Endangerment and Best Interest Sufficiency | In re K.L.B. (2026)
In the Interest of K.L.B., a Child, 01-25-00999-CV, May 28, 2026.
On appeal from 314th District Court, Harris County, Texas
Synopsis
The First Court of Appeals held the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support termination under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(D) and (E), where the record showed persistent medical neglect of a medically fragile child, ongoing marijuana use, and the mother’s failure to protect the child from a violent caregiver in the home. The same evidentiary record also supported the Section 161.001(b)(2) best-interest finding and justified appointing DFPS as sole managing conservator.
Relevance to Family Law
Although this is a termination case, its practical significance extends well beyond CPS litigation. For family-law trial lawyers handling SAPCRs, modifications, divorces with conservatorship disputes, and emergency relief, K.L.B. is a useful reminder that a parent’s failure to secure necessary medical care, continued substance use, and refusal to acknowledge or act on violence in the household can become powerful evidence not only on endangerment, but also on best interest and conservatorship. In private custody litigation, these same themes often appear under different procedural labels—temporary orders, exclusive right to designate residence, supervised possession, or sole managing conservatorship—but the evidentiary logic is the same: a pattern of impaired judgment and failure to protect will carry substantial weight.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Katie was born prematurely at 30 weeks and weighed less than three pounds. After a prolonged NICU stay, she was discharged home with known medical vulnerabilities requiring regular follow-up care and supplemental nutrition. The record reflected that those follow-up appointments were missed and that, at some point, the prescribed nutritional supplements stopped.
The case escalated in February 2024, when maternal relatives observed that Katie was unusually small for her age and refusing to eat. After Mother took her to a pediatric office, Katie was sent by ambulance to a pediatric hospital and admitted for treatment of failure to thrive, microcephaly, developmental regression, and hypothermia. Medical providers investigated whether a genetic or other underlying medical condition explained her presentation, but the testing did not reveal a physical cause. The evidence therefore permitted the trial court to infer that Katie’s severe chronic malnutrition was not attributable to an unavoidable medical disorder.
At the same time, Mother was using marijuana daily for about an hour and had used marijuana since adolescence. After DFPS intervened, a safety plan was implemented, and Mother was referred to Family Based Safety Services. She later tested positive for marijuana and marijuana metabolites, was assessed as cannabis dependent, and was discharged from substance-abuse counseling for nonattendance.
The record also showed domestic danger in the home. DFPS received reports that Father physically abused one of his older children, Penny, leaving visible bruising; later reports indicated he hit Penny with a belt. Mother neither reported the injuries nor accepted that Father caused them, and she continued living with Father and exposing Katie to that environment. DFPS also had concerns about Father’s marijuana use around the children and his lack of protective behavior toward Katie.
Mother’s compliance with services was poor. She did not complete parenting classes, did not submit to required drug testing, remained unemployed, and did not establish a verifiable safe and stable home before trial. When she later claimed she had moved out from Father, she refused to provide the address of the residence where she was staying, preventing DFPS from assessing its safety or suitability.
By contrast, Katie’s condition improved markedly in foster care. She arrived at placement around age two-and-a-half unable to walk or speak beyond babbling and wearing clothing sized for much younger children. In foster placement, with therapies and regular care, she made substantial developmental gains. The foster mother intended to adopt Katie and her half-sister.
Issues Decided
The court decided the following issues:
- Whether legally sufficient evidence supported termination under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(D).
- Whether factually sufficient evidence supported termination under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(D).
- Whether legally and factually sufficient evidence supported termination under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(E).
- Whether legally and factually sufficient evidence supported the finding that termination was in the child’s best interest under Section 161.001(b)(2).
- Whether the evidentiary record supporting termination also supported appointment of DFPS as sole managing conservator.
