Contesting an adoption in Texas is a legal process that birth parents may pursue under specific circumstances. Texas law protects the finality of adoptions to provide stability for children, but it also recognizes situations where consent was invalid or procedures were flawed. Understanding when and how birth parents may challenge an adoption helps families navigate this emotionally complex area of law.
The decision to contest an adoption sometimes arises from confusion about consent requirements, pressure during signing, or concerns about how the process unfolded. Texas courts take these challenges seriously but require clear evidence that legal standards were not met. Birth parents considering whether to contest an adoption benefit from understanding the strict requirements and limited timeframes involved.
Key Takeaways for Contesting an Adoption in Texas
- Texas law makes properly executed adoption consent generally irrevocable, with limited exceptions for fraud, duress, or procedural defects under Texas Family Code §§ 161.103 and 161.1035.
- Birth parents bear the burden of proof when contesting an adoption, meaning they must present clear evidence supporting their claims.
- Challenging a pending adoption differs significantly from attempting to overturn a finalized adoption, which Texas courts rarely permit.
- Fraud or duress claims require specific evidence that the birth parent's consent was obtained through deception or coercion.
- Under Texas Family Code §162.012, challenges to a final adoption decree must generally be filed within six months of entry unless based on fraud or lack of jurisdiction.
How Adoption Consent Works Under Texas Law
Texas adoption law requires birth parents to formally consent before their parental rights may end and an adoption may proceed. This consent process follows specific rules designed to confirm that birth parents understand the permanent nature of their decision. The Texas Family Code Chapter 161 governs these requirements.
Formal Requirements for Valid Consent
Valid adoption consent in Texas must meet several legal requirements. The birth parent signs an affidavit of voluntary relinquishment before a qualified witness. The affidavit must be signed before a person authorized to take oaths and witnessed by two credible persons, as required by Texas Family Code §161.103(a)(2). This document must contain specific language explaining that signing terminates all parental rights permanently.
Under §161.103(a)(1), a mother may not sign an affidavit of voluntary relinquishment until at least 48 hours after giving birth. A father may sign an affidavit any time after the child's birth. This waiting period gives birth mothers time to consider their decision after the immediate emotions of childbirth. Courts may invalidate consent signed before this period expires.
When Consent Becomes Irrevocable
Adoption consent becomes irrevocable according to the affidavit's terms under Texas Family Code §161.1035, which may make it immediately irrevocable upon signing or after a stated period. Birth parents must read these documents carefully before signing. The specific language in the affidavit controls whether any revocation period exists.
Some affidavits include a brief revocation period, while others become immediately irrevocable upon signing. Even when a revocation period exists, revocation takes effect only if the court signs an order revoking termination under §161.1035(b).
In some circumstances, a consent agreement can be challenged based on fraud, duress, or other legal grounds, even if it contains a clause that makes it irrevocable. These legal arguments are extremely fact-specific, so it’s best to consult with an experienced adoption lawyer to know whether you have legal grounds to challenge a consent to adoption.
Grounds for Contesting an Adoption in Texas
Texas law recognizes specific circumstances where a birth parent may contest an adoption. These grounds focus on problems with how consent was obtained or how the adoption process unfolded. Courts require clear evidence supporting any challenge.
Fraud in Obtaining Consent
Fraud occurs when someone makes false statements to induce a birth parent to sign consent. The birth parent must show that they relied on these false statements when deciding to sign. Common examples include lies about the adoptive family, false promises about future contact, or misrepresentation of the birth parent's legal rights.
Texas courts evaluate fraud claims carefully. The fraud must relate to something significant, not minor details. Courts look for evidence that the birth parent would not have signed if they had known the truth.
Duress and Coercion
Duress involves pressure so severe that it overcomes the birth parent's free will. Simple persuasion or emotional appeals do not qualify as duress under Texas law. The pressure must be significant enough that the birth parent felt they had no real choice.
Examples that courts have recognized as potential duress include:
- Threats of physical harm or criminal prosecution
- Extreme emotional manipulation by someone in a position of power
- Coercion from adoption facilitators or agency workers
- Withholding the birth parent's access to their child until signing
Proving duress requires specific evidence of the coercive conduct. General claims of feeling pressured without supporting details rarely succeed.
Procedural Defects
Adoption proceedings must follow specific legal procedures. When courts or agencies skip required steps or fail to provide proper notice, birth parents may have grounds to challenge. Procedural defects focus on what went wrong with the legal process itself.
