Law Office of Bryan Fagan PLLC Podcast

Termination of Parental Rights in Humble, Texas: What Parents Need to Know

20 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Termination of Parental Rights in Humble, Texas: What Parents Need to Know

Descripción

Termination of parental rights is one of the most serious actions a Texas court can take. Whether the case involves CPS, adoption, or a private family law matter, the outcome permanently changes the legal relationship between a parent and child. In this episode, we break down how termination of parental rights cases are handled in Humble and Harris County, and what families need to understand about the process. We cover: ✅ What termination of parental rights means under Texas law ✅ The difference between voluntary and involuntary termination ✅ Common grounds for termination, including abandonment, neglect, endangerment, and failure to comply with court orders ✅ How CPS cases can lead to termination proceedings ✅ The clear and convincing evidence standard required by Texas courts ✅ What judges consider when determining the best interest of the child 👉 Termination cases are among the most complex and emotionally significant matters in family law. The consequences are permanent, making it critical to understand your rights, responsibilities, and legal options before moving forward. Whether you're facing a CPS investigation, considering a stepparent adoption, or trying to protect your parental rights, this episode provides the clarity and practical guidance you need to navigate termination cases in Humble, Texas. Hosted by experienced family law attorneys from The Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC. 👉 Need help protecting your parental rights or navigating a CPS case? Schedule your free consultation at BryanFagan.com/schedule

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Law Office of Bryan Fagan PLLC Podcast!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

365 episodios

Portada del episodio High Net Worth Divorce in Texas Explained | Fort Worth

High Net Worth Divorce in Texas Explained | Fort Worth

A physician sat in our Fort Worth office convinced he was about to lose half of everything he'd spent decades building — a medical practice, investment properties, retirement accounts, interests in two family businesses. It wasn't that simple, and in this episode we explain why. High net worth divorce in Texas turns on characterization and valuation, not a simple split. Under Texas Family Code §3.003, everything either spouse owns at divorce is presumed community property, and separate property must be proven by clear and convincing evidence — a burden that, not the dollar total, is where these cases are won or lost. We walk through what makes a divorce "high asset" (complexity, not a number), how community and separate property get untangled through tracing and forensic accounting, and the trap that catches high earners: income from separate property during the marriage is community, so commingling can quietly destroy a separate-property claim. We cover business valuation — why courts rarely split a company in half, and how one spouse typically keeps it while offsetting the other's share — plus the vesting-timeline rules under §3.007 that divide stock options and RSUs, the surprisingly limited spousal maintenance caps under §8.055 (the lesser of $5,000/month or 20% of gross income, which is why high earners negotiate contractual alimony instead), and the tools courts use against hidden assets: sworn inventories, sanctions, and unequal division. Custody is decided separately under the child's best interest standard, and remains the highest priority throughout. The bottom line: Texas divides "just and right" under §7.001 — which can be unequal — and what you can characterize and prove is worth more than what you simply own. For business owners, executives, and families in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, and across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Learn more at bryanfagan.com.

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio How Contested Divorce Works in Texas | Fort Worth

How Contested Divorce Works in Texas | Fort Worth

Your spouse filed first. Hired an aggressive attorney. Maybe even moved money or threatened to take the kids. Does that decide your case? Not even close. In this episode, we walk through how a contested divorce actually works in Fort Worth, Texas — from the Original Petition filed with the Tarrant County District Clerk to the Final Decree. We break down the biggest myth in Texas divorce (it is not a 50/50 state — judges divide property in a way that's "just and right" under Family Code §7.001, and that split can be unequal), why the temporary orders hearing under §6.502 often shapes the entire outcome, and how discovery is where hidden assets surface — and where hiding them backfires. We also cover the five stages every contested case moves through: filing, temporary orders, discovery, mediation, and trial — and why most contested divorces in Tarrant County settle at the mediation table, not the courtroom. If you're facing a high-conflict divorce involving custody, property, support, or all three, this episode explains why preparation — not panic, and not who filed first — is what wins these cases. For families in Fort Worth and across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Learn more at bryanfagan.com.

7 de jul de 202620 min
Portada del episodio How Uncontested Divorce Works in Texas | Fort Worth

How Uncontested Divorce Works in Texas | Fort Worth

You and your spouse agree on everything — the house, the finances, even the parenting schedule. So do you still need a lawyer? In this episode, we break down what an uncontested divorce in Fort Worth really involves: the residency requirements under Texas Family Code §6.301 (six months in Texas, 90 days in Tarrant County), the mandatory 60-day waiting period under §6.702 that no agreement can waive, and why most agreed divorces finalize in about 61–90 days. We also cover what "uncontested" actually means — total agreement on every material issue, not just the big ones — plus the quiet drafting mistakes that cost families the most: retirement accounts left out of the decree, a mortgage still in both names, and vague custody language that collapses at the first schedule conflict. Whether your case is simple or involves children, real estate, or retirement benefits, this episode explains why the cheapest divorce over your lifetime is the one whose decree you never have to reopen. For families in Fort Worth and across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Learn more at bryanfagan.com.

6 de jul de 202614 min
Portada del episodio Protect Your Texas Business from Divorce | The Heights

Protect Your Texas Business from Divorce | The Heights

For families in The Heights, a business or farm isn't just an asset — it's a legacy built across generations. But under Texas community property law, that legacy can be at serious risk when divorce enters the picture. In this episode, we break down how courts treat family businesses and farms in a Texas divorce: the community property presumption and why assets acquired during marriage are presumed to belong equally to both spouses, the three valuation methodologies courts use (asset-based, income-based, and market-based), the planning mistakes that leave businesses exposed, and the strategic defenses that work — from buy-sell agreements to estate and succession planning. Whether you own a shop on 19th Street or a multi-generational farm, this episode shows you how to protect what you've built before a transition puts it in a courtroom's hands. The Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Schedule at bryanfagan.com/schedule or call 281-606-3374.

6 de jul de 202622 min
Portada del episodio How Texas Courts Terminate Parental Rights | The Heights

How Texas Courts Terminate Parental Rights | The Heights

How Texas Courts Terminate Parental Rights | The Heights Termination of parental rights is the most serious action a Texas family court can take — a permanent, court-ordered end to the legal relationship between parent and child. In this episode, we break down how the process actually works: the specific legal grounds for termination under Chapter 161 of the Texas Family Code, the difference between voluntary relinquishment and involuntary termination, the "clear and convincing evidence" standard courts must apply, and why the child's best interest sits at the center of every ruling. Whether you're a parent fighting to protect your rights, a family member concerned about a child's safety, or a stepparent pursuing adoption, this episode explains what to expect in court and why experienced legal guidance matters. For families in The Heights and across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Schedule at bryanfagan.com/schedule or call 281-606-3374.

3 de jul de 202615 min