[Cite as In re Adoption of V.R.K., 2018-Ohio-4881.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
GREENE COUNTY
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IN THE MATTER OF THE : Appellate Case No. 2018-CA-34
ADOPTION OF: V.R.K. :
: Trial Court Case No. 10910AD
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: (Appeal from Probate Court)
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OPINION
Rendered on the 7th day of December, 2018.
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WILLIAM R. ZIMMERMAN, JR., Atty. Reg. No. 0078925, 108 E. Poplar Street, Sidney,
Ohio 45365
Attorney for Appellant
MICHAEL R. VOORHEES, Atty. Reg. No. 0039293, 11159 Kenwood Road, Cincinnati,
Ohio 45242
Attorney for Appellees
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HALL, J.
{¶ 1} C.H., the putative father of V.R.K., appeals from the trial court’s decision and
judgment entry finding that his consent to the child’s adoption was not required under
R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b).
{¶ 2} C.H. advances two assignments of error. First, he contends the trial court
erred in not considering whether he “willfully” failed to care for and support V.R.K. Second,
he claims the trial court’s finding that he failed to care for and support the child was against
the manifest weight of the evidence.
{¶ 3} The record reflects that V.R.K.’s mother, J.C., voluntarily gave the child to a
private adoption agency in March 2018, just days after the child’s birth. The agency
promptly placed the child with appellees J.K. and M.K., who filed a petition to adopt.
Although putative father C.H. did not consent to adoption, the petition alleged that his
consent was not required under R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b) because he (1) was not the child’s
father, (2) willfully abandoned or failed to care for and support the child, and/or (3) willfully
abandoned J.C. during her pregnancy and up to the time of her surrender of the child or
the child’s placement in the petitioners’ home. The matter proceeded to a June 28, 2018
hearing to resolve the need for C.H.’s consent. Based on the evidence presented, the trial
court made the following findings of fact:
Mother and Putative Father began dating sometime in the spring of
2017. They broke off their relationship several months later.
In early July, 2017, Mother found out she was pregnant. She told
Putative Father about the pregnancy and informed him he was the child’s
father. They mutually decided to try to work out their relationship. Mother
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agreed to move in with Putative Father at his mother’s house in Sidney,
Ohio. Putative Father promised to quit drinking and to get a job.
Sometime during the autumn of 2017, Mother broke off their
relationship again and moved out of Putative Father’s mother’s house.
Mother contended Putative Father was still drinking and had not obtained a
job. Her contention regarding drinking was corroborated shortly after the
breakup when Putative Father encountered legal issues related to alcohol
use.
Mother moved in with her grandmother, who also lived in Sidney,
Ohio. She also blocked Putative Father on her cell phone and on Facebook.
Evidence showed Putative Father tried to text Mother several times shortly
after their breakup and then again after the baby was born. Mother did not
respond to the messages.
Putative Father knew where Mother was living and where her
grandmother’s house was located. Testimony of Putative Father and his
mother indicates they went by the home where Mother was living a few
times, but they contend no one was home.
There is extensive evidence that Putative Father communicated
frequently with Mother’s mother, with whom Mother was not living, through
Facebook Messenger. It appears that their conversations were centered on
Putative Father’s desire to get back with Mother and his interest in being
involved in the child’s life. Nothing ever came of those conversations.
Putative Father’s mother did communicate a few times with Mother.
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On January 1, 2018, Mother informed her that she decided to pursue an
adoption plan for V.R.K. Putative Father’s mother expressed her
displeasure with the idea.
V.R.K. was born on March 6, 2018 in Sidney, Ohio. Mother signed a
permanent surrender agreement with the adoption agency on March 9,
2918, which was filed and approved in Greene County Juvenile Court. The
adoption agency placed the child with Petitioners the same day. The child
has been in Petitioners’ continuous care since that date.
Putative Father contends that he (and his mother) offered to throw a
baby shower for Mother before V.R.K. was born, and to buy diapers and
other necessities after her birth. There is no evidence that those offers ever
materialized.
There is no evidence that Putative Father ever actually provided any
support for V.R.K. after she was born. He did not set up support payments
through the Child Support Enforcement Agency. He did not pay any portion
of Mother’s medical expenses during the pregnancy after they split up and
did not pay anything toward V.R.K.’s care and support after her birth. There
is also no evidence that Putative Father ever actually provided any non-
monetary support to the child, in the form of clothes, diapers, formula or
other baby essentials. Even if Putative Father’s testimony that he offered to
assist is true, the fact is he did not follow through and actually provide
anything. Putative Father admitted that at trial.
Mother and Putative Father have never been married to each other.
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Putative Father is not named as the father on V.R.K.’s birth certificate.
Putative Father did not file a parentage action before Petitioners filed the
Petition for Adoption. He also did not attempt to establish his parent-child
relationship with V.R.K. by an acknowledgment of paternity or through and
administrative determination. Putative Father did not institute any
proceedings in Juvenile Court to seek custody of V.R.K.
Mother was a credible witness. Her testimony was clear, concise and
confident.
Likewise, Putative Father’s mother was a credible witness. However,
her testimony carries little weight because it was not substantially relevant
to the legal issues in this case.
Putative Father’s credibility was questionable to this Court. Although
he was polite and respectful during his testimony, his demeanor and
hesitancy in answering questions clouded the believability of his responses
in many instances. He certainly did not corroborate his claims of offering
support for the child with any evidence that he actually did so. Putative
Father simply did not convey to the Court a sense of complete sincerity in
his desire to be a true father to the child. Instead, he left the Court with a
distinct impression that his objection to the adoption was for his mother’s
benefit more so than his own.
The abundance of Exhibits Putative Father offered into evidence
were not persuasive. While the Exhibits demonstrate Putative Father’s
efforts to communicate with others by means of text messaging and
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Facebook Messenger, they do not establish any genuine showing of actual
support for the Mother or the child.
After the trial, this Court ordered the parties to obtain a paternity test.
The parties filed the DNA Test Report with the Court on June 10, 2018. The
Report showed a 99.999995% probability that Putative Father is the
biological father of V.R.K. Petitioners did not offer any evidence to refute
the test results.
(Decision and Judgment Entry, Doc. #26 at 2-4.)
{¶ 4} In its conclusions of law, the trial court recognized that C.H.’s legal status as
the putative father made his consent to adoption necessary unless a statutory exception
applied. (Id. at 5.) The trial court then correctly looked to R.C. 3107.07(B), which sets
forth circumstances under which a putative father’s consent to adoption is not required.
The trial court found that R.C. 3107.07(B)(1) did not apply because C.H. properly had
registered on the putative father registry.
{¶ 5} The trial court then turned to R.C. 3107.07(B)(2), which provides that consent
is unnecessary if any of the following apply: “(a) The putative father is not the father of
the minor; (b) The putative father has willfully abandoned or failed to care for and support
the minor; (c) The putative father has willfully abandoned the mother of the minor during
her pregnancy and up to the time of her surrender of the minor, or the minor’s placement
in the home of the petitioner, whichever occurs first.”
{¶ 6} Based on the evidence presented, the trial court held that C.H. in fact was
V.R.K.’s biological father. It also found that C.H. did not willfully abandon V.R.K. or the
child’s mother. Rather the trial court held that V.R.K.’s mother, J.C., voluntarily broke off
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her relationship with C.H. and moved out of his residence before giving birth and placing
the child for adoption. Under these circumstances, the trial court declined to find that C.H.
willfully had abandoned mother or child.
{¶ 7} The trial court opined that resolution of the case hinged on whether C.H. had
“failed to care for and support” the child. On this issue, the trial court noted C.H.’s
admission during the hearing that he never actually provided any care or support for
V.R.K. Based on the evidence, the trial court characterized his efforts as “empty” offers
of support with a “lack of action.” (Decision and Judgment Entry, Doc. #26 at 7.) The trial
court also rejected C.H.’s argument that J.C. significantly had impeded his efforts to care
for and support their child. The trial court found “no evidence that any third party ever
remotely interfered with anything Putative Father did or attempted to do toward caring for
or supporting the child.” (Id.). Although J.C. had “blocked” C.H. on social media, V.R.K.
was not in J.C.’s care anyway after being placed with the adoption agency. Thus, the trial
court rejected the notion that “if you are blocked you are somehow no longer obligated to
provide care and support for your child.” (Id. at 8.) The trial court then reasoned:
Putative Father admitted he has never actually provided any care or
support for V.R.K. He admitted he never contacted the adoption agency to
whom Mother surrendered permanent custody of the child, even though he
knew or could have easily determined the name and contact information of
the agency through the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services. Had
he contacted the agency, he could have provided support through that
avenue, regardless of whether Mother continued to ignore his messages.
The complete lack of Putative Father’s care for and support of V.R.K., as
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required in R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b), is easy to resolve in this case.