Common procedural issues include:
- Failure to provide the required notice to a birth parent
- Invalid service of process
- Signing consent before the required waiting period expired
- Missing required language in the consent documents
- Improper venue or jurisdiction
These technical defects may invalidate an adoption even without fraud or duress. Courts examine whether the procedural problems were significant enough to affect the outcome.
Contesting a Pending Adoption Versus a Finalized Adoption
The timing of an adoption challenge dramatically affects the legal options available. Texas law treats pending adoptions and finalized adoptions very differently. Understanding this distinction helps birth parents assess their situation realistically.
Challenging Before the Final Decree
Before a court issues a final decree of adoption, the adoption remains pending. Birth parents have more options during this window, though challenges still require valid legal grounds. Courts may consider evidence of invalid consent or procedural problems before finalizing the adoption.
During this period, birth parents may file motions asking the court to dismiss the adoption petition. They may also present evidence at hearings challenging the validity of their consent. The court weighs this evidence against the best interest of the child.
Attempting to Overturn a Finalized Adoption
Once a court signs the final decree of adoption under Texas Family Code Chapter 162, the adoption becomes final. Texas courts strongly favor maintaining this finality to protect children's stability. Overturning a finalized adoption is exceptionally rare and typically must occur through a motion for new trial, restricted appeal, or bill of review under Texas Family Code §162.012 and the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
Birth parents seeking to challenge a finalized adoption face an extremely high burden. They must typically show:
- Fraud that was not discoverable before finalization
- Fundamental jurisdictional defects that invalidate the entire proceeding
- Newly discovered evidence proving invalid consent
Even with strong evidence, courts weigh the child's current stability and bonds with the adoptive family. The passage of time generally strengthens the finality of the adoption.
The Burden of Proof in Adoption Contests
Birth parents who contest an adoption carry the burden of proof. This means they must present evidence supporting their claims rather than simply making allegations. Texas courts do not shift this burden to adoptive parents or agencies.
What Clear and Convincing Evidence Means
Texas requires clear and convincing evidence for matters involving parental rights. This standard falls between the preponderance of evidence used in typical civil cases and the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in criminal cases. Evidence must produce a firm belief or conviction that the allegations are true.
Meeting this standard requires more than testimony alone. Birth parents benefit from documentation, recordings, witness statements, and other tangible evidence supporting their claims. Vague recollections or general feelings of pressure rarely meet this threshold.
Why Documentation Matters
Gathering evidence before filing a challenge significantly strengthens the birth parent's position. Courts respond to specific, documented claims rather than general assertions of wrongdoing.
Helpful documentation may include:
- Text messages, emails, or letters from adoption workers or agencies
- Medical records showing mental state at the time of signing
- Witness statements from people present during the consent process
- Financial records showing payments or pressure related to the adoption
- Any recordings of conversations about the adoption
Birth parents who suspect problems with their consent benefit from preserving this evidence quickly. Memories fade and documents disappear over time.
How Texas Courts Handle Adoption Contests
Texas family courts regularly handle adoption matters in the family district courts located throughout the state. All judges must follow Texas Family Code requirements strictly when evaluating contested adoptions.
What Judges Look For
Judges evaluating contested adoptions examine whether the birth parent has presented specific, credible evidence. General claims without supporting documentation rarely persuade courts to invalidate properly executed consent documents.
The court must also consider the child's best interest throughout the proceeding. Even when procedural problems exist, courts may decline to overturn an adoption if doing so would harm a child who has bonded with their adoptive family.
The Role of Legal Representation
Adoption contests involve complex procedural requirements and strict deadlines. Birth parents representing themselves may struggle to navigate these technical requirements effectively. The stakes of these proceedings, involving permanent parent-child relationships, make thorough preparation essential.
Attorneys familiar with Texas family court procedures understand local practices and expectations. This familiarity helps attorneys present evidence effectively and meet all filing requirements.
Time Limits and Deadlines for Contesting Adoption in Texas
Texas law imposes strict time limits on adoption challenges. Missing these deadlines may permanently close a birth parent's legal options. Understanding applicable timeframes helps birth parents act before their rights expire.
Revocation Periods for Consent
The revocation period for adoption consent usually depends on the language in the specific affidavit signed. Some affidavits allow revocation within a specified number of days if certain conditions are met. Others become irrevocable immediately upon signing.
In some situations, a birth parent may have the right to challenge a previously executed consent to adoption even if it contains a clause stating it is irrevocable. Limited legal grounds for challenging a consent include fraud, pressure to sign (duress), incapacity to execute the documents, and other arguments. A dedicated adoption lawyer can review your situation and explain if you have the right to challenge a consent.
