In re R.D.B. , 2019 Ohio 1547 ( 2019 )


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  • [Cite as In re R.D.B., 
    2019-Ohio-1547
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY
    :
    :
    IN RE: R.D.B.                                  :   Appellate Case No. 28122
    :
    :   Trial Court Case No. 2010-10146
    :
    :   (Appeal from Common Pleas Court –
    :   Juvenile Division)
    :
    :
    ...........
    OPINION
    Rendered on the 26th day of April, 2019.
    ...........
    JAMES R. KIRKLAND, Atty. Reg. No. 0009731, 10532 Success Lane, Dayton, Ohio
    45458
    Attorney for Appellant-Aunt
    Father, Dayton, Ohio
    Appellee, Pro Se
    .............
    -2-
    FROELICH, J.
    {¶ 1} The maternal aunt (“Aunt”) of R.D.B., a minor, appeals from the trial court’s
    judgment overruling her objections to a magistrate decision that awarded custody of
    R.D.B. to his biological father (“Father”), and further adopted the magistrate’s decision.
    The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    {¶ 2} Mother gave birth to R.D.B. in April 2006. When R.D.B. was four or five years
    old, Father first learned that R.D.B. was his biological son, a fact confirmed through
    genetic testing performed after Mother filed a complaint in the Montgomery County
    Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division, to determine R.D.B.’s paternity. Thereafter,
    Father paid court-ordered child support for R.D.B. Father and R.D.B. also began to
    “spen[d] time together,” including time with Father’s other sons and daughters (R.D.B.’s
    half-siblings). Father and Mother did not have a formal visitation schedule in place, but
    Mother permitted Father to call and arrange to pick up R.D.B. “pretty much * * * anytime
    [Father] wanted,” including for overnight visits.
    {¶ 3} Mother died of leukemia on November 1, 2015. Following Mother’s death,
    Aunt, Mother’s sister, assumed the care of R.D.B. and his half-brother, S.S., one of
    Mother’s two older sons, in Aunt’s Montgomery County home. Father apparently gave
    informal consent to Aunt’s having temporary custody,1 but thereafter, Father and Aunt
    filed competing motions for custody of R.D.B.2
    1
    The timing and form of Father’s consent are unclear, but the record does make clear
    that Father did not relinquish his parental rights (see Tr. p. 8), and Aunt does not contend
    that Father ceded permanent custody to her.
    2
    Aunt apparently filed two motions: one for “change” of custody and one for “legal”
    -3-
    {¶ 4} On September 8, 2016, a juvenile court magistrate conducted a custody
    hearing at which Father and Aunt appeared, both represented by counsel. Father, a
    Montgomery County resident, testified that after Mother’s death, Aunt initially did not
    permit Father to see R.D.B., but Aunt and Father eventually arrived at an arrangement
    that allowed Father to have visitation on an alternating three day/two day weekly
    schedule. Father stated that his child support obligation was current when it was
    terminated due to Mother’s death. Asked why he was seeking custody, Father explained:
    After the passing of his mom, he’s my child, and I feel that I can provide him
    with what he needs. And it’s not that [Aunt] can’t, it’s just he’s my son, and
    I feel like I have the right to raise my child.
    (Transcript (“Tr.”) p. 10).
    {¶ 5} Father testified that he was prepared to provide financial, emotional, and
    spiritual support for R.D.B. While he acknowledged that, since Mother’s death, R.D.B.
    had told Father that he (R.D.B.) did not want to spend the night with Father, did not want
    to live with Father, and felt “comfortable” living with Aunt, Father expressed optimism that
    he and R.D.B. could make living together work.
    {¶ 6} On cross-examination, Father indicated that he worked an 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.
    shift at his current full-time job, where he earned $24 per hour. Father said he would
    transfer to a 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. shift if awarded custody of R.D.B. Father also worked as a
    high school and college basketball referee for approximately 35 games per year, but said
    he would reduce his refereeing schedule if granted custody. Father agreed that he had
    failed to respond to Aunt’s discovery requests or to appear for his scheduled deposition
    custody.
    -4-
    in the custody case, but suggested that such failure was due at least in part to the
    withdrawal of his original attorney.
