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In the Interest of K.R.N.S., a Child

COA14April 28, 2026

Litigation Takeaway

"In private SAPCRs and other non-governmental family cases, appellate courts generally will not reverse based on complaints that a party’s own retained lawyer performed poorly. Unless a statute or the constitution creates a right to counsel, the proper appellate focus is trial-court error, preservation, sufficiency, or abuse of discretion—not ineffective assistance."

In the Interest of K.R.N.S., a Child, 14-24-00805-CV, April 28, 2026.

On appeal from 74th District Court, McLennan County, Texas

Synopsis

In a privately filed SAPCR, the Fourteenth Court held that a parent cannot raise an ineffective-assistance complaint against retained trial counsel unless some constitutional or statutory right to counsel exists. Because this case was not a governmental Subtitle E proceeding under Family Code section 107.013, and the appellant identified no other source of a right to counsel, his complaints about counsel’s performance were not cognizable on appeal.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters well beyond the narrow ineffective-assistance issue because it clarifies a recurring boundary in Texas family practice: not every bad-lawyering complaint can be repackaged as appellate error. In private custody litigation, divorce cases involving SAPCR components, modification suits, and other non-governmental family disputes, dissatisfied parties generally cannot seek reversal by arguing that their own retained counsel mishandled witness preparation, briefing, evidentiary development, or trial strategy. For family-law litigators, that means preservation, record development, and direct trial presentation remain paramount; post-judgment attempts to recast attorney-performance complaints as ineffective assistance will usually fail outside the statutory right-to-counsel context.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The father initiated a suit affecting the parent-child relationship seeking conservatorship and child-support relief concerning the parties’ child. The mother filed a counterpetition seeking similar relief, and another related SAPCR filed by the mother was consolidated into the same proceeding. The matter proceeded to a bench trial with both parents represented by counsel.

After the trial court signed the final SAPCR order, the father appealed pro se. Liberally construing his brief, the court of appeals treated his arguments as complaints that retained trial counsel had performed deficiently. The father asserted, in substance, that counsel failed to subpoena important witnesses, failed to respond effectively to the mother’s major arguments, failed to cite authorities the father believed were favorable, and failed to argue adequately that the requested relief was in the child’s best interest.

The appellate record also showed that counsel was retained, not court-appointed, and that the underlying case was privately filed by the parents rather than brought by any governmental entity. Those facts drove the court’s analysis because the availability of an ineffective-assistance complaint in civil family litigation depends first on whether the complaining party had a constitutional or statutory right to counsel.

Issues Decided

  • Whether a parent in a privately filed SAPCR may assert on appeal that retained trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance.
  • Whether Family Code section 107.013 supplied a statutory right to counsel in this case.
  • Whether any other constitutional or statutory source gave the appellant a right to counsel that would support an ineffective-assistance claim.

Rules Applied

The court relied principally on the distinction between a general expectation of attorney assistance in civil litigation and a legally enforceable right to counsel sufficient to support an ineffective-assistance complaint.

Key authorities included:

  • Texas Family Code section 107.013, which provides for counsel in certain suits filed by a governmental entity under Subtitle E, including specified termination and conservatorship proceedings.
  • In the Interest of D.T., 625 S.W.3d 62 (Tex. 2021), which recognizes that the statutory right to counsel under section 107.013 carries with it a right to effective assistance, including in circumstances involving retained counsel under section 107.013(a-1).
  • In the Interest of E.R.W., 528 S.W.3d 251 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2017, no pet.), which explains that courts do not permit ineffective-assistance claims based merely on a common-law right to assistance of counsel; instead, a constitutional or statutory right to counsel must exist first.
  • In the Interest of Z.Q.N., No. 14-17-00434-CV, 2019 WL 758377 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Feb. 21, 2019, pet. denied) (mem. op.), reinforcing the same framework.

The court also cited the usual rules governing pro se briefs, including liberal construction coupled with holding pro se parties to the same procedural standards as licensed counsel.

Application

The court began by taking the father’s pro se briefing seriously and construing it liberally. Although he did not expressly invoke the phrase “ineffective assistance of counsel,” the court treated his complaints for what they were: an effort to obtain appellate relief based on alleged deficiencies in his lawyer’s trial performance.

From there, the court focused not on whether counsel’s performance was actually deficient, but on the threshold question whether this was even the kind of case in which an ineffective-assistance argument could be made. That inquiry was dispositive. Under D.T., ineffective-assistance complaints are cognizable when a constitutional or statutory right to counsel exists. In family law, section 107.013 creates that right in certain governmental Subtitle E cases. But this was not such a case. The father himself filed the SAPCR, the mother filed the competing and consolidated pleading, and no governmental entity initiated the proceeding.

Because the case fell outside section 107.013, the statutory framework recognized in D.T. did not apply. The father also failed to identify any independent constitutional or statutory provision giving him a right to counsel in this private SAPCR. Without that predicate right, the court held there was no doctrinal basis for an ineffective-assistance claim at all. In other words, the problem was not merely that the father failed to prove deficient performance or prejudice; the problem was that Texas law did not recognize the claim in this procedural setting.