Rules Applied
The court applied the familiar clear-and-convincing-evidence framework governing termination cases. It reiterated that appellate review asks whether the factfinder could reasonably form a firm belief or conviction that the findings were true, citing the heightened sufficiency standards from cases such as In re C.H., In re J.W., and In re J.F.C. The court also emphasized the conventional distinction between legal and factual sufficiency review: legal sufficiency credits evidence favorable to the finding where a reasonable factfinder could do so, while factual sufficiency considers whether contrary evidence is so significant that no reasonable factfinder could have formed the required firm conviction.
Substantively, the court relied on Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(D) and (E), which concern endangerment by conditions or surroundings and by conduct, respectively, as well as Section 161.001(b)(2), the best-interest requirement. The opinion reflects the established rule that only one predicate ground plus best interest is required to affirm termination, although findings under both (D) and (E) carry distinct appellate significance because of their collateral consequences in future cases.
For conservatorship, the court treated the same evidence supporting endangerment and best interest as sufficient to support naming DFPS sole managing conservator under the Family Code once parental rights were terminated.
Application
The court’s reasoning is best understood as a pattern-evidence case rather than a single-incident case. It did not isolate one fact—marijuana use, missed appointments, or cohabitation with Father—and treat that alone as dispositive. Instead, the court evaluated the cumulative force of the evidence and concluded that the record demonstrated a sustained inability or unwillingness to protect a medically fragile child.
On subsection (D), the court had a record showing that Katie entered the world with obvious and serious medical vulnerabilities, required specialized follow-up, and then missed care and lost access to prescribed nutritional support while living in Mother’s home. When she finally came to the hospital, she presented with conditions consistent with severe chronic malnutrition and developmental decline. The absence of an alternative medical explanation mattered. It allowed the trial court to connect the child’s condition to the home environment and caregiving failures, not to unavoidable biology.
On subsection (E), the court appears to have relied on Mother’s course of conduct. Daily marijuana use, failure to engage successfully in treatment, refusal to test as required, noncompletion of parenting services, and ongoing association with a violent caregiver all bore on whether Mother engaged in conduct that endangered Katie’s physical or emotional well-being. Just as important, Mother’s failure to acknowledge Father’s abuse of Penny and her continued residence with him supported the inference that she would not protect Katie from known danger.
Best interest followed from the same evidentiary picture. The trial court could compare the instability and neglect in Mother’s care with the child’s substantial progress in foster placement. A child who had been unable to walk or speak at age two-and-a-half began thriving once she received consistent nutrition, therapy, and structure. That contrast is often compelling in termination appeals, and the First Court treated it as probative not merely of current placement quality, but of the causal connection between prior neglect and later improvement. Mother’s lack of stable housing, unemployment, poor service compliance, and inability to demonstrate a safe home reinforced the conclusion that termination served Katie’s best interest.
The conservatorship ruling presented no independent difficulty for the court. Once the evidence supported termination and established that Mother had not provided safe, stable, and protective care, appointing DFPS as sole managing conservator was a straightforward extension of the same findings.
Holding
The court held that legally and factually sufficient evidence supported termination under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(D). The evidence permitted the trial court to find that Mother placed or allowed Katie to remain in endangering surroundings by failing to secure necessary medical care and nutrition for a medically fragile child, while the child deteriorated in the home environment.
The court also held that legally and factually sufficient evidence supported termination under Section 161.001(b)(1)(E). Mother’s ongoing marijuana use, noncompliance with treatment and testing, and failure to protect Katie from a caregiver who physically abused another child in the household constituted a course of endangering conduct.
The court further held that the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the best-interest finding under Section 161.001(b)(2). Katie’s extreme condition while in Mother’s care, her significant developmental recovery in foster placement, Mother’s instability, and her failure to complete services all supported the trial court’s determination.
Finally, the court held that the same record supported appointing DFPS as sole managing conservator. Given the affirmed endangerment and best-interest findings, the trial court did not err in placing conservatorship with DFPS.