    {¶ 7} Father testified that he had four children in addition to R.D.B. Father never
    had legal custody of his three oldest children, all of whom were now adults, but one of
    those children did live with Father from age 14 to age 18. He also had an 11-year-old
    daughter who had lived with her mother since Father and the girl’s mother divorced in
    2013. Father said that a visitation order never was necessary as to his other children, as
    he and the children’s mothers agreed to visitation. Father said that R.D.B. and Father’s
    other children “all get along well,” and that R.D.B. “adores” Father’s youngest daughter,
    who is about R.D.B.’s age. Father acknowledged that R.D.B. and S.S., Mother’s other
    son who lived with Aunt, also “get along.” Father said that he had attended two or three
    programs at R.D.B.’s school, but he did not know the names of R.D.B.’s teachers or
    counselor, and R.D.B.’s friends and basketball teammates never had been to Father’s
    home.
    {¶ 8} Father acknowledged that he once dropped R.D.B. for a haircut at a home-
    based barber shop where R.D.B. said he became “scared” because, while Father was
    gone, other people rolled a substance in paper that smelled “funny” when smoked. Father
    claimed that the smell was from a cigar. He said he called the barber after he learned of
    the incident and was satisfied with the barber’s explanation, but Father never returned
    there with R.D.B.
    {¶ 9} Aunt testified that she and her husband had their own 12-year-old and 7-
    year-old sons. As R.D.B.’s godmother, she and her family had “always been a part of”
    R.D.B.’s life; her sons and R.D.B. were “cousins, but they act like brothers.” After Mother’s
    -5-
    death, R.D.B. and S.S. moved in with Aunt. R.D.B. remained in his existing elementary
    school for the rest of that school year, but the following year transferred to a different
    school in the same school district yet nearer Aunt’s home.
    {¶ 10} Aunt described R.D.B. as “a very good child” and “a straight-A student” who
    played basketball on an organized team and with neighborhood friends at the park. She
    took R.D.B. to birthday parties and to church. Aunt said R.D.B.’s school communicated
    with her when R.D.B. had a “rough day” after Mother’s death, and Aunt “set him up” with
    a counselor who had monthly lunches with a group of students at R.D.B.’s current school.
    Aunt said R.D.B. declined other counseling.
    {¶ 11} Aunt testified that Father had attended “three or four” of R.D.B.’s basketball
    games since Mother’s death, but Aunt was not aware of Father’s otherwise engaging with
    R.D.B.’s school work or activities. She said Father had requested changes to their agreed
    visitation schedule “maybe seven different times,” and R.D.B. also had “requested not to
    have [visitation with Father] at times.” Aunt described R.D.B. as “crying” when he told her
    about being “scared” by the incident at the barber shop. Aunt was concerned that Father
    had left R.D.B. alone at that home, and she discussed the incident with Father at one of
    R.D.B.’s basketball games.
    {¶ 12} Aunt did not know Father’s family, but said that R.D.B. was “involved in a
    lot of * * * activities” with her family, including R.D.B.’s grandparents, aunts, uncles, and
    “at least 20 cousins” among Mother’s relatives. Aunt stated that she wanted R.D.B. “to
    have a relationship” with Father and had tried “to facilitate some visitation,” but did not
    “think they’re emotionally really close.” Aunt reported that R.D.B. “would cling to [her] and
    hold [her] and not want to go” when Father first came to pick up R.D.B. for visits, and still
    -6-
    sometimes “did not want to go” for visits with Father. Aunt also said R.D.B. told her “at
    least a couple times a week” that he did not want to live with Father. She stated that
    R.D.B. spent one night at Father’s house while living with Aunt, but returned “crying;”
    R.D.B. said he told Father he felt “uncomfortable” and “wanted to [go] home” (to Aunt’s
    house), but Father told R.D.B. to “knock it off.” R.D.B. had not spent a night with Father
    since that incident.
    {¶ 13} Aunt said that, since Mother’s death, R.D.B. had “a lot of days when * * *
    he’s just upset.” She testified that R.D.B. cries, “gets mad,” and says “he’s afraid that he’s
    going to have to move.” Aunt said that she had no plans to move and intended to keep
    R.D.B. enrolled in Kettering schools.
