In the Interest of F.H. and D.K.A., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston)
DecidedMarch 12, 2026
Docket01-25-00760-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of F.H. and D.K.A., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services (In the Interest of F.H. and D.K.A., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of F.H. and D.K.A., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 12, 2026

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-25-00760-CV ——————————— IN THE INTEREST OF F.H. AND D.K.A. A/K/A D.A., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 315th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2023-02526J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The Department of Family and Protective Services sought to terminate the

parental rights of T.A. (Mother) and B.H. (Father) to their minor daughter F.H.

(Faith) and their minor son D.K.A. a/k/a D.A. (David).1 Following a bench trial, the

1 In this opinion, we use pseudonyms for the minor children and their family members to protect their privacy. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2). trial court found that two statutory predicate grounds justifying termination of

Mother’s parental rights existed and that termination of her rights was in the

children’s best interest. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 161.001(b)(1)(E), (O), (b)(2).2

Although the court found that the same two predicate grounds justified termination

of Father’s parental rights, the court also found that termination of his rights was not

in the children’s best interest. The court terminated Mother’s parental rights to Faith

and David, appointed the Department as the children’s sole managing conservator,

and appointed Father as the children’s possessory conservator.

In two issues on appeal, Mother contends that the Department failed to present

factually sufficient evidence to support (1) the trial court’s finding under subsection

(E) and (2) the trial court’s finding that termination of her parental rights was in the

children’s best interest.

We affirm.

Background

Mother has four children: an adult daughter (Sharon); a minor daughter born

in 2009 (Andrea); Faith, who was born in 2010; and David, who was born in 2013.

Only Mother’s parental rights to Faith and David are at issue in this proceeding.

2 As discussed later in this opinion, the Texas Legislature amended Family Code section 161.001(b)(1) in the 2025 legislative session. All citations to section 161.001(b) in this opinion are to the version in effect at the time the trial court signed the final decree. 2 Mother and Father have not been involved in a romantic relationship for several

years.

A. The Department Becomes Involved with the Family and Allegations Leading to this Proceeding

The Department received two referrals concerning Mother and her children

prior to Faith’s birth in 2010. In 2007, Mother’s oldest daughter Sharon reported that

she was afraid of Mother because Mother “whopped” her and would hit her on her

back and arm, sometimes leaving bruises. Mother admitted drinking alcohol and

using marijuana. She was “never home,” sent Sharon “to school with the same dress

and shirt on for a week,” and “never washed” Sharon’s clothes. The allegations in

this referral were “ruled out” after Mother passed a drug test. In 2009, both Mother

and her second daughter Andrea tested positive for marijuana when Andrea was

born. The Department had “reason to believe that abuse occurred.”

From 2011 through 2022, the Department received seven referrals, some of

which included allegations of physical abuse or neglect. Six of the seven referrals

were “ruled out” or had a disposition of “unable to determine.” The remaining

referral concerned an allegation of neglectful supervision in January 2014. Mother

left her three youngest children (including David, who was an infant) unattended in

her car while she went into a store to get milk. Mother “stated they were unattended

for 5 minutes,” and she reported that “where she used to live she had left the children

alone before” and it “was not that big of a deal.” Law enforcement officers saw her

3 “come out of the store with milk.” The children were “in good condition” with no

visible marks or bruises, and Mother “did not appear intoxicated.” Officers did not

file charges against Mother.

Father’s criminal history includes a 2017 charge for driving while intoxicated

with Faith in the car. Faith was seven years old at the time of this offense. Father

pleaded guilty. At trial, Father disputed that he was intoxicated while driving with

Faith, stating instead that he had empty cans in the back of his truck and marijuana

on him. He admitted that he pleaded guilty to another DWI charge in 2022.3 Mother

agreed that driving under the influence with a child in the car was unsafe, but she

did not “recall [Father] driving under the influence.”

In July 2023, law enforcement officers arrested Mother after she allegedly

disciplined Faith by hitting her with a belt. She was subsequently charged with injury

to a child under fifteen years old, a third-degree felony offense. Mother was released

on bond, but she was not allowed to have contact with Faith as part of the conditions

of her pretrial release. Due to these conditions, Faith and David lived with Father

and his girlfriend. The criminal charge arising out of this incident was later

dismissed.

3 At the July 2025 trial setting, Father agreed with the children’s ad litem attorney that he had “picked up another DWI in the last week.” He did not believe that he had a problem with substance abuse. Additionally, he did not intend to stop smoking marijuana, which he characterized as “not a drug.” 4 Faith and David were still staying with Father in November 2023. The

Department and law enforcement received calls alleging that during an argument

with the children, Father punched ten-year-old David in the face, leaving a “ball

size” bruise on his right cheek. When the Department and police investigated, David

reported that Father was physically abusive to him and Faith and that “the police

have been to his mother’s house because she tries to abuse his sister.” Father was

aggressive and belligerent. He denied abusing the children and characterized the

allegations as lies.

Faith spoke with her aunt on the phone, and at her aunt’s urging, she reported

that she was the one who scratched David’s face. Father’s girlfriend “was heard

telling the child [Faith] this is not your fault this is your brother’s fault because he is

lying.” After consulting with the District Attorney’s Office, law enforcement

officers arrested Father, and he was charged with injury to a child. Father’s girlfriend

“started yelling and screaming at the children to get their stuff they have to leave.”

Other family members arrived at Father’s house, but none of them were willing to

care for the children, calling David a “lying child” and stating that both children

were “nothing but trouble” and “nobody wants them.”

5 With Mother unavailable4 and no other family members willing to take the

children, the Department removed the children from Father’s care. The Department

investigator took the children to the hospital. David had a bruise on his face, and he

told the nurse that “his father did [it] by punching him and kicking him in the face.”

When asked whether Father hit him often, David replied, “yes my father always

beats me.” Other than David’s bruised face, the children had no injuries. The injury

to a child charge against Father was later dismissed after it was determined that

Faith—not Father—hit David and left the bruise on his cheek.

The Department sought temporary managing conservatorship over Faith and

David, sole managing conservatorship over the children if they could not be reunited

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In the Interest of F.H. and D.K.A., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-fh-and-dka-children-v-department-of-family-and-txctapp1-2026.