In re Adoption of A.K. (Slip Opinion) , 2022 Ohio 350 ( 2022 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as In
    re Adoption of A.K., Slip Opinion No. 
    2022-Ohio-350
    .]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 
    2022-OHIO-350
    IN RE ADOPTION OF A.K. ET AL.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as In re Adoption of A.K., Slip Opinion No. 
    2022-Ohio-350
    .]
    Adoption—Parent’s right to consent to the adoption of his children not
    extinguished under R.C. 3107.07(A)—Judgment affirmed.
    (No. 2020-1163—Submitted June 15, 2021—Decided February 10, 2022.)
    APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County,
    Nos. 108521 and 108522, 
    2020-Ohio-3279
    .
    _______________________
    STEWART, J., announcing the judgment of the court.
    {¶ 1} This case is a discretionary appeal involving R.C. 3107.07, the statute
    that provides exceptions to requiring parental consent for the adoption of minors.
    We are asked to decide whether under this court’s holding in In re Adoption of B.I.,
    
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , a parent’s consent to the
    adoption of his children is required when that parent has not had more than de
    minimis contact with his children for at least one year prior to the filing of an
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    adoption petition and the parent was under a court order to have no contact with his
    children. This opinion concludes that it is and that a parent’s right to consent to the
    adoption of his or her child is not extinguished under R.C. 3107.07(A) for lack of
    sufficient contact with the child when the parent has acted in compliance with a no-
    contact order prohibiting communication or contact with his or her minor child.
    We affirm the judgment of the Eighth District Court of Appeals.
    Facts and Procedural History
    {¶ 2} In April 2007, appellee, the natural father of A.K. and C.K., was
    convicted of murdering the minors’ natural mother and was sentenced to a prison
    term of 23 years to life. A.K. and C.K. were placed with appellants, their maternal
    grandparents, and have been in their legal custody since February 2007. When the
    Juvenile Division of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas awarded custody
    of the children to the grandparents, the order specifically stated: “Father shall have
    no contact with the minor children absent an Order from this Court.”
    {¶ 3} In 2015, the grandparents filed petitions to adopt the children in the
    Probate Division of the Cuyahoga Court of Common Pleas. The father filed
    objections, and the adoption proceedings were bifurcated to first address whether
    the need to obtain the father’s consent was extinguished under R.C. 3107.07(A). If
    the court determined that consent was not necessary, it would then decide whether
    adoption was in the best interest of the children in a subsequent hearing.
    {¶ 4} R.C. 3107.07(A) provides that the consent of a natural parent to the
    adoption of his or her child is not required under certain circumstances. Relevant
    to this case, consent is not required if the court finds by clear and convincing
    evidence that the parent has failed, with no justifiable cause, to have more than de
    minimis contact with the child for at least one year immediately preceding the filing
    of the adoption petition or the minor’s placement in the home of the petitioner. R.C.
    3107.07(A). The magistrate who presided over the consent hearing determined that
    the grandparents did not establish by clear and convincing evidence that the father’s
    2
    January Term, 2022
    failure to communicate with the children during the one-year period prior to the
    petitions for adoption being filed was not justified, finding that the no-contact order
    from the juvenile court facially established evidence of a justifiable excuse.
    {¶ 5} The grandparents filed objections to the decision, which the probate
    court sustained. The court determined that the father’s consent was not required,
    because it was his conduct that led to the no-contact order and therefore the order
    could not provide justifiable cause for his lack of contact with the children for the
    year prior to the filing of the petitions.
    {¶ 6} The father appealed to the Eighth District Court of Appeals, and in a
    split decision, the court affirmed the probate court’s decision. In re A.K., 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 105426, 
    2017-Ohio-9165
     (“A.K. I”). In A.K. I, the court of appeals
    agreed with the probate court’s conclusion that it would be unjust to allow the father
    to use his imprisonment to justify his failure to contact his children when it was his
    actions that necessitated his prison sentence. The Eighth District remanded the case
    to the probate court to determine whether adoption was in the best interest of the
    children. The magistrate found that the adoption of A.K. and C.K was in their best
    interest and granted the grandparents’ petitions. The father filed objections to the
    magistrate’s decision, but the court adopted the decision granting the petitions for
    adoption.
    {¶ 7} The father appealed the probate court’s judgment, asserting that (1)
    the probate court erred in holding that the grandparents met their burden of
    establishing that they could adopt the children without the father’s consent and (2)
    the probate court erred in holding that the grandparents met their burden of
    establishing that adoption was in the children’s best interest. The Eighth District
    reversed the judgment of the trial court based on this court’s intervening decision
    in B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    . In re Adoption of A.K.,
    
    2020-Ohio-3279
    , 
    155 N.E.3d 239
     (“A.K. II”).
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 8} The Eighth District noted that the issue whether the father’s consent
    to the adoptions was necessary had been decided in A.K. I and that pursuant to the
    law-of-the-case doctrine, the issue would generally not be revisited. A.K. II at ¶ 13.
    However, the court of appeals held that our decision in B.I. was intervening and
    controlling authority regarding the parental-consent analysis under R.C.
    3107.07(A) and that it was therefore required to reexamine the issue. A.K. II at
    ¶ 13, citing Hopkins v. Dyer, 
    104 Ohio St.3d 461
    , 
    2004-Ohio-6769
    , 
    820 N.E.2d 329
    (when an intervening decision from a superior appellate court is inconsistent with
    the law of the case determined by an intermediate appellate court, the inferior court
    is bound to follow the superior court’s holding). In a split decision, the Eighth
    District held that under B.I., the father’s reliance on the no-contact order constituted
    justifiable cause for his having had no contact with his children.
    {¶ 9} The grandparents filed an application for reconsideration and a
    motion to certify a conflict. The Eighth District denied both. The grandparents
    subsequently filed this discretionary appeal, which we accepted on a single
    proposition of law:
    Whether the holding in In re [Adoption of] B.I. applies
    broadly such that the mere existence of any judicial order precluding
    a natural parent from communication with his minor children is
    sufficient justifiable cause to [not] provide more than * * * de
    minimis contact with the minor for a period of at least one year under
    R.C. 3107.07(A).
    See 
    160 Ohio St.3d 1495
    , 
    2020-Ohio-5634
    , 
    159 N.E.3d 273
    .
    Law and Analysis
    {¶ 10} As an initial matter, the grandparents argue, and the dissenting
    opinions agree, that the Eighth District Court of Appeals should not have revisited
    4
    January Term, 2022
    the issue of consent. They assert that because the issue of justifiable cause was
    decided in A.K. I, 
    2017-Ohio-9165
    , the court of appeals was barred from further
    consideration of that issue based on the law-of-the-case doctrine. This is an
    incorrect understanding of the doctrine. Although it is true that a reviewing court’s
    prior ruling on a legal question in a case will generally not be disturbed in
    subsequent proceedings in the same case, Nolan v. Nolan, 
    11 Ohio St.3d 1
    , 3, 
    462 N.E.2d 410
     (1984), the law-of-the-case doctrine is not an automatic or an absolute
    bar to subsequent review of such a legal issue. The doctrine must give way in
    certain circumstances, one of which is when an intervening decision rendered by a
    superior court is at odds with a legal determination made in the pending matter.
    Jones v. Harmon, 
    122 Ohio St. 420
    , 424, 
    172 N.E. 151
     (1930). As the opinion
    concurring in judgment only notes, the doctrine does not serve to limit the authority
    of a court and its application is discretionary. Opinion concurring in judgment only,
    ¶ 34. We therefore reject the position that the Eighth District was precluded from
    revisiting the issue of consent in this case; the court revisited the issue to determine
    whether our decision in B.I. was intervening authority that required a change to the
    appellate court’s prior judgment.
    {¶ 11} Turning now to the issue raised in the proposition of law—whether
    the father’s consent to adoption is necessary under the circumstances of this case—
    as is often noted in cases dealing with severing a parent-child relationship, the
    “[p]ermanent termination of parental rights has been described as ‘the family law
    equivalent of the death penalty * * *.’ ” In re Hayes, 
    79 Ohio St.3d 46
    , 48, 
    679 N.E.2d 680
     (1997), quoting In re Smith, 
    77 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 16, 
    601 N.E.2d 45
     (6th
    Dist.1991). Because adoption terminates the fundamental rights of natural parents,
    written consent is generally required of parents before an adoption may proceed,
    R.C. 3107.06. Exceptions to this rule are set forth in R.C. 3107.07. Relevant to
    this case, R.C. 3107.07(A) provides that consent is not required from
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    [a] parent of a minor, when it is alleged in the adoption
    petition and the court, after proper service of notice and hearing,
    finds by clear and convincing evidence that the parent has failed
    without justifiable cause to provide more than de minimis contact
    with the minor or to provide for the maintenance and support of the
    minor as required by law or judicial decree for a period of at least
    one year immediately preceding either the filing of the adoption
    petition or the placement of the minor in the home of the petitioner.
    {¶ 12} “The cornerstone of the adoption statutes is the promotion of
    children’s welfare, specifically those children who lack and are in need of the
    security and benefits of a loving home and family.” In re Adoption of Kohorst, 
    75 Ohio App.3d 813
    , 817, 
    600 N.E.2d 843
     (3d Dist.1992). R.C. 3107.07(A) operates
    only to determine whether an adoption may proceed without a parent’s consent. In
    re Adoption of Jorgensen, 
    33 Ohio App.3d 207
    , 209, 
    515 N.E.2d 622
     (3d
    Dist.1986). Its operation does not result directly in the adoption to which it relates.
    
    Id.
     “[R.C. 3107.07(A)] only permits a court to proceed with the adoption and then
    only when [the court] finds after hearing that the adoption is in the best interest of
    the child, [may it] enter[] a final decree of adoption.” 
    Id.
    {¶ 13} In B.I., we accepted a discretionary appeal, determined that a conflict
    existed between judgments of the First District Court of Appeals and the Fifth
    District Court of Appeals, and ordered the parties to brief the following question:
    “ ‘In an adoption-consent case under R.C. 3107.07(A) in
    which a court has previously relieved a parent of any child-support
    obligation, does that previous order supersede any other duty of
    maintenance and support so as to provide ‘justifiable cause’ for the
    6
    January Term, 2022
    parent’s failure to provide maintenance and support, therefore
    requiring the petitioner to obtain the consent of that parent?’ ”
    See 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , ¶ 8-9, quoting 
    152 Ohio St.3d 1441
    , 
    2018-Ohio-1600
    , 
    96 N.E.3d 297
    , quoting the court of appeals’ entry.
    In a split decision, a majority of this court concluded that “a parent’s nonsupport of
    his or her minor child pursuant to a zero-support order of a court of competent
    jurisdiction does not extinguish the requirement of that parent’s consent.” Id. at
    ¶ 43.
    {¶ 14} In reaching that conclusion, this court did not directly address the
    question we had ordered the parties to brief. The B.I. majority, instead, used a
    three-part test that asks (1) what the law or judicial decree required of the parent
    during the year immediately preceding either the filing of the adoption petition or
    the placement of the minor in the home of the petitioner, (2) whether during that
    year the parent complied with his or her obligation under the law or judicial decree,
    and (3) if during that year the parent did not comply with his or her obligation under
    the law or judicial decree, whether there was justifiable cause for that failure. Id.
    at ¶ 15. In other words, instead of deciding whether a parent who failed to support
    his child for the year prior to the filing of an adoption petition had justifiable cause
    for doing so when a previously imposed court-ordered child-support obligation had
    been terminated, the majority resolved the matter after answering the first question
    of the three-part test. The court stated, “We stand in this case at the first step—
    determining what the law or judicial decree required of the parent for the year prior
    to the filing of the petition. If the father had no obligation to provide child support,
    the analysis ends there.” Id. at ¶ 16.
    {¶ 15} Applying the B.I. three-part test to the case before us, this opinion
    likewise resolves the matter at the first step by determining what the law or judicial
    decree required of the father during the year immediately preceding the filing of the
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    adoption petitions. The opinion concurring in judgment only and the dissenting
    opinions disagree with this opinion’s determination that B.I. applies to this case.
    The opinion concurring in judgment only and the second dissenting opinion would
    limit the application of B.I. to cases involving child support: specifically, child
    support that is addressed in a judicial decree. Although the exception under R.C.
    3107.07 to the consent requirement in the case before us deals with an allegation
    that the parent failed to have contact with his children as opposed to an allegation
    that the parent failed to provide maintenance and support, which was the situation
    in B.I., there is no logical reason why the analysis should be any different when
    applying the three-part test, despite the insistence of the second dissenting opinion
    that “the plain, unambiguous language of the statute” requires a different analysis.
    Second dissenting opinion, ¶ 72.
    {¶ 16} The opinion concurring in judgment only also makes much ado
    about the fact that under R.C. 3107.07, a parent’s obligation to provide for the
    maintenance and support of his or her child is established by “law or judicial
    decree” whereas the statute does not use the same phrase to measure a parent’s
    contact obligations. Instead, the statute uses the phrase “more than de minimis” to
    assess a parent’s contact obligations. But this court has historically treated the two
    statutory elements the same way when considering whether the consent of a parent
    is required: we have determined whether the parent failed to meet the contact or
    support obligations, and if so, whether there was justifiable cause for that failure.