    {¶ 14} Similar to Father’s work situation, Aunt’s job required her to work from 11
    p.m. to 7:30 a.m. Aunt’s husband, “a stay-at-home dad,” woke the children and prepared
    breakfast for them. Aunt arrived home in time to take R.D.B. and her younger son to
    school. On cross-examination, Aunt said that she slept from about 8:20 a.m. to 2:15 p.m.,
    and was awake when the children returned home from school. She said she adjusted her
    sleep schedule in the summer and on holidays when the children were not in school.
    {¶ 15} On September 9, 2016, the magistrate issued a decision granting legal
    custody of R.D.B. to Father, effective immediately, and granting Aunt a “Standard Order
    of Parenting Time.” Aunt filed objections to that decision.
    {¶ 16} On August 14, 2018, the trial court overruled Aunt’s objections. The court
    granted Father’s motion for custody, denied Aunt’s motions for custody, and ordered
    Father to pay Aunt’s attorney’s fees for a missed deposition.
    -7-
    {¶ 17} Aunt filed a motion to stay the trial court’s judgment3 and filed this appeal,
    asserting three assignments of error:
    1) The trial court abused its discretion by failing to grant custody of R.D.B.
    to his maternal aunt based on overwhelming evidence that support [sic]
    R.D.B.’s best interest should remain in the care of his maternal aunt.
    2) The trial court abused its discretion by failing to find the father unsuitable
    to parent the child in its August 14, 2018 [order,] when the father has not
    visited nor communicated with the child since April 2017.
    3) The trial court abused its discretion by failing to timely prepare a decision
    that goes against the manifest weight of the evidence finding for [sic] the
    best interest of the child is served in the custody of the aunt.
    Assignments of Error #1 & #2 – Best Interest of Child/Unsuitable Parent
    a. Standard of Review
    {¶ 18} An appellate court will not reverse a juvenile court’s award of legal custody
    of a child absent an abuse of discretion. In re C.B., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 28113, 2019-
    Ohio-890, ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 17. The term “abuse of discretion” implies that the juvenile
    court’s decision was unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. 
    Id.,
     citing Blakemore v.
    Blakemore, 
    5 Ohio St.3d 217
    , 219, 
    450 N.E.2d 1140
     (1983). “It is not enough that the
    reviewing court, were it deciding the issue de novo, would not have found that reasoning
    process to be persuasive, perhaps in view of countervailing reasoning processes that
    would support a contrary result.” AAAA Ents., Inc. v. River Place Community Urban
    3
    Although Aunt asserts that a stay was “granted by the trial court [on] September 5, 2018”
    (Appellant’s Brief, p. 22), we see no indication in the record that the trial court ruled on
    Aunt’s motion for a stay (Doc. #3) filed on that date.
    -8-
    Redev. Corp., 
    50 Ohio St.3d 157
    , 161, 
    553 N.E.2d 597
     (1990).
    b. Law Regarding Child Custody Decisions
    {¶ 19} R.C. 2151.23(A)(2) authorizes juvenile courts to make child custody
    determinations. Although R.C. 3109.04(D)(2) sets forth a “best interest of the child”
    standard to be applied by domestic relations courts making child custody determinations
    in divorce proceedings between parents, R.C. 2151.23(A)(2) does not specify the
    standard that juvenile courts are to use in custody determinations between a parent and
    a non-parent. See In re Hockstok, 
    98 Ohio St.3d 238
    , 
    2002-Ohio-7208
    , 
    781 N.E.2d 971
    ,
    ¶ 15. Addressing that omission, the Ohio Supreme Court has found:
    [T]he overriding principle in custody cases between a parent and nonparent
    is that natural parents have a fundamental liberty interest in the care,
    custody, and management of their children. This interest is protected by the
    Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution and by Section 16, Article I of the Ohio Constitution[.] Since
    parents have constitutional custodial rights, any action by the state that
    affects this parental right, such as granting custody of a child to a nonparent,
    must be conducted pursuant to procedures that are fundamentally fair.
    (Citations omitted.) Id. at ¶ 16.
