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In re Adoption of J.T.S. - Probate Court Erred Granting Intervention

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Filed March 20th, 2026
Detected March 20th, 2026
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Summary

The Ohio Court of Appeals reversed a probate court's decision to grant intervention in an adoption proceeding. The appellate court found that the intervenor was not entitled to notice or consent rights under Ohio law, as he had not properly registered as a putative father and no prior judicial determination of parentage existed.

What changed

The Ohio Court of Appeals, in the case of In re Adoption of J.T.S., reversed a probate court's judgment that granted an appellee-intervenor's motion to intervene in an adoption proceeding. The appellate court determined that the intervenor was not entitled to notice of the adoption petition or to withhold consent, citing that the intervenor had not complied with Ohio Revised Code (R.C.) 3107.07(B)(1) by failing to timely register with the Ohio Putative Father Registry. Furthermore, the court noted that no judicial proceeding had established a parent-child relationship between the intervenor and the child prior to the adoption petition's filing, despite a parentage action being filed nine days earlier.

This ruling has significant implications for adoption proceedings in Ohio, particularly concerning the rights of putative fathers. Legal professionals involved in adoption cases must ensure strict adherence to registration requirements and the timing of parentage actions relative to adoption petitions. Failure to comply with R.C. 3107.07(B)(1) and other relevant statutes could result in the denial of intervention and consent rights, potentially expediting adoption processes. The case was remanded for further proceedings consistent with the appellate court's opinion.

What to do next

  1. Review Ohio Revised Code 3107.07(B)(1) regarding Putative Father Registry requirements.
  2. Ensure timely registration with the Ohio Putative Father Registry for any parties asserting rights in adoption proceedings.
  3. Verify prior judicial determination of parentage when assessing intervention rights in adoption cases.

Source document (simplified)

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March 20, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

In re Adoption of J.T.S.

Ohio Court of Appeals

Syllabus

The probate court erred in granting appellee-intervenor's motion to intervene in an adoption proceeding and concluding that appellee was entitled to notice and to withhold his consent in the adoption. Appellee was not entitled to notice of the adoption petition under R.C. 3107.11, nor was his consent required under R.C. 3107.06(B) or 3107.06(A)(3). Appellee had not timely registered with the Ohio Putative Father Registry as required under R.C. 3107.07(B)(1). And although appellee filed a parentage action in the juvenile court nine days before the adoption petition was filed, prior to the petition's filing, no judicial proceeding had determined that a parent-child relationship existed between appellee and the child. Judgment reversed and remanded.

Combined Opinion

[Cite as In re Adoption of J.T.S., 2026-Ohio-951.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
CLARK COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION :
OF J.T.S. : C.A. No. 2025-CA-62
:
: Trial Court Case No. 20245043
:
: (Appeal from Common Pleas Court-
: Probate Division)
:
: FINAL JUDGMENT ENTRY &
: OPINION

...........

Pursuant to the opinion of this court rendered on March 20, 2026, the judgment of the

trial court is reversed, and the matter remanded for further proceedings consistent with the

opinion.

Costs to be paid as stated in App.R. 24.

Pursuant to Ohio App.R. 30(A), the clerk of the court of appeals shall immediately

serve notice of this judgment upon all parties and make a note in the docket of the service.

Additionally, pursuant to App.R. 27, the clerk of the court of appeals shall send a certified

copy of this judgment, which constitutes a mandate, to the clerk of the trial court and note

the service on the appellate docket.

For the court,

MARY K. HUFFMAN, JUDGE

EPLEY, J., and HANSEMAN, J., concur.
OPINION
CLARK C.A. No. 2025-CA-62

JARED B. CHAMBERLAIN, Attorney for Appellant
ALFRED WILLIAM SCHNEBLE III, Attorney for Appellee

HUFFMAN, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant-petitioner K.S. appeals from the probate court’s judgment granting

appellee-intervenor P.H.’s motion to intervene in the adoption of minor J.T.S. and finding

that P.H. was entitled to notice of the adoption petition and to withhold his consent to the

adoption pending further consideration of all circumstances. The probate court came to

these conclusions notwithstanding the fact that the juvenile court did not render its

determination of P.H.’s parentage of J.T.S. until more than four months after the adoption

petition was filed.

{¶ 2} According to K.S., the probate court erred in determining that P.H. was entitled

both to notice of the adoption petition and to withhold consent because P.H. failed to timely

register as a putative father within 15 days of J.T.S.’s birth, as required by

R.C. 3107.07(B)(1), and because there was no final judicial determination of parentage prior

to the date the adoption petition was filed, as required under R.C. 3107.06(A)(3).

{¶ 3} For the reasons that follow, we agree that P.H. was not entitled to notice of the

adoption petition under R.C. 3107.11, nor was his consent required under R.C. 3107.06(B)

or 3107.06(A)(3). First, P.H. had not timely registered with the Ohio Putative Father Registry

(“OPFR”) as required under R.C. 3107.07(B)(1). Second, although P.H. had filed a

parentage action in the juvenile court nine days before the adoption petition was filed, prior

to the date the petition was filed, it was not determined that a parent and child relationship

2
existed. We therefore reverse the judgment of the probate court and remand this matter to

proceed to a final hearing on the adoption.

I. Background Facts and Procedural History

{¶ 4} In early 2018, P.H. and E.S. (“Mother”) were living together in a romantic

relationship but were unmarried. According to mother, she had moved in with P.H. out of

necessity, as she had nowhere else to live. Mother became pregnant, and P.H. was aware

of the pregnancy, accompanying mother to several pregnancy-related medical

appointments. Later during the pregnancy, Mother’s parents persuaded her to move back

home, and P.H. and Mother parted ways. Mother had no contact with P.H. beyond that point

in time.

{¶ 5} Mother had known petitioner K.S. since the two were children, and they had

stayed in contact. After Mother moved back to her parents’ house, she and K.S. started

dating in the winter of 2018-2019. Mother gave birth to J.T.S. on February 6, 2019. In July

2020, she and K.S. married, and J.T.S. lived with Mother and K.S. Three other children were

eventually born of the marriage.

{¶ 6} After P.H. ended his relationship with Mother, he heard rumors that J.T.S. had

been aborted. Around the summer of 2023, J.T.S.’s maternal grandmother notified P.H. that

J.T.S. had been born in 2019. P.H. claimed that upon learning of J.T.S.’s existence, he

sought to have DNA testing to establish paternity in Montgomery County, which was his

county of residence at the time. At some point, P.H. learned that he had tried to establish

paternity in the wrong county, as J.T.S. was residing in Clark County, not Montgomery

County. Between his first attempt in 2023 to mid-year 2024, P.H. did not take any other

action to establish paternity of J.T.S.