Birth parents must review their signed documents carefully to understand what revocation rights, if any, exist. An attorney may help parents interpret the specific language and identify applicable deadlines.
Statute of Limitations for Final Adoption Challenges
Under Texas Family Code §162.012, challenges to a final adoption decree must generally be filed within six months of entry unless based on fraud or lack of jurisdiction. Fraud claims challenging a final adoption generally must be filed within six months under §162.012(a), unless the fraud was undiscoverable despite due diligence, in which case an equitable bill of review may apply.
Birth parents who delay acting may find their claims barred regardless of the underlying merit. Acting quickly after discovering potential grounds preserves legal options.
The Connection Between Termination, Consent, and Adoption Challenges in Texas
Termination of parental rights (TPR) and adoption are separate but connected legal processes. In Texas, a child generally cannot be adopted until the legal rights of each living parent have validly ended. That can happen in two primary ways: voluntary consent (through a signed affidavit) or involuntary termination (through a court order entered over the parent’s objection). Understanding which one applies is critical, because it affects what—if anything—a birth parent may be able to challenge later.
Differences Between Voluntary Consent and Involuntary Termination
Consent is a birth parent’s voluntary agreement to end parental rights. Termination of parental rights (TPR) is the broader legal concept, and it can happen either:
- Voluntarily by consent, typically when a parent signs an affidavit relinquishing parental rights (and often consenting to adoption), or
- Involuntarily by court order, after a contested proceeding.
In an involuntary TPR proceeding, a Texas court must find a statutory ground for termination and determine that termination is in the child’s best interests. Courts may order involuntary termination in serious circumstances—such as abandonment, endangering conduct, repeated failure to comply with court-ordered obligations, long-term incarceration, or when a parent cannot be located despite reasonable efforts.
Why This Distinction Matters When Contesting an Adoption
Whether parental rights ended by consent or by court order can determine if an adoption challenge is even possible—and what must be proven
Challenging Consent Can Block the Foundation for an Adoption
In many adoption challenges, the real focus is whether a birth parent’s voluntary consent/affidavit was legally valid. A parent who signed a voluntary consent may still be able to challenge an adoption in limited situations, depending on what was signed and whether statutory requirements were followed. If the consent is successfully challenged—because it was not properly executed or because a recognized legal defect (e.g., fraud, duress) is proven—the adoption may be blocked or vulnerable because the legal basis for ending parental rights is called into question.
Involuntary Termination Usually Ends the Ability to Contest Adoption
By contrast, if a parent’s rights were involuntarily terminated by a final court order, it is usually impossible under Texas law for that parent to later contest the adoption. Once termination is final, the parent is no longer a legal parent and generally lacks standing to challenge a subsequent adoption unless the termination order itself is first set aside or invalidated through the limited procedures available.
FAQ for Birth Parents Contesting Adoption in Texas
Does Changing My Mind After Signing Count as Grounds to Contest?
Simply regretting the decision to give consent does not provide legal grounds to contest an adoption. Texas law requires fraud, duress, or procedural defects rather than a change of heart. Courts recognize that adoptions must have finality to protect children's stability.
What If I Never Received Notice of the Adoption Proceedings?
Failure to receive proper legal notice may provide grounds to challenge an adoption. Texas law requires notice to birth parents whose rights have not yet been terminated. If you never received notice and did not voluntarily relinquish your rights, an attorney may evaluate whether this defect invalidates the adoption.
May I Contest a Stepparent Adoption of My Child?
Stepparent adoptions require the biological parent's rights to end before the adoption may proceed. Birth parents who did not consent to termination, or who believe their consent was invalid, may have grounds to contest. The same legal standards for fraud, duress, and procedural defects apply.
What Happens to My Child During a Contested Adoption?
During contested adoption proceedings, courts typically maintain the child's current placement unless circumstances warrant a change. Judges prioritize the child's stability while the legal questions get resolved. The child generally remains with the prospective adoptive parents during the contest.
Does Contesting an Adoption Affect Future Custody Rights?
The outcome of an adoption contest determines whether the adoption proceeds or fails. If the contest succeeds and parental rights remain intact, the birth parent may pursue custody through separate proceedings. Success in contesting does not automatically grant custody but preserves the right to seek it.
Your Questions About Adoption Rights Merit Clear Answers
Contesting an adoption involves high stakes for everyone in the family. Birth parents facing this situation need accurate information about Texas law and realistic assessments of their options. Bailey & Galyen has served Texas families for more than 40 years, and our family law attorneys handle adoption matters throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Contact our office at (972) 449-1241 for a confidential consultation to discuss your specific circumstances.