Unapologetic Parenting
What Judges Actually Look For in High-Conflict Custody Cases
You can shape a judge’s perception of your case — but only if you understand how judges think, what they look for, and what they are most skeptical of. This guide pulls back the curtain on what actually influences a Texas family court judge in a high-conflict custody case.
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- The Legal Standard — Best Interest of the Child
- The Holley Factors — What Texas Law Requires
- What Judges See in High-Conflict Cases
- Who Is Driving the Conflict?
- Which Parent Supports the Other Parent’s Relationship With the Kids
- Credibility — The Make-or-Break Factor
- What Hurts Your Case Even When You’re Right
- What Helps Your Case — Specifically
- How Judges View Parental Alienation
The Legal Standard — Best Interest of the Child
Every custody decision in Texas is governed by a single standard: the best interest of the child. Under Tex. Fam. Code §153.002, the best interest of the child is always the primary consideration. Everything else — the parents’ preferences, the history between the parties, the legal arguments — is evaluated through this lens.
What this means practically: a judge does not care who is “winning” the argument between the parents. A judge cares about one question: what arrangement serves these children’s needs, stability, and development best? Everything you do, say, and present in a custody case should be organized around answering that question — not around proving the other parent is terrible.
The Shift That Changes Everything
The most common mistake in high-conflict custody cases is presenting a case that is fundamentally about proving the other parent is terrible. Judges are not looking for the parent who is most right about what the other parent has done. They are looking for the parent who is most focused on what the children need. Make sure everything about your case communicates that.
The Holley Factors — What Texas Law Requires Courts to Consider
Texas courts evaluate the best interest of the child using the factors established in Holley v. Adams (1976) and codified in the Family Code. Understanding these factors tells you exactly what a judge is looking for:
| Holley Factor | What Judges Are Evaluating |
|---|---|
| The child’s desires | Age-appropriate; a 14-year-old’s preference carries more weight than a 6-year-old’s |
| The child’s emotional and physical needs | Now and in the future; stability, continuity, developmental needs |
| Emotional and physical danger to the child | Present and future risk in either household |
| Parental abilities | Each parent’s capacity to provide for the child’s needs — physical, emotional, developmental |
| Programs available to assist each parent | Support networks, resources, community ties |
| Plans for the child | Each parent’s specific, realistic plans for the children’s school, activities, and daily care |
| Stability of the home or proposed placement | Housing stability, employment stability, relationship stability |
| Acts or omissions indicating the parent-child relationship is improper | Abuse, neglect, substance abuse, mental health issues affecting parenting |
| Any excuse for the parent’s acts or omissions | Context and explanation for concerning behavior |
Who Is Driving the Conflict?
In a high-conflict case, one of the most important things a judge is trying to determine is: who is making this case high-conflict? Both parties will claim it is the other person. The judge knows that in most high-conflict cases, one parent is disproportionately responsible for the conflict — and they are watching for the evidence that reveals who it is.
Indicators that reveal the conflict driver:
- Who files motions? Who responds?
- Whose communications are the harassing ones?
- Who shows up to exchanges ready to argue, and who shows up to complete the exchange?
- Who is the Amicus Attorney or social study evaluator identifying as the primary conflict source?
- Whose post-order conduct is generating the violations?
- Who is talking to the children about the litigation?
Being the parent who is NOT driving the conflict — and being able to demonstrate that clearly through documented behavior — is one of the most powerful positions you can be in with a Texas family court judge.
Which Parent Supports the Children’s Relationship With the Other Parent
Texas courts place significant weight on which parent is more likely to support and facilitate the children’s relationship with the other parent. This is explicitly one of the Holley factors, and it is one that experienced family court judges focus on intensely in high-conflict cases.
The parent who speaks negatively about the other parent in front of the children, who uses the children as pawns, who celebrates the other parent’s absence, or who actively works to damage the other parent’s relationship with the children is violating one of the most fundamental custody principles Texas courts enforce.
This does not mean you cannot protect your children from genuine harm. It means that the way you discuss the other parent with and around the children is observed — by the children, by evaluators, and by the judge.
The Counterintuitive Strategy That Works
The parent who can honestly say “I encourage my children to love and spend time with their other parent, and I have consistently done so” — while simultaneously presenting documented evidence of the other parent’s misconduct — is in the strongest possible position. You can document the other parent’s problematic behavior while still genuinely supporting your children’s relationship with them. These are not contradictory. They are complementary.
Credibility — The Make-or-Break Factor
In a credibility battle — which every high-conflict case is — the judge is evaluating every aspect of your presentation against a single question: is this person credible?
Credibility is built through:
- Consistency — your account is the same in every context: in writing, in deposition, in testimony
- Specificity — you can give specific dates, specific words, specific events; vague accounts are less credible
- Documentation — what you say is backed by what you can show
- Fairness — you acknowledge the other parent’s good qualities where they genuinely exist; a parent who presents the other side as entirely without merit is less credible than one who is balanced
- Calm under pressure — emotional stability in testimony signals genuine confidence in the truth of what you are saying
- Child-centeredness — everything you say comes back to the children’s wellbeing, not your own grievances
What Hurts Your Case — Even When You’re Right
| Behavior | Why It Hurts Even When Justified |
|---|---|
| Presenting the other parent as entirely without redeeming qualities | Judges know this is almost never true; it reads as bias and exaggeration, which undermines credibility on everything |
| Excessive litigation | Filing motions for every minor issue signals that you may be using the court system as a weapon; judges notice who keeps returning to court |
| Emotional outbursts in court | Even justified anger damages the perception of stability that custody decisions favor |
| Involving the children in the litigation | Any evidence that the children know about the details of the case, or have been asked their opinions about legal matters, damages your case significantly |
| Social media activity about the case | Anything you post is potentially an exhibit; judges view public airing of custody disputes very negatively |
| Withholding the other parent’s access as retaliation | Even when provoked, self-help remedies that violate the court order put you in contempt and damage your standing |
Carl Knickerbocker Law — Round Rock, TX
Knowing how judges think changes how you prepare. Let’s talk strategy.
Carl Knickerbocker is a Texas family law attorney, parallel parenting author, and founder of @unapologeticparenting. Free consultation.
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