in the Matter of R.S. ( 2022 )


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  •               In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-22-00165-CV
    ___________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF R.S.
    On Appeal from the 323rd District Court
    Tarrant County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 323-118013-22
    Before Sudderth, C.J.; Birdwell and Walker, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell
    Dissenting Memorandum Opinion by Justice Walker
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    R.S. appeals from an order committing him “to the care, custody[,] and control
    of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [(TJJD)] . . . [f]or an indeterminate period of
    time not to exceed the time” he turns nineteen or is “duly discharged in compliance
    with the supervision of [the] Human Resources Code.” See 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 51.03
    (a)(1), 54.03. See generally 
    Tex. Hum. Res. Code Ann. §§ 245.001
    –.151.
    R.S. does not list a specific issue on appeal but contends in his argument that the
    evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support committing him to TJJD
    instead of putting him on probation and placing him either at home or outside the
    home in one of two non-TJJD placement facilities to which he had been accepted. We
    reverse the trial court’s order and remand this case for a new disposition hearing.
    Procedural Background
    After the State filed a petition to adjudicate R.S. guilty of delinquent conduct,
    R.S. signed a judicial confession stipulating that in 2021 he had engaged in delinquent
    conduct by––on the same day––committing one first-degree-felony aggravated
    robbery and four second-degree-felony aggravated assaults with a deadly weapon. See
    
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.02
    (a)(2), 29.03(a)(2). Based on R.S.’s judicial confession
    and subsequent pleas of true to the delinquent-conduct allegations in the State’s
    petition, the trial court found that R.S. had engaged in delinquent conduct. See 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 51.03
    (a)(1), 54.03.
    2
    The trial court then held a disposition hearing. See 
    id.
     § 54.04(a). After hearing
    testimony from three witnesses, the trial court ultimately found that R.S. is a child in
    need of rehabilitation; that even though reasonable efforts had been made to prevent
    or eliminate the need for him to be removed from his home, he could not be
    provided the quality of care and level of supervision in the home that he would need
    to be able to meet the conditions of probation; that he has specific behavioral-health
    or other special needs that cannot be met with the community’s resources; and that it
    would be in R.S.’s best interest to be placed outside the home. Id. §§ 54.04(c), (d)(2),
    (i)(1), 54.04013. Despite hearing evidence that two potential alternative placements––
    one at a secure facility and another at a nonsecure facility––would be able to meet
    R.S.’s needs, the trial court determined that he should be committed to TJJD.
    Standard of Review and Applicable Law
    A juvenile court has considerable discretion to determine the suitable
    disposition for a child who has been adjudicated as having engaged in delinquent
    conduct. In re D.T., No. 02-20-00312-CV, 
    2021 WL 5028769
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth Oct. 28, 2021, no pet.) (mem. op.). A juvenile court abuses that discretion
    when it acts arbitrarily or unreasonably or without reference to guiding rules or
    principles. 
    Id.
     It does not abuse its discretion simply by basing its decision on
    conflicting evidence. 
    Id.
     Thus, we may not conclude that a juvenile court abused its
    discretion so long as some evidence of substantive and probative character exists to
    support its decision. 
    Id.
     However, a juvenile court abuses its discretion if it orders a
    3
    child committed to TJJD without evidence to support the statutorily required
    predicate findings. See In re J.C., No. 02-18-00038-CV, 
    2018 WL 2701613
    , at *2 (Tex.
    App.––Fort Worth June 5, 2018, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    In conducting our review of a disposition order, we engage in a two-pronged
    analysis: (1) did the juvenile court have sufficient information upon which to exercise
    its discretion, and (2) did it err in its application of discretion? D.T., 
    2021 WL 5028769
    , at *1. In doing so, we apply the civil standards of review for legal and factual
    evidentiary sufficiency. In re B.R., No. 02-19-00328-CV, 
    2020 WL 3969556
    , at *2 (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth June 18, 2020, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    When determining whether legally sufficient evidence supports the finding
    under review, we consider evidence favorable to the finding if a reasonable factfinder
    could and disregard evidence contrary to the finding unless a reasonable factfinder
    could not. In re M.E., No. 02-14-00051-CV, 
    2014 WL 7334990
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth Dec. 23, 2014, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem. op.). Anything more than a
    scintilla of evidence supporting a finding renders the evidence legally sufficient. 
