Can parental rights be terminated if a parent is in jail or prison?
This question has been addressed in 2 Texas court opinions:
In the Interest of I.H., A Child
COA02 — January 30, 2026
A father challenged the termination of his parental rights, arguing that he was denied due process because he was not transported from jail for his trial and that the evidence was insufficient to support the termination. The Fort Worth Court of Appeals analyzed the father's history of substance abuse and his repeated refusal to submit to court-ordered drug testing, concluding that such refusals create a legal inference of ongoing drug use. The court held that this "presumption of use," combined with the child's drug exposure at birth, supported an endangerment finding. Additionally, the court held that because the father's attorney did not explicitly raise a constitutional objection to the father's absence during the trial, those due process claims were waived for appeal.
Litigation Takeaway
“Refusing a court-ordered drug test is not a neutral act; Texas courts treat a refusal as substantive evidence of illegal drug use and child endangerment. Furthermore, if a parent is unable to attend a hearing, counsel must explicitly cite constitutional due process grounds on the record to preserve the right to appeal that absence.”
In The Interest of W.G., M.G., A.G., Children
COA14 — February 13, 2026
The Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court's decree terminating a father’s parental rights following his ten-year sentence for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Although the father was previously a primary caretaker, his long-term incarceration created a vacuum of care that he attempted to fill by proposing a kinship placement with the children's paternal grandparents. The court analyzed the case under Texas Family Code § 161.001(b)(1) and the Holley v. Adams best-interest factors, concluding that the grandmother’s repeated positive drug tests for cocaine rendered the proposed placement unsuitable. The court held that the father’s criminal conduct, coupled with the failure to provide a safe, drug-free alternative environment, provided legally and factually sufficient evidence to support termination.
Litigation Takeaway
“When a parent faces long-term incarceration, the survival of their parental rights often depends entirely on the viability of their proposed kinship placements; practitioners must proactively vet relatives—specifically through independent drug testing—as a relative's substance abuse can effectively seal the parent's fate in a termination proceeding.”