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Mootness Defeats UCCJEA Emergency-Jurisdiction Appeal | In the Interest of R.A. (2026)

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

In the Interest of R.A., a Child, 02-25-00654-CV, May 14, 2026.

On appeal from 233rd District Court, Tarrant County, Texas

Synopsis

An appeal from the dismissal of a Texas temporary emergency-jurisdiction proceeding under Texas Family Code § 152.204 became moot once the Washington court—the court with continuing, exclusive jurisdiction—entered later custody orders governing the child. Because temporary emergency jurisdiction is inherently provisional and the later Washington orders superseded the relief Father sought from Texas, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family lawyers handling interstate SAPCR, modification, enforcement, and emergency-protection disputes, this case is a sharp reminder that UCCJEA emergency jurisdiction is a stopgap, not a path to permanent forum transfer. In divorce and custody litigation, especially where one parent tries to convert a temporary Texas emergency proceeding into a lasting merits forum, the practical risk is that subsequent home-state orders can extinguish any live appellate controversy before review is complete. The case also matters in DFPS-related litigation layered onto private custody disputes: once the decree state continues to act and enters operative custody orders, Texas appellate courts may have no live controversy left to decide, even if the Texas dismissal was arguably premature or procedurally messy.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The child, referred to as Ann, was already subject to a Washington parenting plan entered in 2021. Washington had continuing, exclusive jurisdiction. Mother was the primary custodian, with shared decision-making and possession rights for Father.

In 2023, Ann traveled to Texas for summer visitation with Father and did not return to Washington. Washington ordered her returned. When Mother later attempted to enforce return in Texas through habeas proceedings, Ann reportedly made outcries against Mother. Texas then asserted temporary emergency jurisdiction under the UCCJEA, and DFPS filed a petition to terminate both parents’ rights based on the allegations.

The Texas proceeding remained active for roughly a year and a half. During that period, the Texas court conducted UCCJEA conferences with Washington while Father and Mother simultaneously litigated custody issues in Washington. Father then sought another UCCJEA conference and urged Texas to become the child’s home state and displace Washington’s jurisdiction. Mother countered that Washington retained continuing, exclusive jurisdiction and that Texas, acting only under temporary emergency authority, could not enter a final custody judgment.

Instead of trying the DFPS case before the statutory dismissal deadline, the Texas trial court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in November 2025. Father appealed, arguing in substance that the dismissal left the child unprotected and that Texas should not have terminated its emergency role before Washington entered an adequate protective order.

While the appeal was pending, the Fort Worth court required further development of the record concerning what had happened in Washington. That supplemental record showed that Washington entered a Temporary Family Law Order on January 30, 2026. That order kept the 2021 parenting plan in place except for stated modifications, addressed the child’s care and safety, provided for appointment of a guardian ad litem, required therapy, and restricted Father’s parenting time to Washington. Those later orders became central to the mootness analysis.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court’s analysis centered on the UCCJEA, particularly Texas Family Code § 152.204, which authorizes temporary emergency jurisdiction when a child is present in Texas and emergency protection is necessary. The opinion treated that jurisdiction as temporary and provisional by design, not a vehicle for Texas to supplant the decree state’s continuing, exclusive jurisdiction absent a proper jurisdictional shift under the UCCJEA framework.

The court also applied ordinary Texas mootness principles. If events occurring after judgment eliminate the parties’ legally cognizable interest in the dispute or prevent the appellate court from granting effective relief, the appeal becomes moot and must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.

The opinion further reflects the UCCJEA’s interstate coordination structure: where another state retains continuing, exclusive jurisdiction and continues to issue child-custody determinations, Texas emergency orders operate only in a limited interim capacity. Once the home-state or decree-state court enters governing orders that address the child’s custody and protection, the basis for a live Texas emergency controversy may disappear.

Application

The Fort Worth court approached the case as a jurisdictional one, not as a merits review of whether the Texas trial court should have dismissed when it did. That distinction mattered. Father’s position on appeal was that the dismissal was improper because Texas allegedly could not stand down until Washington had entered orders sufficiently protecting Ann. At the outset of the appeal, that theory appeared to present a live controversy because the record did not clearly show whether Washington had in fact acted.

The appellate court then developed the post-judgment record. Through a remand for a hearing, a UCCJEA conference on the record, and supplementation with Washington orders and docket materials, the court established that Washington had not remained inactive. Instead, Washington entered a Temporary Family Law Order in January 2026 that continued the existing parenting plan with modifications, addressed care-and-safety concerns, ordered further investigation through a guardian ad litem, required counseling, and imposed restrictions on Father’s access.

Those Washington orders changed the appellate posture entirely. Even if Father had been correct that the Texas court dismissed too early in November 2025, the subsequent Washington orders meant there was no longer any presently effective relief a Texas appellate court could grant concerning Texas’s temporary emergency proceeding. The child’s custody and protective structure were now governed by the state that already possessed continuing, exclusive jurisdiction. In the appellate court’s view, that superseded the emergency relief Father had sought to preserve through the Texas appeal.

The court therefore treated the case as overtaken by events. Temporary emergency jurisdiction under § 152.204 exists to bridge an emergency until the proper jurisdictional court can act. Once Washington did act—and did so through actual custody orders addressing the child’s care and safety—the dispute over whether the Texas emergency case should have remained open no longer presented a live controversy. At that point, any opinion from the Texas court of appeals would have been advisory.

Holding

The court held that Father’s appeal was moot. Because Washington, the state with continuing, exclusive jurisdiction, entered subsequent custody orders governing Ann, no live controversy remained regarding the dismissal of Texas’s temporary emergency-jurisdiction proceeding.

The court further held that under Texas Family Code § 152.204, temporary emergency jurisdiction is provisional in nature. Once the decree-state court enters operative custody orders that supersede the relief sought from Texas, the Texas appellate court cannot grant effective relief tied to the emergency proceeding. The proper disposition is dismissal for want of jurisdiction.

Practical Application

This opinion should reset expectations in interstate custody emergencies. If you represent a parent seeking refuge in Texas under § 152.204, do not litigate as though emergency jurisdiction will mature by inertia into a permanent Texas custody forum. It may buy time, protection, investigation, and short-term stabilization, but it does not displace the decree state merely because the emergency case remains pending for months.

For practitioners representing the parent invoking Texas emergency jurisdiction, the strategic imperative is speed and record-building. If your appellate theory depends on the proposition that the decree state has failed to act, you must preserve a clear record showing both the ongoing emergency and the absence of superseding out-of-state relief. Once the decree state enters a meaningful custody order—even one you view as inadequate—the appeal may be vulnerable to mootness unless you can articulate a still-live controversy with available Texas appellate relief.

For practitioners representing the parent resisting Texas jurisdiction, this case confirms the value of aggressively moving the decree-state case forward. Obtain prompt hearings, create a record that the continuing-jurisdiction court is actively exercising authority, and secure temporary orders that directly address possession, safety, investigation, therapy, and decision-making. Those later orders may not only reinforce the decree state’s primacy; they may also eliminate the appellate oxygen from the Texas emergency case.

This ruling also has implications for DFPS-adjacent family cases. When abuse allegations trigger both a Texas emergency response and parallel proceedings in the decree state, counsel must continuously assess whether the two tracks are converging toward mootness. A Texas appeal challenging dismissal may become nonjusticiable if the foreign court enters intervening custody orders that answer the same practical question: who controls the child’s care now?

Practitioners should also take seriously the opinion’s procedural subtext. The appellate court had to order additional hearings to determine what happened in Washington, including a conference that apparently had occurred without a record. In any UCCJEA case, the jurisdictional story must be documented meticulously. An incomplete interstate record invites confusion, delay, and avoidable appellate risk.

Checklists

Preserving a Live UCCJEA Emergency Appeal

Building the Trial-Court Record in Interstate Emergency Cases

Representing the Parent Seeking Texas Emergency Protection

Representing the Parent Opposing Continued Texas Jurisdiction

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Problem

Citation

In the Interest of R.A., a Child, No. 02-25-00654-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 14, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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