    Id.
    When reviewing whether factually sufficient evidence supports a finding, we set
    aside the finding only if, after considering and weighing all of the evidence in the
    record pertinent to that finding, we determine that the credible evidence supporting
    the finding is so weak or so contrary to the overwhelming weight of all the evidence
    that the answer should be set aside and a new trial ordered. 
    Id.
    4
    Upon making the required findings that R.S. should be subject to a hearing to
    determine disposition, the trial court was authorized by the Family Code to either
    (1) place him on probation at home or outside the home or (2) commit him to TJJD.
    See 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.04
    (d)(1)–(2). No disposition placing a child on
    probation outside the child’s home or committing a child to TJJD is permitted unless
    the factfinder finds that it is in the child’s best interest to be placed outside the child’s
    home; reasonable efforts were made to prevent or eliminate the need for the child’s
    removal from the home and to make it possible for the child to return to the child’s
    home; and the child, in the child’s home, cannot be provided the quality of care and
    level of support and supervision that the child needs to meet the conditions of
    probation. 
    Id.
     §§ 54.04(c), (d)(1)(B), (i). 1 Probation outside the home may be in a
    suitable foster home, a suitable public or private residential treatment facility, or a
    suitable public or private post-adjudication secure correctional facility as permitted
    under the Texas Family Code. See id. § 54.04(d)(1)(B)(i), (ii), (iii); In re J.V.M., 
    318 S.W.3d 444
    , 448 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2010, no pet.).
    1
    The Stipulation of Evidence and Judicial Confession R.S. signed stated that he
    “agree[d] to a disposition of . . . OPEN [to] DISPOSITION,” but then it also
    included stipulations to the three required findings for placement outside the home;
    thus, it is unclear whether he agreed to a truly open disposition. Nevertheless, because
    R.S. challenges the trial court’s ultimate decision to commit him to TJJD, we address
    his complaint.
    5
    But to place a child in TJJD custody, Section 54.04013 requires another
    finding, 2 which the trial judge made in this case:
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this code, after a disposition
    hearing held in accordance with Section 54.04, the juvenile court may
    commit a child who is found to have engaged in delinquent conduct that
    constitutes a felony offense to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department
    without a determinate sentence if the court makes a special commitment
    finding that the child has behavioral health or other special needs that cannot be met
    with the resources available in the community. The court should consider the
    findings of a validated risk and needs assessment and the findings of any
    other appropriate professional assessment available to the court.
    
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.04013
     (emphasis added); see 
    id.
     § 54.04(d)(2) (listing, as one
    of three possible dispositions, commitment to TJJD without a determinate sentence
    “if . . . the court or jury made a special commitment finding under Section 54.04013”
    (emphasis added)); In re J.M.G., No. 06-16-00011-CV, 
    2016 WL 9175816
    , at *1 (Tex.
    App.––Texarkana Nov. 29, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.) (stating that Section 54.04013
    2
    This section applies to conduct that occurred on or after September 1, 2017. See
    Act of May 31, 2015, 84th Leg., R.S., ch. 962, § 8, 
    2015 Tex. Gen. Laws 3403
    , 3407.
    Legislative history for the bill in which Section 54.04013 was enacted states that “[i]t
    establishes a new sentence scheme for sending indeterminate youth to the state
    facilities, requiring a valid needs assessment and determination that the needs of the
    youth cannot be met with the resources available within the community.” Tex. S.
    Comm. on Crim. Just., Bill Analysis, Tex. S.B. 1630, 84th Leg., R.S. (2015). This “new
    sentence scheme” was enacted in response to a Justice Center of the Council for State
    Government study that found “juveniles under community-based supervision are far
    less likely to reoffend than youth with very similar profiles who are confined in Texas
    Juvenile Justice Department (TJJD) facilities.” 
    Id.