    See, e.g., In re Adoption of Masa, 
    23 Ohio St.3d 163
    , 166, 
    492 N.E.2d 140
     (1986);
    In re Adoption of Bovett, 
    33 Ohio St.3d 102
    , 105, 
    515 N.E.2d 919
     (1987). It was
    this court’s decision in B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    ,
    that created a new first step. Instead of a court’s simply determining whether the
    parent had provided maintenance and support pursuant to law or judicial decree and
    if the parent had not, whether the trial court could find by clear and convincing
    evidence that there was justifiable cause for not doing so, under B.I., the court first
    8
    January Term, 2022
    determines what the law or judicial decree required of the parent for the year prior
    to the filing of the petition. The decision in B.I. created an automatic exemption
    from the trial court’s justifiable-cause analysis when a parent can point to a court
    order that required no maintenance and support as the basis for determining the
    amount of maintenance and support the parent was required to provide to his or her
    child, regardless of any other circumstances that might pertain to the parent’s ability
    to support the child or whether there is any other obligation under the law to do so.
    {¶ 17} The disjunctive relationship of the contact and support provisions in
    R.C. 3107.07(A) (failure to provide more than de minimis contact or failure to
    provide maintenance and support) shows that the General Assembly intended to
    make the provisions of equal importance because each provision is subject to the
    same evidentiary standard and a parent’s failure to meet either provision is
    sufficient to nullify the need to obtain that parent’s consent. In re Adoption of A.H.,
    9th Dist. No. 12CA010312, 
    2013-Ohio-1600
    , ¶ 9, citing In re Adoption of
    McDermitt, 
    63 Ohio St.2d 301
    , 304, 
    408 N.E.2d 680
     (1980). Thus, the automatic
    exemption from the justifiable-cause inquiry that this court created in B.I. when a
    court order relieves a parent from a previously imposed child-support obligation
    should also apply when a court specifically orders a parent to have no contact with
    his child.
    {¶ 18} It is clear that the judicial decree in the instant case (the no-contact
    order) mandated that the father do just what was ordered—have no contact or
    communication with his children. What was legally required of the father here is
    more intelligible than what the majority in B.I. found had been legally required of
    the father in that case. The majority in B.I. interpreted a judicial decree terminating
    a previously imposed court-ordered child-support obligation to actually require—
    no, mandate—that the father not support his child, id. at ¶ 16, an interpretation that
    was criticized as defying logic, id. at ¶ 63 (Stewart, J., dissenting). In any event,
    regardless of whether a parent’s alleged failure to provide support for his or her
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    child or to have contact with his or her child is being evaluated under the first prong
    of the three-part test, the underlying policy implications are the same: a probate
    court should not dispense with the requirement of a parent’s consent when the
    parent abided by a court order prohibiting the parent from doing the very act that
    the statute requires in order for the parent to maintain his or her right to consent to
    the adoption of his or her minor child.
    {¶ 19} Similar to the assertion in the opinion concurring in judgment only
    discussed above, the second dissenting opinion states that because “[t]here is no
    judicial-decree language in the de minimis contact provision,” “whatever contact a
    judicial decree orders between a parent and his or her child is not relevant to the
    probate court’s inquiry regarding whether the parent had more than de minimis
    contact with the child.” Second dissenting opinion at ¶ 71. To conclude that a no-
    contact order that prohibits all contact between a parent and his or her child is not
    determinative, let alone that it is irrelevant, regarding the amount of contact
    required under R.C. 3107.07(A) would essentially mean that a “zero-support
    order,” under which, according to B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , a parent does not need to provide any support in order to maintain his
    or her right to consent, demands more compliance than a no-contact order that
    expressly prohibits a parent from having contact with his or her child. That
    conclusion would also ignore our prior case law indicating that we must strictly
    construe R.C. 3107.07(A) in favor of the nonconsenting parent. In re Adoption of
    Sunderhaus, 
    63 Ohio St.3d 127
    , 132, 
    585 N.E.2d 418
     (1992).
    {¶ 20} In B.I., this court explained that “ ‘[t]he interests of orderly
    government demand that respect and compliance be given to orders issued by courts
    possessed of jurisdiction of persons and subject matter.’ ” Id. at ¶ 41, quoting
    United States v. United Mine Workers of Am., 
    330 U.S. 258
    , 303, 
    67 S.Ct. 677
    , 
    91 L.Ed. 884
     (1997). Moreover, we asked, “Can a parent who relies on a valid order
    of a court of competent jurisdiction suffer—because he or she relied on that order—
    10
    January Term, 2022
    the ‘ “family law equivalent of the death penalty * * *?” ’ ” Id. at ¶ 11, quoting
    Hayes, 79 Ohio St.3d at 48, 
    679 N.E.2d 680
    , quoting Smith, 77 Ohio App.3d at 16,
    
    601 N.E.2d 45
    . When applying R.C. 3107.07(A), we must strictly construe its
    language in favor of the retention of parental rights. B.I. at ¶ 12; see also In re
    Adoption of M.G.B.-E., 
    154 Ohio St.3d 17
    , 
    2018-Ohio-1787
    , 
    110 N.E.3d 1236
    ,
    ¶ 31 (explaining that courts must strictly construe any exception to the parental-
    consent requirement in favor of the nonconsenting parent).
    {¶ 21} Accordingly, this opinion concludes (1) that a parent’s right to
    consent to the adoption of his or her child is not extinguished under R.C.
    3107.07(A) when the parent did not have more than de minimis contact with the
    minor child during the statutory period because the parent was acting in compliance
    with a no-contact order prohibiting all communication and contact with the child
    and (2) that therefore, in order for the adoption proceedings in this case to go
    forward, the father’s consent is required.
    {¶ 22} We affirm the judgment of the Eighth District Court of Appeals and
    remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings.
    Judgment affirmed
    and cause remanded to the trial court.
    BRUNNER, J., concurs.
    DEWINE, J., concurs in judgment only, with an opinion joined by FISCHER,
    J.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., dissents, with an opinion.
    KENNEDY, J., dissents, with an opinion joined by DONNELLY, J.
    _________________
    DEWINE, J., concurring in judgment only.
    {¶ 23} The statute at the center of this case directs courts to make two
    distinct inquiries. To find that a parent’s consent to the adoption of his or her child
    is not required, a court must first find that the parent has failed either “to provide
    11
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    more than de minimis contact with the minor” or “to provide for the maintenance
    and support of the minor as required by law or judicial decree.” R.C. 3107.07(A).
    Second, the court must find that there was no justifiable cause for the failure. 
    Id.
    {¶ 24} The lead opinion, however, collapses the two questions and
    improperly concludes that a no-contact order conclusively establishes justifiable
    cause for a parent’s failure to maintain contact with his or her child. In doing so, it
    disregards the plain language of the statute and our caselaw interpreting it. Whether
    a no-contact order amounts to justifiable cause for a parent’s failure to contact his
    or her child necessarily depends on case-specific considerations, such as the
    specific terms of the order and the extent to which the parent’s lack of contact was
    due to the existence of the order.
    {¶ 25} But while the lead opinion gets the legal analysis wrong, I ultimately
    agree that under the facts of this case, the parent’s consent to the adoption is
    required. The adoption petitioners failed to establish by clear and convincing
    evidence that the parent’s lack of contact with his children was without justifiable
    cause. I therefore concur in the judgment remanding the case to the trial court for
    further proceedings.
    The statute
    {¶ 26} Under R.C. 3107.07(A), consent to adoption is not required of
    [a] parent of a minor, when it is alleged in the adoption
    petition and the court * * * finds by clear and convincing evidence
    that the parent has failed without justifiable cause to provide more
    than de minimis contact with the minor or to provide for the
    maintenance and support of the minor as required by law or judicial
    decree for a period of at least one year immediately preceding either
    the filing of the adoption petition or the placement of the minor in
    the home of the petitioner.
    12
    January Term, 2022
    Thus, a court must undertake a two-step analysis in considering whether a parent
    loses his or her right to consent to an adoption under the statute. In re Adoption of
    M.B., 
    131 Ohio St.3d 186
    , 
    2012-Ohio-236
    , 
    963 N.E.2d 142
    , ¶ 23. The court must
    first determine whether the parent has failed either “to provide more than de
    minimis contact with the minor” or “to provide for the maintenance and support of
    the minor as required by law or judicial decree.” R.C. 3107.07(A); see also M.B.
    at ¶ 23; In re Adoption of Bovett, 
    33 Ohio St.3d 102
    , 105, 
    515 N.E.2d 919
     (1987).
    If he or she has failed in either respect, the court must then consider whether that
    failure was “without justifiable cause.” 
    Id.
     The burden of proving both that the
    parent failed to contact or support the child and that the failure was without
    justification is on the person seeking to adopt the child. Bovett at paragraph one of
    the syllabus, following In re Adoption of Masa, 
    23 Ohio St.3d 163
    , 
    492 N.E.2d 140
    (1986), paragraph one of the syllabus.
    The adoption proceedings
    {¶ 27} In this case, minors A.K. and C.K. were placed in the legal custody
    of their maternal grandparents following their father’s incarceration for murdering
    their mother. The juvenile court’s order awarding legal custody to the grandparents
    provided: “Father shall have no contact with the minor children absent an Order
    from this Court.”
    {¶ 28} The maternal grandparents later sought to adopt the girls. It is
    undisputed that the girls’ father did not have any contact with them in the year
    leading up to the filing of the adoption petitions. The grandparents asserted that his
    lack of contact was not justifiable and, consequently, his consent to the adoption
    was not legally required. Father countered that the no-contact order had prevented
    him from contacting his children and thus the lack of contact was justified.
    {¶ 29} After a hearing, the magistrate found that father was “willing[] but
    unable to contact his children due to the no contact order.” Noting that father had
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    written numerous letters to his daughters and given them to his mother for
    safekeeping, the magistrate found that father genuinely desired to communicate
    with his children. The magistrate further explained that the no-contact order was
    “direct and unqualified” and that “[d]espite the terrible circumstances that gave rise
    to the no contact order,” he would “not find fault in an individual for following a
    Court order completely and to the letter.” The magistrate determined that any
    attempt by father to modify the terms of the no-contact order would have been met
    with vigorous opposition by the maternal grandparents. He also credited father’s
    concerns that if father attempted to modify the order, the maternal grandparents
    would not allow his family to visit the girls. As a result, the magistrate determined
    that the grandparents had failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that
    father’s failure to contact his children was unjustified and that, therefore, his
    consent to the adoption was required.
    {¶ 30} The probate court sustained the grandparents’ objections to the
    magistrate’s decision and ordered that the adoption could proceed without father’s
    consent. The probate court acknowledged that throughout the relevant time period,
    the juvenile court’s order barred all contact between the children and their father.
    But the probate court disagreed with the magistrate’s take on father’s failure to seek
    modification of the no-contact order, explaining that it was “not satisfied with the
    apparent lack of initiative on [father’s] part to make any attempt to restore
    communication with his children, especially where his testimony indicated that he
    strongly wished to have contact with them.”
    {¶ 31} The most significant factor for the probate court, however, was the
    circumstances that led to father’s predicament in the first place: “Justice requires
    that this Court should not ignore the reason [father] was put into his current
    position.” And because “[h]e should not now be allowed to reap any legal benefit
    from the consequences of his crime,” the probate court determined father’s consent
    to the adoption was not required.
    14
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 32} Father appealed to the Eighth District Court of Appeals. In re A.K.,
    8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 105426, 
    2017-Ohio-9165
    . Picking up on the probate
    court’s reasoning, the Eighth District opined that father should not be able to obtain
    a legal benefit from murdering the children’s mother. Id. at ¶ 27. The appellate
    court therefore held that father’s failure to have contact with his children was not
    justified and his consent to the adoption was not required. It remanded the case to
    the probate court to determine whether adoption was in the best interests of the
    minors. The probate court concluded that adoption was in the minors’ best
    interests, and father again appealed.
    {¶ 33} In the second appeal, father asked the Eighth District to reconsider
    its decision that his consent was not required, in light of this court’s intervening
    decision in In re Adoption of B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    . The Eighth District concluded that B.I. compelled a different result on the
    consent issue. In re Adoption of A.K. (“A.K. II”), 
    2020-Ohio-3279
    , 
    155 N.E.3d 239
    .
    While the Eighth District noted that B.I. involved a different type of court order—
    one eliminating the parent’s child-support obligation—the court of appeals relied
    on our broader discussion in B.I. that “ ‘a parent who relies on a valid order of a
    court of competent jurisdiction’ cannot suffer because he or she relied on that
    order.” A.K. II at ¶ 15, quoting B.I. at ¶ 11. Pointing to our statement in B.I. that a
    contrary result “would essentially render the court order in question invalid,”
    A.K. II at ¶ 15, citing B.I. at ¶ 39, the Eighth District opined that the “same
    reasoning applies to an order involving a parent’s contact with their child,” 
    id.
    Thus, it concluded, “Pursuant to the holding of B.I., reliance on a court order
    constitutes justifiable cause.” A.K. II at ¶ 15. The Eighth District therefore held
    that father’s consent to the adoption was required.
    {¶ 34} There are certainly parallels between the issues presented in this case
    and those in B.I., and I agree that the Eighth District was warranted in revisiting the
    consent issue based on the B.I. court’s broader discussion of the effect of court
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    orders on a parent’s consent to adoption. The law-of-the-case doctrine “is a matter
    of practice and discretion, not a limit on power.” Wright & Miller, Federal Practice
    and Procedure, Section 4478 (2d Ed.2021). Thus, an intervening decision “ ‘need
    not discuss the precise issue’ ” previously addressed by an appellate court for the
    decision to cast doubt on that court’s prior ruling. United States v. Plugh, 
    648 F.3d 118
    , 124 (2d Cir.2011), quoting In re Zarnel, 
    619 F.3d 156
    , 168 (2d Cir.2010); see
    also United States v. Holloway, 
    630 F.3d 252
    , 258 (1st Cir.2011) (controlling
    authority “need not be directly on point to undermine” a prior decision of an
    appellate court for purposes of the law-of-the-case doctrine).
    {¶ 35} Although the law-of-the-case doctrine did not preclude the Eighth
    District from taking a second look at the consent issue, B.I. does not control the
    result in this case. In holding that B.I. “established that reliance on a valid court
    order constitutes justifiable cause,” A.K. II at ¶ 20, the Eighth District overlooked
    important aspects of that decision, and the lead opinion makes that same error now.
    B.I. involved a different question
    {¶ 36} This court’s decision in B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    ,
    
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , involved the first inquiry under R.C. 3107.07(A): whether the
    parent failed to have more than de minimis contact with the child or to provide for
    the maintenance and support of the child as required by law or judicial decree. In
    B.I., a child’s stepfather sought to adopt the child without the consent of the child’s
    biological father. The stepfather alleged that the father had failed to financially
    support the child in the manner required by law or judicial decree and that as a
    result, the adoption could go forward without the father’s consent. Id. at ¶ 2-3. The
    father objected on the grounds that he had been subject to a court order eliminating
    his child-support obligations and therefore had not failed to provide the financial
    support required by judicial decree. See id. at ¶ 4.
    {¶ 37} This court agreed with the father.         We held that “a parent’s
    nonsupport of his or her minor child pursuant to a judicial decree does not
    16
    January Term, 2022
    extinguish the requirement of that parent’s consent to the adoption of the child.”
    Id. at ¶ 1. We outlined the three statutory considerations necessary to decide
    whether the parent’s consent to adoption was required when it was alleged that the
    parent had failed to provide child support in the amount required by law or judicial
    decree. Id. at ¶ 15. To determine whether a parent has failed to provide child
    support “as required by law or judicial decree,” R.C. 3107.07(A), the court must
    first ascertain “what the law or judicial decree required of the parent,” B.I. at ¶ 16.
    We explained, “If the father had no obligation to provide child support, the analysis
    ends there.” Id. If there is an obligation to pay support, the court then must
    determine whether the parent complied with that requirement. Id. at ¶ 15. And
    finally, if the parent failed to pay support as required by law or judicial decree, the
    court must determine whether that failure was justified. Id.
    {¶ 38} The result in B.I. was compelled by the plain language of the statute.
    For the court to conclude that the father’s consent to adoption was not required, the
    stepfather needed to establish that the father had failed “to provide for the
    maintenance and support of the minor as required by law or judicial decree.”
    (Emphasis added.) R.C. 3107.07(A). We held that because the juvenile court had
    issued an order reducing the father’s support obligation to zero, the father had not
    failed to provide the support required by judicial decree. B.I. at ¶ 29; see also In re
    Adoption of A.C.B., 
    159 Ohio St.3d 256
    , 
    2020-Ohio-629
    , 
    150 N.E.3d 82
    , ¶ 10
    (“Whether father has provided the necessary support under the statute is measured
    by the terms of the judicial decree”).
    {¶ 39} The court in B.I. never reached the question whether the parent’s
    failure to provide support or contact was justifiable. Indeed, we explained that the
    statute distinguishes the justifiable-cause inquiry from the question of what was
    required by the judicial decree, saying:
    17
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    [T]he issue is not whether a decree ordering zero support—or one
    that terminates a previously ordered support obligation or modifies
    a previously ordered support amount to zero—justifies a failure to
    provide maintenance and support; instead, the issue is whether the
    existence of a no-support order means that the parent subject to it
    was under no obligation to provide maintenance and support.
    (Footnote omitted.) B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , ¶ 16.
    {¶ 40} The lead opinion relies on the three-part test outlined in B.I., saying
    that it, too, decides this case “at the first step by determining what the law or judicial
    decree required,” lead opinion at ¶ 15. But that analysis has no application here.
    The three steps outlined in B.I. pertained only to a challenge to a parent’s right to
    consent to adoption on the grounds that the parent had failed in his or her child-
    support obligations. That is because the language “as required by law or judicial
    decree” in the statute applies only to the determination of the amount of child
    support owed. R.C. 3107.07(A); B.I. at ¶ 14-16. The amount of contact a parent
    must have with his or her children to preserve the right to consent to adoption is not
    set by law or judicial decree; it is instead dictated by R.C. 3107.07(A) itself, which
    requires that the contact be “more than de minimis.” Thus, to resolve a challenge
    involving a parent’s lack of contact with his or her children, the statute directs us
    to consider only two things: whether the parent failed to have more than de minimus
    contact with them and whether that failure was justified.
    {¶ 41} It is undisputed that A.K. and C.K.’s father had no contact with them
    during the year preceding the filing of the adoption petitions. There is therefore no
    question that the first requirement necessary to extinguish the need to obtain
    father’s consent to adoption has been met: father failed “to provide more than de
    minimis contact” with his children. See R.C. 3107.07(A). The question we must
    18
    January Term, 2022
    answer here exists at the second step; we must decide whether that failure was
    “without justifiable cause.” See 
    id.
    {¶ 42} It is true that, like the father in B.I., A.K. and C.K.’s father asserts
    that he relied on a valid court order—here, a court order prohibiting him from
    contacting his children. But the lead opinion is wrong to conclude that there should
    be no difference in how courts approach the support and contact inquiries because,
    in its estimation, “the underlying policy implications are the same,” lead opinion at
    ¶ 18. By thumbing its nose at the statute and relying almost exclusively on policy
    considerations, the lead opinion writes off the critical distinction between the legal
    question presented in B.I. and the one at issue here. In B.I., the father’s legal child-
    support obligation was set by the terms of the court order; in other words, the child-
    support order directly informed the issue whether the father had failed to provide
    his child with the financial support “required by * * * judicial decree,” as mandated
    by R.C. 3107.07(A). The same is not true in this case. The no-contact order has
    no bearing on the first part of the test, whether A.K. and C.K.’s father failed to have
    “more than de minimus contact” with them; it is relevant only to the second
    question, whether their father’s lack of contact was justified.
    {¶ 43} Given that the lead opinion acknowledges this variation in the
    statutory language, its contention that “there is no logical reason why the analysis
    should be any different,” lead opinion at ¶ 15, is puzzling. The B.I. court’s analysis
    of the child-support order dealt not with justifiable cause but with the threshold
    question under the statute: the amount of child support that was required by the
    judicial decree. In contrast to the child-support order in B.I., a no-contact order has
    no effect on the threshold legal requirement that a parent have more than de minimis
    contact with his or her children.
    {¶ 44} The lead opinion scoffs at this distinction, assuring us that the
    difference in the way the statute treats the support and contact inquiries doesn’t
    matter, because it won’t change the result in this case. But our goal isn’t just to end
    19
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    up in the right place, it is also to correctly set forth the law for the benefit of future
    litigants. And if we are sloppy in our analysis in this case, there may well be
    untoward results in other cases.
    {¶ 45} Consider, for instance, an order forbidding a parent from having
    contact with his or her child until the parent satisfies a specified set of conditions—
    say, completion of a drug-treatment program or anger-management classes. Or a
    no-contact order that explicitly states that the court will consider requests for
    modification after a period of one year. Surely, if a parent’s lack of contact with
    his or her child is a result of the parent’s failure to take the steps necessary to have
    contact, a trial court may consider those facts in evaluating whether the lack of
    contact was justified—notwithstanding the fact that the parent is still complying
    with a valid no-contact order.
    {¶ 46} Or take a situation in which a no-contact order is in place, but the
    petitioner presents evidence indicating that the parent has sworn off any desire to
    have contact with the child. Should the parent be able to object to the adoption
    simply because he or she is subject to a no-contact order, when the evidence
    suggests that the order is not the reason for the lack of contact?
    {¶ 47} These are just examples. But they illustrate the real problem with
    the lead opinion’s proposed holding. The lead opinion, in effect, would turn a no-
    contact order into a conclusive presumption that a natural parent was justified in
    not having contact with a child. In doing so, it would deprive a potential adoptive
    parent of any opportunity to show that the natural parent’s lack of conduct was
    unjustified notwithstanding the existence of the order. Although establishing a lack
    of justifiable cause “ordinarily will not be an easy showing to make,” A.C.B., 
    159 Ohio St.3d 256
    , 
    2020-Ohio-629
    , 
    150 N.E.3d 82
    , ¶ 17, it is one that the statute
    entitles an adoption petitioner a fair chance to make.
    {¶ 48} To be sure, a person seeking to adopt will often be unable to meet
    his or her burden of establishing a lack of justifiable cause when faced with
    20
    January Term, 2022
    evidence that a parent’s failure to contact his or her child was due to compliance
    with a valid no-contact order. I am not suggesting that the trial court should
    examine the underlying reasons that the no-contact order was issued in the first
    place. But in determining whether a parent’s lack of contact was justified, a trial
    court must be permitted to consider evidence relevant to that lack of contact. The
    lead opinion’s proposed holding that, as a matter of law, “a parent’s right to consent
    to the adoption of his or her child is not extinguished under R.C. 3107.07(A) for
    lack of sufficient contact with the child when the parent has acted in compliance
    with a no-contact order prohibiting communication or contact with his or her minor
    child,” lead opinion at ¶ 1, would remove from consideration the scope and terms
    of the no-contact order at issue or whether the order affected the parent’s contact
    with his or her children in a given case. Rather than hold that the existence of a no-
    contact order irrefutably establishes justifiable cause, I would permit courts to
    consider the scope of the order and to determine based on the evidence presented
    whether the parent’s lack of contact with his or her child was truly a result of the
    order.
    The adoption petitioners did not establish a lack of justifiable cause
    {¶ 49} Although I disagree with the lead opinion’s reasoning, I ultimately
    concur in the judgment it announces. On the facts of this case, the grandparents
    have not met their burden of establishing that despite the existence of the no-contact
    order, father lacked justification for failing to have contact with his children.
    {¶ 50} The record in this case more than established that father’s lack of
    contact with his daughters was due to his compliance with the juvenile court’s no-
    contact order. And the probate court improperly relied on father’s crime as the
    central basis for finding that his lack of contact was unjustifiable. Moreover, while
    the order stated that father was prohibited from contacting his children “absent an
    Order from [the juvenile] Court,” such general language does little to establish that
    21
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    under the circumstances here, father would have had any meaningful opportunity
    to obtain modification of the order.
    {¶ 51} In short, father presented substantial evidence establishing that he
    was actively abiding by the terms of the no-contact order, and the grandparents did
    not meet their burden of overcoming that showing and establishing by clear and
    convincing evidence that father’s lack of contact with the children was nevertheless
    unjustified. I therefore agree that father’s consent to adoption is required and join
    in the judgment remanding the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
    FISCHER, J., concurs in the foregoing opinion.
    _________________
    O’CONNOR, C.J., dissenting.
    {¶ 52} Because I do not believe that this court’s decision in In re Adoption
    of B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , is an intervening
    decision, I would conclude that the court of appeals erred when it reconsidered its
    decision that the father’s consent to the adoption of the children was not required,
    and I would accordingly reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand
    this matter to that court for it to review the probate court’s determination that the
    adoption was in the best interest of the children.
    _________________
    KENNEDY, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 53} The common thread between this case and In re Adoption of B.I.,
    
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , is that both cases concern
    subdivision (A) of the consent-to-adoption statute—R.C. 3107.07. But that is all
    that these two cases have in common.
    {¶ 54} This case is about what constitutes “justifiable cause” when a natural
    parent has failed to have more than de minimis contact with his children in the year
    preceding the filing of a petition for adoption. B.I. was not about the de minimis
    22
    January Term, 2022
    contact provision of R.C. 3107.07(A), and this court never reached the question of
    what constituted “justifiable cause” in that case.
    {¶ 55} The law-of-the-case doctrine provides that a court decision resolving
    a question of law should control the same legal issue in subsequent proceedings in
    the same case. Pepper v. United States, 
    562 U.S. 476
    , 506, 
    131 S.Ct. 1229
    , 
    179 L.Ed.2d 196
     (2011), citing Arizona v. California, 
    460 U.S. 605
    , 618, 
    103 S.Ct. 1382
    , 
    75 L.Ed.2d 318
     (1983). One exception to the law-of-the-case doctrine is
    when an intervening decision changes the controlling law. See Nolan v. Nolan, 
    11 Ohio St.3d 1
    , 
    462 N.E.2d 410
     (1984); Hopkins v. Dyer, 
    104 Ohio St.3d 461
    , 2004-
    Ohio-6769, 
    820 N.E.2d 329
    , ¶ 3. An appellate court is required to apply an
    “intervening decision by a superior court that [is] inconsistent with the law of the
    case.” Id. at ¶ 19. Because B.I. has different facts, involves a different provision
    of the consent-to-adoption statute, and does not address “justifiable cause,” B.I. is
    not an intervening decision and the law-of-the-case doctrine applies to this case.
