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Incomplete Reporter’s Record Waives Sufficiency Challenge | In re A.P.Z. (2026)

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

In the Interest of A.P.Z., a Child, 05-25-00666-CV, May 11, 2026.

On appeal from 330th Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas

Synopsis

A Dallas Court of Appeals panel reaffirmed a basic but often outcome-determinative appellate rule: a party attacking a modification order on sufficiency grounds must bring forward a complete reporter’s record. Because the mother omitted the in-camera child interview and related proceedings, the court presumed the missing evidence supported the modification order and held her evidentiary complaints could not succeed.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a family-law record-preservation case as much as a conservatorship case. In modification, SAPCR, and custody appeals, sufficiency and abuse-of-discretion arguments frequently rise or fall on what was said in chambers, at status settings, in therapist-related report-back hearings, or in other less formal proceedings that practitioners may underestimate when assembling the appellate record. In re A.P.Z. is a pointed reminder that, in Texas family litigation, an incomplete reporter’s record will usually be fatal to complaints that the trial court misread the evidence, ignored the child’s preference, or lacked support for best-interest and material-and-substantial-change findings.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The parties had been operating under a prior modification order that made them joint managing conservators, gave Mother the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence within Irving ISD through middle school, and imposed a week-on/week-off possession structure during the school year. Mother later sought to modify the arrangement to reduce Father’s time; Father counterpetitioned to obtain the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence while maintaining joint managing conservatorship.

At the modification hearing, Mother presented evidence that the child’s grades had declined under the fifty-fifty schedule and attributed the child’s academic and social struggles to conditions in Father’s home, including lack of structure and isolation. Father acknowledged academic struggles but testified that he was helping the child and that the issues were being addressed. The trial court expressed concern not only about school performance and Father’s home environment, but also about both parents’ inability to co-parent effectively.

Critically, the court referenced a “child interview status report” that was not included in the appellate record, then conducted an in-camera interview of the fifteen-year-old child under Family Code section 153.009. That interview was also absent from the appellate record. The record further reflected a later “report back” hearing after the court had apparently entered interim orders and directed therapist involvement, but that proceeding likewise underscored that the court’s ultimate ruling followed events beyond the narrow trial testimony Mother relied on in her appeal.

The final modification order kept the parents as joint managing conservators, awarded Father the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence, and gave Mother a modified standard possession schedule. Mother, proceeding pro se on appeal, challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting conservatorship and possession.

Issues Decided

The court decided the following issues:

Rules Applied

The court relied on familiar modification and appellate-record principles:

Application

The Fifth Court treated the appeal as controlled not by close weighing of competing conservatorship evidence, but by the threshold failure to bring up a complete record. Mother’s appellate arguments all depended on persuading the court that the trial judge disregarded stronger evidence favoring her requested relief, misunderstood the child’s wishes, and reached conclusions inconsistent with the overall proof. But each of those complaints turned on the state of the evidence, and the appellate court could not evaluate that state of the evidence without the entire record the trial court had before it.

The missing in-camera interview was especially important. The opinion expressly characterized the interview as evidence. That point matters in practice: family lawyers sometimes talk about child interviews as though they are merely procedural or advisory, but for appellate purposes they can be substantive evidence bearing directly on best interest, conservatorship, possession, and the child’s preferences. Once that interview was missing, the court presumed it supported the ruling awarding Father the exclusive right to designate residence and reducing Mother to a modified standard possession schedule.

The opinion also noted the absence of any indication that the interview had been recorded at a party’s request under section 153.009(f), and no showing that Mother had attempted to obtain any existing record. That omission left the court with no basis to test Mother’s assertions about what the child supposedly said in chambers. Indeed, the panel specifically rejected Mother’s reliance on another document in the clerk’s record as proof of the child’s in-camera statements because that document concerned a different interview through family court services, not the trial judge’s section 153.009 interview.

Given those gaps, the court applied the standard presumption that the omitted material was relevant and supported the judgment. With no findings of fact and an incomplete reporter’s record, the appellate path narrowed to essentially none. The court therefore concluded the evidence must be treated as sufficient to support both material-and-substantial-change and best-interest determinations and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion.

Holding

The court held that Mother could not prevail on her evidentiary-sufficiency and abuse-of-discretion complaints because she failed to provide a complete reporter’s record, including the in-camera child interview that constituted evidence before the trial court. Under Texas appellate procedure and In re C.J., the omitted portions of the record were presumed relevant and supportive of the judgment.

The court further held that complaints asserting the trial court disregarded evidence, misinterpreted the proof, or reached findings inconsistent with the evidentiary record are waived when the appellant does not furnish the complete evidence considered below. Because Mother’s appellate issues depended on the state of the evidence, they could not support reversal.

Finally, applying the incomplete-record presumption, the court affirmed the modification order and treated the record as sufficient to support the trial court’s implied findings that circumstances had materially and substantially changed and that the modification was in the child’s best interest.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, the strategic lesson is straightforward: if the appeal will challenge the factual basis for a custody or modification ruling, record management starts in the trial court, not after the notice of appeal. If a child interview is likely to matter—and in most contested modification cases involving older children, it will—counsel should make a deliberate decision whether to invoke section 153.009(f) and ensure the interview is recorded. If post-trial appellate review is foreseeable, failing to do so may effectively immunize the ruling from sufficiency review.

The case also matters beyond child interviews. Family cases often unfold over multiple settings: evidentiary hearings, in-chambers interviews, temporary-order proceedings, compliance reviews, status conferences, therapist updates, and report-back hearings. Appellate complaints about best interest, material change, possession restrictions, or primary-residence designations may depend on all of it. A partial record may be worse than no complaint at all, because it invites the presumption that the missing proceedings filled every evidentiary gap in the judgment.

This decision should also influence how lawyers frame appellate issues. If the record is incomplete, arguments styled as “abuse of discretion” will not avoid the problem when they are substantively sufficiency complaints. Dallas continues to treat insufficiency as a component of abuse-of-discretion review in family cases. So if the complaint is really that the evidence did not support the result, a missing record remains fatal regardless of the label.

In trial practice, A.P.Z. is a reminder to create a reviewable record when the court references off-record materials or interim developments that may later influence final relief. If the judge considers a child interview status report, therapist input, or later report-back proceedings, counsel should think ahead about how those matters will appear in the appellate record. The practitioner who wins at trial may welcome silence; the practitioner who may need to appeal should not.

Checklists

Preserving a Reviewable Child-Interview Record

Building the Appellate Record in a Modification Case

Avoiding Waiver of Sufficiency Complaints

Trial-Level Steps for Family Litigators

Appellate Intake Checklist After an Adverse Modification Order

Citation

In the Interest of A.P.Z., a Child, No. 05-25-00666-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas May 11, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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