     The bill analysis recites that “the
    study results show that youth incarcerated in state facilities are 21 percent more likely to
    be rearrested than those who remain under supervision closer to home in local county
    programs.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, Section 54.04013 and other changes in the bill were
    intended to “continue the movement of the Texas juvenile justice system from the
    1950’s model of large rural institutions into a regional system that supervises and treats
    a youth closer to the youth’s home community.” 
    Id.
    6
    requires the trial court to make the special commitment finding before committing a
    juvenile to TJJD without a determinate sentence); see also In re T.A.W., 
    234 S.W.3d 704
    , 708 (Tex. App.––Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g) (Frost, J.,
    concurring) (noting that Section 54.04(d) “outline[s] the different options for
    disposition and the findings required for each” (emphasis added)).3
    “The [TJJD] is the most severe form of incarceration in the juvenile justice
    system, and it is neither reasonable nor appropriate in the area of juvenile law to use
    the final, most restrictive form of detention in all situations.” In re W.B.G., 
    598 S.W.3d 367
    , 372 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2020, no pet.) (quoting J.M.G., 
    2016 WL 9175816
    , at
    *2). Nevertheless, for purposes of the best-interest, reasonable-efforts, and
    unsuitability-of-the-home-for-probation findings, a trial court is not required to
    exhaust all possible alternatives before committing a juvenile to TJJD custody. In re
    K.L., No. 02-17-00226-CV, 
    2018 WL 1755225
    , at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Apr.
    12, 2018, no pet.) (mem. op.). 4 But cf. In re J.E.N., No. 11-21-00189-CV, 
    2022 WL 4541759
    , at *6–7 (Tex. App.––Eastland Sept. 29, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding
    that trial judge abused discretion by ordering J.E.N. committed to TJJD when no
    3
    R.S. does not expressly challenge this finding, but he does so implicitly by
    arguing that the factfinder should not have ordered him committed to TJJD.
    4
    In other parts of the Family Code, the best interests of children are often
    paramount, but in the Juvenile Justice Code, the best interests of children who engage
    in serious and repeated delinquent conduct are superseded to the extent they conflict
    with public safety. In re J.P., 
    136 S.W.3d 629
    , 633 (Tex. 2004).
    7
    alternative-placement efforts were made; thus, insufficient evidence supported trial
    court’s reasonable-efforts finding).
    Evidence at Disposition Hearing
    The trial judge took judicial notice of the court’s file5 and of prior hearings in
    the case over which he had presided, “to the exclusion of any statements made by
    [R.S.] during any detention hearings.” Therefore, the judge knew the nature of the
    offenses to which R.S. had judicially confessed. Additionally, the State explored the
    nature of those offenses at the disposition hearing.
    R.S. had used Instagram on his iPhone6 to meet a group of people, ostensibly
    to buy shoes. Instead, R.S. robbed the driver at gunpoint, stealing the victim’s car and
    ten pairs of shoes. R.S. also held the other occupants of the car, some of whom were
    juveniles, at gunpoint. R.S. claimed to have bought the gun, a Glock, from a homeless
    man for $350; he said he sold some different shoes for the money to buy the gun.
    R.S. admitted that after committing the robbery and aggravated assaults––but
    before being detained for them––he had been involved in another incident in which
    he tried to sell the Glock outside his school. The man to whom he tried to sell the gun
    5
    The trial court also took judicial notice of the sealed social history, which we
    have reviewed. See 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 54.04
    (b), 54.04013. The report includes a
    victim statement, placement summary, and detailed description of R.S’s background
    and the results of his psychological testing.
    6
    The State got R.S. to agree during cross-examination that he could have sold his
    iPhone for extra money “instead of holding a family at gunpoint.”
    8
    took it without giving R.S. any money; when R.S. grabbed his phone and the gun, the
    man shot R.S. in the finger.7
    Shelly Brasel, R.S.’s assigned court-intake officer, testified that R.S. lived with
    his grandmother, who was supportive of him. His grandfather––who was divorced
    from his grandmother and with whom R.S. did not live––had attended several of
    R.S.’s hearings, and his basketball coaches had spoken on his behalf. Thus, Brasel
    opined that R.S. had support at home and at school.
    Brasel testified that R.S. was “of low cognitive ability.” R.S.’s counsel asked the
    trial judge to take into account the discussion of R.S.’s “cognitive proficiency” in the
    social history provided to the court, which counsel stated “may shed some light on
    some of this very poor decision-making this young man has made.” R.S. explained
    that he was far behind in school because he and his mother had been homeless before
    he moved in with his grandmother.
    Before committing the delinquent conduct to which he pleaded true, R.S. had
    successfully completed probation 8 for unlawfully carrying a firearm. But Brasel
    7
    At the time of the disposition hearing, the man had been charged with
    aggravated robbery. R.S. claimed that the Glock was not loaded when he brought it to
    school––on a weekend while he was at basketball practice––but that the man buying it
    had brought the ammunition and loaded the gun while sitting in his own car.
    8
    During that probation, he was “part of the TCAP program,” performed
    community service, and wore an electronic monitor “for a period of time.” See In re
    G.L.C.P., No. 2-06-293-CV, 
    2007 WL 1377733
    , at *1 n.2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May
    10, 2007, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem. op.) (“TCAP is a home-based program which
    9
    admitted that, based on the delinquent conduct to which R.S. had pleaded, he had not
    been rehabilitated successfully after his probation. She admitted that R.S.’s successful
    completion of probation showed that “he has the capability to behave when he wants
    to.” At the time of the disposition hearing, R.S. had been in detention almost five
    months and was on a “Level 1 outstanding,” meaning he was “following all the
    instructions and following all the rules.” He had not committed any new offenses and
    had been respectful.
    R.S. testified and first apologized to his grandparents: “I’m sorry for doing
    something that y’all hadn’t raise[d] me to do.” He claimed to be “serious and sincere
    in [his] apology.” R.S. said that his grandparents had always taught him to work for
    what he wanted. Instead, he said that he committed the offenses because he wanted to
    buy his grandfather and younger siblings Christmas presents.
    R.S. testified that he had learned “a different way” since being detained: to “try
    to buy nothing at all or get a job.” Although he had briefly worked as a cook and
    dishwasher and had quit that job because basketball was interfering with his work, he
    was willing to do that job again.
    Shequita Burrell, a placement officer for Tarrant County Juvenile Services,
    testified that she had conducted a placement search for R.S. He had been accepted
    into a nonsecure facility where he would participate in weekly group and individual
    utilizes paid, trained adults (advocates) who live in the same communities as the youth
    to develop relationships with at-risk youth and families.”).
    10
    therapy and monthly family therapy; would be enrolled in school; and would have the
    opportunity to enroll in programs that would allow him to work, get on-the-job
    training, prepare for jobs and interviews, and obtain identification and a food
    handler’s license. 9 R.S. had also been accepted into a secure facility similar to the
    Tarrant County juvenile detention center where he would also do weekly individual
    and group therapy, monthly family therapy, and recover school credits. He would also
    be able to complete any ordered community-service hours and have his medications
    managed. In other words, both facilities provided essentially the same services except
    that vocational training was available only at the nonsecure facility.
    Burrell agreed that getting work experience would be valuable for R.S. Brasel
    also agreed; she thought that, in light of R.S.’s being from a low- to mid-income
    family, he would benefit from job training and would have better opportunities at the
    nonsecure facility. Although Brasel acknowledged that the offenses R.S. committed
    are of the type that would “make the community feel unsafe,” she nevertheless
    thought that both the secure and nonsecure facility could contribute to R.S.’s
    rehabilitation. R.S. wanted the judge to “make the right decision” and send him to the
    nonsecure facility so that he would have more opportunities. He was willing to “stick
    it out” and do what he needed to do to be successful there. R.S. agreed to ask for help
    when things got hard or when he felt like giving up.
    The record also shows that at this facility, his medications and medical needs
    9
    would be managed.
    11
    The State advocated that R.S. be placed in the secure facility where the
    community would be safe from him and where his cognitive issues and mental health
    could be addressed. The State emphasized R.S.’s good behavior while in detention as
    evidence that “he can thrive in a secure environment.” R.S. argued that the job-training
    programs at the nonsecure facility made it the better choice for him. He also argued
    that being there would keep “him away from the really bad kids.” R.S. did not advocate
    being placed back in his grandmother’s home.
