In every family law case that affects the parent-child relationship, the primary consideration of the court is the “best interest of the child.” Yet, the Texas Family Code gives no specific direction for making this determination. That is problematic for the following reasons:
- Judges across Texas have very different opinions as to what constitutes the “best interest of the child.”
- Family law cases make up 50 percent of the Texas judicial caseload. The state is asking its judges to spend a significant portion of their time parenting other people’s children.
- The United States Supreme Court and the Texas Supreme Court have provided nearly 100 years of guidance as to how judges should constitutionally determine the “best interest of the child.” However, these rules are not reflected in the Texas Family Code.
- The Texas Family Code is the source most commonly cited by family law judges, but many are unaware of the Supreme Court’s clear direction on deciding the “best interest of the child.” Judges cannot find the instructions that they need in the Texas Family Code.
Furthermore, the U.S. Supreme Court has consistently held that parents have a fundamental right to raise their own children under the due process clause of the U.S. Constitution.
This extensive precedent from the U.S. Supreme Court was also recently outlined by Attorney General Ken Paxton in AG Opinion KP-0241.
THSC’s legislative team has worked with lawmakers and attorneys who are experienced in Constitutional law and Texas family law to draft the Family Unity Act.
The Family Unity Act will update the Texas Family Code to directly incorporate Supreme Court precedent outlined by AG Opinion KP-0241.
Codifying the Supreme Court’s guidance into the Texas Family Code would ensure that all Texas judges are provided with clear and consistent Constitutional direction when determining how far they can intervene into the parent-child relationship.
The bill will answer a legal question using only existing case law. It does not address the policy debate as to which outcome is correct in any specific case. Specifically, the bill:
- Codifies the constitutional presumption that parents are fit and that fit parents act in the best interest of their children
- Specifies that a parent’s fundamental right to raise his or her child includes, but is not limited to, the right to direct the care, custody, control, education, upbringing, moral and religious training, and medical care of the child
- Prevents courts from in fringing upon a parent’s fundamental right to raise his or her child unless the infringement is necessary to prevent a significant impairment of the child’s physical health or emotional well-being
Before introducing this legislation, THSC submitted a brief to the Texas attorney general’s office to obtain his opinion on the matter.
The Attorney General has released an opinion in response to the request.