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CROSSOVER: The Anders Brief Loophole: Why Retained Counsel in Parental Termination Appeals Follow TRAP 6.5 Instead

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Simon Rico, Jr. v. State, 06-24-00218-CR, March 18, 2026.

On appeal from 354th District Court, Hunt County, Texas.

Synopsis

The Sixth Court of Appeals held that the constitutional safeguards of Anders v. California apply exclusively to indigent appellants with appointed counsel. When retained counsel determines an appeal is frivolous, they are not required to file an Anders brief but must instead comply with the withdrawal requirements of Rule 6.5 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. Furthermore, the substitution of retained counsel for court-appointed counsel effectively rebuts the presumption of continued indigency.

Relevance to Family Law

In the “quasi-criminal” arena of parental termination litigation, Texas courts often apply the Anders framework to ensure the due process rights of indigent parents are protected on appeal. This ruling is a critical reminder for family law practitioners that the Anders “safety net”—and the rigorous briefing requirements it entails—disappears the moment counsel is retained. If a parent transitions from appointed to retained counsel for an appeal, the procedural path for withdrawing from a meritless case shifts from the Anders protocol to the standard requirements of TRAP 6.5, potentially streamlining the withdrawal process for the advocate while signaling to the court that the appellant no longer qualifies for indigent protections.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Appellant Simon Rico, Jr. pled guilty to manslaughter and received an eighteen-year sentence. Initially, the trial court found Rico to be indigent and appointed appellate counsel. However, shortly after the record was filed, Rico’s appointed counsel and a newly retained private attorney filed a joint motion to substitute. Once substituted, the retained counsel conducted a review of the record and concluded the appeal was frivolous. Counsel then attempted to follow the Anders protocol by filing a motion to withdraw accompanied by an Anders brief. The Sixth Court of Appeals accepted the brief but declined to file it, instead directing counsel to follow the procedure for retained attorneys. Counsel then filed an amended motion to withdraw pursuant to TRAP 6.5, stating that after a diligent review of the clerk’s and reporter’s records, no arguable grounds for reversal existed.

Issues Decided

  1. Whether the procedural requirements of Anders v. California apply to retained counsel who determines that an appeal is frivolous.
  2. Whether the substitution of retained counsel for court-appointed counsel rebuts the presumption of an appellant’s continued indigency.
  3. Whether retained counsel must follow Rule 6.5 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure to withdraw from a meritless appeal.

Rules Applied

Application

The court’s analysis focused on the distinction between the constitutional protections afforded to the indigent and the contractual relationship inherent in retained representation. The court reasoned that Anders was designed to ensure that indigent defendants receive the same quality of advocacy as those who can afford to hire an attorney. Consequently, if an appellant has the means to retain counsel, they have already secured the advocacy Anders seeks to protect.

In this case, because Rico replaced his court-appointed attorney with private counsel, the court determined he was no longer indigent. This shift changed the attorney’s procedural obligations. Rather than filing a formal Anders brief (which requires a detailed roadmap of the record to assist the court’s independent review), the retained attorney only needed to satisfy the professional and ethical obligation to refuse to pursue a frivolous appeal. The court clarified that the mechanism for this is TRAP 6.5. Once the attorney represented that he had reviewed the entire record and found no arguable grounds, and provided the client with the motion to withdraw, the court’s only remaining duty was to verify compliance with Rule 6.5 and conduct its own cursory justice-of-the-record review.

Holding

The Sixth Court of Appeals held that Anders protections do not extend to appellants with retained counsel. The court affirmed that only appointed counsel is burdened with the requirement to file an Anders brief.

The court further held that when a defendant substitutes retained counsel for appointed counsel, the prior finding of indigency is rebutted. Because Rico was deemed non-indigent upon retention of counsel, his attorney’s compliance with TRAP 6.5 was the sufficient and correct procedure for withdrawal. Finding no arguable issues in its independent review of the record, the court affirmed the trial court’s judgment.

Practical Application

Checklists

Withdrawal for Retained Counsel in Meritless Appeals

Rebutting the Presumption of Indigency

Citation

Simon Rico, Jr. v. State, No. 06-24-00218-CR (Tex. App.—Texarkana Mar. 18, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Full Opinion Link

Family Law Crossover

This criminal ruling is a strategic weapon for family law litigators dealing with opposing parties who “pauper out” to avoid appellate costs. Under Texas law, parental termination appeals are the primary civil crossover where Anders is frequently invoked. If an opposing parent secures a free record and appointed counsel, but subsequently retains a private “heavy hitter” for the actual briefing or strategy, Rico provides the authority to shut down their indigent status. By demonstrating that the party has “retained counsel,” you can argue that the presumption of indigency is rebutted as a matter of law. This can shift the financial burden of the appellate record back onto the opposing party and remove the specialized procedural protections (like the court’s independent Anders review) that might otherwise keep a weak appeal alive.

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