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Chosen Counsel in TPR Cases: In re S.H. (2026)

New SCOTX Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

In re S.H., 26-0030, June 05, 2026.

On appeal from Court of Appeals for the First District of Texas – Houston

Synopsis

An indigent parent in a Department-filed termination case is not limited to representation solely by court-appointed counsel under Family Code § 107.013(a)(1). The Supreme Court of Texas held that the parent may proceed through chosen counsel as well, including a public defender appearing outside the court’s appointment authority, and that a trial court’s sua sponte removal of that lawyer is functionally an improper disqualification reviewable by mandamus.

Relevance to Family Law

Although In re S.H. arises in the termination context, its reasoning has immediate consequences across Texas family litigation. The opinion reinforces a broader principle family lawyers confront in SAPCRs, high-conflict custody disputes, divorce cases with parallel criminal exposure, and even property cases involving protective orders or fraud allegations: trial courts do not control a party’s choice of counsel merely because the court also has statutory authority to appoint counsel in a subset of proceedings. For family litigators, the case is especially important where a client has overlapping criminal, CPS, protective-order, juvenile, or mental-health issues and outside institutional counsel—public defender, nonprofit, legal-services lawyer, or pro bono counsel—seeks to appear alongside or instead of previously appointed counsel. The Court’s mandamus framing also gives practitioners a strong appellate pathway when a trial court effectively disqualifies counsel by labeling the ruling as a “removal” or denial of substitution.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

S.H. was simultaneously defending against a Department petition to terminate her parental rights and a criminal prosecution. In the termination suit, the district court initially appointed temporary counsel and then, after determining S.H. was indigent, appointed that lawyer as her attorney ad litem under Family Code § 107.013(a)(1). Around the same time, a different court appointed the Harris County Public Defender’s Office to represent S.H. in the criminal case.

Shortly thereafter, the Public Defender’s Office agreed to represent S.H. in the parental-rights termination case as well. A lawyer from that office entered an appearance, filed an answer, and moved to substitute as counsel for S.H. At the adversary hearing, the associate judge questioned the lawyer’s authority to appear, but also recognized the tension in preventing a parent from proceeding with counsel of her own choosing.

The district judge then signed two orders: one denying the motion to substitute counsel and another removing the public defender’s lawyer from the case. The court reasoned that because the Public Defender’s Office was created under Code of Criminal Procedure article 26.044, it was limited to criminal or juvenile representation and could not appear in a civil termination matter. The court further concluded that the office had impermissibly “usurped” the judiciary’s role in determining indigence and appointing counsel.

S.H. sought mandamus relief. After the court of appeals summarily denied relief, the Supreme Court of Texas conditionally granted mandamus and directed the trial court to vacate the removal order.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The Court relied primarily on the following statutes and authorities:

The Court also invoked the established civil-law principle that parties generally have the right to counsel of their choosing, while acknowledging the unique nature of termination proceedings, where appointed counsel is statutorily required for indigent parents.

Application

The Court treated the trial court’s premise as fundamentally mistaken. The district court had assumed that because Family Code § 107.013(a)(1) gives the court authority—and indeed the duty—to appoint counsel for an indigent parent, any additional lawyer appearing for that parent must be acting only by judicial appointment. From there, the district court concluded that the Public Defender’s Office had intruded upon the court’s exclusive authority.

The Supreme Court rejected that framing. The public defender’s lawyer was not claiming to be court-appointed termination counsel. She was appearing as S.H.’s chosen counsel, even though her services were being provided at no cost to S.H. That distinction mattered. The Court reasoned that free representation by an outside lawyer does not transform the representation into a judicial appointment, nor does it interfere with the trial court’s indigence determination. The court had already fulfilled its statutory obligation by appointing counsel once indigence was established. Nothing in the statute made that appointment exclusive.

The Court also found no statutory barrier to the Public Defender’s Office providing this representation. Article 26.044 contains certain restrictions on public defenders, but it does not categorically prohibit county-authorized holistic services that include family-law advocacy. Because Harris County had authorized that broader service model, the office’s representation of S.H. in the termination case was not ultra vires.