    Therefore, I dissent and would reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and
    remand this matter to that court to review the probate court’s determination that the
    adoption was in the best interest of the children.
    Appellate court’s determination that father’s de minimis contact with his
    children was without justifiable cause is the law of the case
    {¶ 56} The law-of-the-case doctrine provides that “ ‘when a court decides
    upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in
    subsequent stages in the same case.’ ” Pepper at 506, quoting Arizona at 618. The
    doctrine “expresses the practice of courts generally to refuse to reopen what has
    been decided,” but it does not limit their power. Messenger v. Anderson, 
    225 U.S. 436
    , 444, 
    32 S.Ct. 739
    , 
    56 L.Ed. 1152
     (1912). The law-of-the-case doctrine applies
    to “legal questions involved for all subsequent proceedings in the case at both the
    trial and reviewing levels.” Nolan at 3. The rule is necessary “to ensure consistency
    of results in a case, to avoid endless litigation by settling the issues, and to preserve
    23
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    the structure of superior and inferior courts as designed by the Ohio Constitution.”
    
    Id.
     “Absent extraordinary circumstances, such as an intervening decision by the
    Supreme Court, an inferior court has no discretion to disregard the mandate of a
    superior court in a prior appeal in the same case.” 
    Id.
     at syllabus. An intervening
    decision is one that has “created a change in the law that [is] inconsistent with the
    legal conclusion reached by the appellate court.” Hopkins at ¶ 2-3. A lower court
    is required to apply an intervening decision by this court that is inconsistent with
    the law of the case. Id. at ¶ 19.
    {¶ 57} “Under the law-of-the-case doctrine, the denial of jurisdiction over
    a discretionary appeal by this court settles the issue of law appealed.” Sheaffer v.
    Westfield Ins. Co., 
    110 Ohio St.3d 265
    , 
    2006-Ohio-4476
    , 
    853 N.E.2d 275
    , syllabus.
    After the appellate court affirmed the trial court’s determination that the father in
    this case had failed to have contact with his daughters without justifiable cause, In
    re A.K., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 105426, 
    2017-Ohio-9165
    , the father filed a
    discretionary appeal in this court. He raised the following proposition of law:
    When a natural parent refrains from contacting his children
    in compliance with a court order, he has “justifiable cause” for the
    lack of contact, regardless of the circumstances leading to the order,
    and he may therefore withhold his consent to a third party’s adoption
    petition under R.C. 3107.07(A).
    This court declined jurisdiction. In re A.K., 
    152 Ohio St.3d 1468
    , 
    2018-Ohio-1795
    ,
    
    97 N.E.3d 502
    . Therefore, under Shaeffer, our denial of jurisdiction settled the
    issue of law appealed and the appellate court’s holding—that the father lacked
    justifiable cause in failing to have more than de minimis contact with his children—
    became the law of the case.
    24
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 58} The father argues that the court of appeals was correct in holding
    that the intervening-decision exception to the law-of-the-case doctrine applies here.
    He asserts, and the court of appeals determined, that this court’s decision in B.I.,
    
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , is an intervening decision. It
    is not. This case addresses only whether the father had “justifiable cause” for his
    lack of contact with his children in the year immediately preceding the filing of the
    petitions for adoption. The facts in this case and the legal question raised here are
    different from the facts and the legal question raised in B.I.
    {¶ 59} B.I. was a discretionary appeal and certified-conflict case from the
    First District Court of Appeals. While the certified question and the second
    proposition of law we accepted posed a “justifiable cause” question, see id. at
    ¶ 8-9, we never reached that question. In fact, we explicitly stated: “[T]he issue is
    not whether a decree ordering zero support * * * justifies a failure to provide
    maintenance and support; instead, the issue is whether the existence of a no-support
    order means that the parent subject to it was under no obligation to provide
    maintenance and support.” (Footnote explaining the term “no-support order”
    omitted.) Id. at ¶ 16. B.I. was about whether a natural parent’s reliance on and
    compliance with a zero-child-support order meant that he had met his court-ordered
    obligation of support. Id.
    {¶ 60} Our decision in B.I. does not announce a rule of law that is
    inconsistent with the court of appeals’ prior decision in this case. It is not an
    intervening decision that provides an exception to the law-of-the-case doctrine and
    permits the lower courts to disregard the mandate from this court leaving in place
    the court of appeals’ holding that the father’s consent was not required for the
    adoptions. Our decision in B.I. is not based on the same facts or law at issue in this
    case.
    {¶ 61} Therefore, our denial of the father’s discretionary appeal resulted in
    the appellate court’s original judgment—that there was no justifiable cause for his
    25
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    failure to have contact with his children in the year preceding the filing of the
    petitions for adoption—becoming the law of the case. The question whether he had
    justifiable cause for his failure to have contact is not properly before us.
    {¶ 62} Once this court determines that the law-of-the-case doctrine applies,
    our analysis should end. But the lead opinion attempts to fix this fatal flaw by
    ignoring the factual and legal differences in the two cases and by conflating the
    provisions of R.C. 3107.07(A). As a result, the lead opinion’s conclusion is
    contrary to the plain and unambiguous language of the statute.
    Plain and unambiguous language of R.C. 3107.07(A)
    {¶ 63} “ ‘Decisions are the hardest moves to make, especially when it’s a
    choice between what you want and what is right.’ ” Unknown.
    {¶ 64} This court must respect the fact that the constitutional authority to
    legislate was conferred solely on the General Assembly, Article II, Section 1, Ohio
    Constitution, and that it is the province of the General Assembly to make policy
    decisions, Groch v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    117 Ohio St.3d 192
    , 
    2008-Ohio-546
    , 
    883 N.E.2d 377
    , ¶ 212. It is undisputed that “[j]udicial policy preferences may not be
    used to override valid legislative enactments.” State v. Smorgala, 
    50 Ohio St.3d 222
    , 223, 
    553 N.E.2d 672
     (1990), superseded by statute on other grounds as stated
    in State v. Mayl, 
    106 Ohio St.3d 207
    , 
    2005-Ohio-4629
    , 
    833 N.E.2d 1216
    , ¶ 54.