    {¶ 20} For that reason, in a child custody proceeding between a parent and a non-
    parent, a court may not award custody to the non-parent “without first determining that a
    preponderance of the evidence shows that the parent abandoned the child; that the
    parent contractually relinquished custody of the child; that the parent has become totally
    incapable of supporting or caring for the child; or that an award of custody to the parent
    -9-
    would be detrimental to the child.” In re Perales, 
    52 Ohio St.2d 89
    , 
    369 N.E.2d 1047
    (1997), syllabus. Courts deciding a parent’s “suitability” under the final prong of that
    analysis should focus on “the harmful effect of [parental] custody on the child, rather than
    [on] society’s judgment of the parent.” Id. at 98. “The appropriate analysis is whether the
    natural [parent] is unsuitable as custodian, not whether someone else is more suitable.”
    (Citation omitted.) (Emphasis sic.) In re D.C.J., 
    2012-Ohio-4154
    , 
    976 N.E.2d 931
    , ¶ 58
    (8th Dist.).
    {¶ 21} Since the Perales decision, courts of this state uniformly have recognized
    that a trial court may not award legal custody of a minor to someone other than a parent
    “[a]bsent a finding of parental unsuitability.” In re R.R.S., 2d Dist. Greene Nos. 2016-CA-
    25 and 2017-CA-45, 
    2018-Ohio-990
    , ¶ 17; see also Hockstok at syllabus (“In a child
    custody case * * * between a natural parent of the child and a nonparent, the trial court
    must make a parental unsuitability determination on the record before awarding legal
    custody of the child to the nonparent”); Cantrell v. Trinkle, 
    197 Ohio App.3d 82
    , 2011-
    Ohio-5288, 
    966 N.E.2d 288
    , ¶ 34 (2d Dist.) (“a parent may lose custody of a child to a
    nonparent [only] if a court finds the parent unsuitable”).
    {¶ 22} Once a legal custody determination has been made, however, “the best-
    interest-of-the-child standard should be used for any custody modification petitions filed
    * * *.” (Emphasis added.) Hockstok at ¶ 38. The Court there continued:
    After * * * a determination has established * * * a parent’s fundamental
    custodial rights, the focus must shift from the rights of the parents to the
    rights of the child. A child’s rights are effectuated through the use of the
    best-interest-of-the-child standard for subsequent custodial modification
    -10-
    requests. In this way the rights of parents and children are balanced in child
    custody disputes.
    (Emphasis added.) Id. at ¶ 38-39.
    c. Aunt’s “Best Interest of Child” Argument
    {¶ 23} In her first assignment of error, Aunt contends that the trial court erred by
    failing to find that R.D.B.’s “best interest” would be served by remaining in her custody.
    The trial court did make one brief reference in its final judgment entry to Father’s having
    legal custody as being “in the best interest of the child.” (See 8/14/18 Decision and
    Judgment, p. 5). As the case law outlined above makes clear, however, “the best interest
    of the child” is not the standard applicable to the custody contest between Aunt and
    Father, R.D.B.’s biological parent. Moreover, the analysis in which the trial court engaged
    in reaching its decision illustrates that the court properly applied the “unsuitable parent”
    standard set forth in Perales, 
    52 Ohio St.2d 89
    , 
    369 N.E.2d 1047
     (see 8/14/18 Decision
    and Judgment, pp. 2-5), not R.C. 3109.04(D)(2)’s inapposite “best interest” standard, for
    which Aunt advocates.
    {¶ 24} Because the trial court did not err by failing to base its custody determination
    on a “best interest of the child” analysis under the circumstances of this case, Aunt’s first
    assignment of error is overruled.
    d. Aunt’s “Unsuitable Parent” Argument
    {¶ 25} Aunt’s second assignment of error asserts that the trial court erred by failing
    to find Father to be an unsuitable parent and denying him custody of R.D.B. on that basis.
    Although this argument identifies the proper standard for the trial court’s custody
    determination, the record does not support a conclusion that the trial court abused its
    -11-
    discretion by determining that Father had not been shown to be “unsuitable.”