Holding

The Fourteenth Court held that the appellant could not complain on appeal that his retained counsel in a privately filed SAPCR rendered ineffective assistance. Because the case was not a suit filed by a governmental entity under Subtitle E, Family Code section 107.013 did not confer a right to counsel, and the appellant identified no other constitutional or statutory basis for such a right.

Having concluded that no cognizable ineffective-assistance claim existed, the court rejected the father’s sole appellate complaint and affirmed the final SAPCR order. The opinion is therefore a clean reaffirmation that ineffective-assistance doctrine in Texas family law is limited to proceedings in which the right to counsel arises from statute or constitution, not merely from retention of counsel in private litigation.

Practical Application

For family-law trial lawyers, the strategic lesson is straightforward: in private SAPCRs, custody disputes embedded in divorce actions, and modifications between private parties, appellate courts are unlikely to rescue a party from a poor trial presentation by treating attorney-performance grievances as reversible ineffective assistance. If the case is not one in which a statute or the constitution guarantees counsel, counsel’s tactical failures ordinarily will not create an appellate issue under that label.

That has several practical consequences. First, trial counsel should assume that the record made at trial is the record the client will live with; there may be no meaningful appellate doctrine available to challenge counsel’s omissions. Second, when inheriting a case post-judgment, appellate counsel should carefully distinguish between cognizable legal error by the trial court and non-cognizable complaints about the client’s own lawyer. Third, practitioners should counsel clients candidly about remedy selection. In many private family cases, complaints about retained counsel’s alleged failures may point more naturally toward malpractice analysis than appellate reversal.

This case also has value in motion practice. When an appellant in a private family case attempts to frame retained-counsel errors as ineffective assistance, appellee’s counsel should consider an early, focused merits response centered on the absence of any statutory or constitutional right to counsel. Conversely, if the case does involve a governmental Subtitle E filing, practitioners must recognize that D.T. changes the landscape, including where the parent is represented by retained counsel rather than appointed counsel.

In divorce litigation specifically, this opinion is relevant whenever conservatorship, possession, child support, or related SAPCR relief is tried alongside property issues. A party cannot generally attack the custody or support rulings on appeal by arguing that retained divorce counsel failed to call the right witnesses, cross-examine effectively, offer financial proof, or brief the best-interest factors persuasively. The error must usually be framed, if possible, as trial-court error, preservation error, evidentiary error, legal insufficiency, or abuse of discretion—not ineffective assistance.

Checklists

Screening for a Cognizable Ineffective-Assistance Claim

  • Determine who filed the case: a governmental entity or a private party.
  • Identify whether the suit falls under Title 5, Subtitle E of the Family Code.
  • Analyze whether Family Code section 107.013 applies.
  • Confirm whether counsel was appointed, retained, or both at different stages.
  • Research whether any separate constitutional or statutory right to counsel exists in the specific proceeding.
  • Do not brief ineffective assistance unless you can first establish a recognized right to counsel.

Preserving Appellate Issues in a Private SAPCR

  • Focus on trial-court error, not merely attorney-performance complaints.
  • Preserve evidentiary objections clearly and obtain rulings.
  • Make offers of proof for excluded testimony or exhibits.
  • Request findings of fact and conclusions of law where appropriate.
  • Ensure key best-interest evidence is actually admitted into the record.
  • Challenge sufficiency, abuse of discretion, or procedural error where the record supports it.
  • Avoid relying on post hoc assertions that trial counsel “should have done more.”

Advising Clients About Post-Judgment Options

  • Explain that ineffective-assistance doctrine generally does not apply in private SAPCRs.
  • Distinguish between appealable judicial error and dissatisfaction with retained counsel.
  • Evaluate whether a motion for new trial can still cure record or preservation issues.
  • Consider whether newly discovered evidence standards are actually met before pursuing that route.
  • Discuss separately whether the client’s complaints implicate fee disputes, grievance issues, or possible malpractice questions.
  • Set realistic expectations about the likelihood of reversal when the complaint is directed solely at counsel’s performance.

Trial Preparation to Avoid the Appellant’s Problem

  • Confirm in writing which witnesses will be subpoenaed and why.
  • Memorialize strategic decisions about witness selection and legal authorities.
  • Prepare and exchange exhibit lists early enough to avoid exclusion problems.
  • Develop a clear best-interest theory tied to admissible evidence.
  • Address opposing arguments directly in trial briefing and at hearing.
  • Create a record showing the rationale for major strategic choices where appropriate.
  • If a client insists on a tactic you reject, document the advice and the decision.

Appellee-Side Response Checklist

  • Argue first that ineffective assistance is not cognizable absent a constitutional or statutory right to counsel.
  • Emphasize whether the case was privately filed and not initiated by a governmental entity.
  • Cite Family Code section 107.013, In the Interest of D.T., and In the Interest of E.R.W.
  • Point out if the appellant identifies no independent source of a right to counsel.
  • Urge affirmance without engaging unnecessary Strickland-type analysis where the claim fails at the threshold.
  • Use the appellant’s own characterization of counsel as retained, if the record supports it.

Citation

In the Interest of K.R.N.S., a Child, No. 14-24-00805-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 28, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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Thomas J. Daley

Analysis by Thomas J. Daley

Lead Litigation Attorney

Thomas J. Daley is a board-certified family law attorney. He has guided more than 225 clients to successful resolution of their cases over his 18 years of experience.

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