Ann’s Case: What’s Happening in our Local Courts?
According to the unanimous opinion from SCOTX, the lower district court’s decision to keep Chris and Ann apart wasn’t just a little bit wrong, it was completely wrong.
According to the unanimous opinion from SCOTX, the lower district court’s decision to keep Chris and Ann apart wasn’t just a little bit wrong, it was completely wrong.
Temporary orders for child custody fail to provide adequate due process protections for Texas children and families.
July 22, 2020—Homeschooling for Now
July 8, 2020—Landmark Texas Supreme Court Ruling for Families
The enormous force it took for the courts to finally decide a fit father had the constitutional right to the custody of his own daughter was impossible for the average family.
Are other Texas courts ignoring the rights of families and unnecessarily traumatizing children?
The Supreme Court of Texas’ parental rights ruling corrected an injustice and ensured that parental rights will be protected in future cases.
Chris and his 5-year-old daughter, Ann, are petitioning the state’s highest civil court for an order protecting their parent-child relationship from intrusion by an unrelated man
We found a stunning and systematic disregard for the rights of Texas families over the last two decades.
TX Supreme Court: Fiance has not accused Chris of any wrongdoing but argues that he should be able to take custody of Ann away from Chris.
Nearly 100 years of legal precedent requires courts to presume that parents are fit and that fit parents act in the best interests of their children. Do Texas courts follow these constitutional rules?