435 N.E.2d 96 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1980
This cause came on to be heard upon appeal from the Juvenile Division of the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County.
Respondent-appellant, the mother of the two children involved, seeks reversal of the order of the Juvenile Division that adjudicated her two children to be dependent and ordered temporary commitment to the Hamilton County Welfare Department, the appellee herein. In these consolidated appeals, the mother asserts four errors of which we find one has merit requiring the judgment below to be reversed.
The issues raised are whether neglecting to call attention *118 of the court to its failure to follow the procedural requirements of R. C. Chapter 2151 constitutes a waiver of procedural errors, whether the trial court properly restricted its first hearing to the adjudication of dependency to the exclusion of the disposition of the children if found dependent, and whether the finding of dependency was against the weight of the evidence.
A full hearing was held on the Welfare Department's complaint that the children were both dependent (R. C.
The first assignment of error contends that the court erred in failing to ascertain whether all necessary parties had received notice of the hearing and whether unrepresented parties had waived their right to counsel. These contentions are not properly before us because no party to the proceeding brought the claimed errors to the attention of the trial court, prior to or during the hearing, by objection, motion, or otherwise, when the alleged error could have been avoided or corrected by the trial court. Stores Realty Co. v. Cleveland (1975),
The only exception to this rule is plain error, but the errors in the instant case do not rise to that level. The record discloses that the only party who did not attend the hearing was the father of one of the children, who had been served by publication but failed to appear. Furthermore, the mother and the father of the other child were represented by counsel, and the children by a guardian ad litem (as authorized by R. C.
The second assignment contends that error occurred when the court examined the children in camera without the presence of their guardian ad litem and the consent of all parties, the court thereafter failing to report to the parties the contents of that examination. Again, this claim was not brought to the attention of the trial court. The record discloses that the mother's counsel presented the children as her witnesses and stated that it would be "agreeable to us" if the court had anin camera conference with them that would be recorded. The error, if any,1 was waived. The second assignment has no merit.
The third assignment of error contends that the court concurrently conducted a mixed hearing on the adjudication of dependency and the disposition of the children, in violation of the requirement of R. C.
The fourth assignment of error has merit. In it, the mother asserts, in essence, that the finding of dependency was against *120
the weight of the evidence. Children are dependent under R. C.
We note that the award of custody of the two children in the case sub judice was temporary only and that the question of permanently divesting the mother of all legal rights and obligations to or from the children was deferred. It has been held that an initial adjudication of dependency that results in a temporary order does not constitute legal grounds for permanent commitment when twenty-two months have elapsed between the temporary custody hearing and the permanent custody hearing, and when, during that period, the children were returned to the natural parents. In re Fassinger (1974),
We are sensitive to the rule that an appellate court will not substitute its judgment for that of the trial court. The rule is founded on the more accurate perceptions of a judge who hears and sees the parties testify, and who can make personal, intimate observations about the children, their parents and the relationships between them. We acknowledge that the trial court has discretion in resolving difficult questions about a child's relationship to his or her parents during the fluid, ever-changing years of growing up. State, ex rel. Scordato, v.George (Hamilton Co. Ct. of Appeals No. C-800603, October 8, 1980), unreported.
Nevertheless, we find the evidence in the instant case insufficient to sustain a finding of dependency. The mother's witnesses, whose testimony was not controverted by the Welfare Department, testified that the children were clean, properly clothed and well fed; one witness said that they were happy, affectionate kids. They had a good relationship with their mother. While each of them had trouble of one sort or another in school (such as, eating crayons, kicking the principal, being late, having temper tantrums, "acting out," and not having many friends), these problems were corrected over a period of time. Their school reports were favorable, both being average pupils, and they had good reports from a summer camp experience. The mother's psychiatrist stated that he never saw any psychiatric reason for removing them from her custody.
The psychiatrist, who had treated the mother since 1973 on a periodic basis, diagnosed her problems as recurrent episodic depressions, but he saw no reason why she could not be a competent mother. The depressions will recur, but with less frequency; she is not likely to deteriorate and has matured as a human being. The doctor reported, as did other witnesses, that one cause of her depressions was the stress she felt from pressure exerted on her about her children by the Welfare Department. The children are the focus of her life, and the *122 threat or even suggestion of removal of the chilren brought on debilitating reactions. In fact, she was kept in the hospital for an extended time after the instant complaint was filed in order to assist her in settling down and preparing herself for appearance in the Juvenile Division hearing. The Welfare Department did not rebut the clear suggestion that, in recent months, it had exacerbated the situation, unknowingly but inevitably; there is a paucity of evidence demonstrating any attempts to cure and resolve a difficult situation.
Militating in favor of a finding of dependency is the evidence about those periods of time when the children had to be placed immediately with someone else when the mother was hospitalized, and the many moves from one residential location to another. The mother managed to make some provision for the children each time, but she was nonetheless physically unable to care for them while in the hospital. While the children have apparently experienced a normal development, they have had problems with adjustment in the past and are subject to wide, perhaps irrational, shifts of attitude. They appeared, to one Welfare Department worker, to be scared and nervous during at least one of the mother's depressive episodes.
In this case, we find none of the instability and impoverished conditions of the mother's life, none of the failure to support or care for the children, and none of the psychological dependency and affectionate attachment of the children for foster parents or others standing in locoparentis, as we did in In re Justice (1978),
The fourth assignment of error has merit.
The evidence did not support a finding of dependency. See Inre Burrell (1979),
We reverse the judgment below and remand the cause for further proceedings.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
SHANNON, P. J., KEEFE and BLACK, JJ., concur.
"As used in sections
"(A) Who is homeless or destitute or without proper care or support, through no fault of his parents, guardian, or custodian;
"(B) Who lacks proper care or support by reason of the mental or physical condition of his parents, guardian, or custodian;
"(C) Whose condition or environment is such as to warrant the state, in the interests of the child, in assuming his guardianship."