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Dallas Court Affirms Denial of Protective Order Sought for Foster Child Against Permanent Managing Conservator

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

In the Interest of N.A.G.A., a Child, 05-24-00891-CV, April 21, 2026.

On appeal from 469th Judicial District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of a family-violence protective order sought by foster parents on behalf of a child against the child’s permanent managing conservator. Even with evidence of prior endangerment, a USCIS T-visa approval, and allegations of abuse and trafficking, the court held the trial record was sufficient to support the trial court’s refusal to find the statutory predicates necessary for a protective order under the Family Code.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters well beyond the foster-care context. For Texas family-law litigators handling divorce, SAPCR, modification, and protective-order proceedings, the case is a reminder that protective-order relief remains tightly tied to statutory proof requirements, even where the equities appear compelling. Allegations of abuse, trafficking, coercive conduct, or dangerous past behavior will not substitute for admissible, trial-ready evidence establishing the Family Code elements, including the qualifying relationship or household nexus where required. In custody litigation, that means lawyers cannot assume that concerning conduct shown in a CPS file, immigration record, or related proceeding will automatically carry a protective-order application; the evidentiary bridge must still be built in the protective-order case itself.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The child, N.A.G.A., came to the United States from Guatemala with R.E.G. in 2018. In May 2020, law enforcement found R.E.G. and the child asleep in the back of a vehicle, with R.E.G. described in the police report as heavily intoxicated, vomiting on himself and on the child. R.E.G. was arrested, later indicted, and ultimately pleaded guilty to child abandonment or endangerment. The child was then placed with foster parents, who remained the child’s caregivers.

A related SAPCR followed. Although DNA testing excluded both identified men as the child’s biological father, the SAPCR ultimately ended with a Rule 11 agreement under which R.E.G. was appointed permanent managing conservator. The final order expressly recognized that R.E.G. was not a familial relation to the child, yet still placed him in that conservatorship role and contemplated reunification. The foster parents were not informed of the Rule 11 agreement before prove-up, did not successfully intervene, and later saw a writ of attachment issued for delivery of the child to TDFPS.

In 2024, the foster parents filed an application for a family-violence protective order in Collin County on the child’s behalf. They alleged that R.E.G. had abused and trafficked the child and asserted that the child had obtained a T-visa from USCIS based on trafficking. Their proof included the foster mother’s affidavit, the USCIS approval notice, the SAPCR order, live testimony from both foster parents, and later-filed transcripts from the prior SAPCR proceedings. R.E.G. was served but did not appear. The trial court denied the requested protective order, concluding there was no evidence of a court finding of trafficking, no credible evidence of abuse, and no credible evidence that the child and R.E.G. were members of the same family or had resided in the same household. The Fifth Court affirmed.

Issues Decided

The court addressed whether the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s denial of the application for protective order, including whether the evidence was sufficient to support the trial court’s refusal to find:

  • that N.A.G.A. was a victim of human trafficking;
  • that N.A.G.A. was a victim of abuse; and
  • that N.A.G.A. and R.E.G. had the requisite prior household or family relationship for purposes of a family-violence protective order.

Rules Applied

The court reiterated that, in the Fifth District, orders granting or denying family-violence protective orders are reviewed for legal and factual sufficiency. In doing so, the court cited the familiar legal-sufficiency framework from City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802 (Tex. 2005), Central Ready Mix Concrete Co. v. Islas, 228 S.W.3d 649 (Tex. 2007), and Shields LP v. Bradberry, 526 S.W.3d 471 (Tex. 2017). The opinion also noted the inter-court conflict on standard of review, with some courts applying abuse of discretion or a hybrid standard, but confirmed that Dallas continues to use sufficiency review in this context.

Substantively, the case turned on the statutory predicates for a Family Code protective order based on family violence. While the snippet does not reproduce the full statutory discussion, the court’s framing makes clear that the applicant bore the burden to prove facts sufficient to bring the case within the Family Code’s definition of family violence and within the statute’s relationship-based scope. The court also treated the case as one in which the trial court, sitting as factfinder, was entitled to decide credibility, weigh competing inferences, and reject evidence it did not find persuasive.

Application

The opinion is best understood as a proof-case, not a sympathy-case. The foster parents presented a serious factual narrative: a child removed after intoxication-related endangerment, a non-biological conservator, immigration relief apparently tied to trafficking concerns, and prior CPS litigation reflecting substantial controversy over reunification. But the appellate court focused on a narrower question: whether this record compelled the trial court to find the statutory facts necessary for a family-violence protective order.

On trafficking, the foster parents relied heavily on a USCIS notice approving T-1 nonimmigrant classification for the child. That was not enough to require the trial court to find that the child had been trafficked for Family Code protective-order purposes. The trial court had specifically noted that no court finding of trafficking had been presented, and the appellate court concluded the evidence did not render that assessment legally or factually unsustainable. In other words, immigration-related documentation and associated inferences did not obligate the trial court to translate those materials into a finding satisfying the protective-order framework.

On abuse, the record included evidence of the 2020 vehicle incident and the resulting criminal case. But the appellate court treated the issue through the lens of the precise relief requested and the evidence before the protective-order court. A prior endangerment event, even a troubling one that led to criminal consequences, did not automatically compel a present finding that the statutory abuse predicates had been established in the manner necessary to support the requested protective order. The trial court was free to assess the quality, relevance, and weight of the evidence and to conclude the proof fell short.