The Court is not impressed with the effort Putative Father expended
to show his desire to be a real dad to V.R.K. since her birth. He had several
weeks between the child’s birth and the date Petitioners filed the Adoption
Petition in which to take legal action to formally establish his parentage. He
did not do anything. He could have attempted to gain custody through
Juvenile Court. He did not do anything. The clear message in R.C.
3107.07(B)(2)(b) is that a putative father cannot sit back, do nothing while
others care for and support his child, and then claim he deserves to get the
child.
It is the decision of this Court that Putative Father failed to care for
and support V.R.K. after her birth. Petitioners have met their burden of proof
on this element by clear and convincing evidence. Putative Father has failed
to refute that evidence with sufficient, credible evidence to the contrary.
Accordingly, it is the decision of this Court that the consent of Putative
Father to the proposed adoption of V.R.K. is not required.
(Id.).
{¶ 8} On appeal, C.H. contends the trial court erred in failing to consider whether
his failure to care for and support V.R.K. was “willful.” This argument requires
interpretation of R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b) as well as analysis of the record. As set forth
above, the statute makes a putative father’s consent to adoption unnecessary if he “has
willfully abandoned or failed to care for and support the minor.” The initial issue raised by
C.H.’s argument is whether “willfully” only modifies “abandoned” or whether it also
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modifies “failed to care for and support.” This court addressed that issue in In re Adoption
of R.C.A., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 19509, 2003-Ohio-607, reasoning: “Although it is
perhaps unclear whether the word ‘willfully’ modifies only ‘abandoned’ or also modifies
‘failed to care for and support,’ this court previously has read [R.C.] 3107.07(B) as
requiring a petitioner to establish a willful failure to care for and support a child.” Id. at ¶
10, fn. 3, citing In re of Bachman, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 15720, 1996 WL 535320
(Sept. 13, 1996).1
{¶ 9} In the present case, the trial court’s ruling is perhaps ambiguous as to
whether it required proof of a “willful” failure by C.H. to care for and support his child. As
evidence that it did not, C.H. cites the trial court’s observation that “the law does not give
a putative father an excuse of ‘justifiable cause’ for not providing the child care and
support[.]” (Decision and Judgment Entry, Doc. #26 at 8.) The trial court made this
observation, however, in the context of pointing out that the “justifiable cause” standard,
which is found in R.C. 3107.07(A), applies to a legally recognized parent, not a putative
father.
1 The appellees cite In re Adoption of P.L.H., 151 Ohio St.3d 554, 2017-Ohio-5824, 91
N.E.3d 698, for the proposition that the word “willfully” in R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b) modifies
only “abandoned” and not “failed to care for and support.” We note, however, that P.L.H.
had nothing to do with whether the word “willfully” modified “failed to care for and support.”
The issue in the case involved the meaning of “willfully abandoned” as applied to a
putative father’s treatment of the birth mother. The Ohio Supreme Court was not called
on to decide, and did not decide, whether the word “willfully” modified “failed to care for
and support.” In the course of its analysis, the court did observe that “[a] putative father’s
failure to care for and support the minor child provides a relevant basis under R.C.
3107.07(B)(2)(b) for determining that his consent to the adoption is not required.”
(Emphasis sic) Id. at ¶ 27. But the court’s omission of the word “willful” before the word
“failure” in this passing reference to an issue not before it does not constitute a holding
that the word “willfully” in the statute modifies only “abandoned.” In our view, the appellees
read too much into P.L.H. in making such an argument.
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{¶ 10} Other portions of the trial court’s opinion support a conclusion that it did
require proof of a “willful” failure to care for and support V.R.K. The trial court recognized
C.H.’s admission that he never provided any care and support for the child. If this bare
failure to provide care and support were sufficient to satisfy R.C. 3107.07(B)(2)(b), the
trial court could have stopped its analysis there. But it did not. It proceeded to identify
ways in which C.H. could have provided support for V.R.K. despite the fact that the child
had been placed for adoption. (Id. at 8). That analysis, which supports a determination
that C.H.’s failure to provide support was “willful,” would have been unnecessary and
irrelevant if the trial court believed the mere act of failure to provide support alone satisfied
the statute. Moreover, if the burden of going forward is upon the putative father to provide
some evidence that failure to provide support is other-than-willful, we believe he has failed
in that regard.2
{¶ 11} For the foregoing reasons, we reject C.H.’s argument that the trial court
erred in failing to expressly state that it had considered whether his failure to care for and
support V.R.K. was “willful.” Accordingly, his first assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 12} C.H.’s second assignment of error challenges the weight of the evidence to
support the trial court’s finding that he failed to provide care and support. More
2 In re Adoption of Lozan, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 7547, 1982 WL 3762 (July 19, 1982),
this court clarified an adoption petitioner’s burden to prove that a putative father’s lack of
care and support was “willful.” Addressing the consent-to-adoption exceptions in R.C.
