In re K.K.

[Cite as In re K.K., 2021-Ohio-1689.]

                                        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                            TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

                                            BUTLER COUNTY




 IN RE:                                            :

         K.K., et al.                              :      CASE NOS. CA2020-12-130
                                                                    CA2021-01-002
                                                   :                CA2021-01-003

                                                   :               OPINION
                                                                    5/17/2021
                                                   :

                                                   :




               APPEAL FROM BUTLER COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                                  JUVENILE DIVISION
                   Case Nos. JN2018-0380, JN2018-0381, & JN2018-0435


Michael T. Gmoser, Butler County Prosecuting Attorney, Michael Greer, Government
Services Center, 315 High Street, 11th Floor, Hamilton, Ohio 45011, for appellee

Jeanine C. Barbeau, P.O. Box 42324, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242, for appellant, mother

Garrett Law Offices, Dawn S. Garrett, 9435 Waterstone Boulevard, Suite 140, Mason, Ohio
45249, for appellant, father

Parachute Butler County CASA, Lorraine M. Search, 284 North Fair Avenue, Hamilton,
Ohio 45011, guardian ad litem


        PIPER, J.

        {¶1}     Appellants, A.T. ("Mother") and M.K. ("Father"), appeal a decision of the Butler

County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, granting permanent custody of their

children to the Butler County Department of Job and Family Services ("the Agency").
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        {¶2}    Mother and Father share two children, K.K. and M.K., and Mother has another

child, D.T., by a different father. The Agency filed a complaint alleging that K.K. and D.T.

were abused, neglected, and dependent children, and that M.K. was dependent after

receiving information that the family home was unsafe for the children.1

        {¶3}    The Agency received temporary custody and the children were placed in

foster care. Mother and Father agreed that K.K. and D.T. were neglected and dependent

children, but would not agree that M.K. was dependent. Thus, the juvenile court scheduled

a hearing on the matter. However, neither Mother nor Father appeared at the hearing. The

juvenile court adjudicated M.K. dependent. Eventually, the trial court held dispositional

hearings for the children and continued temporary custody of all three children to the

Agency.

        {¶4}    In February 2020, the Agency filed motions for permanent custody of all three

children.    The matter was heard before a magistrate and the magistrate granted the

Agency's motions. Mother and Father filed objections to the magistrate's decision. The

juvenile court held a hearing, after which it overruled Mother's and Father's objections and

adopted the magistrate's decision as an order of the court. Mother and Father each appeal

the juvenile court's decision. We will address Father's first assignment of error, as we find

it dispositive of the appeal.

        {¶5}    Father's Assignment of Error No 1:

        {¶6}    THE      TRIAL      COURT        LACKED        JURISDICTION           TO     TERMINATE

APPELLANT'S PARENTAL RIGHTS AND THE MATTER MUST BE REVERSED AND

REMANDED FOR MANDATORY DISMISSAL.



1. Mother gave birth to M.K. after the Agency initially filed its complaint regarding K.K. and D.T. Thus, the
Agency subsequently filed an additional complaint regarding M.K.

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        {¶7}    Father argues that the juvenile court should have dismissed the Agency's

complaints once it failed to hold dispositional hearings within 90 days of the filing of the

complaints. The record indicates that the Agency filed complaints regarding K.K. and D.T.

on October 25, 2018. The Agency filed a complaint regarding M.K. on December 11, 2018.

However, and the state does not deny, dispositional hearings were not held within 90 days

of these dates for any of the children.2

        {¶8}    According to the version of R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) in place at the time of the

proceedings,

                If the court at an adjudicatory hearing determines that a child is
                an abused, neglected, or dependent child, the court shall not
                issue a dispositional order until after the court holds a separate
                dispositional hearing. * * * The dispositional hearing shall not be
                held more than ninety days after the date on which the complaint
                in the case was filed.

                If the dispositional hearing is not held within the period of time
                required by this division, the court, on its own motion or the
                motion of any party or the guardian ad litem of the child, shall
                dismiss the complaint without prejudice.

        {¶9}    The Ohio Supreme Court was asked to determine whether the 90-day

timeframe set forth in the statute is discretionary or mandatory after some appellate districts

had found that the statute did not prohibit a juvenile court from issuing orders even if the

dispositional hearing occurred after the 90-day timeframe expired. In re K.M., 159 Ohio

St.3d 544, 2020-Ohio-995.

        {¶10} The Ohio Supreme Court reversed these appellate districts and held that the

timeframe listed in the statute is mandatory, not discretionary, and contains an "express

limitation on a juvenile court's authority for failure to comply with a statutory deadline." Id.



2. The record indicates that the dispositional hearing for D.T. and K.K. was held on March 19, 2019 and that
the juvenile court did not hold a dispositional hearing for M.K. until June 7, 2019.

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at ¶ 23. Thus, the Ohio Supreme Court reversed the consolidated cases and remanded

with instructions that the juvenile courts dismiss the complaints without prejudice for failure

to hold the dispositional hearings within 90 days. See also In re Z.S., 5th Dist. Perry Nos.

20-CA-00002 thru -04, 2021-Ohio-118, ¶ 22 (holding that "after the expiration of the ninety

day deadline on October 23, 2018, the trial court had no authority to issue further orders

except to journalize the dismissal of the case").

       {¶11} In so deciding, the Ohio Supreme Court compared R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) to two

other statutes where the timing aspect proscribed by the legislature was not mandatory or

jurisdictional in nature. The court noted that a juvenile court is required by R.C. 2151.28 to

hold an adjudicatory hearing no later than 30 days after the filing of a complaint, but noted

that the statue also permitted a relaxed timeframe "for good cause shown." The court also

considered R.C. 2151.414(A)(2), which expressly states that a "failure of the court to comply

with the time periods * * * of this section does not affect the authority of the court to issue

any order under this chapter and does not provide any basis for attacking the jurisdiction of

the court or the validity of any order of the court."