Practical Application
For family-law litigators, K.L.B. is a useful case to frame endangerment as an accumulation of decisions rather than a dramatic isolated event. In private SAPCR or modification cases, counsel representing the protective parent should develop records showing missed specialty care, medication noncompliance, failure to follow pediatric recommendations, substance use affecting parental judgment, and tolerance of violence by a paramour or household member. The case is especially valuable when the child has special needs, developmental delays, or documented medical fragility, because the parent’s obligations become more concrete and the causal inferences more persuasive.
For defense-side counsel, K.L.B. underscores the danger of conceding the narrative through noncompliance. Missed drug tests, incomplete classes, discharge from treatment, vague testimony about housing, and refusal to allow home assessment all allow the factfinder to draw adverse inferences. In a close record, proof of actual behavioral change—verified sobriety, documented housing, employment, consistent attendance at appointments, and demonstrable separation from the dangerous partner—may matter more than generalized testimony about love for the child or future intentions.
The opinion also has direct utility in conservatorship disputes short of termination. If you are seeking sole managing conservatorship in a divorce or post-divorce case, the same evidentiary themes recognized here—medical neglect, failure to protect from family violence, and ongoing substance use—can be marshaled to support restrictions on possession, supervised access, or exclusive decision-making authority over medical care and residence.
Checklists
Building an Endangerment Record
- Obtain complete pediatric, hospital, therapy, and specialty-care records.
- Identify missed appointments, delayed follow-up, and noncompliance with prescribed treatment or nutrition plans.
- Develop testimony linking the child’s condition to caregiving failures rather than an unexplained medical cause.
- Document any history of substance use, including admissions, test results, refusals to test, and treatment discharge records.
- Prove the parent’s knowledge of dangers in the home, including violence by another caregiver or household member.
- Tie each fact into a broader course-of-conduct theory rather than presenting events in isolation.
Proving Best Interest Through Comparative Functioning
- Show the child’s condition at removal with specifics: weight, developmental status, medical presentation, and observed deficits.
- Present evidence of the child’s improvement in a stable placement, including therapy progress and developmental milestones.
- Establish the current caregiver’s ability to meet medical, emotional, and developmental needs.
- Develop evidence of the parent’s present instability in housing, employment, and daily functioning.
- Use service-plan performance as a best-interest indicator, especially where tasks were designed to address the precise dangers in the case.
- Do not rely only on bond evidence; pair relational testimony with concrete evidence of safety and stability.
Defending Against a Termination or Sole-MC Case
- Get the parent into immediate, verifiable compliance with all medical recommendations for the child.
- Produce objective proof of sobriety, not just testimony—clean tests, treatment completion, and relapse-prevention records.
- Confirm the parent has actually separated from the dangerous partner and can prove it with address verification and corroborating witnesses.
- Make the home available for inspection and document its suitability.
- Complete parenting, counseling, and substance-abuse services before trial, not on the eve of trial.
- Prepare the parent to acknowledge prior poor judgment and explain concrete corrective measures.
- Avoid excuses for missed testing or missed services unless they are documented and compelling.
Using the Case in Private Custody Litigation
- Frame chronic medical noncompliance as a best-interest and decision-making issue, not merely a parenting-style disagreement.
- Seek temporary orders allocating exclusive medical decision-making when the child has special needs.
- Use evidence of tolerated household violence to support supervised possession or geographic restrictions.
- Subpoena daycare, school, therapist, and pediatric witnesses to corroborate functional concerns.
- Build a timeline showing deterioration in one home and improvement in the other.
- Request findings that specifically address protection, medical care, and substance use to strengthen appellate posture.
Avoiding the Mother’s Appellate Problems
- Do not leave drug-test requests unanswered; a no-show will often be treated as functionally positive.
- Do not refuse to disclose the residence where the child would live.
- Do not minimize or deny obvious abuse of another child in the household.
- Do not assume partial service compliance will offset ongoing instability.
- Do not present future plans without documentary support.
- Do not ignore how strongly a child’s improvement in placement may influence both best interest and conservatorship.
Citation
In the Interest of K.L.B., a Child, No. 01-25-00999-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 28, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
~~3d0b221c-2308-48e7-9415-5e49f6c3f533~~
Share this content:
