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Texarkana Court Affirms Termination of Parental Rights Under Endangerment Grounds D and E

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

In the Interest of A.C. and E.C., Jr., Children, 06-25-00084-CV, March 31, 2026.

On appeal from County Court at Law No. 2, Gregg County, Texas

Synopsis

The Sixth Court of Appeals (Texarkana) affirmed termination of Mother’s parental rights based on legally and factually sufficient evidence supporting Family Code § 161.001(b)(1) endangerment grounds (D) and (E). The court also held the evidence was sufficient to support the best-interest finding as to both parents, affirming the termination order in full.

Relevance to Family Law

Even outside SAPCR/termination dockets, this opinion matters to divorce and custody litigators because it reinforces (1) how appellate courts will review and sustain endangerment-based findings under the Supreme Court’s “holistic” framework, and (2) how trial courts’ credibility calls and reasonable inferences will be insulated on appeal under the clear-and-convincing standard. For custody disputes involving requested restrictions (supervised possession, geographic limitations, injunctions, or exclusive use), the opinion is a reminder that “endangerment” analysis is an aggregate, record-wide story—meaning your temporary-orders record, social-study evidence, drug/alcohol proof, housing and employment stability, and parent-child contact history can become the scaffolding for dispositive findings later.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The Department removed Ashley (14) and Edward (9) from the parents’ home. After a bench trial, the court terminated both parents’ rights and made predicate findings for each parent under four statutory grounds: endangering conditions or surroundings (D), endangering conduct (E), constructive abandonment (N), and controlled-substance use (O). Mother challenged legal and factual sufficiency on all predicate grounds and best interest; Father did not challenge the predicate grounds but did challenge the best-interest finding.

On accelerated appeal, the Texarkana court focused its analysis on grounds (D) and (E) (because of their unique collateral consequences in future cases) and the best-interest finding as to both parents. The opinion’s most important “fact” content is less about the granular family history (not fully reflected in the provided snippet) and more about the appellate lens: the court applied heightened clear-and-convincing review while emphasizing strong deference to the trial court on credibility and reasonable inferences, and it evaluated endangerment “holistically” under the Supreme Court’s recent line of cases.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court grounded its analysis in the termination framework and the Texas Supreme Court’s current sufficiency and endangerment jurisprudence:

Application

Texarkana framed the case around the Supreme Court’s modern termination directives: courts must conduct an “exacting” review of the whole record, but they must also maintain a “healthy regard” for the constitutional rights at issue while deferring to the trial judge’s credibility determinations. Within that framework, the court emphasized two practice-driving points.

First, because (D) and (E) findings carry downstream consequences under § 161.001(b)(1)(M), an appellate court cannot sidestep sufficiency challenges to those grounds simply because some other predicate ground might also support termination. That directive—now entrenched after N.G., M.P., and J.W.—forces litigants and trial courts to treat endangerment proof as a primary objective, not a backup theory.

Second, the court applied the Supreme Court’s “holistic” endangerment review. Under that method, the question is not whether any single datapoint compels termination, but whether the aggregate weight of the endangering circumstances and endangering conduct supports a firm belief or conviction. The opinion reiterates that this holistic approach is broader than drug cases; it embraces the full constellation of instability, unsafe surroundings, poor decision-making, lack of protective capacity, and sustained course-of-conduct evidence that a factfinder can reasonably treat as endangering. And on sufficiency review, the appellate court will assume the trial court resolved disputed facts in favor of its findings when a reasonable factfinder could do so, while still accounting for undisputed contrary evidence.

On best interest, the court treated the Holley factors as guidance—not a checklist—and evaluated the record under the same firm-belief-or-conviction standard. Notably, even though Father did not contest predicate grounds, he did contest best interest, and the court still held the evidence sufficient as to him—highlighting that best interest can stand independently on record evidence tied to stability, risk, parental abilities, plans, and the children’s needs, not merely on a parent’s litigation posture.

Holding

The court held the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support termination of Mother’s parental rights under Family Code § 161.001(b)(1)(D). In doing so, the court applied the Supreme Court’s endangerment-sufficiency framework requiring deference to credibility determinations and a record-wide assessment of endangering conditions.

The court also held the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support termination of Mother’s parental rights under § 161.001(b)(1)(E). Consistent with R.R.A. and A.V., the court treated endangerment as a holistic inquiry, permitting the factfinder to weigh the cumulative force of circumstances and conduct.

Finally, the court held the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the best-interest finding under § 161.001(b)(2) as to both Mother and Father. The termination order was affirmed.

Practical Application

For trial lawyers, the opinion is less about novel doctrine and more about execution under the Supreme Court’s now-settled “D/E + best interest” appellate architecture. A few strategic takeaways translate directly to contested custody and divorce litigation where endangerment-adjacent themes drive conservatorship outcomes:

Checklists

Building a Defensible Ground (D) Record (Conditions/Surroundings)

Building a Defensible Ground (E) Record (Course of Conduct)

Holistic Endangerment Proof (R.R.A./A.V. Approach)

Best-Interest Record (Holley Factors Without Treating Them as a Checklist)

Parent-Side Defense: Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Pitfalls

Citation

In the Interest of A.C. and E.C., Jr., Children, No. 06-25-00084-CV (Tex. App.—Texarkana Mar. 31, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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