3
{¶ 7} Around late summer 2024, when J.T.S. was five-and-a-half years old, P.H.

contacted the Clark County Child Support Enforcement Agency (“CSEA”), and Mother

received notice from CSEA in late August 2024. On October 29, 2024, P.H. filed a complaint

for parentage in the juvenile court and a motion for allocation of parental rights and

responsibilities for J.T.S. In his complaint, P.H. requested that the juvenile court order

genetic testing to establish paternity.

{¶ 8} Nine days later, on November 7, 2024, K.S., as J.T.S.’s stepfather, filed a

petition for adoption of J.T.S. in the probate court. In his petition, K.S. indicated that P.H.’s

consent to adoption was unnecessary because P.H. had not timely registered as J.T.S.’s

putative father and because P.H. had failed without justifiable cause to provide more than

de minimis contact with J.T.S. or to provide for the maintenance and support of J.T.S. for a

period of at least one-year immediately preceding the filing of the adoption petition.

{¶ 9} On December 2, 2024, Mother filed a motion to stay P.H.’s juvenile case while

the adoption proceeding was pending in the probate court. On January 13, 2025, the juvenile

court submitted an entry stating that it had jurisdiction to proceed with respect to the

determination of parentage related to the adoption of J.T.S. and ordered the parties to submit

to genetic testing. On March 17, 2025, CSEA filed a notice with the juvenile court, which

included a DNA parentage test report confirming P.H. to be J.T.S.’s natural father. On March

19, 2025, following the genetic testing, the juvenile court issued an entry providing that,

based on the paternity testing results, P.H. was the father of J.T.S.

{¶ 10} On April 28, 2025, P.H. filed a motion in the probate court to intervene and

object to the adoption petition and requested the probate court’s acceptance of the finding

of P.H. as J.T.S.’s natural father. On June 2, 2025, K.S. opposed P.H.’s motion to intervene,

setting forth two arguments: (1) a motion to intervene was not the correct procedural

4
mechanism by which P.H. could assert any rights to notice and hearing regarding the

adoption; and (2) P.H.’s consent to the adoption was unnecessary, particularly for putative

fathers under R.C. 3107.07(B). K.S. argued that because P.H. had failed to register as a

putative father in the OPFR within 15 days of J.T.S.’s birth, his consent was unnecessary

under R.C. 3107.07(B)(1), and he was not entitled to notice or hearing regarding the

adoption.

{¶ 11} The probate court rendered its decision concerning P.H.’s motion to intervene

on July 22, 2025, identifying two issues: (1) whether P.H. was entitled to notice of the

adoption petition and (2) whether P.H.’s consent was necessary to the probate court’s

consideration of the adoption petition given that he had failed to register as a putative father

in the OPFR. After acknowledging that P.H. had failed to timely register with the OPFR, the

court decided that, because he “took steps” to enforce his rights as J.T.S.’s natural father by

seeking an administrative decision regarding paternity and, to that end, filed a parentage

action in the juvenile court, which determined that he had a legal relationship with J.T.S.,

P.H. was entitled to notice of the adoption petition and to withhold his consent pending

further consideration of all circumstances. The probate court rendered its decision even

though the judgment entry establishing parentage was not issued in the juvenile court until

more than four months after the adoption petition was filed.

{¶ 12} K.S. appealed the probate court’s decision granting P.H.’s motion to intervene.

II. Assignment of Error

Adoption in Ohio

{¶ 13} In Ohio, adoption is governed by R.C. Chapter 3107, while paternity actions

are primarily regulated by the Ohio Parentage Act in R.C. Chapter 3111. Original and

exclusive jurisdiction over adoption proceedings is vested in the probate court, but an action

5
to determine the existence of a father-child relationship (paternity action) may be brought in

the juvenile court or other court with jurisdiction under R.C. 2101.022 or 2301.03. State ex

rel. Portage Cty. Welfare Dept. v. Summers, 38 Ohio St.2d 144, (1974), paragraph two of

the syllabus; R.C. 3111.06.

{¶ 14} Under Ohio law, “a petition to adopt a minor may be granted only if written

consent to the adoption has been executed” by the persons whose consent is required under

the adoption statutes. In re Adoption of H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, ¶ 20, citing R.C. 3107.06;

see also R.C. 3107.07. “[W]hen a child needs a stable family environment and adoption is

necessary to meet that need, the statutes require an adoption to proceed expeditiously.” Id.

at ¶ 3, citing In re Adoption of Zschach, 75 Ohio St.3d 648, 651 (1996). “To process an

adoption expeditiously, a probate court must be able to determine whose consent to the

adoption is required at the earliest point possible in the proceeding.” (Emphasis added.) Id.

at ¶ 29.

{¶ 15} Adoption typically requires written consent from parents and putative fathers,

who “are presumed to have the right to withhold consent to an adoption.” Id. at ¶ 20. A

“parent” is “a legally recognized natural or adoptive parent of a child.” R.C. 3107.01(N). A

“putative father” is a man, including one under age eighteen, who may be a child’s father but

is not married to the child’s mother at the time of the child’s conception or birth; has not

adopted the child; has not been determined, prior to the date a petition to adopt the child is

filed, to have a parent and child relationship with the child by a court proceeding pursuant to

sections 3111.01 to 3111.18 of the Revised Code; and has not acknowledged paternity of

the child pursuant to sections 3111.21 to 3111.35 of the Revised Code. R.C. 3107.01(S).

{¶ 16} In 1996, the OPFR was established under R.C. 3107.061 et seq. to authorize

a man to register with the state if he believed that he may have fathered a child and wanted

6
to be notified if the child was placed for adoption. A man who files with the OPFR

demonstrates his intent to claim paternity of a child born out of wedlock and is entitled to

receive notice of any proceeding to adopt that child. Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 250-

251 (1983). “In general, Ohio’s adoption statutes relating to putative fathers are the result of

the legislature’s effort to balance a biological father’s interest in having an opportunity to

develop a relationship with his child against the state’s interest in protecting the best

interests of children.” In re Adoption of H.N.R., 2015-Ohio-5476, ¶ 28, citing Zschach at 650-

651.

