties’

parenting times surrounding the Wood County Fair and other holidays. Additionally,

appellee alleged that appellant was not complying with the requirement of video-calls

two times per week, and that appellant was not allowing the children to wear and use

their phone watches to freely contact appellee. Furthermore, appellee alleged that

appellant was making “nasty remarks” when the children wanted to contact appellee, and

that appellant yelled at the children, thereby intimidating the children into not wanting to

call appellee. Appellee subsequently supplemented her motion five times with additional

complaints regarding appellant’s availability to be home when the children return from

school, appellant’s inability or unwillingness to hire a babysitter, and appellant’s move to

within a block from appellee’s home and his desire to send the children to appellee’s

house after school which would require appellee to expend her own funds to hire a

babysitter.

{¶ 9} Appellant responded to appellee’s motions by filing a motion to reallocate

the parental rights and responsibilities, as well as subsequent motions to show cause. In

his motions, appellant alleged that appellee’s behavior has become increasingly erratic,

4. and that she has attempted to alienate the children from him and has failed to properly

care for the children by not providing adequate meals. Appellant also alleged that

appellee signed the children up for extracurricular activities without first consulting him

in violation of the most recent court order, that she denies the children access to their

phones to contact appellant, and that she refuses to allow L.R. to ride the bus from school

to appellant’s home and interferes with his parenting time by picking L.R. up from

school. Furthermore, appellant alleged that appellee confiscated electronic devices that

appellant had purchased for the children and refused to return them to appellant. Finally,

appellant alleged that appellee was not paying her share of the medical expenses.

{¶ 10} Following a February 6, 2019 hearing on this round of motions, the

magistrate found that although there was still tension between the parties, the relationship

“seem[ed] to have improved somewhat,” and the children were doing relatively well.

Based upon the guardian ad litem report and her in-camera discussions with the children,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 Ohio 1845, 173 N.E.3d 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/short-v-rhodes-ohioctapp-2021.