    {¶ 65} A court’s main objective in statutory construction is to determine
    and give effect to the legislative intent, and to determine intent, we must first look
    to the words of the statute itself. Provident Bank v. Wood, 
    36 Ohio St.2d 101
    , 105,
    
    304 N.E.2d 378
     (1973). “When the statutory language is plain and unambiguous,
    and conveys a clear and definite meaning, we must rely on what the General
    Assembly has said.” Jones v. Action Coupling & Equip., Inc., 
    98 Ohio St.3d 330
    ,
    
    2003-Ohio-1099
    , 
    784 N.E.2d 1172
    , ¶ 12, citing Symmes Twp. Bd. of Trustees v.
    Smyth, 
    87 Ohio St.3d 549
    , 553, 
    721 N.E.2d 1057
     (2000). “Words and phrases shall
    26
    January Term, 2022
    be read in context and construed according to the rules of grammar and common
    usage.” R.C. 1.42.
    {¶ 66} When there is no ambiguity, we must abide by the words employed
    by the General Assembly, see State v. Waddell, 
    71 Ohio St.3d 630
    , 631, 
    646 N.E.2d 821
     (1995), and have no cause to apply the rules of statutory construction, see
    Hulsmeyer v. Hospice of Southwest Ohio, Inc., 
    142 Ohio St.3d 236
    , 2014-Ohio-
    5511, 
    29 N.E.3d 903
    , ¶ 22-23. “We ‘do not have the authority’ to dig deeper than
    the plain meaning of an unambiguous statute ‘under the guise of either statutory
    interpretation or liberal construction.’ ” Jacobson v. Kaforey, 
    149 Ohio St.3d 398
    ,
    
    2016-Ohio-8434
    , 
    75 N.E.3d 203
    , ¶ 8, quoting Morgan v. Adult Parole Auth., 
    68 Ohio St.3d 344
    , 347, 
    626 N.E.2d 939
     (1994).
    {¶ 67} Generally, in Ohio parental consent is a prerequisite to adoption.
    McGinty v. Jewish Children’s Bur., 
    46 Ohio St.3d 159
    , 161, 
    545 N.E.2d 1272
    (1989). R.C. 3107.07(A) creates exceptions to the parental-consent requirement.
    A natural parent’s consent to an adoption is unnecessary if a probate court
    determines
    by clear and convincing evidence that the parent has failed without
    justifiable cause to provide more than de minimis contact with the
    minor or to provide for the maintenance and support of the minor as
    required by law or judicial decree for a period of at least one year
    immediately preceding * * * the filing of the adoption petition.
    R.C. 3107.07(A).
    {¶ 68} A plain reading of the statute demonstrates that there are two
    circumstances under (A) when a natural parent’s consent to adopt is not necessary.
    The first circumstance is when the natural parent fails to have more than de minimis
    contact with the child or children in the year preceding the filing of the adoption
    27
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    petition without justifiable cause. The second circumstance is when the natural
    parent has failed to provide maintenance and support as required by law or judicial
    decree in the year preceding the filing of the petition for adoption without justifiable
    cause.
    {¶ 69} A plain reading of the de minimis contact provision provides that
    there are only two elements for the court to consider. The court begins with the
    inquiry whether there was more than de minimis contact in the year preceding the
    filing of the petition for adoption. If there was more than de minimis contact during
    that time, the court’s inquiry ends. But if there was not more than de minimis
    contact during that time, the court must consider the second element—whether the
    lack of contact was justified.
    {¶ 70} A plain reading of the maintenance-and-support provision provides
    that there are three elements for the court to consider. The first consideration, as
    we said in B.I., is what the applicable judicial decree required for maintenance and
    support. 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    , 
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , at ¶ 15. The second
    consideration is whether the parent met his or her obligation under the judicial
    decree. 
    Id.
     If the parent has met that obligation, then the court’s inquiry ends. But
    if the parent has not met that obligation, then the court must determine whether
    there was justifiable cause for that failure.
    {¶ 71} The judicial-decree element of the three-part test for determining
    whether the maintenance-and-support provision is satisfied comes directly from the
    statutory language of R.C. 3107.07(A). There is no judicial-decree language in the
    de minimis contact provision. Therefore, whatever contact a judicial decree orders
    between a parent and his or her child is not relevant to the probate court’s inquiry
    regarding whether the parent had more than de minimis contact with the child. The
    question is simply whether there was more than de minimis contact.
    {¶ 72} In this case, the lead opinion applies our three-part maintenance-and-
    support test established in B.I. to a two-part de minimis contact case. The lead
    28
    January Term, 2022
    opinion claims that “there is no logical reason why the analysis should be any
    different” when considering a contact case as opposed to a maintenance-and-
    support case. Lead opinion, ¶ 15. But that conclusion is erroneous. There is a
    logical reason to analyze the two provisions differently: the plain, unambiguous
    language of the statute.
    {¶ 73} The evaluation of a de minimis contact case does not start with the
    question “What does the judicial decree say?” It starts with the question “Was there
    more than de minimis contact?” The lead opinion applies the wrong test to this
    case and has to pretend that this case and B.I., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 29
    , 
    2019-Ohio-2450
    ,
    
    131 N.E.3d 28
    , are the same type of case to avoid the law-of-the-case doctrine. And
    in avoiding the law-of-the-case doctrine, the lead opinion creates an unacceptable
    consequence for the children in this case: an inability to enjoy their right to an intact
    childhood and a loving adoptive family.
    Conclusion
    {¶ 74} In this case, the father has not had contact with his children, A.K.
    and C.K., for at least 14 years. The probate court determined that the father lacked
    justifiable cause for not contacting his children, the court of appeals affirmed that
    judgment, A.K., 
    2017-Ohio-9165
    , and we declined to accept the father’s
    discretionary appeal, 
    152 Ohio St.3d 1468
    , 
    2018-Ohio-1795
    , 
    97 N.E.3d 502
    .
    Because the law at issue in this case is not the same as the law at issue in B.I., the
    intervening-decision exception to the law-of-the-case doctrine does not apply.
    Moreover, since the issue of justifiable cause was determined by the probate court
    and affirmed by the appellate court and this court declined to accept jurisdiction
    over an appeal from the appellate court’s judgment, under the law-of-the-case
    doctrine, that decision—that the father did not have justifiable cause—is the law of
    this case. I therefore dissent and would reverse the judgment of the appellate court
    and remand this matter to that court for it to review the probate court’s best-interest
    determination.
    29
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    DONNELLY, J., concurs in the foregoing opinion.
    _________________
    Law Offices of James B. Palmquist III and Rebecca Clark; and Michelle K.
    McGuire, for appellants.
    Mary Catherine Barrett Co., L.P.A., and Mary Catherine Barrett, for
    appellee.
    _________________
    30