In re I.L. , 2020 Ohio 2946 ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as In re I.L., 
    2020-Ohio-2946
    .]
    COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    IN RE I.L.                                    :
    :          No. 109034
    A Minor Child                                 :
    :
    [Appeal by Mother]                            :
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    JUDGMENT: REVERSED AND REMANDED
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: May 14, 2020
    Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Juvenile Division
    Case No. AD-17918915
    Appearances:
    Michael E. Stinn, for appellant.
    Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting
    Attorney, and Willie Mitchell, Assistant Prosecuting
    Attorney; Joyce E. Barrett, and James P. Reddy, for
    appellees.
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J.:
    Appellant-mother (“mother”) appeals from the juvenile court’s
    decision that awarded legal custody of her child, I.L., to I.L.’s biological father
    (“father”). For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and
    remand with instructions for the trial court to issue a judgment entry adopting the
    magistrate’s decision that awarded legal custody of I.L. to mother.
    I.   Procedural and Factual Background
    In December 2017, the Cuyahoga County Division of Children and
    Family Services (“CCDCFS” or the “agency”) filed a complaint alleging I.L. to be a
    dependent child and requesting a disposition of temporary custody. CCDCFS also
    filed a motion for predispositional temporary custody. The court granted the motion
    and committed I.L. to the predispositional custody of her paternal aunt, A.S.
    In February 2018, the court held an adjudicatory hearing during
    which mother admitted to the allegations of the amended complaint and agreed to
    an adjudication of dependency. At the subsequent dispositional hearing in June
    2018, I.L. was committed to the temporary custody of A.S.
    In September 2018, CCDCFS filed a motion asking the court to
    modify its order of temporary custody to A.S. to legal custody to father. Father also
    filed a motion for legal custody of I.L.
    On November 29, 2018, a juvenile court magistrate commenced a
    hearing regarding the agency’s and father’s motions. Renae Cameron, a CCDCFS
    social worker assigned to the case in late September 2018, testified that I.L. was
    eight years old and had always lived with mother before the grant of pre-
    dispositional temporary custody to A.S. She said that CCDCFS had developed case
    plans for both mother and father, with the goal of reunifying I.L. with either parent
    who complied with their case plan and demonstrated a benefit from the case plan
    services.
    Cameron said that father’s case plan required that he have adequate
    housing, complete a drug and alcohol assessment and any recommended treatment,
    complete domestic violence/anger management classes due to mother and father’s
    history of domestic violence, and engage in family counseling with mother to learn
    ways to effectively co-parent with her. Cameron said that father had substantially
    complied with his case plan, and that although he had tested positive for marijuana
    in January 2018, subsequent random drug tests had been negative.
    Cameron testified that mother’s case plan was to obtain stable and
    adequate housing, complete a drug and alcohol assessment and any recommended
    treatment, complete a mental health assessment and engage in recommended
    mental health services, complete domestic violence/anger management classes, and
    participate in counseling with father regarding effective co-parenting.
    Cameron said that both mother and father had “substantially
    complied” with their case plans, although mother had not completed the mental
    health and substance abuse portions of her plan. Specifically, Cameron testified that
    although mother had completed her outpatient substance abuse treatment program,
    mother had twice not submitted random urine samples within the time-frame
    requested by CCDCFS, although she ultimately submitted a negative test each time.
    Cameron also said that in August 2018, mother’s drug test showed the presence of a
    drug commonly used to treat mental health issues but mother failed to submit the
    requested documentation evidencing her prescription for the drug.
    With respect to mother’s mental health issues, Cameron testified that
    mother had been diagnosed with PTSD, bipolar disorder, anxiety, and depression.
    She said that mother had been compliant in taking her prescribed medications but
    inconsistent with attending mental health counseling, although Cameron
    acknowledged that mother told her this was due to scheduling issues because she
    was going to school. Cameron testified further that mother had been hospitalized
    for mental health issues shortly after the case commenced and again in August 2018.
    Cameron testified that the agency believed it would be in I.L.’s best interest for father
    to have legal custody because mother’s hospitalization in August and untimely drug
    screens indicated she had not benefited “consistently” from her case plan services.
    Cameron testified that mother and father had equal time with I.L. —
    several days each week and every other weekend. She said that she had observed
    I.L. in both mother and father’s homes, and that I.L. was comfortable and respectful
    of father, but seemed more “defiant” at mother’s house, although she acknowledged
    that I.L. could simply have been having a bad day. Cameron said that I.L. was in the
    third grade at a private school she had attended since kindergarten, where she
    engaged in various school activities and individual counseling each week to deal with
    the violence she had observed between mother and father. Cameron said that father
    planned to keep I.L. in this school for the remainder of the year if granted legal
    custody, but had not made a decision whether I.L. would go to a different school the
    following year.
    Due to time constraints, only Cameron testified on November 29,
    2018. Mother, mother’s attending physician for her hospitalization in August 2018,
    father, A.S., I.L.’s guardian ad litem, and social worker Cameron testified when trial
    continued on February 5, 2019.
    Mother testified with respect to her mental health that she had
    treated with Dr. Phillip Fischer at Psych BC from 2013 to May 2017, and that he
    diagnosed her with ADHD, depression, and PTSD as a result of the domestic
    violence with father.
    She admitted she had been voluntarily hospitalized in December
    2017, shortly after the case began, because of her separation anxiety related to I.L.’s
    absence from her home. She said that the CCDCFS caseworker assigned to the case
    before Cameron recommended that she see Dr. Patel Reddy for mental health
    treatment upon her discharge, and that Dr. Reddy prescribed numerous
    medications for her, many of which caused significant side effects. She testified that
    one night in August 2018, she had such an adverse reaction to one of the prescribed
    drugs that she became disoriented and required hospitalization. Mother denied that
    she tried to commit suicide by a drug overdose, and said she voluntarily went to
    Windsor-Laurelwood Center for Behavioral Medicine after her hospitalization in
    order to obtain treatment to adjust her medications.
    Mother testified that she changed doctors after her hospitalization,
    and had been seeing Dr. Inna Krasnyansky — a doctor she chose and who prescribed
    far fewer medications for her than Dr. Reddy — since October 2018. She testified
    further that since November 2018, she had been meeting regularly with Samantha
    Hoch, a therapist at the Domestic Violence Advocacy Center, and with Renee Haber,
    a friend who is a therapist. Mother testified that she “gained insight into her
    situation” when she took the domestic violence classes in April 2018, and that she
    “really started to benefit” from her case plan services at that time. Mother said that
    she was no longer ashamed to have a mental illness and planned to continue
    treatment with her mental health care providers even after the case was over.
    Mother testified that she was twice unable to drop urine screens
    within the time period requested by CCDCFS because of conflicts with her work as
    a nanny and her EMT training. She said that she completed EMT training in
    January 2019, and now works as an EMT technician and sometimes as a nanny
    when parents need her. Mother said she has a very supportive family who could
    help her care for I.L. when needed, including her brother who lives in an apartment
    across the hall from her.
    Dr. Rajesh Chandra, division chief of internal medicine at University
    Hospitals Medical Center, testified that he was mother’s attending physician during
    her hospitalization from August 9-12, 2018. He said the initial admitting diagnosis
    was “pharmacy overdose,” and that mother told him she had taken five or six
    Klonopin pills, 25 Seroquel pills, and an unspecified amount of BuSpar.
    Interestingly, Dr. Chandra testified that mother’s drug screen testing was negative
    for the presence of opiates, and did not show the presence of Seroquel or BuSpar.
    He said the drug screen showed only the presence of amphetamines, which was
    consistent with the Adderall mother was taking for her ADHD. Nevertheless, he
    testified that the amount of drugs she had admitted taking would not likely have
    been taken by accident, so the presumption was the overdose was intentional. Dr.
    Chandra testified that mother was admitted to Windsor-Laurelwood for psychiatric
    treatment after her hospitalization, and that her admission there was considered
    involuntary because she had allegedly tried to harm herself by overdosing.
