In the Interest of J.P. and I.P., Children v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
DecidedFebruary 12, 2026
Docket02-25-00437-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of J.P. and I.P., Children v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of J.P. and I.P., Children v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth) 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 J.P. and I.P., Children v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-25-00437-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF J.P. AND I.P., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 233rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 233-748715-24

Before Kerr, Birdwell, and Bassel, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this ultra-accelerated appeal,1 Mother and Father each appeal the order

terminating their parent–child relationships with J.P. and I.P., two of their minor

children. 2

In four issues, Mother challenges the legal and factual sufficiency supporting the

trial court’s findings on three conduct-based statutory termination grounds and the

children’s best interests. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(b)(1), (2). In a single issue,

Father challenges the evidentiary sufficiency only as to the children’s best interests. See

id.

Because sufficient evidence supported the trial court’s order, we will affirm.

I. Background

J.P. and I.P. were born in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Mother also has two older

children who did not live with her and who are not subject to this suit. Mother and

Father have one younger child, B.P., who was born in 2025, still lived with Mother and

Father during the final hearing in this case, and was not subject to this suit.

1 See Tex. R. Jud. Admin. 6.2(a), reprinted in Tex. Gov’t Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. F app. (requiring appellate court to dispose of appeal from judgment terminating parental rights, so far as reasonably possible, within 180 days after notice of appeal is filed). 2 We use initials to refer to the minors, and use relationships to the minors or fictitious names for others as necessary to protect the minors’ identities. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(b)(2).

2 The termination petition was tried without a jury in July 2025. At the hearing,

Mother, Father, a permanency specialist with Our Communities Our Kids (OCOK), an

investigative supervisor with the Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS),

and Father’s therapist testified.

A. History Before the Current Removal

The history between the family and DFPS goes back to 2017. That year, DFPS

received reports that one of Mother’s older children was being physically abused and

that Mother had assaulted Father with a knife. When DFPS could not locate the family,

the investigation was closed.

In 2021, Mother was involved in a car collision while she was intoxicated.

Because Mother had children in the car with her, DFPS was called to respond, but it

ultimately conducted no investigation. Father was unaware of the collision or DFPS’s

involvement.

In 2022, when J.P. was born, the hospital reported to DFPS that Mother had had

limited prenatal care and that, although Mother’s urinalysis test was negative, J.P. tested

positive for methamphetamine. Because Mother was released from the hospital before

the test results were returned, DFPS closed the case without removing J.P but did work

3 with the family 3 to provide services. Father was aware neither that J.P. tested positive

for methamphetamine nor of DFPS’s involvement.

In 2024, Mother and Father were living together in a house with Mother’s

ex-boyfriend. The house was under construction and lacked a kitchen or running water.

Mother used methamphetamine on the property; Father moved out shortly after he quit

using methamphetamine.

In March 2024, soon after Father moved out, Fort Worth Police received a

domestic-disturbance call from Mother’s ex-boyfriend that Mother was intoxicated on

methamphetamine, had stripped herself, I.P., and J.P—then one and two years old—

and was walking in the street. Mother left before the police arrived. When she came

back, her ex-boyfriend again called the police, who returned and questioned Mother.

While she was speaking to them, the police saw Mother give a small glass pipe to

I.P., who immediately put it in his mouth.4 Because the pipe had methamphetamine

residue on it, an officer arrested Mother for endangering a child by criminal negligence

and contacted DFPS. DFPS contacted Father, who lived in Dallas at the time, to take

possession of the children on condition that they not be moved back in with Mother.

The record is unclear whether only Mother or both Mother and Father received 3

information from DFPS about available services. 4 Mother disputes that she gave the pipe to I.P., but not that it was her pipe, that she used it to smoke methamphetamine, or that I.P. put it in his mouth.

4 Shortly after taking possession, Father moved back to the house in Fort Worth

with Mother and her ex-boyfriend. Father was not aware that Mother was using

methamphetamine at that time, although he knew that she had been arrested. He

returned to her because his living situation in Dallas was not stable and because

Mother’s ex-boyfriend had offered him work and had given him permission to live in

the Fort Worth house. Father would later testify that he did not know that DFPS had

conditioned his possession on not moving back in with Mother. When DFPS learned

that he had done so, they visited the home.

The investigators found the conditions “deplorable,” the home littered with

debris and construction equipment and tools, lacking cooking facilities or running

water, and an electrical cord running from another residence on the property as the only

source of electricity to the area where Mother, Father, and the two children lived. DFPS

then began the removal process.

B. Current Removal and Service Plans

DFPS had removed J.P. and I.P. after Mother’s arrest and placed them in an

adoption-focused foster home.5 Father started working on a service plan in May 2024,

but Mother did not.

5 The OCOK specialist observed appropriate interactions between the foster parents and the children.

5 Father’s service plan required him to obtain stable employment and housing and

to attend parenting classes and a victim’s intervention and prevention program (VIPP),

obtain a drug-and-alcohol assessment and a psychological evaluation, and attend weekly

individual counseling sessions. Father completed the drug-and-alcohol assessment,

psychological evaluation, parenting classes, and VIPP classes and maintained

employment and housing. He had no positive drug tests during the removal.

Father attended six counseling sessions over a six-month period: one in

December 2024, four in January and February 2025, and one in June 2025. In his first

five sessions, Father worked with his counselor on strategies to be a successful single

parent because he could not co-parent with Mother. Father told his counselor in a

February session that he did not believe that Mother was using methamphetamine.

Father did not mention any concerns about domestic abuse or that Mother had been

arrested for aggravated assault against him. Father told his counselor in these sessions

that he intended to regain custody as a single parent, without Mother.

Between March 2024 and January 2025, Mother completed only one service-plan

requirement: a psychological assessment.

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In the Interest of J.P. and I.P., Children v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-jp-and-ip-children-v-the-state-of-texas-txctapp2-2026.