In the Interest of I.N.A.M., a Child v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 8th District (El Paso)
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
Docket08-24-00342-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of I.N.A.M., a Child v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of I.N.A.M., a Child v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 8th District (El Paso) 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 I.N.A.M., a Child v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS ————————————

No. 08-24-00342-CV ————————————

In the Interest of I.N.A.M., a Child

On Appeal from the 65th Judicial District Court El Paso County, Texas Trial Court No. 2022DCM0109

M E MO RA N D UM O PI NI O N

Mother appeals from a default final order in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship,

wherein the trial court appointed Father as sole managing conservator of the parties’ child,

I.N.A.M., restricted Mother’s possession to supervised visitation, and imposed other related

orders. 1 On appeal, Mother challenges the trial court’s rulings on multiple grounds. Finding no

error, we affirm.

1 To protect the child’s identity, we use an alias, I.N.A.M., and refer to the parties by their relationship to the child. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(a). I. BACKGROUND

On January 10, 2022, the Texas Attorney General (AG) filed an Original Petition in Suit

Affecting Parent-Child Relationship asking the trial court to appoint appropriate conservators and

order appropriate support for I.N.A.M., a child approximately 4 months old at the time. The

petition alleged that I.N.A.M. resided with Mother. Father, who appeared through counsel,

subsequently filed a counter-petition asking the trial court to appoint him and Mother as joint

managing conservators with neither conservator granted the exclusive right to designate

I.N.A.M.’s primary residence but asking the court to order Mother to pay him support.

Alternatively, he asked that he be appointed as I.N.A.M.’s primary conservator with the exclusive

right to determine the child’s primary residence within El Paso County, Texas.

Mother, who was then represented by counsel, next sought to modify temporary orders

entered on August 16, 2022. 2 She alleged that, due to a change in circumstances, the child

possession and access arrangement granted by the trial court had become “unworkable and

inappropriate.” On that same date, Mother also filed a counter-petition in which she asked to be

appointed sole managing conservator and for the trial court to deny, restrict, or limit Father’s

possession of I.N.A.M. In the alternative, Mother requested that Father’s periods of visitation be

supervised because he had a history or pattern of committing family violence during the two years

preceding the date of the filing of the suit. She additionally requested Father be ordered to pay her

support for the child.

On September 6, 2022, following a hearing, the associate court signed a temporary order

(1) appointing Father and Mother as joint managing conservators of I.N.A.M., (2) granting Mother

2 Our record does not contain a file stamped copy of this order. Mother attached a copy of an interim order dated August 16, 2022, to one of her later filed pleadings, but the order is not signed or filed stamped.

2 the right to “maintain the child’s primary residence in” El Paso County, (3) setting a possession

and access schedule, and (4) ordering Father to pay medical and child support. The next day,

Mother filed a motion requesting a de novo hearing and asking the trial court to review and reform

the associate court’s temporary orders on conservatorship and temporary possession and access.

Father also filed a motion requesting a de novo hearing stating he was appealing the associate

court’s orders on possession and access, temporary conservatorship, and child support and medical

support.

The district court held a hearing on October 4, 2022, where all parties were present. 3 The

hearing was originally set as a de novo hearing. Our record does not contain a transcript of this

hearing. Immediately following the hearing, Father filed a motion for writ of attachment in which

he alleged:

A De Novo Hearing was held via Zoom on October 4, 2022. [Mother] made it very clear to the Court that she would not follow the Court’s Order and that she would keep the child no matter what was ordered. [Mother] yelled and cursed at the Court and Counsel. Her behavior towards the Court and her disregard for the child’s safety is alarming and of great concern.

The same day, the district court granted the motion and issued a writ, “commanding the sheriff or

any constable within the State of Texas to attach the body of I.N.A.M. and present the child to the

65TH District Court during business hours . . . if before 5:00 p.m. or to [Father] . . . if after 5:00

p.m.” The trial court ordered that a hearing would be held to determine the custody of I.N.A.M.

“upon the presentment of the child to the Court.” The trial court also granted Mother’s counsel’s

previously filed motion to withdraw.

The following day, the trial court signed temporary orders appointing Father as temporary

sole managing conservator of I.N.A.M. with the exclusive right to designate I.N.A.M.’s primary

3 Prior to the hearing, the trial court signed an order transferring the case from the 383rd Judicial District Court to the 65th Judicial District Court.

3 residence within El Paso County, Texas. The trial court appointed Mother as temporary possessory

conservator and granted her the “right to possession and access to I.N.A.M. for supervised visits

at Project Amistad with one visit per week for two hours depending on Project Amistad[’s]

availability.” The trial court ordered Mother to pay child support to Father in the amount of

$228.56 each month.

On October 7, 2022, Father filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus and Attachment in

which he alleged Mother was illegally restraining I.N.A.M. from his possession and Mother was

in contempt due to her refusal to return the child to the court and him. He asked that a writ issue

to compel the return of I.N.A.M. to his possession. The trial court signed an order for writ of habeas

corpus for child ordering a writ issue directing Mother to present I.N.A.M. to the court and that

Mother appear at a hearing, to respond to the writ.

Representing herself, Mother filed an amended counter-petition alleging Father had a

history of violence and requesting she be appointed the primary and sole managing conservator

with the exclusive right to designate I.N.A.M.’s primary residence, “where she deems fit, and

where her primary support system will be located, now or in the future.” She additionally requested

Father’s parental rights be terminated. 4 Mother also filed a motion to vacate or nullify the

temporary order alleging that it was “procured by fraud and without jurisdiction[.]” Her complaint

centered on the allegation that a de novo hearing scheduled for October 4 was not heard but another

hearing took place without due process.

4 Mother also filed a separate petition to terminate Father’s parental rights. She later filed a notice to non-suit this petition. The trial court signed an order in which it approved the non-suit and stating the pleadings regarding the SAPCR remained pending.

4 Mother requested a jury trial and proceeded to file other pleadings before the trial court. 5

The trial court set the case for a jury trial on June 10, 2024. On the day of trial, the AG, Father,

and Father’s counsel were all present. Mother did not appear. The trial court noted at the start that

Mother forfeited her right to a jury trial by not appearing and asked the remaining parties whether

they wanted the jury to try the issues in the case.

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