Fourteenth Court of Appeals Affirms Parental Termination Based on Endangerment and Service Plan Non-Compliance
In the Interest of K.H., K.H., K.H., and E.H., Children, 14-25-00816-CV, March 19, 2026.
On appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas.
Synopsis
The Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court’s decree terminating parental rights, holding that a mother’s criminal charge for child abandonment and a chronic history of Department-verified neglect constituted a “voluntary, deliberate, and conscious course of conduct” under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(E). The court found that the cumulative weight of documentary evidence regarding physical abuse and medical neglect, coupled with a failure to complete a court-ordered service plan, provided legally and factually sufficient evidence to support both the predicate grounds and the best interest finding.
Relevance to Family Law
This decision reinforces the strategic utility of Subsection (E) in termination litigation, particularly when a parent exhibits a persistent pattern of instability rather than a single isolated incident. For practitioners, the case underscores that “endangerment” is a broad concept that encompasses the “uncertainty and instability” of a child’s environment. Moreover, this opinion serves as a critical reminder of the evidentiary weight afforded to unobjected-to documentary exhibits; even when live testimony is “scant,” properly admitted Department reports and criminal affidavits can sufficiently anchor a termination decree against a sufficiency challenge on appeal.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The litigation arose following the December 2023 arrest of the Mother for child abandonment. According to the probable cause affidavit, she left her youngest child, E.L.H., unsupervised for approximately 16 hours in hazardous conditions—specifically, a home without heat, electricity, or food, where a knife was within the child’s reach and feces were present on the floor. While the children were initially placed with a maternal aunt, the placement failed due to a lack of support from the Mother and safety concerns regarding the older children.
The evidentiary record at trial was primarily composed of documentary exhibits, as the Mother failed to appear for the bench trial and the State offered only brief testimony from a caseworker and a guardian ad litem. These documents detailed a long-term history of Department involvement dating back to 2009, including “reason to believe” findings for neglectful supervision, physical abuse (striking a child with a metal ruler and a belt buckle), and medical neglect. Furthermore, the Mother failed to comply with the majority of her Family Service Plan, including requirements for stable housing, employment, and drug testing.
Issues Decided
The court addressed whether there was legally and factually sufficient evidence to support:
- The predicate finding of endangerment under Texas Family Code Section 161.001(b)(1)(E).
- The trial court’s determination that termination was in the best interest of the children under Section 161.001(b)(2).
Rules Applied
The court relied upon the following statutory and precedential frameworks:
- Texas Family Code § 161.001(b): The statutory basis for involuntary termination of parental rights, requiring clear and convincing evidence.
- Texas Family Code § 161.001(b)(1)(E): Predicate ground focused on a parent’s conduct that endangers the physical or emotional well-being of the child.
- In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d 256 (Tex. 2002): Establishing the standards for legal and factual sufficiency review in termination cases.
- In re M.C., 917 S.W.2d 268 (Tex. 1996): Defining “endanger” as more than a metaphysical threat, but less than actual injury.
- In re J.O.A., 283 S.W.3d 336 (Tex. 2009): Clarifying that a life of uncertainty and instability constitutes endangerment.
Application
In evaluating the Mother’s conduct, the court applied the “course of conduct” requirement of Subsection (E). The court rejected the notion that the evidence was insufficient due to the “scant” nature of live trial testimony. Instead, it emphasized that the documentary evidence—which the Mother dismissed as hearsay on appeal but failed to object to at trial—carried significant probative value.
The court categorized the evidence into four endangering factors: home instability, abuse and neglect, drug use, and a general lack of interest in the children’s welfare. The 16-hour abandonment incident served as a primary anchor, but the court also looked retrospectively at verified reports of physical assault and medical neglect. By connecting the Mother’s criminal history with her failure to provide basic necessities (heat, food, and electricity), the court concluded that the Mother had engaged in a voluntary and conscious course of conduct that jeopardized the children’s physical and emotional health.
Holding
The court held that the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the endangerment finding under Section 161.001(b)(1)(E). The court noted that when a parent subjects children to a life of instability and fails to address the very issues that led to removal—such as housing and substance abuse—a factfinder can reasonably form a firm belief that the parent’s conduct endangers the children.
The court further held that the trial court did not err in its best interest determination. In light of the Mother’s failure to attend trial, her non-compliance with the service plan, and the children’s successful placement in stable foster homes, the court affirmed the final decree of termination.
Practical Application
For the family law litigator, this case highlights the “hearsay trap” in bench trials. Appellate counsel often struggle with records where trial counsel allowed Department reports into evidence without objection. If you are representing a parent, you must be prepared to contest the admissibility of removal affidavits and internal Department summaries; otherwise, they serve as competent evidence on appeal. For those representing the Department or an Intervenor, this case proves that a strong documentary trail can survive an appeal even if your live witnesses are not extensively examined, provided the documents establish a “course of conduct” rather than an isolated lapse in judgment.
Checklists
Substantiating a Subsection (E) Finding
- Document Historical Neglect: Collect all “reason to believe” findings from prior Department involvements, even if they occurred years prior to the current suit.
- Link Criminality to Endangerment: Use probable cause affidavits to establish the specific conditions of the home at the time of arrest (e.g., lack of utilities, presence of weapons).
- Demonstrate Instability: Provide evidence of transient housing and sporadic employment as indicators of a life of “uncertainty.”
- Track Service Plan Failures: Specifically highlight missed drug tests, as Texas courts frequently treat a failure to test as a presumed positive.
Protecting the Record for Appeal (Respondent’s Counsel)
- Object to Hearsay: Ensure that every Department report or third-party affidavit is scrutinized for hearsay within hearsay; do not allow the State to build its entire case on documents alone.
- Secure Client Attendance: A parent’s failure to appear at trial is nearly impossible to overcome on appeal when the court is weighing “best interest” factors and stability.
- Contradict the “Course of Conduct”: Present evidence that hazardous incidents were isolated or caused by external factors (e.g., poverty vs. neglect) to pull the conduct out of the scope of Subsection (E).
Citation
In the Interest of K.H., K.H., K.H., and E.H., Children, No. 14-25-00816-CV (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Mar. 19, 2026, no pet. h.).
Full Opinion
~~eb6cbc5f-5a4f-4b51-9b44-2dbb3ed04183~~
Share this content:
