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In re Georgina Yackelin Ramirez Uzcátegui

COA03March 18, 2026

Litigation Takeaway

"Valid foreign custody orders provide a powerful 'fast-track' for child recovery in Texas; unless a parent can prove a dire emergency, Texas courts are legally required to enforce foreign decrees via habeas corpus without reconsidering the merits of the custody case."

In re Georgina Yackelin Ramirez Uzcátegui, 03-26-00090-CV, March 18, 2026.

On appeal from Williamson County

Synopsis

The Third Court of Appeals held that a trial court abuses its discretion by denying a writ of habeas corpus when a relator establishes a "bare legal right" to possession of a child under a foreign custody order. Under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), Texas courts must treat foreign custody determinations as sister-state orders, rendering the return of the child a mandatory, ministerial act absent evidence of a dire emergency.

Relevance to Family Law

This decision reinforces the high hurdle required to resist the enforcement of foreign custody orders in Texas. For practitioners, it confirms that once a "bare legal right" to possession is established via a foreign decree, trial courts lose nearly all discretion to deny habeas relief. It effectively limits the trial court’s role to a ministerial function, preventing judges from reconsidering the merits of the underlying custody dispute or denying relief based on equitable or procedural technicalities that do not rise to the level of a "dire emergency" or a "serious immediate question" concerning the child's welfare.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Relator (Mother) and Real Party in Interest (Father) were married in Venezuela and obtained an agreed custody order from a Venezuelan court in 2023, granting Mother exclusive possession and decision-making authority for three years. Father relocated to the United States for work, and Mother eventually joined him with the child. After a period of reconciliation and subsequent separation in Texas, Mother was arrested following an altercation and deported to Venezuela. Federal agents denied her request to take the child with her upon deportation.

Upon her return to Venezuela, Mother attempted to coordinate the child's return, but Father refused. Mother then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Williamson County, seeking enforcement of the Venezuelan order which she had previously sought to register under Texas Family Code section 152.305. Despite the existence of the foreign order, the trial court denied the habeas petition. Mother sought mandamus relief.

Issues Decided

  1. Whether a foreign child custody determination must be recognized and enforced by a Texas court under the UCCJEA.
  2. Whether a trial court possesses the discretion to deny a writ of habeas corpus once a relator establishes a "bare legal right" to possession.
  3. Whether challenges to the validity of a foreign order—such as allegations of forgery or lack of notice—preclude habeas relief when the opposing party has otherwise acknowledged the order's validity.

Rules Applied

  • Tex. Fam. Code § 152.105: Mandates that Texas courts treat a foreign country as a state of the United States for the purposes of applying the UCCJEA, unless the foreign country's child custody laws violate fundamental principles of human rights.
  • Tex. Fam. Code § 157.372: Provides that if the right to possession of a child is governed by a court order, the court in a habeas corpus proceeding shall compel the return of the child if it finds the relator is entitled to possession under that order.
  • Tex. Fam. Code § 157.374: Prohibits the trial court from denying the return of a child unless there is evidence of a "dire emergency" or a "serious immediate question concerning the welfare of the child."
  • UCCJEA Definitions (§ 152.102): Define "child custody determination" broadly to include temporary, initial, and modification orders, regardless of whether they were the result of a contested proceeding.
  • Standard of Review: Mandamus is the appropriate vehicle to challenge the denial of habeas corpus relief in child possession cases because such orders are not appealable. A trial court has no discretion in determining what the law is or applying it to the facts.

Application

The Third Court of Appeals began by clarifying that the Venezuelan order constituted a "child custody determination" under the UCCJEA. Because Mother produced an order granting her exclusive possession, she established the requisite "bare legal right" to the child. The court rejected Father’s argument that the order was not a "determination" simply because it was an agreed interlocutory judgment; the statutory definition explicitly includes such orders.

Furthermore, the court found that Father failed to meet the heavy burden of proving an exception to enforcement. He produced no evidence that Venezuelan law violates human rights, nor did he establish a "dire emergency" in the trial court. Although Father alleged his signature on the Venezuelan order was forged, the court noted his subsequent actions—specifically filing a petition to modify that very order—acted as an implicit acknowledgment of its validity. Consequently, the trial court’s refusal to enforce the order was an error of law, as the issuance of the writ should have been automatic and ministerial once the legal right was established.

Holding

The court held that a foreign nation must be treated as a sister state under the UCCJEA, and its custody orders must be recognized and enforced accordingly. The Venezuelan court was a "court" within the meaning of the Texas Family Code, and its decree was a valid child custody determination.

The court further held that once the Relator demonstrated her right to possession under the Venezuelan order, the trial court had no discretion to deny the writ of habeas corpus. In the absence of evidence showing a dire emergency or a serious immediate question regarding the child's welfare, the trial court’s duty to return the child was ministerial. The court conditionally granted the writ of mandamus.

Practical Application

This case provides a powerful roadmap for litigators dealing with international or interstate custody disputes. It emphasizes that habeas corpus is a "fast track" remedy that bypasses the lengthy merits-based litigation typical of SAPCR proceedings. If you represent a client with a valid foreign order, your primary objective should be the "bare legal right" showing, which shifts the burden entirely to the opposing party to prove a "dire emergency"—a standard that requires more than mere allegations of instability or parental unfitness.

Checklists

Establishing the Bare Legal Right

  • Verify the Order: Ensure the foreign order specifically addresses "legal custody" or "physical custody" as defined by Tex. Fam. Code § 152.102(3).
  • Apostille and Translation: Secure a certified translation and, if applicable, an apostille to satisfy evidentiary requirements and preempt "authenticity" objections.
  • Statutory Compliance: Confirm the foreign court exercised jurisdiction in substantial conformity with the jurisdictional standards of Chapter 152.
  • Registration: While not always a prerequisite for habeas relief, filing for registration under § 152.305 simultaneously can strengthen the procedural posture.

Defeating Enforcement (The High Bar)

  • Identify Human Rights Violations: Determine if the foreign jurisdiction’s custody laws violate fundamental human rights (Tex. Fam. Code § 152.105(c)).
  • Evidentiary "Dire Emergency": Move beyond general welfare concerns; prepare evidence of an immediate threat to the child’s physical or emotional safety to trigger § 157.374.
  • Notice and Due Process: Document any lack of notice or opportunity to be heard in the foreign proceeding, as these are specific grounds for contesting registration and enforcement.

Strategic Considerations for Counsel

  • Avoid Merits Entanglement: Remind the trial court that a habeas proceeding is not a SAPCR and that the court lacks the authority to issue new temporary orders absent a "serious immediate question" of welfare.
  • Estoppel Arguments: Look for "inconsistent actions" by the RPI, such as prior attempts to modify or follow the order, to defeat claims of forgery or invalidity.
  • Mandamus Readiness: Because habeas denials are not appealable, have the mandamus petition drafted or outlined as soon as the trial court signals a refusal to enforce the "bare legal right."

Citation

In re Georgina Yackelin Ramirez Uzcátegui, __ S.W.3d __ (Tex. App.—Austin 2026, orig. proceeding) (No. 03-26-00090-CV).

Full Opinion

View 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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