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CROSSOVER: Branch v. State: Article 38.074 complaints are waived unless counsel specifically objects to missing support-person findings

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

Branch v. State, 06-25-00085-CR, May 26, 2026.

On appeal from 115th District Court, Upshur County, Texas

Synopsis

A Rule 614 sequestration objection does not preserve a different complaint that the trial court failed to make the specific findings required by Article 38.074 before allowing a child witness’s support person to remain in the courtroom. To preserve that issue for appellate review, counsel must direct the objection or request to Article 38.074 itself and complain about the absence of the required findings; otherwise, the complaint is waived under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 33.1(a).

Relevance to Family Law

Although Branch v. State is a criminal appeal, its preservation lesson translates directly to Texas family litigation, particularly SAPCRs, custody modifications, protective-order proceedings, and any bench or jury trial involving child testimony, forensic interview evidence, or requests for courtroom accommodations. Family lawyers regularly confront analogous situations involving support persons, witness sequestration, trauma-informed procedures, and objections to trial management; Branch underscores that a generic evidentiary objection will not preserve a more specific procedural complaint. In divorce and custody litigation, where appellate posture often turns on preservation rather than merits, the case is a useful reminder that counsel must identify the precise legal defect, request the required findings, and secure a ruling if they want error review later.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The defendant was tried in Upshur County for aggravated sexual assault of a child under fourteen. During trial, the child complainant testified, and the State asked that her father be permitted to remain in the courtroom as a support person while she testified. Defense counsel objected, but only on ordinary sequestration grounds under Texas Rule of Evidence 614, stating that if the father intended to testify and was “under the Rule,” counsel objected to his presence.

The State responded that Article 38.074 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure authorized a support person for a child witness. The trial court allowed the exception, but did not articulate the statutory findings required by Article 38.074—namely, that the child could not reliably testify without the support person’s presence and that allowing the support person was not likely to prejudice the factfinder’s evaluation of the child’s testimony.

On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court erred by allowing the support person without making those findings. He also complained that the State referenced other support persons in the courtroom during the child’s testimony. The Texarkana Court of Appeals held both complaints were unpreserved.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on familiar preservation doctrine and the distinction between a general objection and a complaint tied to a distinct statutory framework.

Application

The court’s reasoning was straightforward and worth close attention because it is pure preservation doctrine. Defense counsel objected only under Rule 614, which addresses sequestration of witnesses. When the State answered that Article 38.074 allowed the father’s presence as a support person, counsel did not pivot. There was no request that the trial court conduct the Article 38.074 analysis, no insistence on a record establishing the statutory predicates, and no objection that the court had failed to make the findings the statute requires.

That gap was decisive. On appeal, the defendant attempted to convert a sequestration objection into a statutory-findings complaint. The court refused to permit that shift. Under Heidelberg, the appellate complaint must match the trial complaint. An objection that a witness should be excluded under “the Rule” is not the same as an objection that the court failed to comply with Article 38.074’s procedural prerequisites. Because counsel never specifically directed the trial court to the statutory omission, there was nothing preserved for review.

The court applied the same preservation principles to the prosecutor’s references to other support persons in the courtroom. The record did not reflect a contemporaneous objection to those questions. Without an objection, a ruling, and continued objection where required, there was no preserved complaint.

Holding

The Texarkana Court of Appeals held that a Rule 614 objection does not preserve a complaint that the trial court failed to make the findings required by Article 38.074 before allowing a child witness’s support person to remain in the courtroom. Preservation required a specific objection, request, or complaint directed to Article 38.074 and the absence of its required findings. Because no such objection or request was made, appellate review was forfeited under Rule 33.1(a).

The court also held that any complaint about the State’s references to other support persons in the courtroom was unpreserved because defense counsel did not object to the questioning when it occurred. As a result, the court overruled the support-person issue in its entirety.

Practical Application

For family lawyers, the immediate takeaway is not about Article 38.074 itself, but about how preservation works when trial courts make child-witness accommodations or procedural adjustments. In custody litigation, termination cases, and protective-order hearings, lawyers often object at a high level—“under the Rule,” “hearsay,” “prejudicial,” “improper bolstering”—while the true appellate point is narrower and more technical. Branch is a warning that appellate courts will not fill in the missing steps.

If you are opposing a support person, a courtroom accommodation, remote testimony procedure, in camera child interview process, or relaxed sequencing of witnesses in a family case, you should not assume a broad objection preserves every subsidiary complaint. If a statute, rule, or constitutional provision requires predicate findings, procedural safeguards, or balancing, you need to say so expressly, request those findings on the record, and obtain an adverse ruling. The same principle applies when evidence is admitted through a theory different from the one you challenged. Preservation in family law is especially vulnerable in fast-moving hearings, where courts often proceed informally and counsel may rely on shorthand. Branch reinforces that shorthand is dangerous.

In practical terms, this case should influence at least four recurring family-law settings:

Checklists

Preserving a Complaint About Child-Witness Accommodations

Protecting the Record in Custody or SAPCR Trials

Opposing a Support Person or Courtroom Presence Exception

Avoiding the Mistake Made by the Non-Prevailing Party

Building an Appellate-Ready Record in Family Cases

Citation

Branch v. State, No. 06-25-00085-CR, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Texarkana May 26, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in divorce or custody litigation in a very practical way: as both sword and shield on preservation. If opposing counsel makes only a generic objection to a child-related accommodation, you can defend the ruling on appeal by arguing that the actual complaint now advanced was never presented to the trial court with the necessary specificity. Conversely, if you anticipate an appeal, Branch tells you exactly how to frame the record when the court permits a parent, therapist, support person, or other influential adult to remain present during a child’s testimony or interview process. In contested conservatorship cases, where courtroom optics and child-witness handling can materially affect the factfinder, Branch becomes a procedural leverage case: the side that most precisely identifies the governing authority, requests findings, and secures rulings will usually own the appellate framing.

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