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Texarkana Court Vacates SAPCR Final Order for Lack of Continuing Exclusive Jurisdiction

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

In the Interest of C.B., D.N.B., and J.B., Children, 06-25-00081-CV, March 30, 2026.

On appeal from County Court at Law, Panola County, Texas

Synopsis

The Sixth Court held that a Panola County Chapter 262 court could enter emergency and temporary orders, but it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to render a final SAPCR order affecting Jarod because a Denton County district court already had continuing, exclusive jurisdiction (CEJ) based on a prior parentage order. The final order was therefore vacated as to Jarod and otherwise affirmed as to the other children, and the trial court’s denial of Mother’s motion for new trial attacking the agreed order was upheld.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a jurisdictional tripwire for custody litigation that frequently overlaps with divorce and modification practice: an existing paternity/support order in another Texas court can lock in CEJ and make a later “new” SAPCR (including a Department case) non-final as to that child unless the case is transferred correctly. For family-law litigators, the lesson is strategic and immediate—if you are trying to resolve conservatorship, possession, child support redirection, or termination in a county where the child is found, you can litigate temporary relief under Chapter 262, but you cannot “paper” a global final order as to a CEJ child without a valid Chapter 155 transfer (or transfer into the Chapter 262 court). The result is avoidable appellate disruption: a seemingly comprehensive agreed final order can be partially void.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The Department filed a Chapter 262 removal/SAPCR in the Panola County Court at Law concerning three children (Charlie, Dalton, and Jarod). The case proceeded to a final hearing where a final order—based on the parties’ agreement—was signed naming Mark managing conservator of Charlie and Dalton and non-parent managing conservator of Jarod; Mother (Susan) was named a conservator of all three children with phased-in possession for Dalton and Jarod. The final order also recognized Jarod’s father (Jack) but did not award him conservatorship and purported to redirect Jack’s child-support payments to Mark.

The jurisdictional problem: years earlier, the 211th District Court of Denton County had entered a parentage order (and later modification) regarding Jarod, which—by statute—conferred continuing, exclusive jurisdiction on the Denton court over SAPCR matters “in connection with” Jarod. During the Panola County proceeding, the Department attempted to obtain Vital Statistics confirmation of CEJ, but the requests misidentified Jarod (wrong birthplace on one request; wrong birth year on another), producing responses that did not identify the Denton CEJ case. At the final hearing, counsel flagged that there was likely a Denton County (or Arkansas) order already in place; the trial court nonetheless signed the agreed final order.

Only after rendition did the Department move in Denton County to transfer, and Denton signed a transfer order the next day. By then, however, the Panola final order had already been rendered without CEJ or a pre-rendition transfer.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The Sixth Court treated the question as classic CEJ doctrine with a Chapter 262 overlay. Denton County’s 2015 parentage order (and later modification) meant Denton had CEJ over “matters . . . in connection with” Jarod. That statutory status deprived every other Texas court of jurisdiction to render final orders concerning Jarod unless and until a transfer occurred in compliance with Chapter 155/262.

The Panola County Court at Law was not powerless: because the Department brought a governmental Chapter 262 case in the county where Jarod was found, the Panola court could issue emergency orders, conduct the adversary hearing, and enter temporary orders. But the point of demarcation is finality. Without a transfer from Denton (or an order transferring CEJ to Panola), the Panola court could not render a final order that substantively adjudicated conservatorship and support for Jarod—no matter that the parties agreed, and no matter that the trial court attempted to “redirect” a Denton support obligation.

The record underscored how easily CEJ can be missed in practice. The Department did attempt to use Vital Statistics to identify CEJ, but it fed incorrect identifying information, resulting in “no SAPCR found” responses that were not reliable for Jarod. And even though CEJ was discussed at the final hearing (including the existence of a support order), the trial court proceeded to final judgment anyway. The later post-judgment transfer order from Denton did not retroactively supply jurisdiction for a final order already rendered.

Holding

The court vacated the final order as it related to Jarod because Denton County’s 211th District Court had CEJ under Chapter 155, and Panola County—sitting as the Chapter 262 court—lacked jurisdiction to render final orders affecting Jarod absent a transfer. The opinion emphasizes that Chapter 262 creates a narrow lane for emergency and temporary orders in the county where the child is found, not a bypass around CEJ for final adjudication.

Separately, the court affirmed the trial court’s denial of Mother’s motion for new trial challenging the agreed order as involuntary and affirmed the final order as to the other children. In other words, the jurisdictional defect required a targeted vacatur (Jarod only), not a total reversal of the entire decree.

Practical Application

Texas family-law litigators should treat CEJ as an initial-file triage issue, not an end-of-case housekeeping item—especially in multi-child cases where one child has a different father or a prior parentage/support history. This case is a reminder that you can negotiate an “agreed final” all day long, but you cannot stipulate your way into subject-matter jurisdiction, and you cannot fix a CEJ defect with a post-judgment transfer.

A few common scenarios where this bites in private litigation (not just DFPS cases):

Checklists

CEJ Triage at Intake (Private SAPCR, Divorce, or DFPS)

Vital Statistics / CEJ Verification (Avoiding “False Negative” Searches)

Litigation Strategy When a Chapter 262 Court Is Not the CEJ Court

Drafting and Proving Up Agreed Finals (Preventing Partial Void Orders)

Citation

In the Interest of C.B., D.N.B., and J.B., Children, No. 06-25-00081-CV (Tex. App.—Texarkana Mar. 30, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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