    The behavioral evaluation in the social-history report included the psychologist’s
    conclusion that R.S. has antisocial tendencies and was thus at a high risk for future
    violence “without successful intervention.” However, the psychologist also concluded
    that R.S. was at “potential risk of . . . having adjustment problems to institutional living”
    and recommended that he “be considered for placement in a long-term residential
    treatment program where he might receive strict supervision in a structured and
    supportive therapeutic environment. The psychologist further recommended individually
    tailored therapy, psychiatric care, “academic remediation services,” and participation in a
    violence-prevention program “through a strict behavioral conditioning program that
    utilizes a social learning modality in reinforcing prosocial attitudes in community
    living.”10
    10
    Although we note that TJJD is required to provide an educational program for
    residents, the record does not contain evidence about any services available to R.S. at
    TJJD. See In re D.J.P., No. 02-13-00156-CV, 
    2014 WL 173490
    , at *7 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth Jan. 16, 2014, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem. op.) (“While . . . there was little
    12
    Notably, there was no evidence that the level of security at the secured facility
    was insufficient to protect either the public or––relevant to Section 54.04013––to
    meet R.S.’s need for a “long-term residential treatment program where he might
    receive strict supervision in a structured and supportive therapeutic environment.”
    Nor was there any evidence comparing or contrasting that security level with TJJD’s.
    In fact, the evidence showed that the secure facility was “a lockdown facility kind of
    like [the Tarrant County] detention center,” where R.S. had been “following all the
    instructions and following all the rules.”
    evidence presented at the disposition hearing about the educational programs available at
    TJJD or the treatment that he could receive there, the TJJD is statutorily required to
    provide an educational program that requires all residents to participate.” (citing 2013
    version of 
    37 Tex. Admin. Code § 343.670
     (2022) (Tex. Juvenile Justice Dep’t,
    Educational Program), which requires facility administrator to “ensure there is an
    educational program that requires all residents to participate”)); cf. In re J.P., No. 01-20-
    00072-CV, 
    2021 WL 2231259
    , at *5–6 (Tex. App.––Houston [1st Dist.] June 3, 2021, no
    pet.) (mem. op.) (holding evidence sufficient to support educational-need and best-
    interest findings despite lack of TJJD-specific testimony when J.P. had been unable to
    control himself in detention, and probation officer testified generally that J.P.’s behavioral
    problems and mental-health issues could be addressed by TJJD, and also citing cases with
    similar facts); In re J.F.S., No. 2-04-059-CV, 
    2005 WL 375152
    , at *1–3 (Tex. App.––Fort
    Worth Feb. 17, 2005, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem. op.) (holding same when juvenile had
    “received every rehabilitative resource available in Tarrant County” and “continued to
    engage in criminal conduct and violate the terms of his court-ordered probation”). But cf.
    In re J.R.D., No. 07-21-00174-CV, 
    2022 WL 2237838
    , at *3 (Tex. App.––Amarillo
    June 22, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.) (recounting TJJD-specific testimony supporting TJJD-
    commitment disposition); In re A.W.B., 
    419 S.W.3d 351
    , 361 (Tex. App.––Amarillo 2010,
    no pet.) (affirming commitment order when evidence showed that applicable services
    from Texas Youth Commission were the same as locally available rehabilitative services).
    13
    Analysis
    Generally, a trial court does not abuse its discretion in rendering a commitment
    order when a delinquent juvenile has engaged in some type of violent activity that
    makes the juvenile potentially dangerous to the public. B.R., 
    2020 WL 3969556
    , at *6
    (reviewing trial court’s “reasonable efforts” finding but not a Section 54.04013
    finding). Here, R.S. threatened five people at gunpoint to steal a car and shoes. Within
    the preceding year, he had completed probation for unlawfully carrying a gun; both
    offenses occurred while he was living with his grandmother.11 The evidence shows that
    instead of being rehabilitated by his prior at-home probation, he escalated his behavior.
    Thus, the public’s need for protection was high, and the evidence supported the trial
    court’s Section 54.04(i) findings that in-home probation would not be appropriate.