3107.07(B), this court reasoned: “[W]e believe that it is sound law that petitioner need
only produce evidence of failure to support, and the burden of going forward (not burden
of proof) with some evidence of the nonwillfulness is upon the objecting party. Once
evidence is introduced on the non-willful failure by the objecting party, the petitioner must
prove willful failure by ‘clear and convincing evidence.’ ” Id. at *2. In the present case,
C.H. admitted his failure to support V.R.K., and we see no evidence that this failure was
non-willful. In any event, as explained above, the trial court’s analysis supports a
conclusion that it believed his failure to provide care and support for his child was willful.
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specifically, he contends any finding that he “willfully” failed to provide care and support
for V.R.K. is against the manifest weight of the evidence. C.H. reasons that his failure to
provide support for his child cannot be deemed “willful” for two reasons: (1) the petitioners
failed to prove that he was capable of providing support and (2) V.R.K.’s mother, J.C.,
rejected his offers of support for the child. To buttress his argument, C.H. cites numerous
cases for the general proposition that a failure to provide support is not willful where a
putative father is incapable of providing support or where offers of support are rejected.
Although we have reviewed those cases, the trial court reasonably could have found the
two propositions upon which C.H. relies inapplicable on the facts before us.
{¶ 13} “The question of whether a putative father ‘has abandoned or failed to care
for and support the minor’ has been proven by the petitioner by clear and convincing
evidence is a determination for the probate court. We may not disturb the judgment of the
probate court unless such determination is against the manifest weight of the evidence.”
In re Adoption of Woods, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 11068, 1989 WL 14719, *2 (Feb. 24,
1989), citing In re Adoption of Bovett, 33 Ohio St.3d 102, 515 N.E.2d 919 (1987).
Judgments supported by some competent, credible evidence going to all the essential
elements of the case will not be reversed as being against the manifest weight of the
evidence. C.E. Morris Co. v. Foley Constr. Co., 54 Ohio St.2d 279, 281, 376 N.E.2d 578
(1978). “In determining whether a judgment is against the manifest weight of the
evidence, we must review the entire record, weigh the evidence and all reasonable
inferences, consider witness credibility, and determine whether, in resolving conflicts in
the evidence, the trier of fact ‘clearly lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage
of justice’ that there must be a reversal of the judgment and an order for a new trial.”
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Steagall v. Crossman, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 20306, 2004-Ohio-4691, ¶ 29.
{¶ 14} Here C.H.’s argument about a lack of proof that he was capable of providing
support for V.R.K. fails because his own hearing testimony supported an inference that
he was capable of doing so. Indeed, C.H. testified at the hearing that he tried to provide
support for both J.C. and the child but that he was “shut out” and “blocked” or never
received a response and could not get in touch with J.C. (See, e.g., Hearing Tr. at 12-15,
36.) C.H. never suggested at the hearing that he lacked the capacity to provide any
support. It is unconvincing for C.H. to testify at the hearing that he tried to provide support
while now insisting that he lacked the ability to provide support. If C.H. tried to provide
support for V.R.K. and J.C., as he testified at the hearing, then the trial court reasonably
could have inferred from his own evidence that he was capable of providing some support.
In light of this determination, we need not dwell on whether C.H.’s claimed unemployment
or other circumstances precluded him from providing support for his child.
{¶ 15} With regard to C.H.’s other argument, the trial court recognized that J.C.
had attempted to avoid contact with him. It nevertheless reasoned that he could have
provided support for the child, who no longer was in J.C.’s care, through the Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services or through the adoption agency if he had made
any effort to contact those entities. Despite C.H.’s knowledge that V.R.K. had been placed
for adoption, the trial court found that he made no real attempt to support the child. It
concluded that “Putative Father here is solely responsible for his empty offers of support
for V.R.K., but lack of action in providing it.” (Decision and Judgment Entry, Doc. #26 at
7.) This finding is supported by the record. Therefore, C.H.’s second assignment of error
is overruled.
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{¶ 16} The judgment of the Greene County Probate Court is affirmed.
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WELBAUM, P.J. and TUCKER, J., concur.
Copies sent to:
William R. Zimmerman, Jr.
Michael R. Voorhees
Hon. Thomas M. O’Diam