{¶ 17} To be considered a father whose written consent is presumed to be required

under R.C. 3107.06(A), any one of the following must apply: (1) the minor was conceived or

born while the father was married to the mother, (2) the father legally adopted the child,

(3) the father’s parent-child relationship was determined through a court or administrative

proceeding pursuant to R.C. Chapter 3111 prior to the date the adoption petition was filed,

or (4) the father acknowledged paternity of the child. R.C. 3107.06(A). Likewise, under

R.C. 3107.06(B), the putative father of a minor is also required to give his consent.

{¶ 18} A party, however, may overcome the consent presumption by establishing that

an exception under R.C. 3107.07 to the consent requirement applies. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369,

at ¶ 20, citing In re Adoption of P.L.H., 2017-Ohio-5824, ¶ 32. “The exceptions that may

apply to a parent are set forth in R.C. 3107.07(A) and are different from those that may apply

to a putative father under R.C. 3107.07(B).” Id. Under R.C. 3107.07(A), for instance, consent

to adoption is not required when the parent of a minor “failed without justifiable cause to

have more than de minimis contact with the minor or to provide meaningful and regular

maintenance and support of the minor as required by law or judicial decree for a period of

one year immediately preceding the filing of the adoption petition.” R.C. 3107.07(B)(1), on

7
the other hand, provides that a putative father’s consent to adoption is not required if “the

putative father fails to register as the minor’s putative father with the Ohio putative father

registry established under section 3107.062 of the Revised Code in accordance with rule

5101:2-48-02 of the Ohio Administrative Code, not later than fifteen days after the minor’s

birth.”

{¶ 19} “‘Registering as a putative father is relatively simple. At the time he engages

in sexual intercourse, a man is considered to be on notice of the potential biological and

ensuing legal consequences of that intercourse. R.C. 3107.061. From that point forward, he

can register as a putative father by filling out a short form on a webpage maintained by

ODJFS or by mailing the same information to ODJFS.’” In re Adoption of Z.D.W., 2025-Ohio-

2465, ¶ 12 (2d Dist.), quoting H.N.R., 2015-Ohio-5476, at ¶ 17. The Revised Code puts

putative fathers on further notice that their consent to adoption is unnecessary and warns

that “[a] man who has sexual intercourse with a woman is on notice that if a child is born as

a result and the man is the putative father, the child may be adopted without his consent” in

accordance with R.C. 3107.07(B). R.C. 3107.061.

{¶ 20} Although a putative father has other means of securing the right to notice and

to withhold consent, including through judicial paternity proceedings under

R.C. 3107.06(A)(3), if he does not do so, his failure to timely register in the OPFR “‘precludes

him from receiving notice and an opportunity to prove that his consent as a mere putative

father should be required for a child’s adoption.’” Z.D.W. at ¶ 13, quoting H.N.R. at ¶ 19,

citing R.C. 3107.07(B)(1) and R.C. 3107.11(A)(1); see also H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 2

(“However, failure to register or to take other required steps in the time and manner

prescribed by Ohio’s adoption statutes will result in the father’s having no say should another

person step forward to adopt the child.”).

8
{¶ 21} Finally, while related, notice requirements in an adoption proceeding are set

forth separately from consent. Notice is not required to be given to a person whose consent

is not required as provided in R.C. 3107.07(B), including a putative father who fails to register

with the OPFR within 15 days of the minor’s birth. R.C. 3107.11(A).

Motion to Intervene

{¶ 22} A motion to intervene is governed by Civ.R. 24 and is a request to a court

asking to be joined as a party to a case. Under Civ.R. 24, there are two types of intervention:

intervention of right and permissive intervention. Civ.R. 24(A) and (B). Whether intervention

is granted as of right or by permission, we review a trial court’s determination under Civ.R. 24

for an abuse of discretion. In re Adoption of K., 2018-Ohio-3082, ¶ 7 (6th Dist.), citing State

ex rel. Merrill v. Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources, 2011-Ohio-4612, ¶ 41. Abuse of discretion

means that the trial court’s decision was unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. State

ex rel. Askew v. Goldhart, 75 Ohio St.3d 608, 610 (1996).

The Probate Court’s Decision

{¶ 23} The probate court engaged in a lengthy analysis that primarily focused on the

consent issue and mainly relied on two cases to justify its decision: In re Adoption of

Pushcar, 2006-Ohio-4572, and H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369. The court indicated that registering

as a putative father was not the only means by which a purported father could protect his

right to withhold consent in an adoption proceeding. The court pointed out that a purported

father could also preserve his right to consent by a judicial determination, and that in this

case, according to the juvenile court’s March 19, 2025 entry, based on genetic testing, P.H.

was in fact the natural father of J.T.S. Upon concluding that parentage had been determined,

the court reasoned that although P.H. had failed to register as a putative father, he sought

9
an administrative determination of a father-child relationship by filing a parentage action in

the juvenile court nine days before K.S. filed the adoption petition.

{¶ 24} The probate court then considered the timing of P.H.’s filings. The probate

court emphasized that under Pushcar, when an issue concerning the parentage of a minor

is pending in the juvenile court, the probate court must refrain from proceeding with the

adoption of that child. The probate court highlighted its understanding of the reasoning

underlying this rule; only the juvenile court enjoys the jurisdiction to decide the question of a

child’s paternity, and until that decision is made, the probate court is unable to determine

whether a particular person’s consent in an adoption action is required.

{¶ 25} The probate court then distinguished this case from H.P. In H.P., the putative

father had filed a parentage action in juvenile court after the adoption petition was filed.

Based on that timing, the Ohio Supreme Court concluded that the putative father had

forfeited his right to withhold consent to the adoption. According to the probate court, the

Court’s analysis in H.P. indicated that prior to the filing of an adoption petition, a putative

father need only “take the steps necessary” to establish a parent-child relationship. The

probate court noted that in this case, P.H. had filed a parentage action in juvenile court in

October 2024, nine days before the adoption petition was filed. The probate court concluded

that P.H. had therefore “taken the steps necessary” to establish a father-child relationship

prior to the date that the adoption petition was filed. See R.C. 3107.06(A)(3) (requiring

consent to adoption by person who, prior to the date that the adoption petition was filed, had

parentage determined by one of the court proceedings enumerated under the statute).