       {¶12} The K.M. Court compared R.C. 2151.35(B)(1)'s language to these two

examples and found that unlike the two statutes, R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) did not include any

language to allow "the court to act beyond the 90-day time limit." In re K.M. at ¶ 25. Instead,

the K.M. Court determined that the plain language of the statute required dismissal after the

expiration of the 90-day time frame, even if no party raised the issue to the trial court. "If

the General Assembly had intended for a juvenile court to proceed with dispositional

determinations beyond the 90-day time limit in R.C. 2151.35(B)(1), it could have added

language to that effect. * * * In the absence of any such language here that allows the court

to act beyond the 90-day time limit, we must apply the express mandate in R.C.

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2151.35(B)(1) requiring dismissal of the complaints." Id. at ¶ 24-25.

       {¶13} The Ohio Supreme Court addressed the analysis employed by the lower

courts that found juvenile courts were permitted to act outside the 90-day timeframe. These

lower courts reasoned that the mothers in their cases had implicitly waived the 90-day

requirement by cooperating with the agencies and even requesting that the dispositional

hearing be set for a future date past the 90 days. However, and given the mandatory nature

of the timeline addressed in K.M., the Ohio Supreme Court ultimately held, "there can be

no implicit waiver of the 90-day limit." Id. at ¶ 26.

       {¶14} Thus, K.M. specifically states that a parent cannot implicitly waive the juvenile

court's requirement to hold the dispositional hearing within 90 days of the filing of the

complaint and that a juvenile court must dismiss the complaint without prejudice should it

fail to hold the dispositional hearing within the 90-day time frame, whether or not any party

raises the issue.

       {¶15} While the state concedes that the juvenile court's hearings did not occur within

90 days of the complaint dates, the state relies on caselaw from other districts for the

proposition that a parent can (1) waive the 90-day requirement, and (2) that a parent is

barred by res judicata if he or she does not raise the issue with the juvenile court.

       {¶16} First, the cases cited by the state involve cases where the parents expressly

waived the application of R.C. 2151.35(B)(1). While the Ohio Supreme Court stated that

there can be no implicit waiver of the 90-day timeframe, the court did not address whether

express waiver is possible. Appellate courts have since interpreted R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) to

permit express waiver. See In re K.M., 4th Dist. Highland Nos. 20CA4 and 20CA6, 2020-

Ohio-4476 (all parties orally waived the 90-day period in court and the trial court issued an

entry that reiterated that both parents waived the 90-day dispositional requirement); and In

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re L.S., 4th Dist. Ross No. 20CA3719, 2020-Ohio-5516 (parents signed a continuance entry

stating that they waived the time for adjudication and disposition).

       {¶17} Whether we agree with our sister districts on this matter is not before us at

this time because the state neither argues nor demonstrates that Mother or Father expressly

waived the relevant timeframe.      Thus, the state's reliance on the cases is misplaced

because the facts of those cases are readily distinguishable and the courts' holdings

inapplicable to the case sub judice.

       {¶18} The state also claims that Father's argument is barred by res judicata because

no party raised the 90-day issue to the juvenile court and neither parent filed an appeal from

the juvenile court's disposition orders, which was a final appealable order.

       {¶19} However, the case relied upon by the state to support the res judicata issue

is also distinguishable because in that case, the parents signed a waiver form indicating an

express waiver of the statutory requirement, continued with the proceedings, and then only

raised the issue of the applicability of R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) after the child had been returned

to the parents and they wanted the court's original dependency adjudication reversed. In

re L.S., 2020-Ohio-5516. In that case, the court considered that the parents signed a

"continuance entry stating that they waived the time for adjudication and disposition," thus

analyzing the issue pursuant to express waiver grounds. Id. at ¶ 16. We have no such

grounds here.

       {¶20} The law is well settled that Ohio's juvenile courts are statutory entities, able to

exercise only those powers that the General Assembly confers upon them. R.C. Chapter

2151; In re Z.R., 144 Ohio St.3d 380, 2015-Ohio-3306, ¶ 14. The law is also well settled

that attacks on subject-matter jurisdiction cannot be forfeited and can be raised at any time,

even for the first time on appeal. Pilkington N. Am., Inc. v. Toledo Edison Co., 145 Ohio

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St.3d 125, 2015-Ohio-4797.

        {¶21} While dismissal of the complaints and the Agency's need to refile will deny

the children permanency at this time, the K.M. Court explained,

                the General Assembly crafted a solution that balances the rights
                of parents with the interests of protecting children—it provided
                for dismissal of a complaint without prejudice, which allows an
                agency to refile a new complaint that very same day and
                marshal its evidence if it still has concerns about a child's
                welfare. We acknowledge the burden that a mandatory 90-day
                deadline in R.C. 2151.35(B)(1) may impose on the already-
                strained dockets of the juvenile courts. But regardless of the
                policy concerns raised by dismissal of the complaint, our duty is
                to apply the statute as written.

(Emphasis sic.) In re K.M. at ¶ 30. Like the Ohio Supreme Court, we must also apply the

statute as written. Therefore, we find that the juvenile court erred by not dismissing the

complaints without prejudice once it failed to hold the dispositional hearings within 90 days

as required by R.C. 2151.35(B)(1). Thus, Father's first assignment of error is sustained.3

        {¶22} Judgment reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.


        S. POWELL and HENDRICKSON, JJ., concur.




3. Given our disposition of Father's first assignment of error, his remaining assignments of error, as well as
Mother's assignment of error, are rendered moot.

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