We represent Houston-area parents in child custody matters across Harris, Montgomery, Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties — conservatorship, possession orders, modifications, enforcement, emergency custody, and CPS defense. Our team includes a former CPS caseworker and licensed mediator. Free consultation.
We provide custody representation throughout the Houston area — including cases filed in Harris County, Montgomery County, and cases that span both systems when parents live on different sides of the county line. Our office in downtown Conroe sits along the I-45 corridor, placing us in a strong position for cases from Houston through Spring and The Woodlands into Montgomery County.
Harris County custody cases involve the same Texas Family Code framework as anywhere in the state — conservatorship, possession and access, and the best interest of the child standard — but the scale of the Houston metro means these cases frequently involve dual-income households, significant assets, energy sector employment, relocation dynamics, and non-standard possession arrangements. We handle both straightforward initial orders and financially complex contested cases.
Whether you are going through a divorce and need an initial custody order, dealing with a co-parent who is violating your existing order, facing a relocation dispute, or need to modify terms that no longer reflect your family’s circumstances — we provide direct, experienced representation from filing through resolution, including trial when necessary.
One of our attorneys worked professionally as a CPS caseworker before earning a law license — and has been a licensed mediator since 2020. That background provides firsthand familiarity with how investigators document parenting, what courts weigh most heavily, and how to build a custody case that speaks the language Harris and Montgomery County judges respond to. Free consultation →
Conservatorship cases in Harris County’s 12 family district courts, cases involving both Harris and Montgomery County parents along the I-45 and Hwy 249 corridors, emergency custody applications, CPS defense, and post-decree modifications — we handle the full range of what Houston-area families face in family court.
Not every custody matter requires a contested hearing. When both parents have agreed on changes to the possession schedule, geographic restriction, or other terms, the case can often be resolved significantly faster and at a fraction of the cost of litigated proceedings. For qualifying uncontested divorce cases that include agreed custody terms, flat-fee services may be available through 2500Divorce.com. A free consultation confirms whether your situation qualifies. An informal agreement between parents is not legally enforceable — only a signed court order can be enforced through contempt.
Contact us immediately — before your next CPS interaction if possible. Our team includes a former CPS caseworker who understands how these investigations proceed and can help you protect your parental rights from the start. Contact us now →
141 N. San Jacinto Street
Conroe, TX 77301
Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Evening & weekend by appointment
Texas uses “conservatorship” for what most states call legal custody — the right to make decisions about education, healthcare, religious upbringing, and other significant aspects of a child’s life. Joint managing conservatorship is the default; both parents share decision-making rights. Sole managing conservatorship is awarded when joint conservatorship would significantly impair the child’s welfare — typically in cases involving family violence, substance abuse, or demonstrated inability to cooperate. Rights and duties are specifically apportioned in the order, not automatically equal.
The possession order establishes the physical schedule — where the child lives, when each parent has time, and how holidays and summers are divided. Texas provides the Standard Possession Order as a baseline under TFC § 153.312, but courts regularly grant expanded, modified, or customized schedules. Many Houston-area families with energy sector schedules, offshore rotations, or non-standard hours benefit from customized possession arrangements drafted at the outset. The SPO is a floor, not a ceiling.
Every custody decision in Texas is filtered through the best interest of the child. Courts weigh each parent’s stability, the child’s established relationships and routines, any history of family violence or substance abuse, the child’s physical and emotional needs, and — for children 12 or older — the child’s own preference. Texas law is gender-neutral; neither parent has a built-in advantage. Understanding how these factors are weighed in Harris and Montgomery County specifically is where our team’s local experience provides practical insight.
One of our attorneys worked professionally as a Child Protective Services caseworker before earning a law license. In that role, they conducted investigations, documented parenting assessments, and made recommendations that directly influenced custody outcomes — the same kinds of evaluations that Harris and Montgomery County family courts rely on today.
That background provides firsthand familiarity with what investigators typically document, what courts weigh most heavily, and how child welfare assessments are conducted — context that informs how we approach custody cases involving active CPS involvement, DFPS proceedings, or protective service allegations in the Houston area.
If CPS has contacted you or opened a case involving your children, contact us immediately. How you engage with the investigation in its early stages significantly affects the outcome. The right approach is not simply to cooperate — it is to cooperate strategically, with representation that understands what is being documented and why.
The most common arrangement in Texas. Both parents share rights and duties — including the right to access educational and medical records, the right to be informed of school and medical appointments, and the right to consent to non-emergency medical treatment during their period of possession. One parent is typically designated to have the exclusive right to determine the child’s primary residence, often subject to a geographic restriction. JMC does not mean equal time. The possession schedule in a JMC case can range from the standard schedule to an equal 50/50 arrangement depending on the circumstances.
One parent is awarded exclusive rights to make major decisions for the child. Courts award sole managing conservatorship when joint conservatorship would significantly impair the child’s physical health or emotional development — most commonly in cases involving documented family violence, substance abuse, chronic neglect, or a parent’s demonstrated inability to cooperate. The other parent is typically named possessory conservator with a court-ordered possession schedule. Obtaining or defending against sole managing conservatorship requires presenting a compelling factual record.
The Standard Possession Order under Texas Family Code § 153.312 serves as the default schedule — the first, third, and fifth weekends each month, Thursday evenings during the school year, alternating holidays, and extended summer possession. Harris and Montgomery County courts regularly deviate from the standard when the child’s needs, a parent’s work schedule, or the distance between homes warrants a different arrangement. Getting the possession schedule right at the outset matters — modifying it later requires showing a material change in circumstances.
Texas courts can issue emergency temporary orders — including ex parte orders entered without prior notice to the other parent — when a child faces immediate danger of physical harm, sexual abuse, or imminent removal from the jurisdiction. The evidentiary bar is high and proceedings move quickly. If you believe your child is in immediate danger, contact an attorney the same day. Having the right documentation ready makes a significant difference in these situations. Call (713) 352-6900.
Texas allows modification when there has been a material and substantial change in circumstances since the last order, and modification is in the child’s best interest. Common qualifying changes in the Houston area include a parent relocating outside the geographic restriction, a significant income change, a new safety concern, a parent’s remarriage that materially affects the child’s environment, school changes, or the child’s changing needs as they grow older.
Changes that seem significant in daily life do not always meet the legal threshold — and what does not qualify today may qualify after additional circumstances develop. Strategy matters as much as the merits. When both parents agree, an uncontested modification can often be completed significantly faster and at lower cost.
When a parent in the Houston area violates a custody order — denying possession time, moving a child without notice, withholding the child during your designated period, or interfering with your rights — Texas courts can hold them in contempt, award make-up possession time, require payment of your attorney’s fees, and in serious cases modify primary custody.
Document every violation with dates, times, and any communications. Enforcement actions are strongest when the pattern is clear and the evidence is contemporaneous. Contact us as soon as a pattern emerges — waiting allows violations to continue and may affect what remedies are available.
Many Houston-area families straddle the Harris-Montgomery County line — one parent in The Woodlands or Spring, the other in Houston, Humble, or Cypress. When custody cases involve parents in different counties, venue, jurisdiction, and potential transfer questions add complexity that requires an attorney who knows both systems. We handle cases throughout this corridor regularly — from downtown Houston north through Spring and The Woodlands to Conroe and beyond, as well as cases extending into Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties.
When a case is filed in Harris County but one parent lives in Montgomery County — or when a modification needs to be transferred between courts as circumstances change — we handle those procedural issues efficiently so the focus stays on the substantive custody questions that determine how much time you spend with your children.
We offer free consultations for Houston and Greater Houston custody cases. Call (713) 352-6900 or schedule online. Evening and weekend appointments are available.
Schedule your free consultation →141 N. San Jacinto Street
Conroe, TX 77301
Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Evening & weekend by appointment
Conservatorship is the Texas term for what most states call legal custody — the legal rights and duties a parent has with respect to a child. A Texas custody order establishes who has the right to make decisions about education, healthcare, and religious upbringing, and what rights each parent holds regarding the child’s records, activities, and daily life.
Joint managing conservatorship means both parents share those rights and duties — it is the default in Texas. Sole managing conservatorship gives one parent exclusive decision-making authority, typically in cases involving family violence, substance abuse, or a demonstrated inability to cooperate. Rights and duties are specifically apportioned in the order; joint managing conservatorship does not automatically mean equal time or equal authority on all decisions.
In Texas family law, conservatorship (legal custody) and possession and access (physical custody) are two distinct issues addressed separately in every custody order. Conservatorship governs decision-making rights. Possession and access establishes the physical schedule — where the child lives, when each parent has the child, and how holidays and summers are divided.
Parents can share conservatorship rights equally while one parent has significantly more physical possession time — or vice versa, depending on what the court determines serves the child’s best interest. Many Houston-area parents assume 50/50 is the default; it is not. The Standard Possession Order is the baseline, and it is not equal time.
Yes. Texas law explicitly prohibits courts from applying any gender preference in custody decisions. The best interest of the child is the only governing standard, and it applies equally regardless of which parent is requesting primary custody. A father can be designated as the parent with the right to establish the child’s primary residence when the evidence supports that arrangement.
Outcomes are based on each parent’s involvement, stability, availability, and ability to meet the child’s needs — not on gender. If you are a father seeking primary custody in the Houston area, the question is the same as for any parent: what does the evidence show about which arrangement best serves the child?
A Texas custody order can be modified when there has been a material and substantial change in circumstances since the last order was entered, and modification is in the child’s best interest. Common qualifying changes in the Houston area include a parent relocating outside the geographic restriction, a significant income change, a new safety concern, a parent’s remarriage that materially affects the child’s environment, school changes, or the child’s changing needs as they grow older.
Minor disagreements or routine lifestyle differences do not meet the legal threshold for modification. When both parents agree to the change, an uncontested modification can often be handled more quickly and at lower cost than a litigated modification — but the agreement still requires a properly entered court order to be enforceable.
Contact a family law attorney as soon as possible — before your next interaction with CPS if you can. You have legal rights throughout the investigation process, and how you respond in the early stages can significantly affect the outcome.
Our team includes an attorney who formerly worked as a CPS caseworker and understands how these investigations often proceed, what caseworkers typically document, and how to engage with the process in a way that protects your parental rights. Do not assume that cooperation alone will resolve the matter favorably. Call (713) 352-6900 to speak with us as soon as possible.
This firm represents clients throughout Montgomery, Harris, Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties — with our office based in Conroe, steps from the Montgomery County Family Law Courts.
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Attorney advertising. Fritz and Phillips, PC is a Texas law firm. The information on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or establish an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Jessica Fritz (TX Bar 2008) and Keith Phillips (TX Bar 2016) are the attorneys responsible for this content.