    A.S., father’s sister and I.L.’s paternal aunt, testified that she is a
    licensed social worker, and that I.L. had been in her temporary custody since
    December 2017. A.S. said that I.L. is bonded with father, and after her visits with
    him, returns to A.S.’s home clean, in appropriate clothing, emotionally stable, and
    ready for bed. She said that I.L. is also bonded with mother and enjoys spending
    time with her. A.S. testified that when I.L. returns from a visit with mother, she is
    “more emotionally disregulated,” sometimes has temper tantrums, and is hard to
    put to bed. A.S. testified that once in November 2018, when she went to pick up I.L.
    from mother’s apartment, she smelled an odor of marijuana coming from her
    apartment.
    Father admitted that he initiated the case by calling CCDCFS and
    anonymously raising concerns about mother’s housing and drug use. He said he has
    lived with his girlfriend and her two young children since 2016, and I.L. is close with
    his girlfriend’s children. He has worked for the same company since 2015. Father
    admitted that he tested positive for marijuana in December 2017, but said he has
    not had any positive drug tests since then. He said he completed six sessions of
    anger management counseling, and there had not been any incidents of domestic
    violence between him and his girlfriend. He admitted that if he gained legal custody
    he would like to continue sending I.L. to the private school she had attended since
    kindergarten, but as of the date of the hearing, he likely could not afford to do so.
    Social worker Cameron testified again at the February 2019 hearing.
    She testified that both mother and father had benefited from their case plan services,
    both can manage I.L., and at times they can successfully communicate with each
    other about I.L., which was not possible when the case started. She testified further
    that mother had completed her case plan objectives, but CCDCFS had concerns
    about how much she had benefited from the case plan services because of her
    hospitalization in August 2018, as well as concerns about her consistency because
    she had changed mental health providers several times. Upon questioning by the
    magistrate, Cameron admitted that mother’s alleged inconsistencies had not caused
    her to neglect I.L. or affected her care of her, and that after her hospitalization in
    August, mother had not demonstrated anything that would indicate she had mental
    health issues. Nevertheless, Cameron testified that it was in I.L.’s best interest that
    father obtain legal custody.
    Pamela Hawkins, the guardian ad litem, testified that I.L. loves and is
    bonded with both mother and father. Hawkins agreed that mother’s mental health
    appeared to be stable, and that no concerns about mother’s mental health had been
    raised since August 2018, but Hawkins said she wanted to see a longer period of
    mental health stability because mother’s mental health had been “very cyclical” over
    the past several years.   She said that her initial recommendation was shared
    parenting, but because mother and father cannot communicate with each other well
    enough to co-parent, her recommendation was that father obtain legal custody as
    the more stable parent.
    The magistrate subsequently issued a decision committing I.L. to
    mother’s legal custody with protective supervision by the agency. The magistrate’s
    decision found that both mother and father had made significant progress on their
    case plans and in alleviating the cause for the removal of I.L. from mother’s home.
    The magistrate also found that the custody plan was reunification, continued
    temporary custody was not in I.L.’s best interest, supervision of I.L. was in her best
    interest, and I.L.’s return to mother would not be contrary to her best interest. The
    magistrate’s decision contained the following factual findings:
    The Cuyahoga County Division of Children and Family Services has
    made reasonable efforts to finalize the permanency plan for the child.
    These efforts are parenting education classes, substance abuse
    assessment and treatment as recommended, mental health services,
    counseling services for domestic violence and anger management,
    assistance in finding adequate housing and random urine screens. The
    Mother and Father have completed case plan services. The Mother
    completed parenting education, domestic violence services, obtained
    housing, and has engaged in ongoing mental health services and
    substance abuse services. The Agency believed that Mother failed to
    complete the objectives of the case plan so as to reduce the risk so the
    child could be returned to her as the Mother was hospitalized in August
    2018, for an alleged overdose of prescription medication. The evidence
    failed to support a finding that the Mother intentionally overdosed or
    that the Mother still exhibits any signs of suicidal ideations or attempts
    at suicide. The Mother has changed mental health providers; however,
    these changes are understandable given the multiple drugs previously
    prescribed for the Mother by prior providers. The Father has
    completed all of his case plan goals, including completing anger
    management services, drug and alcohol assessment (no
    recommendations), supportive visitation, and family therapy. The
    Mother and Father have been having equal amounts of visitation with
    the child. There have not been any reports of problems that have given
    rise to the Agency requesting a termination of either parent’s visitation
    schedules. The child is very happy with both parents. The Mother
    needs to eventually get housing to accommodate for separate bedrooms
    for the child and the child’s sibling. The child attends a private school
    in Pepper Pike, Ohio. The Father is not sure if he would be able to keep
    the child in the same school if he were to be granted legal custody of the
    child. The GAL would like to see the Mother have more stability with
    her mental health and, therefore, recommended that the father have
    legal custody. The Court believes this could be accomplished by
    allowing the Mother to have the child in her home with protective
    supervision.
    Father subsequently filed preliminary objections to the magistrate’s
    decision, and CCDCFS filed a brief in support of father’s preliminary objections.
    Father then filed supplemental objections to the magistrate’s decision and the
    transcript from the hearing.
    On August 19, 2019, the trial court issued two decisions awarding
    legal custody of I.L. to father: one decision sustained father’s objections; the other
    sustained father’s objections and adopted the magistrate’s decision as amended by
    the court. The trial court’s judgment entry sustaining father’s objections stated that
    “[u]pon review of the court file, the transcript of the proceedings, briefs of counsel,
    the magistrate’s decision, and the objections, the court finds the objections are well-
    taken.” The trial court’s journal entry regarding the magistrate’s decision stated that
    “upon an independent review of the matter, the court hereby sustains father’s
    objections and approves and adopts the magistrate’s decision, as amended by the
    court, that was filed on February 5, 2019.” Significantly, with the exception of
    awarding legal custody to father, both of the trial court’s entries contained the exact
    same findings made in the magistrate’s decision: that both mother and father had
    made significant progress on their case plans and in alleviating the cause for the
    removal of I.L. from mother’s home, the custody plan was reunification, supervision
    of I.L. was necessary and in her best interest, and continued temporary custody was
    not in I.L.’s best interest. More significantly for purposes of this appeal, both of the
    trial court’s journal entries contained, verbatim, the same factual findings contained
    in the magistrate’s decision as quoted above in paragraph 21 of this opinion.1
    This appeal followed.
    II. Law and Analysis
    A. Were father’s objections general or specific?
    Juv.R. 40(D)(3)(b)(ii) provides that “[a]n objection to a magistrate’s
    decision shall be specific and state with particularity all grounds for objection.” A
    mere blanket objection to the magistrate’s decision is insufficient to preserve an
    objection. When a party submits general objections that fail to provide any reason,
    support, or authority for the objection, the trial court may affirm the magistrate’s
    decision without considering the merits of the objection. Solomon v. Solomon, 157
    1  The trial court’s decision ordered the same parenting time schedule for father as
    the magistrate had ordered for mother, but ordered that mother have six weeks with I.L.
    in the summer, whereas the magistrate had ordered that father would have three weeks.
    Ohio App.3d 807, 
    2004-Ohio-2486
    , 
    813 N.E.2d 918
    , ¶ 11 (7th Dist.); In re D.N., 4th
    Dist. Ross No. 11CA3213, 
    2011-Ohio-3395
    , ¶ 18; Waddle v. Waddle, 11th Dist.
    Ashtabula No. 2000-A-0016, 
    2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 1551
    , 9-10 (Mar. 30, 2001).
    In her first assignment of error, mother contends that the trial court
    erred in considering father’s objections to the magistrate’s decision and should have
    simply affirmed the decision because father raised only general objections. We
    disagree.
    Father’s preliminary objections to the magistrate’s decision set forth
    three bases for his objections: (1) the magistrate’s decision awarding legal custody
    to mother ignored the guardian ad litem’s report and testimony, which
    recommended legal placement with father; (2) the magistrate’s decision ignored
    CCDCFS’s recommendation that legal custody be awarded to father; and (3) the
    magistrate’s decision minimized mother’s alleged “multiple overdoses” by ignoring
    the medical records submitted at trial. Father cited various examples of testimony
    by the guardian ad litem that the magistrate allegedly ignored when awarding legal
    custody to mother, referenced CCDCFS’s motion to modify custody in which
    CCDCFS cited mother’s alleged inability to maintain sobriety, and referred to the
    medical records submitted at trial. Father subsequently submitted supplemental
    objections, along with a transcript of the hearing. In his supplemental objections,
    he cited to testimony from social worker Cameron, Dr. Chandra, and A.S. to support
    his objections.
    Father’s objections were not merely blanket objections to the
    magistrate’s decision. Instead, he gave specific reasons why the decision was
    allegedly incorrect and pointed to specific evidence the magistrate had allegedly
    either not considered or minimized in rendering her decision. Accordingly, the trial
    court properly considered father’s objections, and the first assignment of error is
    overruled.
    B. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in awarding legal
    custody to father?
    In her second assignment of error, mother contends that the juvenile
    court abused its discretion in awarding legal custody to father because the
    magistrate’s decision properly determined the factual issues in the case and
    appropriately applied the law. In her third assignment of error, mother contends
    that the juvenile court abused its discretion in awarding legal custody to father
    because its decision is not supported by the facts as the trial court determined them
    to be. We consider these assignments of error together because they are related.
    When a juvenile court awards legal custody following an adjudication
    of abuse, neglect, or dependency, ‘“it does so by examining what would be in the best
    interest of the child based on a preponderance of the evidence.”’ In re A.C., 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 108442, 
    2019-Ohio-5127
    , ¶ 15, quoting In re T.R., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 102071, 
    2015-Ohio-4177
    , ¶ 44. Preponderance of the evidence means evidence
    that is ‘“more probable, more persuasive, or of greater value.”’ In re C.V.M., 8th
    Dist. Cuyahoga No. 98340, 
    2012-Ohio-5514
    , ¶ 7, quoting In re D.P., 10th Dist.
    Franklin No. 05AP-117, 
    2005-Ohio-5097
    , ¶ 52. There is no “specific test or set of
    criteria” that must be applied or considered in determining what is in a child’s best
    interest in a legal custody case. In re A.C. at 
    id.,
     citing In re T.R. at ¶ 48.
    Pursuant to Juv.R. 40(D)(4)(d), when a party has properly objected
    to a magistrate’s decision, the trial court must “undertake an independent review as
    to the objected matters to ascertain that the magistrate has properly determined the
    factual issues and appropriately applied the law.” Under the rule, “the trial court
    must conduct a de novo review of the facts and an independent analysis of the issues
    to reach its own conclusions about the issues in the case.” In re I.R.Q., 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 105924, 
    2018-Ohio-292
    , ¶ 23.
    A trial court has the authority to adopt the factual findings of the
    magistrate but arrive at a different conclusion. Brandish v. Brandish, 11th Dist.
    Geauga No. 2002-G-2489, 
    2004-Ohio-3544
    , ¶ 11. As this court has recognized, ‘“the
    trial judge always has the authority to determine if the referee’s findings of fact are
    sufficient to support the conclusions of law drawn therefrom [and] come to a
    different legal conclusion if that conclusion is supported by the referee’s findings of
    fact.”’ (Emphasis sic.) O’Brien v. O’Brien, 
    167 Ohio App.3d 584
    , 
    2006-Ohio-1729
    ,
    
    856 N.E.2d 274
    , ¶ 14 (8th Dist.), quoting Hearn v. Broadwater, 
    105 Ohio App.3d 586
    , 588, 
    664 N.E.2d 971
     (11th Dist.1995). Accordingly, “the trial court should not
    adopt a magistrate’s ‘findings of fact unless the trial court fully agrees with them —
    that is, the trial court, in weighing the evidence itself and fully substituting its
    judgment for that of the [magistrate], independently reaches the same conclusion.”’
    Becher v. Becher, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 108472, 
    2020-Ohio-669
    , ¶ 24, quoting
    McCarty v. Hayner, 4th Dist. Jackson No. 08CA8, 
    2009-Ohio-4540
    , ¶ 17.
    A trial court’s ruling on objections to a magistrate’s decision lies
    within the discretion of the trial court, and will not be reversed on appeal absent an
    abuse of discretion. Hissa v. Hissa, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga Nos. 99498 and 100229,
    
    2014-Ohio-1508
    , ¶ 17. An abuse of discretion occurs when the court’s decision is
    unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore, 
    5 Ohio St.3d 217
    , 219, 
    450 N.E.2d 1140
     (1983). A decision is unreasonable if there is “no sound
    reasoning process that would support that decision.” Baxter v. Thomas, 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 101186, 
    2015-Ohio-2148
    , ¶ 21. A decision is arbitrary if it is made
    “without consideration of or regard for facts or circumstances.” In re C.D.Y., 8th
    Dist. Cuyahoga No. 108355, 
    2019-Ohio-4262
    , ¶ 8.
    In this case, although the trial court amended the magistrate’s
    decision to award legal custody to father, the trial court adopted the magistrate’s
    findings of fact in toto. Thus, as determined by the magistrate and adopted by the
    trial court, the trial court found that both mother and father had completed their
    case plan services. The court found that father had completed anger management
    services, a drug and alcohol assessment, supportive visitation, and family therapy,
    and that mother had completed parenting education and domestic violence services,
    and engaged in ongoing mental health and substance abuse services. The trial court
    further found that mother had obtained adequate housing, although she would
    eventually have to get housing to accommodate separate bedrooms for I.L. and her
    younger brother. The trial court also found that although mother had changed
    mental health providers, those changes were understandable given the multiple
    drugs prescribed to her by her prior mental health provider.
    The trial court further found that I.L. was “very happy” with both
    parents, both mother and father had been having equal amounts of visitation with
    I.L., and there had been no reports giving rise to a request by CCDCFS to terminate
    either parent’s visitation schedule. The trial court found that I.L. had been attending
    a private school in Pepper Pike, and that father was not sure he would be able to
    keep her in that school if he were granted legal custody.
    The trial court further found that although CCDCFS believed that
    mother had failed to reduce the risk that caused I.L. to be removed from her care
    because she had been hospitalized in August 2018, for “an alleged overdose” of
    prescription medication, the evidence did not support a finding that mother
    intentionally overdosed, or that she was exhibiting any signs of suicidal ideation.
    The trial court further found that although the guardian ad litem had recommended
    that father be given legal custody because she wanted mother to “have more stability
    with her mental health,” “the court believes this could be accomplished by allowing
    mother to have the child in her home with protective custody.”
    We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s adoption of the
    magistrate’s findings of fact. Our review of the record demonstrates that the
    magistrate accurately set forth the facts as testified to by the witnesses at the
    hearing. Furthermore, our review demonstrates that the record was equivocal
    regarding mother’s alleged overdose in August 2018, and one could reasonably
    conclude that her hospitalization was not the result of an intentional overdose.
    Furthermore, in light of mother’s continued progress with her mental health issues,
    as demonstrated by the testimony at the hearing, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in finding that I.L. could be returned to mother’s home with protective
    supervision by the agency.
    However, in light of the trial court’s findings of facts, its decision to
    award legal custody of I.L. to father was an abuse of discretion because its decision
    is not supported by the facts as the trial court determined them to be. Specifically,
    after conducting its own independent review of the matter, the trial court found that
    the guardian ad litem’s concerns that mother needed to demonstrate a longer period
    of mental health stability could be alleviated with I.L.’s placement in mother’s home
    with protective supervision by the agency. Further, the trial court found that the
    agency’s concern that mother had not consistently benefited from her case plan
    services because she was hospitalized in August 2018, for an alleged intentional
    overdose was not supported by the evidence. Thus, the trial court’s decision
    awarding legal custody to father was inconsistent with the court’s own factual
    findings.
    Father argues that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    rejecting the magistrate’s decision to award legal custody to mother because “the
    magistrate did not properly determine the factual issues in the case.” The trial
    court’s decision refutes father’s argument, however; the trial court adopted the
    magistrate’s findings of fact verbatim, thus evidencing its full agreement with them.
    CCDCFS, on the other hand, argues that the trial court’s decision
    awarding legal custody to father should be affirmed because “the trial court did not
    reject the magistrate’s factual determination, [it] just reached a different conclusion
    after analyzing the facts.” CCDCFS is correct that the trial court did not reject the
    magistrate’s factual determinations; indeed, it adopted them verbatim. But contrary
    to the agency’s argument, the trial court’s “different conclusion” from that of the
    magistrate is not supported by the facts as the trial court found them to be. The only
    reasonable conclusion from the trial court’s findings of fact is that the court found
    that I.L. should be returned to mother’s legal custody with protective supervision by
    CCDCFS.
    Father and CCDCFS also offer various arguments why the evidence
    presented at trial weighs in favor of granting legal custody of I.L. to father. But the
    trial court did not rely on the evidence referenced by father and the agency in
    rendering its decision; it made no factual findings other than those made by the
    magistrate. Furthermore, the trial court adopted the magistrate’s factual findings
    verbatim after its own “independent review of the matter.” By doing so, the trial
    court indicated that “after weighing the evidence itself and fully substituting its
    judgment for that of the magistrate,” it “fully agree[d]” with the magistrate’s findings
    of fact. Becher, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 108472, 
    2020-Ohio-669
    , at ¶ 24.
    In its decision, after conducting its own independent review, the trial
    court found there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that mother had
    intentionally overdosed in August 2018. Thus, the agency’s concern that mother
    had not benefited consistently from her case plan services as demonstrated by her
    hospitalization for an alleged overdose in August 2018, was not supported by the
    evidence. The trial court also found that the guardian ad litem’s concern about
    mother’s mental health could be addressed by placing I.L. in mother’s legal custody
    with protective supervision by CCDCFS. In light of these factual findings by the trial
    court, it is apparent that the trial court’s decision awarding legal custody to father is
    not supported by the facts as the trial court determined them to be.
    Moreover, the trial court did not find that the magistrate had
    improperly applied the law in awarding legal custody to mother with protective
    supervision, presumably because the magistrate was not required to adopt either the
    agency’s or the guardian ad litem’s recommendation that legal custody be granted
    to father. In re R.J.G., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 97427, 
    2012-Ohio-3802
    , ¶ 16, citing
    In re P.P., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 19582, 
    2003-Ohio-1051
    , ¶ 24.
    The magistrate’s decision recommended that I.L. be placed in the
    legal custody of mother with protective supervision by CCDCFS. Because the trial
    court did not find that the magistrate failed to correctly determine the factual issues
    or properly apply the law, and because the factual findings as adopted by the trial
    court do not support an award of legal custody to father, we find that the trial court’s
    decision to award legal custody to father was arbitrary and unreasonable.
    Mother’s second and third assignments of error are sustained, and
    the trial court’s decision is hereby reversed. In light of our resolution of the second
    and third assignments of error, we need not address mother’s fourth assignment of
    error in which she argues that the trial court’s decision was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence.
    Reversed and remanded with instructions for the trial court to issue
    a judgment entry adopting the magistrate’s decision awarding legal custody of I.L.
    to mother with protective supervision by Cuyahoga County Division of Children and
    Family Services.
    It is ordered that appellant recover from appellee costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the
    common pleas court, juvenile division, to carry this judgment into execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27
    of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, JUDGE
    EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, A.J., and
    MARY EILEEN KILBANE, J., CONCUR