The household-membership issue appears to have been especially important. The trial court found no credible evidence that the child and R.E.G. were members of the same family or had resided in the same household at any time. Given that the Family Code’s family-violence remedies are relationship-specific, that finding was significant. The appellate court held that the record was sufficient to support the trial court’s refusal to find otherwise. For practitioners, that underscores a recurring appellate point: when the case turns on a definitional element such as household membership, the applicant must present direct, organized proof of that element rather than assume it will be inferred from the broader procedural history.

Holding

The Fifth Court held that the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s denial of the foster parents’ application for a family-violence protective order. The court therefore affirmed the order denying relief.

The court further held, in substance, that the record did not require the trial court to find that the child had been trafficked, abused, or had the requisite family or household relationship with R.E.G. for purposes of the protective-order statutes. Because the factfinder was entitled to weigh the evidence and because the record did not conclusively establish the statutory predicates, the denial stood.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, the strategic lesson is straightforward: protective-order cases must be built as standalone evidentiary records, even when they arise from a larger CPS, SAPCR, divorce, or modification history. If your theory depends on trafficking, abuse, stalking-like conduct, or prior co-residence, you need admissible proof tied carefully to the governing statutory definitions. Do not assume that a CPS removal, criminal plea, immigration benefit, or prior court controversy will do that work for you.

This has immediate implications in several settings:

  • In divorce cases, if one party seeks a protective order to shape temporary orders, exclusive use of the residence, or supervised possession, the applicant must prove the statutory elements directly rather than rely on generalized allegations from the divorce pleadings.
  • In custody and modification litigation, prior CPS involvement may be relevant, but it is not self-executing proof of family violence. Counsel should be prepared to offer certified records, witnesses with personal knowledge, and a clean evidentiary theory connecting the past conduct to the requested relief.
  • In nonparent or third-party litigation, including grandparent, foster-parent, or fictive-kin disputes, standing in one proceeding does not eliminate the need to prove the relationship element required in another. Protective-order eligibility is not simply a function of caregiving equities.
  • In cases involving immigration-related evidence, practitioners should anticipate that agency determinations, approvals, or notices may be persuasive but not dispositive. They should be authenticated, contextualized, and supported by testimony explaining how the underlying facts satisfy the Family Code.

The case also highlights a practical appellate point: when the trial court is the factfinder and the standard is legal and factual sufficiency, reversal is difficult unless the appellant can show either the absence of evidence supporting denial or evidence conclusively establishing the opposite. If you are trying the case, that means preserving and presenting proof with appellate review already in mind.

Checklists

Building the Protective-Order Record

  • Plead the statutory basis for relief with precision rather than in generalized abuse language.
  • Identify each element you must prove, including the qualifying relationship or household status.
  • Offer admissible evidence for each element independently.
  • Use witnesses with personal knowledge to establish historical co-residence, caregiving arrangements, and the nature of the respondent’s conduct.
  • Authenticate agency records, criminal records, and prior court filings before assuming they will carry evidentiary weight.
  • Make clear how prior conduct fits the Family Code definitions at issue.

Proving Household or Family Nexus

  • Develop direct testimony on where the child lived, with whom, and for what period.
  • Introduce documentary proof of residence where available.
  • Avoid relying solely on assumptions arising from conservatorship status or prior CPS involvement.
  • If the respondent is fictive kin or a nonparent conservator, explain specifically how that status intersects with the Family Code’s relationship requirements.
  • Anticipate and rebut arguments that the record shows only legal status, not household membership.

Using Related Proceedings Effectively

  • Do not assume evidence from a SAPCR, CPS case, criminal matter, or immigration matter is automatically part of the protective-order record.
  • Decide which prior transcripts, orders, and exhibits are actually admissible and relevant.
  • Tie each prior proceeding to a specific fact you need the trial court to find.
  • Be prepared to explain why a prior plea, removal, or agency action satisfies the current statutory standard.
  • If relying on prior testimony, address admissibility and preservation issues before the hearing.

Handling Trafficking or Immigration Evidence

  • Obtain complete, authenticated records rather than relying on a bare approval notice.
  • Present testimony explaining the factual basis for the immigration determination.
  • Distinguish between an agency’s administrative decision and the Family Code findings the trial court must make.
  • Do not overstate what a T-visa approval proves.
  • Build corroboration through witnesses, records, and timeline evidence.

Avoiding the Applicant’s Pitfalls

  • Do not treat a compelling factual narrative as a substitute for element-by-element proof.
  • Do not assume a respondent’s failure to answer or appear guarantees relief.
  • Do not leave credibility and inference gaps unaddressed.
  • Do not rely on offers of proof or background materials unless they are actually admitted and tied to the statutory predicates.
  • Do not ignore the appellate standard; if the trial court can reasonably decline to draw your inference, affirmance becomes likely.

Preserving Error for Appeal

  • Request clear rulings on disputed evidentiary matters.
  • Offer excluded evidence formally and obtain a ruling.
  • If the court issues memorandum findings or explanatory statements, align your post-judgment strategy to those specific findings.
  • In a motion for reconsideration or new trial, target the missing statutory elements and identify precisely what evidence compelled a contrary finding.
  • Frame appellate issues around the actual burden of proof and the deference given to the trial court as factfinder.

Citation

In the Interest of N.A.G.A., a Child, No. 05-24-00891-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas Apr. 21, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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Tom Daley is a board-certified family law attorney with extensive experience practicing across the United States, primarily in Texas. He represents clients in all aspects of family law, including negotiation, settlement, litigation, trial, and appeals.