{¶ 26} The probate court reasoned that although P.H. had failed to timely register with

the OPFR, he still had sought to enforce his right to consent by seeking an administrative

determination and filing a parentage action in the juvenile court before the filing of the

10
adoption petition. Based on these circumstances, the probate court indicated that under the

guidance of Pushcar, it had been required to refrain from making any decisions with respect

to the adoption petition until the juvenile court adjudicated the parentage issue, which

determined whose consent was necessary to proceed with the adoption. Upon the March

2025 parentage adjudication by the juvenile court, the probate court noted that P.H. did in

fact have a father-child relationship with J.T.S. based on genetic testing. Given the juvenile

court’s parentage determination, the probate court concluded that at that stage, P.H. was

entitled to notice of the adoption petition and to withhold his consent as J.T.S.’s natural

father, notwithstanding the fact that the genetic testing and subsequent parentage

determination in the juvenile court had not been rendered until more than four months after

the adoption petition was filed.

In re Application of Pushcar

{¶ 27} We first turn our attention to Pushcar, upon which the probate court relied in

justifying its conclusion that the adoption petition had to remain pending until the parentage

action in the juvenile court was determined. The probate court surmised that a decision in

the parentage action was required to determine what notice and consent were necessary,

and that justified its restraint from making an earlier decision on the adoption petition

because the parentage issue was still pending.

{¶ 28} The facts of Pushcar are worth restating. In Pushcar, the natural father signed

the birth certificate of the minor child, which registered him as the child’s legal father in an

out-of-wedlock birth. Id., 2006-Ohio-4572, at ¶ 1. The natural father and mother never

married but resided together with the child for almost two years. Id.

{¶ 29} Approximately eight months after the natural father and mother separated,

they signed an agreement concerning visitation and support of the child. Id. at ¶ 2. Eleven

11
months later, a conflict between them arose, which ended their mutual cooperation. Id.

Shortly thereafter, the child’s mother obtained a civil protection order against the natural

father. Id. at ¶ 3. Nearly five months later, the natural father filed an application with the

CSEA to establish his parentage of the minor, but the agency notified him that it could not

proceed with his application because he had signed the child’s birth certificate and was

already considered the child’s legal father. Id. at ¶ 4. The natural father then filed a complaint

with the juvenile court, asking the court to enforce the visitation agreement that he and the

mother had agreed to, but the juvenile court informed him that it required genetic testing to

establish paternity. Id. Hearings regarding the paternity tests were continued. Id.

{¶ 30} In the meantime, over a period of about six months, the child’s mother married

Pushcar, and Pushcar filed a petition in the probate court to adopt the child. Id. at ¶ 5. The

natural father opposed the adoption petition. A hearing was held to determine whether the

natural father’s consent to adopt was required under R.C. 3107.07(A), which delineated

whose consent was not required for an adoption and included parents who had not provided

for or communicated with the child for one year or more. Id. Following the hearing, the

magistrate found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural father had failed to

communicate with the child for one year prior to the filing of the adoption petition and

concluded that the natural father’s consent was therefore not required for the adoption. Id.

{¶ 31} The natural father filed objections to the magistrate’s decision, which were

overruled by the trial court. Pushcar, 2006-Ohio-4572, at ¶ 6. The trial court adopted the

magistrate’s decision, and the natural father appealed. Id. at ¶ 6-7. The Eleventh District

acknowledged that the probate court had jurisdiction to consider the petition for adoption but

held that the probate court should have refrained from intervening until the juvenile court

adjudicated the parenting matter to its conclusion. Id. at ¶ 7.

12
{¶ 32} The matter proceeded to the Ohio Supreme Court as a discretionary appeal.

Id. at ¶ 8. The issue presented for review was whether a probate court must refrain from

proceeding with the adoption of a child when an issue concerning the parenting of that child

is pending in the juvenile court. Id. The Supreme Court held that “when an issue concerning

the parenting of a minor child is pending in the juvenile court, a probate court must refrain

from proceeding with the adoption of that child.” Id. at ¶ 10.

{¶ 33} It is this conclusion upon which the probate court relied in justifying its decision

to allow P.H. to intervene in this adoption matter, ultimately deciding that P.H. was entitled

to notice and to withhold his consent—even though P.H. had not timely registered with the

OPFR and the existence of a parent and child relationship had not been determined prior to

the date the adoption petition was filed. The probate court reasoned that because P.H. had

filed a parentage action in the juvenile court nine days before the adoption petition was filed,

under Pushcar, it had been required to refrain from proceeding with the adoption until the

juvenile court adjudicated the parentage issue, which did not occur until more than four

months after the adoption petition was filed. We disagree with this application of Pushcar.

As set forth below, the Ohio Supreme Court has since limited the holding in Pushcar, which

had required a probate court to always refrain from proceeding with an adoption when there

is a pending parentage issue.

{¶ 34} It is worth noting that the facts in Pushcar are distinctly different from the facts

in this case. Unlike P.H., Pushcar signed the minor child’s birth certificate and was the child’s

legal father at the time the adoption petition was filed, and he had had a relationship with

the child since birth. P.H. was not J.T.S.’s legal father when the adoption petition was filed.

Consent in Pushcar was predicated on R.C. 3107.07(A) relating to legal fathers, in contrast

to this case that involves consent predicated on R.C. 3107.07(B) relating to putative fathers.

13
In re Adoption of H.P.

{¶ 35} Next, the probate court considered In re Adoption of H.P. and attempted to

distinguish H.P. from this case. We, however, find H.P. to be instructive in this matter.

{¶ 36} In H.P., a married couple filed a petition in the probate court on September 3,

2020, for legal adoption of H.P. (K.W.’s biological child) when H.P. was only three days old.

In re Adoption of H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 5. J.D. gave birth to H.P. when she was 17

years old, planned for H.P.’s adoption, and executed the necessary consent forms filed with

the adoption petition. Id.

{¶ 37} The married couple informed the probate court that they did not believe that

the consent of H.P.’s biological father (K.W.) was required but acknowledged that a putative

father could still come forward and had until 15 days after H.P.’s birth to do so. Id. at ¶ 6.

Eventually, no father of the child timely registered with the OPFR. Id.

{¶ 38} On September 17, 2020, 18-year-old K.W., believing he was the father of H.P.,

filed an action in the juvenile court seeking custody and genetic paternity testing of H.P. Id.

at ¶ 7. Six days later, K.W. filed an objection to the adoption in the probate court, informing

the court that he believed he was H.P.’s biological father and arguing that J.D. knew he was

father and that he did not agree with her plan to place H.P. for adoption. Id. The married

couple filed a motion to strike K.W.’s objection on the grounds that K.W. was not entitled to

object because he did not timely register as a putative father. Id.