    {¶ 26} “Nonparents seeking custody have the burden of demonstrating a parent’s
    unsuitability.” In re J.R., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 26894, 
    2016-Ohio-5054
    , ¶ 8, quoting
    In re D.C.J., 
    2012-Ohio-4154
    , 
    976 N.E.2d 931
    , at ¶ 58. During the custody hearing, the
    evidence adduced by Aunt regarding Father’s suitability as R.D.B.’s custodian consisted
    of testimony about one occasion when Father left R.D.B. at a barber shop where
    unnamed men “scared” R.D.B. by smoking what Aunt’s counsel intimated was marijuana;
    Aunt’s opinion that R.D.B. was too young to have been left alone at the barber shop;
    Aunt’s expressed doubts about Father’s “emotional closeness” to R.D.B. and Father’s
    ability to support R.D.B.’s heightened emotional needs after Mother’s death; testimony
    that Father once told R.D.B. to “knock it off” when R.D.B. persisted in wanting to return to
    Aunt’s house; concerns about Father’s availability in light of his third-shift work schedule;
    and suggestions that Father had not maintained a regular schedule of visits with R.D.B.
    or acted as legal custodian of any of Father’s other children. We cannot conclude that the
    trial court abused its discretion by declining to find Father unsuitable based on that
    evidence.
    {¶ 27} As to the barber shop incident, Father denied that the substance involved
    was marijuana, and Aunt presented no evidence to the contrary. Because the trial court,
    as the trier of fact, saw and heard the witnesses at the hearing, we defer to that court’s
    decisions whether, and to what extent, to credit the testimony of particular witnesses.
    Brown v. Grauman, 2d Dist. Champaign No. 2013 CA 14, 
    2013-Ohio-4814
    , ¶ 9. Whether
    the trial court believed Father or simply concluded that the isolated barber shop incident
    -12-
    was not indicative of unsuitably, 4 the trial court acted within its discretion in its
    assessment of that evidence.
    {¶ 28} Our deference also extends to all of the other testimony presented. The trial
    court had discretion to discount Aunt’s expressed concerns about Father’s briefly leaving
    a 10-year-old to be watched over by a barber that Father had known “for probably about
    20 years,” as well as her concerns about Father’s ability to provide for R.D.B.’s emotional
    and spiritual needs. Father’s work schedule was nearly identical to Aunt’s, and Father
    expressed a willingness and ability to change his schedule if awarded custody. Father’s
    alleged “knock it off” comment bears no indicia of inappropriate discipline, and nothing
    suggested that Father’s occasional requests to vary from the parties’ agreed visitation
    schedule were due to reasons other than the types of conflicts to be expected in any
    individual’s schedule. The record evidence does not support a conclusion that the trial
    court abused its discretion in assessing Father’s suitability to act as R.D.B.’s custodian.
    {¶ 29} In reaching this conclusion, we recognize that Aunt’s unsuitability argument
    on appeal focuses primarily on her contention that “Father has not visited nor
    communicated with [R.D.B.] since April 2017,” including no money or gifts sent, no calls
    made, and no other form of contact initiated. (Appellant’s Brief, pp. 2, 19, 21, 22).
    However, no evidence of that purported lack of contact appears in the record before us
    for purposes of this appeal. “[A] bedrock principle of appellate practice in Ohio is that an
    appeals court is limited to the record of the proceedings at trial.” Morgan v. Eads, 
    104 Ohio St.3d 142
    , 
    2004-Ohio-6110
    , 
    818 N.E.2d 1154
    , ¶ 13, citing State v. Ishmail, 
    54 Ohio 4
    We have held that even a parent’s own “occasional” use of marijuana did not necessitate
    a change in her custodial status. See Gillum v. Gillum, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 24401,
    
    2011-Ohio-2558
    , ¶ 15, 18.
    -13-
    St.2d 402, 
    377 N.E.2d 500
     (1978), paragraph one of the syllabus (“A reviewing court
    cannot add matter to the record before it, which was not a part of the trial court’s
    proceedings, and then decide the appeal on the basis of the new matter.”). For example,
    another Ohio appellate court has declined to consider “additional evidence” the appellants
    claimed “they would have introduced” before the juvenile court, stating that the appellate
    court’s “scope of review must be limited to the transcript of the evidentiary hearing.” See
    In re M.L.E., 11th Dist. Portage Nos. 2015-P-0007, 2015-P-0010, 
    2015-Ohio-3647
    , ¶ 22.
