Law Office of Bryan Fagan PLLC Podcast

Family Law Mediation in Texas Explained | Fort Worth

14 min · 8. juli 2026
episode Family Law Mediation in Texas Explained | Fort Worth cover

Beskrivelse

A husband walked into our Fort Worth office convinced his divorce was headed for an all-out courtroom battle — months of hearings, mounting fees, and a judge making deeply personal decisions about his property and his children. What he didn't realize is that the vast majority of contested family cases in Tarrant County never reach a trial: they settle at mediation. In this episode, we break down how family law mediation works in Texas — a confidential process where a neutral mediator helps both sides negotiate conservatorship, parenting plans, child support, spousal maintenance, and property division, but can never force an agreement. The final decision always stays with you. We explain why Texas courts expect mediation before setting a contested trial, and why that's good news: it's a structured, low-risk chance to settle on your own terms. We cover the Mediated Settlement Agreement — why a compliant MSA under Texas Family Code §6.602 and §153.0071 is binding the moment it's signed and generally cannot be revoked, which is exactly why you should never sign one without your own attorney in the room (the mediator is neutral and cannot advise you). We also walk through the confidentiality protections under §154.073 that let both sides negotiate openly without offers being used against them later, when mediation works best, when it doesn't — family violence, hidden assets, or emergencies requiring immediate court action — and the preparation steps that decide the result: gather your documents, set your goals, manage your emotions, and know your outcomes. The bottom line: mediation isn't about giving in — it's about taking control, and the party who walks in prepared sets the terms of the conversation. For 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.

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Alle episoder

378 Episoder

episode Common Law Divorce in Texas: What Counts? | Fort Worth cover

Common Law Divorce in Texas: What Counts? | Fort Worth

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episode CPS Investigations in Texas: The 5 Phases | Fort Worth cover

CPS Investigations in Texas: The 5 Phases | Fort Worth

Few things terrify a parent like an unexpected visit from Child Protective Services. In this episode, we walk through the entire Texas CPS case process in five phases — starting with how an investigation actually begins: priority levels, background checks, interviews, and the home visit. From there, we cover the rights every parent has during an investigation (including what you're not required to consent to), how Family-Based Safety Services can keep children in the home, and what happens if the department moves to legal removal. We close with the court timeline every parent needs to know cold — the Day 1 emergency hearing, the adversary hearing at 14 days, status and permanency hearings, and the final trial around the one-year mark — plus why missing even one hearing can jeopardize your parental rights. If CPS has contacted your family anywhere in Texas, this episode gives you the roadmap to respond from a position of knowledge, not fear. The Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC defends parents in CPS cases across Texas. Schedule a consultation at bryanfagan.com/schedule or call our Fort Worth office at 817-406-7230. You Don't Have to Go Through This Alone.

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episode Asset Division in a Texas Divorce Explained | Fort Worth cover

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Who gets the house, the 401(k), the business? In this episode, we walk through how asset division really works in a Texas divorce — starting with the two buckets every asset falls into: community property and separate property. We cover the community property presumption (and why the burden of proof falls on you), the "danger zone" of commingling funds, and how tracing works when separate property has changed form over the years. Then we get into the part most people misunderstand: Texas courts don't automatically split things 50/50 — they divide the community estate in a manner that's "just and right," weighing factors like earning capacity, fault, and the needs of the children. Whether you're in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, or anywhere in Texas, this episode gives you the framework — and the documentation checklist — to protect what's yours. The Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC serves families across Texas. Schedule a consultation at bryanfagan.com/schedule or call our Fort Worth office at 817-406-7230. You Don't Have to Go Through This Alone.

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episode The Texas Alimony Myth, Dispelled | Fort Worth cover

The Texas Alimony Myth, Dispelled | Fort Worth

Ask ten Texans about alimony and you'll get ten confident answers — most of them wrong. In this episode, we dispel the Texas alimony myth once and for all, starting with the fact that surprises almost everyone: the word "alimony" doesn't actually appear in the Texas Family Code. What Texas has is spousal maintenance under Chapter 8 — and it looks nothing like the Hollywood version people absorb from celebrity headlines, where a lifetime of big monthly checks follows every divorce. The Texas reality is far narrower. Eligibility is strict: generally a marriage of at least ten years paired with a genuine inability to meet your minimum reasonable needs, or circumstances like family violence or a disabling condition. Even when a court orders it, the amounts are capped — the lesser of $5,000 per month or 20% of the paying spouse's average gross monthly income — and the duration is limited by statute based on the length of the marriage. It's a bridge to independence, not a permanent income stream, which is exactly why so many claims that assume otherwise get rejected. Then we cover the path most people never hear about: contractual alimony, the negotiated agreement between spouses that isn't bound by the statutory caps and is enforced as a contract — often the more flexible tool in settlement. We bring it home to Fort Worth and Tarrant County: what local courts expect, why documentation decides these cases, and how to know which path fits your situation before you build your divorce strategy on a myth. For spouses in Fort Worth and across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Learn more at bryanfagan.com.

15. juli 202623 min
episode Conservatorship & Adoption in Texas Explained | Fort Worth cover

Conservatorship & Adoption in Texas Explained | Fort Worth

What does "custody" actually mean in Texas? Not what most people think — and in this episode, we trace the entire arc of Texas family law from conservatorship basics all the way to a finalized adoption. We start with the term that surprises every parent: Texas law doesn't say custody, it says conservatorship — the legal framework of rights and duties over a child's education, medical care, and residence. We break down the tiers: sole managing conservatorship (exclusive decision-making and primary residence), joint managing conservatorship (shared rights, with one parent typically designating the primary residence), and possessory conservatorship. Then we follow what happens when the state steps in: the CPS timeline from emergency removal — with or without an ex parte order — through the SAPCR filing, the hearing before a judge, and a grant of temporary managing conservatorship, and how long-term placements become permanent managing conservatorship, often with relatives like grandparents. From there, we cover the most serious step in family law: terminating parental rights — severing the bond — and the crucial distinction between a PMC arrangement, where birth parents retain some rights like visitation, and adoption, which is a complete legal severance creating a new permanent bond. Finally, we walk the adoption steps in order: termination of prior parental rights, strict criminal background checks, the rigorous home study evaluation, and the final hearing where the judge officially grants the adoption decree. Through it all runs the guiding principle of the Texas Family Code: the best interest of the child. For 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.

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