    But to uphold the trial court’s order committing R.S. to TJJD, we must also
    consider whether the evidence supports the trial court’s finding that R.S.’s behavioral-
    health or other special needs could not be met with non-TJJD community resources.
    The evidence showed that R.S. had a strong need for long-term structure and direct
    11
    R.S. distinguishes this case from In re A.G.N., No. 07-07-00312-CV, 
    2008 WL 2511197
    , at *1 (Tex. App.––Amarillo June 24, 2008, pet. denied) (mem. op.), in which
    the court affirmed an order committing A.G.N. for an indeterminate time. In that
    case, the appellate court had noted that A.G.N. “lacked family support”; R.S. notes
    that, here, although he has “a long history of being in an unstable home
    environment,” his environment had “changed when his grandmother more recently
    took custody of him,” showing that R.S. “had a home where he could be properly
    supervised now.” But this argument ignores that R.S.’s most serious delinquent
    conduct (from which the trial court determined the public had a high need for
    protection and which involved firearms possession, display, and threats) occurred
    while he was living with his grandmother.
    14
    supervision and that he had done well in juvenile detention. He also had a high need
    for psychiatric care, behavioral correction, and academic remediation, rather than job-
    specific training. Thus, the evidence supports a disposition at a secure facility rather
    than a nonsecure facility.
    But nothing in this record showed that the secure facility could not meet R.S.’s
    behavioral-health or other special needs, particularly his needs for strict supervision and
    intensive therapy in a “supportive therapeutic environment.” Unlike in the two other
    reported cases affirming TJJD commitment based on a Section 54.04013 finding, see In
    re H.C., Nos. 02-18-00230-CV, 02-18-00231-CV, 02-18-00232-CV, 
    2019 WL 1185089
    ,
    at *18–19 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 14, 2019, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem. op.);
    J.M.G., 
    2016 WL 9175816
    , at *2–4,12 the evidence here did not show that R.S. had been
    offered or had participated in the same or similar recommended community services
    without success. In fact, the evidence showed that his need for supervision had been
    met while in detention. And no evidence showed that he had ever been placed in a
    secure environment where he also had the recommended intensive therapy available to
    him. The evidence instead showed that such a facility was available that was capable of
    meeting R.S.’s needs for a secure, structured environment as well as for education and
    12
    Cf. In re H.A., No. 02-19-00192-CV, 
    2019 WL 6904549
    , at *4 (Tex. App.––Fort
    Worth Dec. 19, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op.) (rejecting, for purposes of reasonable-efforts
    finding, argument that “a juvenile court always lacks legally or factually sufficient
    evidence to make a reasonable-efforts finding if the State does not present evidence at
    the disposition hearing showing what specific services or outside-the-home placement
    options the juvenile department could offer to the delinquent juvenile”).
    15
    intensive therapy. In other words, all of the evidence showed that R.S.’s needs could be
    met in the secure facility, and there was no controverting evidence on which the trial
    court could have based its Section 54.04013 finding.
    Although a trial court is not required to exhaust all possible alternatives before
    committing a juvenile to TJJD, the trial court cannot commit a juvenile to TJJD based
    upon a record that does not support the required juvenile-specific (as opposed to
    community-safety specific) Section 54.04013 finding. Here, the evidence is insufficient
    to support the trial court’s finding that community resources could not meet R.S.’s
    behavioral-health or other special needs, given the then availability of the secure
    facility that had programs available according to the psychological evaluation’s specific
    recommendations.
    Conclusion
    Because no evidence supports the trial court’s Section 54.04013 finding, we
    therefore conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by committing R.S. to
    TJJD. We reverse the trial court’s order and remand the case for a new disposition
    hearing. See 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 56.01
    (i) (requiring remand when reversing
    disposition); In re L.F.R., No. 02-12-00454-CV, 
    2013 WL 1830325
    , at *1 (Tex. App.––
    Fort Worth May 2, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.) (remanding even when holding evidence
    legally insufficient to support disposition finding).
    /s/ Wade Birdwell
    Wade Birdwell
    16
    Justice
    Delivered: December 8, 2022
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02-22-00165-CV

Filed Date: 12/8/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/12/2022