Close

Articles Posted in Parental Rights

Updated:

Genetic Testing of Presumed Father in Texas Paternity Case

Texas family law presumes a man is the father of a child in certain circumstances, including when he is married to the child’s mother at the time of the birth or when he continuously resides with the child for the first two years of the child’s life and holds himself…

Updated:

Joint Managing Conservators Do Not Have to Have Equal Possession in Texas Custody Order

A court should consider a number of factors in deciding a Texas custody case.  Even when the court determines the parents should be joint managing conservators, the court does not have to award equal periods of possession and access to the child to each parent. Tex. Fam. Code § 153.135. …

Updated:

Successor Judge Had Authority to Reform Judgment in Texas Parental Adjudication Case

The trial court in a Texas family law case has only a limited ability to change its judgment once its plenary power expires.  Generally, plenary power lasts for thirty days from the date the final judgment is signed, but it may be extended if the court overrules certain motions or…

Updated:

Texas Custody Modification Upheld Despite Conflicting Evidence

When a court considers Texas child custody and visitation, the child’s best interest is the primary concern.  The court considers certain factors, including what the child wants, the child’s current and future needs, any danger to the child, the parents’ respective abilities, programs available, the parents’ plans for the child,…

Updated:

Texas Supervised Visitation

A court must base its decisions regarding custody and visitation primarily on the child’s best interest.  In a recent Texas case, a father challenged a court’s modification of his prior possession order, restricting him to supervised visitation with his daughter. The mother petitioned to be named the child’s sole managing…

Updated:

Texas Parental Presumption and Joint Managing Conservatorship

There is a strong presumption in Texas family law that it is in the child’s best interest for a parent to be awarded custody over a non-parent. In a recent case, a father appealed a judgment naming him joint managing conservator with the child’s maternal grandmother. A central issue in…

Updated:

Supervised Visitation Not Required for Texas Mother after Sobriety

  In Texas custody cases, a court may only issue an order denying possession of a child or imposing restrictions or limitations on a parent’s right to possession to the extent necessary to protect the child’s best interest.  Tex. Fam. Code § 153.193. Thus, a court may only order that…

Updated:

Evidence of Adultery and Drug Use in a Texas Custody Case

Evidence is important in any case, including a Texas child-custody dispute.  In a recent case, a father challenged a trial court’s divorce decree based on the exclusion of certain evidence at trial. Mother’s Burner Phone Found with Explicit Messages According to the appeals court’s opinion, the main issue at the…

Updated:

Standard Possession Presumption Does Not Apply to Child Under Three in Texas Custody Case

Texas family law includes a presumption that parents should be appointed joint managing conservators.  The law does not require, however, that the parents be given equal possession just because they are joint managing conservators.  Tex. Fam. Code § 153.135.  There is a rebuttable presumption that the standard possession order is…

Updated:

Texas Court Should Have Applied Parental Presumption Even When Parent Lived Outside U.S.

Texas family law has a strong presumption that it is in the child’s best interest to give custody to a parent. Generally, the court must appoint sole managing conservatorship to the parent instead of a non-parent unless it finds doing so would not be in the child’s best interest due…

Contact Us
Start Chat