    {¶ 30} Significantly, a means by which the record might have been supplemented
    was available. “Juv.R. 40 contemplates that new events may arise or be discovered
    between the time of a magistrate’s decision and a trial judge’s final judgment, and the rule
    provides a mechanism for the introduction of such evidence in a timely manner.” In re
    A.S., 9th Dist. Summit No. 26462, 
    2013-Ohio-1975
    , ¶ 14, citing Juv.R. 40(D)(4)(b) and
    (d). In matters referred to magistrates, Juv.R. 40(D)(4) authorizes the juvenile court to
    “take additional evidence” after the magistrate has issued a decision. Further, Juv.R.
    40(D)(4)(d) provides that, before ruling on objections to a magistrate’s decision, the
    juvenile court may not refuse to hear additional evidence if “the objecting party
    demonstrates that the party could not, with reasonable diligence, have produced that
    evidence for consideration by the magistrate.” In re C.B., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23615,
    
    2010-Ohio-2129
    , ¶ 25, quoting Juv.R. 40(D)(4)(d); see also Robinson v. Beneta, 2019-
    Ohio-667, ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 9 (3d Dist.) (when a party demonstrates he or she could not
    have produced additional evidence for magistrate’s consideration, “the trial court must
    hold a hearing on the additional evidence”).
    {¶ 31} Where an objecting party fails to make a request pursuant to Juv.R.
    -14-
    40(D)(4)(d), however, a juvenile court “d[oes] not abuse its discretion by not reopening
    the matter to hear additional evidence.” In re K.P., 5th Dist. Fairfield Nos. 17-CA-3 and
    17-CA-4, 
    2017-Ohio-4264
    , ¶ 23-24. It was incumbent on Aunt to make a request in
    accordance with Juv.R. 40(D)(4)(d) if she wished to preserve for appeal the issue of the
    evidence she faults the trial court for failing to consider. Id.; see also, e.g., In re A.S. at ¶
    25-27 (juvenile court erred by failing to consider appellant’s proffer of additional evidence
    discovered after objections to magistrate’s decision but before final judgment); Robinson
    at ¶ 9 (juvenile court erred by denying request for hearing on additional evidence). The
    record here contains nothing indicating that, between the date she filed her supplemental
    objections and the date the trial court ruled on those objections, Aunt asked to present to
    the trial court additional evidence about Father’s conduct after the September 8, 2016
    custody hearing.
    {¶ 32} As we may not consider Father’s purported actions subsequent to the
    September 8, 2016 custody hearing,5 and as the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    assessing the evidence presented at that hearing, Aunt’s second assignment of error is
    overruled.
    Assignment of Error #3 – Manifest Weight of Evidence/Undue Delay
    {¶ 33} Aunt’s third assignment of error appears to advance two distinct bases for
    challenging the trial court’s judgment: first, she argues that the trial court “failed to timely
    prepare [its final] decision,” and second, she argues that the judgment “goes against the
    manifest weight of the evidence” showing that R.D.B.’s “best interest [would be] served”
    5 This conclusion does not affect any remedy that may be available through the trial court
    for Father’s subsequent conduct. See, e.g., In re Hockstok, 
    98 Ohio St.3d 238
    , 2002-
    Ohio-7208, 
    781 N.E.2d 971
    , ¶ 38-39.
    -15-
    in her custody. (Appellant’s Brief, p. 22). Although Aunt combines those two arguments
    within a single assignment of error, we will address them separately.
    a. Manifest Weight of the Evidence regarding “Best Interest”
    {¶ 34} Aunt contends that the trial court’s judgment was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence which, according to her, shows that R.D.B.’s “best interest” would
    be served by granting custody to Aunt, not Father. However, we have determined that the
    trial court did not apply, and should not have applied, the “best interest” test in making its
    custody determination. As such, we need not conduct a manifest weight analysis in order
    to conclude that Aunt’s argument on the issue of R.D.B.’s “best interest” lacks merit. Her
    assignment of error on that basis is overruled.
    a. Undue Delay in Issuing Decision
    {¶ 35} In the other prong of her final assignment of error, Aunt in essence argues
    that the lapse of “nearly two years” between the custody hearing and the trial court’s final
    judgment amounted to an abuse of discretion because the circumstances of Father’s
    relationship with R.D.B. changed during that time. We do not agree.
    {¶ 36} Where a trial court’s judgment is not against the manifest weight of the
    evidence, a delay between the trial and the entry of judgment has been found not to affect
    the judgment, and thus not to amount to an abuse of discretion. See Ross v. Sweeney,
    11th Dist. Portage No. 2002-P-0027, 
    2003-Ohio-2919
    , ¶ 21-23. A delay in filing a
    judgment entry also is not an abuse of discretion if the delay was attributable in part to
    the actions of the party challenging that delay and that party did not specify how he or
    she was prejudiced by the delay. See Rice v. Rice, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 51025, 
    1986 WL 11525
    , *3 (Oct. 2, 1986).
    -16-
    {¶ 37} The record provides relevant context for the delay between the September
    8, 2016 custody hearing and the court’s August 14, 2018 final judgment entry. The
    magistrate issued his decision awarding custody to Father the day after the custody
    hearing, and the trial court adopted that decision the same day. Aunt filed timely
    objections to that decision and separately requested that the court issue findings of fact
    and conclusions of law. Her objections included requests for a transcript of the custody
    hearing as well as an extension of 21 days after the filing of that transcript in order to
    submit supplemental objections.
    {¶ 38} In September 2016, the trial court granted Aunt’s requests for findings of
    fact and conclusions of law, a transcript, and an extension to file supplemental objections.
    The court also ordered Aunt to submit proposed findings and conclusions within seven
    days. When Aunt moved for an extension to file the proposed findings of fact and
    conclusions of law, the court granted an additional seven days for that purpose. On
    September 23, 2016, Father responded to Aunt’s objections. Aunt filed her proposed
    findings and conclusions a week later, on September 30, after which the magistrate
    issued findings of fact and conclusions of law on October 5.
    {¶ 39} The hearing transcript was filed on December 22, 2016. On January 13,
    2017, Aunt moved for another extension of time to file supplemental objections; the court
    granted an extension through January 25, 2017. Aunt filed her supplemental objections
    on that date. Father did not respond. The trial court entered its final judgment some 17
    months later.
    {¶ 40} Although the interval between the custody hearing and the final judgment
    entry was due in part to requests for extensions and other requests made by Aunt, the
    -17-
    record arguably reflects a substantial gap between the filing of the supplemental
    objections and the judgment. We therefore examine whether Aunt has demonstrated that
    she was prejudiced by the delay. Ross, 11th Dist. Portage No. 2002-P-0027, 2003-Ohio-
    2919, at ¶ 21-23; Rice, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 51025, 
    1986 WL 11525
    , at *3.
    {¶ 41} Aunt claims that she was prejudiced because “the trial court’s decision
    came so late[ ] that none of the factors [regarding Father’s conduct since the custody
    hearing] would be considered and could not be appealed * * *.” However, had the decision
    been rendered sooner, evidence of Father’s alleged post-hearing conduct still would not
    have been before the trial court – i.e., even if the trial court had ruled on Aunt’s
    supplemental objections as soon as January 26, 2017, the day after Aunt filed them, the
    court’s judgment presumably would have been no different. Aunt was not prejudiced
    because the trial court awarded custody of R.D.B. to Father a substantial time after the
    custody hearing instead of making the same determination much earlier. Indeed, it
    appears that R.D.B. has remained in Aunt’s de facto custody throughout that time.
    Additionally, Aunt could have moved to submit additional evidence to the trial court
    pursuant to Juv.R. 40(D)(4)(d).
    {¶ 42} Because Aunt has neither claimed nor demonstrated that the trial court’s
    suitability determination was against the manifest weight of the evidence, and because
    she cannot demonstrate that she suffered any prejudice as a result of the timing of the
    final judgment, her third assignment of error is overruled.
    Conclusion
    {¶ 43} The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
    .............
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    WELBAUM, P.J. and TUCKER, J., concur.
    Copies sent to:
    James R. Kirkland
    Father
    Hon. Anthony Capizzi