From there, the mandamus analysis was straightforward. By “removing” the public defender’s lawyer sua sponte, the trial court had effectively disqualified chosen counsel. Texas law treats wrongful disqualification as an extraordinary harm for which appeal is inadequate. The Court therefore held mandamus was the proper remedy and directed the trial court to vacate its removal order. Although S.H. had not separately sought relief from the order denying substitution, the Court explained that the two orders were linked and that vacating the removal order necessarily meant S.H. must be allowed to proceed with her chosen lawyer as lead counsel.

Holding

The Court first held that an indigent parent in a Department-filed termination case may be represented by chosen counsel in addition to, or instead of, counsel appointed under Family Code § 107.013(a)(1). The statute guarantees appointed counsel as a floor of protection; it does not create a ceiling barring outside representation once the court has satisfied its appointment duty.

The Court next held that a public defender’s appearance as chosen counsel in a termination proceeding does not usurp the trial court’s authority to determine indigence or appoint counsel. The office was not purporting to exercise judicial power. It was simply providing legal services through a lawyer the parent chose to use, much as a nonprofit organization, pro bono lawyer, or privately retained attorney might do.

Finally, the Court held that the trial court’s sua sponte “removal” of the public defender’s lawyer functioned as a disqualification order. Because erroneous disqualification causes immediate and irreparable harm by depriving a party of counsel of choice, mandamus relief was proper. The Supreme Court therefore conditionally granted mandamus and directed the trial court to vacate the removal order.

Practical Application

For TPR practitioners, In re S.H. is a significant procedural decision with immediate strategic consequences. If your client qualifies for appointed counsel but later secures representation from a public defender, nonprofit, clinic, pro bono program, or privately funded relative, the trial court cannot treat the statutory appointment mechanism as exclusive. The safer framing is that court-appointed counsel satisfied the statute, while chosen counsel appears by virtue of the client’s own right to select representation.

The opinion is especially useful in cases involving parallel criminal allegations. In many Department cases, the same underlying facts generate criminal charges, and a coordinated defense may materially affect Fifth Amendment strategy, service planning, affidavit practice, and evidentiary presentation. In re S.H. supports integrated representation where an institutional lawyer already handling the criminal matter seeks to enter the TPR case as chosen counsel. That may improve consistency in admissions, protect against avoidable waiver, and reduce the risk of one proceeding undercutting the other.

The case also matters beyond TPR. In custody modification cases, divorce actions with family-violence allegations, and SAPCR proceedings involving juvenile or criminal exposure, lawyers sometimes encounter judicial resistance to substitutions, limited-scope appearances, institutional counsel, or hybrid representation arrangements. In re S.H. provides a useful appellate analogy: a court’s administrative preference cannot override the client’s right to proceed with qualified counsel of choice absent a valid legal basis for disqualification.

Practitioners should also note the Court’s willingness to look past the label used by the trial court. If the order is called a “removal,” “striking of appearance,” or “denial of substitution,” the operative question is whether the ruling functionally deprives the client of chosen counsel. If so, mandamus should be evaluated immediately, especially in accelerated family matters where waiting for final judgment is often meaningless.

From the defense side, the record matters. Counsel should make clear on the record that the lawyer is not seeking appointment, not contesting the court’s indigence determination, and not attempting to displace the court’s statutory authority. From the petitioner’s side—whether the Department or another party—In re S.H. suggests caution before advocating for exclusion of opposing counsel based solely on appointment mechanics. Absent a real conflict, statutory prohibition, or disqualification ground, that position now carries substantial mandamus risk.

Checklists

When Chosen Counsel Enters a TPR Case

Building the Record Against Improper Removal

Mandamus Preservation Checklist

For Lawyers Representing Public Defenders, Nonprofits, or Institutional Counsel

For Court-Appointed Counsel Navigating Entry of New Counsel

Avoiding the Trial Court Error Highlighted in In re S.H.

Citation

In re S.H., No. 26-0030, __ S.W.3d __ (Tex. June 5, 2026) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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