{¶ 39} The probate court scheduled a consent hearing on K.W.’s objection, which

was held on January 29, 2021. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 8. One day prior to the hearing,

K.W. filed a motion to intervene in the adoption proceeding and an additional objection

asserting that he was the biological father of H.P. based on a judgment entry in the juvenile

court dated January 21, 2021. Id. K.W. did not submit a copy of the juvenile court’s entry or

14
a request to stay the adoption proceeding but instead attached copy of a genetic testing

report and an administrative order from the CSEA. Id. at ¶ 8-9. The probate court

acknowledged that it did not have jurisdiction over paternity proceedings. Id. at ¶ 10.

{¶ 40} At the consent hearing, K.W. testified that he knew that J.D. was due to give

birth on September 5 but did not find out about H.P.’s birth until one day past the deadline

for registering as a putative father. Id. at ¶ 12. He testified that if he had known the registry

rules or had known sooner about H.P.’s birth, he would have registered before the deadline.

Id.

{¶ 41} At the conclusion of the hearing, the parties’ attorneys and the court engaged

in a discussion about whether K.W. fell within the definition of a putative father and ultimately

agreed that K.W. met the definition. Id. at ¶ 13. The parties also agreed that the juvenile

court had issued the January 21 judgment entry setting forth the genetic testing results,

which concluded that K.W. was the biological father of H.P. Id. at ¶ 14. In his written closing

arguments to the probate court, K.W. asserted that he had taken sufficient steps to protect

his right to parent H.P., even though he had failed to timely register as a putative father. Id.

He also asked the probate court to allow him to intervene in the adoption matter and to

sustain his objection to the adoption. Id.

{¶ 42} The probate court determined that under R.C. 3107.07(B), the adoption could

proceed without K.W.’s consent because he had failed to register with the putative-father

registry within 15 days of H.P.’s birth. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 15, citing

R.C. 3107.07(B)(1). The probate court found that K.W. “could have registered on the [OPFR]

anytime from when he became romantically involved with [J.D.] until 15 days after the birth

of the child on August 31, 2020,” and that had he done so, his rights would have been

protected. Id. While the probate court sympathized with K.W., it found that the legislature’s

15
deadline under R.C. 3107.07(B) promoted the goal of giving certainty to families who want

to adopt a child. Id. K.W. appealed the probate court’s judgment. Id.

{¶ 43} On appeal, though K.W. admitted that he was a putative father, he asserted

that the probate court erred in finding that his consent to the adoption was not required under

R.C. 3107.07(B), which applied only to putative fathers, because at the time of the consent

hearing on January 29, 2021, he had been determined to be H.P.’s legal father based on

genetic testing. Id. at ¶ 16. K.W. argued that based on Pushcar, the adoption should not

have proceeded in the probate court when a parenting action regarding the child was

pending in a juvenile court. Id. He contended that once he filed his custody case in the

juvenile court, the probate court was required to stay the adoption proceeding. Id. The

married couple and J.D. filed a joint brief in opposition, arguing that K.W. had not established

his right to withhold his consent to the adoption as either a legal father or a putative father.

Id. at ¶ 17. They argued that K.W.’s reliance on Pushcar was erroneous because Pushcar

required a probate court to stay an adoption proceeding only when a paternity action had

been filed in a juvenile court prior to the filing of the adoption petition. Id.

{¶ 44} The Third District held that there was no question that K.W. was a putative

father at the time the adoption petition was filed and that he had not registered with the

putative-father registry within 15 days of H.P.’s birth. Id. at ¶ 18. The appellate court

concluded that the probate court was therefore correct in determining that K.W.’s consent to

the adoption was not necessary as a mere putative father but decided that K.W. had a

“second status” as the biological father of H.P. Id. The court determined that the probate

court should have considered whether K.W.’s consent—“as the legal father with all of the

rights and responsibilities that entails”—was necessary under R.C. 3107.07(A). Id. The

appellate court remanded the matter to the probate court for it to conduct that analysis. Id.

16
The married couple and J.D. appealed, and the Ohio Supreme Court accepted the appeals

for discretionary review. Id. at ¶ 19.

{¶ 45} On review, the Supreme Court stated that the probate court’s consent

determination could not have been made at the time the adoption petition was filed because,

on that date, the 15-day-post-birth window for any man to register as H.P.’s putative father

had not expired. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 22. The Court went on to explain, however, that

once the 15-day window expired and [the married couple] filed the certificate

showing that no one had registered as H.P.’s putative father, K.W. had no right

to object to the adoption. At that point, K.W. did not have a right to receive

notice that the adoption petition had been filed, see R.C. 3107.11(A)(1), let

alone a right to object to it, and K.W.’s legal endeavor to be a parent to H.P.

came to an end, see R.C. 3107.07(B)(1); In re Adoption of H.N.R., 145 Ohio

St.3d 144, 2015-Ohio-5476, 47 N.E.3d 803, ¶ 19 (explaining that failure to

satisfy any one of the statutory conditions “brings the putative-father process

to an end”).

Id. at ¶ 23.

{¶ 46} The Supreme Court also disagreed with K.W.’s argument that even if his

consent was not required as a putative father, by the time the probate court conducted the

consent hearing, he was no longer a putative father but was, rather, a legal father for consent

purposes, and thus had the right to object as H.P.’s biological father. Id. at ¶ 24-25.

Observing that there was merely a stipulation in the probate court record that genetic-testing

results indicated that K.W. was H.P.’s biological father and there was no judicial

determination, the Court concluded that the genetic-testing results were of no consequence

17
because they were obtained after the adoption petition had been filed. Id. at ¶ 26. The Court

stated:

In addition to registering as a putative father, K.W. could have protected his

right for his consent to the adoption to be necessary by initiating an

administrative or court proceeding under R.C. Chapter 3111 to establish his

legal rights to parent H.P. See R.C. 3107.06(B)(3). He could have done this at

any time, even prior to the child’s birth. See R.C. 3111.04(C). However, for

purposes of preserving his right that his consent to any adoption be necessary,

K.W. was required to take these steps “prior to the date the [adoption] petition

was filed,” R.C. 3107.06(B)(3).

(Emphasis added.) Id. at ¶ 27.

{¶ 47} In the instant matter, to justify granting P.H.’s motion to intervene and finding

that P.H. was entitled to notice and to withhold his consent, the probate court relied on H.P.’s

indication that K.W. had been required to take steps to establish parentage prior to the date

the adoption petition was filed. The probate court opined that P.H. had filed his motion to

intervene in April 2025 not as J.T.S.’s putative father, but as his biological father after genetic

testing had confirmed his paternity and after the juvenile court had made a judicial

determination of his parentage in March 2025. The probate court reasoned that P.H. had

sought to establish parentage in October 2024, nine days before the adoption petition was

filed, and thus his right to consent as a legal father existed by way of a judicial determination

in the juvenile court under R.C. 3107.06(A)(3), rather than as a putative father under

R.C. 3107.06(B). The court deduced that for the purpose of preserving the right to consent

and rendering consent necessary, P.H. had been required merely to take the steps for a

judicial determination of parentage prior to the date the adoption petition was filed, which he

18
had done. The probate court’s attempt to distinguish H.P. from the circumstances in this

case centered on the fact that unlike the putative father in H.P., P.H. had sought to establish

his parentage by a judicial determination via filing a complaint for parentage nine days before

the adoption petition was filed, which the probate court deemed sufficient.

K.S.’s Sole Assignment of Error

{¶ 48} In his assignment of error, K.S. contends that the probate court erred as a

matter of law when it determined that P.H. was entitled to both notice of the petition for

adoption and to withhold his consent because (1) P.H. failed to register as a putative father

within 15 days of J.T.S.’s birth, as required by R.C. 3107.07(B)(1) and (2) it was not

determined prior to the date the petition was filed that a parent and child relationship existed,

as set forth in R.C. 3107.06(A)(3).

{¶ 49} K.S. argues that the statutory language and the case law retreating from the

broad reading of Pushcar, as applied to this case, required a determination not only that

P.H. lost his rights as putative father for failing to timely register in the OPFR, but also that

he could not revive his parental rights after waiting more than five years from J.T.S.’s birth

before filing a complaint for parentage in the juvenile court and then filing his complaint just

nine days before the filing of the adoption petition. Upon our review, we agree.

Analysis

{¶ 50} We acknowledge that “natural parents have a fundamental right to the care

and custody of their children.” Pushcar, 2006-Ohio-4572, at ¶ 11, citing In re Adoption of

Masa, 23 Ohio St.3d 163, 165 (1986), citing Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753 (1982).

“Because adoption terminates those fundamental rights, any exception to the requirement

of parental consent to adoption must be strictly construed.” Id. While any exception to the

consent requirements for adoption must be construed in favor of protecting the natural

19
parent’s right to parent his child, we apply the statute as written when the language of the

statute is clear, as it is here. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 3, citing P.L.H., 2017-Ohio-5824, at

¶ 23, and Gabbard v. Madison Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn., 2021-Ohio-2067, ¶ 13.

{¶ 51} The plain language of R.C. 3107.06(B) provides that the putative father of a

minor is required to provide his consent to adoption. However, a putative father’s consent is

unnecessary under R.C. 3107.07(B)(1) if he fails to register as the minor’s putative father

with the OPFR not later than 15 days after the minor’s birth. Similarly, the plain language of

R.C. 3107.06(A)(3) provides that to be considered a father whose written consent is

presumed to be required in an adoption, a parentage action in a court proceeding

establishing that a parent-child relationship existed must be determined “prior to the date

the [adoption] petition was filed.”

{¶ 52} In the instant matter, once the juvenile court determined that based on

paternity testing, P.H. had a parent-child relationship with J.T.S., the probate court

concluded that P.H. was entitled to notice of the adoption petition and to withhold his consent

pending further consideration of the circumstances in R.C. 3101.07, even though the juvenile

court did not render its parentage determination until more than four months after the

adoption petition was filed. We disagree with the probate court’s conclusion.

{¶ 53} First, it is undisputed that P.H. met the definition of a putative father when the

adoption petition was filed. He was never married to mother, never adopted J.T.S., never

acknowledged paternity by filing an affidavit with the appropriate agency, and never

established that a parent-child relationship with J.T.S. existed prior to the date the adoption

petition was filed. It is also undisputed that P.H. failed to register with the OPFR within 15

days of J.T.S.’s birth. R.C. 3107.07(B)(1). “[U]nder Ohio’s statutory scheme, putative fathers

need not have notice of a birth or even a pregnancy to have their rights foreclosed.” In re

20
Adoption of B.M.M., 2024-Ohio-2288, ¶ 15 (2d Dist.), quoting In re Adoption of Z.G.A., 2016-

Ohio-238, ¶ 20 (2d Dist.). A man has notice that if a child is born as a result of his having

sexual intercourse with a woman and he is a putative father, the child may be adopted

without his consent. R.C. 3107.061. Thus, even if P.H. believed that mother had aborted

J.T.S. based on rumors that he had heard, he was still on notice of his potential putative

father status and was precluded under Ohio law from maintaining his right to consent while

sitting on his rights for more than five years as an unregistered putative father. P.H. could

have registered in the OPFR at any time between when he became romantically involved

with mother and 15 days after the birth of J.T.S. Had he done so, his rights with respect to

the adoption proceeding would have been preserved.

{¶ 54} Next, the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision In re Adoption of M.G.B.-E., 2018-

Ohio-1787, narrowed the holding of Pushcar. In M.G.B.-E., the father of the minor in the

adoption proceeding asked the Court to hold broadly that a probate court “may not proceed

with an adoption petition if any pending parenting matter is proceeding in another court.” Id.

at ¶ 1. The Court rejected the father’s proposition of law, holding “more narrowly that a

probate court must merely consider the existence of pending parenting matters when

determining whether an exception to the requirement of parental consent to adoption

applies.” Id. The Court explained that “when a parenting issue pending in a juvenile or

domestic-relations court does not affect a probate court’s ability to determine the statutory

prerequisites for adoption, we have not required the probate court to refrain from exercising

its exclusive jurisdiction over adoption proceedings.” Id. at ¶ 35.

{¶ 55} Based on this reasoning, we do not believe that the probate court was

obligated to stay the adoption proceeding pending the outcome of the parentage matter in

the juvenile court, particularly when P.H. had waited more than five-and-a-half years to seek

21
to establish parentage and the parentage action was filed only nine days prior to the adoption

petition. Moreover, the probate court was able to determine, without any finding by the

juvenile court, whether P.H. had registered with the OPFR, which he had failed to do, thereby

rendering his consent unnecessary under R.C. 3707.07(B)(1). See M.G.B.-E. at ¶ 36. In this

case, the probate court had the ability to make notice and consent determinations at the

time the adoption petition was filed—even though P.H. had a pending complaint for

parentage in the juvenile court—because when the adoption petition was filed, P.H. was

merely a putative father who had never registered with the OPFR.

{¶ 56} To further guide us, we are also persuaded by the following reasoning from

the dissent in In re Adoption of G.V., 2010-Ohio-3349:

The definition of “putative father” specifically provides that a man is a

putative father if “[h]e has not been determined, prior to the date a petition to

adopt the child is filed, to have a parent and child relationship” with the child

through a court or administrative proceeding. (Emphasis added.)

R.C. 3107.01(H). Similarly, the definition of “father” under R.C. 3107.06(B)(3)

provides that to establish a parent-child relationship through court or

administrative proceedings, the court or administrative determination must be

completed “[p]rior to the date the [adoption] petition was filed.” In other words,

when an adoption petition is filed, the statutes require the status of the parties

involved to be ascertained at that time.

The statutes are absolutely clear that the child may be adopted without

a putative father’s consent when he fails to register with the Putative Father

Registry or to establish a parent-child relationship through one of the judicial

or administrative means set forth in R.C. 3107.06(B) before the adoption

22
petition is filed. The statutes also are absolutely clear that consent is required

from a putative father who timely registers with the Putative Father Registry

unless the exception set forth in R.C. 3107.07(B)(2) applies. Nothing in the

adoption statutes provides for a stay of the adoption proceedings to allow for

the filing of or completion of pending actions to establish paternity.

(Emphasis added.) Id. at ¶ 18-19 (Brown, C.J., dissenting).

{¶ 57} Here, because P.H. failed to register as a putative father within the required

time, any argument that the probate court could not determine his “status” for consent

purposes is without merit. See H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 21. Although a hearing might be

required for adoption petitioners to demonstrate any exceptions to the consent requirement

under R.C. 3107.07(B)(2), no hearing is necessary to determine whether a putative father

has properly registered. See id. Thus, we do not believe that the holding in Pushcar required

the probate court to stay the adoption proceeding for a parentage action filed just nine days

before the adoption petition when the existence of a parent and child relationship had not

yet been determined. When P.H. filed his adoption petition, the probate court was able to

determine whether a putative father whose consent was necessary existed. Therefore, the

probate court’s notice and consent determinations should have been made at the time. We

agree with K.S. that the plain language of R.C. 3107.062, 3107.06(B), and 3107.07(B)(1),

taken together, dictates that a putative father, like P.H., who has not registered with the

OPFR within 15 days of the child’s birth loses his rights both to notice of a petition for

adoption and to withhold his consent.

{¶ 58} Further still, we want to emphasize that the natural father in Pushcar signed

the birth certificate of the minor child, which registered him as the child’s legal father in an

out-of-wedlock birth, and the natural father and mother resided together with the child for

23
almost two years. Upon their separation, the natural father and mother signed an agreement

concerning visitation and support of the child, and the natural father promptly took action to

enforce the agreement when a conflict later arose between him and the mother. Unlike P.H.,

the natural father in Pushcar had significant custodial, personal, and financial relationships

with the minor—factors that the United States Supreme Court identified in Lehr v. Robertson

as important to determining whether a putative father has had an opportunity to develop a

relationship with his child warranting constitutional protection. See id., 463 U.S. at 262.

{¶ 59} Much of the analysis in Lehr centered on due process. The Fourteenth

Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that no state shall deprive any person

of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, and Article I, Section 16 of the Ohio

Constitution guarantees the same. Several cases, like Lehr, have considered the extent to

which the Constitution affords protection to the relationship between natural parents and

children born out of wedlock, specifically including a putative father’s right to due process in

the context of adoption. In Lehr, the Supreme Court explained:

When an unwed father demonstrates a full commitment to the responsibilities

of parenthood by “com[ing] forward to participate in the rearing of his child,”

Caban, 441 U.S., at 392, 99 S.Ct., at 1768, his interest in personal contact with

his child acquires substantial protection under the due process clause. At that

point it may be said that he “act[s] as a father toward his children.” Id., at 389,

n. 7, 99 S.Ct., at 1766, n. 7. But the mere existence of a biological link does

not merit equivalent constitutional protection. The actions of judges neither

create nor sever genetic bonds. “[T]he importance of the familial relationship,

to the individuals involved and to the society, stems from the emotional

attachments that derive from the intimacy of daily association, and from the

24
role it plays in ‘promot[ing] a way of life’ through the instruction of children as

well as from the fact of blood relationship.” Smith v. Organization of Foster

Families for Equality and Reform, 431 U.S. 816, 844, 97 S.Ct. 2094, 2109-

2110, 53 L.Ed.2d 14 (1977) (quoting Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 231-

233, 92 S.Ct. 1526, 1541-1542, 32 L.Ed.2d 15 (1972)).

The significance of the biological connection is that it offers the natural

father an opportunity that no other male possesses to develop a relationship

with his offspring. If he grasps that opportunity and accepts some measure of

responsibility for the child’s future, he may enjoy the blessings of the parent-

child relationship and make uniquely valuable contributions to the child’s

development. If he fails to do so, the Federal Constitution will not automatically

compel a state to listen to his opinion of where the child’s best interests lie.

Lehr at 261-262.

{¶ 60} The Lehr court clarified that a putative father must demonstrate full

commitment to the responsibilities of parenthood to gain substantial protection under the

due process clause. In this case, we want to stress that over a period of more than five

years, and unlike the natural father in Pushcar, P.H. never made any effort to develop a

relationship with J.T.S. as described in Lehr. P.H. never fostered significant custodial,

personal, or financial relationships with J.T.S. The factors identified in Lehr were not

applicable to P.H., and no due process concerns are presented here.

{¶ 61} In addition to registering as a putative father, P.H. could have protected his

right to consent by initiating a timely administrative or court proceeding under R.C. Chapter

3111 to establish his legal rights to parent J.T.S. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 27; see R.C.

3107.06(A)(3). “[P.H.] could have done this at any time, even prior to the child’s birth.” Id.,

25
citing R.C. 3111.04(C). But for purposes of preserving his right that his consent to any

adoption be necessary, P.H. was required to demonstrate that a parent and child relationship

existed by way of a judicial determination prior to the date the petition was filed.

R.C. 3107.06(A)(3).

{¶ 62} The probate court’s application of Pushcar in this case ignored the statutory

language in R.C. 3107.06(A)(3) requiring that “[p]rior to the date the [adoption] petition was

filed, it was determined by a court proceeding . . . that a parent and child relationship exists.”

See H.P. at ¶ 37. As the Ohio Supreme Court stated in H.P., “that language is critical to the

effective functioning of the adoption statutes, and it obviously has significant meaning, as it

draws a bright line between when a parent’s consent to adoption is required and when it is

not.” Id. The legislature could have specified a different time frame within which a father

must establish paternity under R.C. 3107.06(A)(3), but it specifically used the words “prior

to the date” regarding the filing of the adoption petition. Id. Like the Court in H.P., we must

give the language the effect that was intended. Id. If the legislature intended that a purported

father merely had to file an action to establish parentage prior to the date of the petition, it

could have said so.

{¶ 63} Here, there was no question that in accordance with R.C. 3107.06(A)(3),

there had been no judicial determination that a parent-child relationship existed between

P.H. and J.T.S. prior to the date the adoption petition was filed, which would have warranted

P.H.’s consent. We recognize that P.H. filed his complaint for parentage on October 29,

2024, nine days before the petition for adoption was filed by K.S. Even though a judicial

determination regarding P.H.’s paternity was ultimately made more than four months later

in March 2025 (after the adoption petition was filed and the paternity results were obtained),

there was no need for the probate court to wait for the juvenile court to make a judicial

26
determination on P.H.’s parentage complaint. As explained in H.P., the genetic testing

results were of no consequence because the results were obtained after the adoption

petition had been filed. Under these circumstances, at the time the adoption petition was

filed, P.H. could not have been considered a legal father to J.T.S. under the plain language

of R.C. 3107.06(A)(3), and his consent to the adoption was not necessary as a mere putative

father. See H.P. at ¶ 18; R.C. 3107.06(A)(3) and 3107.07.

{¶ 64} Finally, in a case like this one, when P.H. had not registered in the OPFR and

no judicial or agency determination regarding the existence of a parent-child relationship

had been made prior to the filing of an adoption petition, the statutes did not provide a

mechanism to revive P.H.’s parental rights. Despite this, P.H. sought to change his status in

the adoption proceeding from putative father to natural father based on a parentage finding

made after the adoption petition was filed. The probate court agreed with P.H. and found

that the adoption proceeding had to be stayed pending completion of the juvenile court

paternity proceedings; that the juvenile court’s finding of paternity had to be recognized by

the probate court; and that P.H.’s new status as natural father rather than putative father

required P.H.’s consent under R.C. 3107.06(A)(3).

{¶ 65} We note that the H.P. court, in dicta, stated that while it had envisioned the

possibility that a father might revive his right for his consent to an adoption to be necessary

by establishing his paternity after he had failed to timely register as a putative father, there

was no precedent for a rights-reviving paternity action that could occur after an adoption

proceeding was already underway. H.P., 2022-Ohio-4369, at ¶ 30. The Court stated that to

permit a purported father to change his status for consent purposes (e.g. from putative father

to legal father) “would not only ignore the time limitations set forth in the relevant statutes,

see R.C. 3107.062 and 3107.07(B)(1), but also ‘would leave the rights of the parties to a

27
pending adoption in a state of uncertainty and would impede the adoption process that had

already begun.’” Id. at ¶ 29, quoting H.N.R., 2015-Ohio-5476, at ¶ 30. In H.N.R., a father

had obtained genetic-testing results indicating that he was the father of H.N.R., but the father

had failed to timely register with the putative-father registry. H.N.R. at ¶ 3-4. Like the natural

father in H.P., the father in H.N.R. sought custody of the child but not until after the petition

for adoption had been filed. Id. at ¶ 6. The probate court in H.N.R. determined that the

father’s consent was unnecessary because he had made no effort to protect that right until

after the petition for adoption had been filed. Id. at ¶ 12.

{¶ 66} In consideration of the foregoing, we cannot say that P.H. successfully revived

his notice and consent rights in this matter by changing his status from putative father to

legal father simply because he filed an action for a judicial determination of parentage nine

days before the adoption petition was filed and more than five years after J.T.S. was born.

Permitting P.H. to change his status from putative father to legal father ignored the time

limitations in R.C. 3107.06(A)(3) and 3107.07(B)(1) and left the rights in the pending

adoption proceeding in a state of uncertainty when the notice and consent determinations

could have already been made. “Staying the probate court’s adoption proceedings for a

juvenile court proceeding to establish paternity is inappropriate in light of the clear directive

of the adoption statutes and unnecessarily delays adoption proceedings contrary to the

intent of the General Assembly.” G.V., 2010-Ohio-3349, at ¶ 28 (Brown, C.J., dissenting).

Therefore, the probate court’s failure to apply the unambiguous language in the relevant

adoption statutes and its erroneous reliance on Pushcar contravened the express adoption

policy established by the legislature.

{¶ 67} In conclusion, when K.S. filed the adoption petition, more than five years had

passed since J.T.S.’s birth, P.H. had not established a parent-child relationship with J.T.S.,

28
and the 15-day-post-birth window for him to register as J.T.S.’s putative father had long

expired. Once the 15-day window had expired for P.H. to register as J.T.S.’s putative father,

P.H. did not have a right to receive notice that the adoption petition had been filed, let alone

a right to object to it, and his legal endeavor to be a parent to J.T.S. came to an end. See

H.P. at ¶ 23, citing R.C. 3107.11(A)(1); see also R.C. 3107(B)(1). Although P.H. filed a

parentage action in the juvenile court nine days before the adoption petition was filed, the

parentage action, establishing that a parent and child relationship between him and J.T.S.

existed, had not been determined prior to the date the petition was filed. For these reasons,

P.H. was not entitled to notice of the adoption or to withhold his consent. We conclude that

the probate court abused its discretion when it granted P.H.’s motion to intervene in this

adoption. Therefore, K.S.’s sole assignment of error is sustained.

III. Conclusion

{¶ 68} Having sustained K.S.’s assignment of error, the judgment of the probate court

is reversed, and this matter is remanded for a final hearing on the adoption.

.............

EPLEY, J., and HANSEMAN, J., concur.

29

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
OH Courts
Filed
March 20th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
2026 Ohio 951
Docket
2025-CA-62

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Activity scope
Adoption Proceedings
Geographic scope
US-OH US-OH

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Family Law Adoption Law

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