What happens if I don't respond to court orders or deadlines in my case?
This question has been addressed in 4 Texas court opinions:
Tumey v. Crawford
COA14 — February 3, 2026
In Tumey v. Crawford, the appellant attempted to appeal a trial court's order granting a motion to dismiss under the Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA). However, the appellee’s request for mandatory attorney’s fees remained unresolved in the trial court. The Fourteenth Court of Appeals analyzed Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 51.014(a)(12), which specifically authorizes interlocutory appeals only when a TCPA motion is denied, not when it is granted. Following the principle that judgments are not final until all claims—including attorney's fees—are resolved, the court held that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal and dismissed the case.
Litigation Takeaway
“In Texas, you cannot immediately appeal the granting of a TCPA dismissal if the issue of attorney’s fees is still pending; for family law litigants, this means a successful movant can effectively block an opponent's appeal by keeping the fee adjudication active in the trial court.”
Estate of Lake Zack Hughes v. Thoyze Baker Hughes
COA05 — February 6, 2026
In Estate of Lake Zack Hughes, a contestant challenged his alleged father's will, asserting he was an omitted biological son and claiming the will was a forgery. The trial court dismissed the contest and admitted the will to probate after the contestant failed to post a court-ordered security for costs and submitted a handwriting expert report that was not properly verified. On appeal, the Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment, holding that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in enforcing the Texas Estates Code's security requirements and the Rules of Evidence regarding unverified expert reports. The case underscores that a party's failure to bridge the gap between allegations and admissible evidence can lead to a final judgment without a trial.
Litigation Takeaway
“Procedural and evidentiary compliance is non-negotiable in inheritance and paternity litigation; failure to post court-ordered security or to verify expert reports with specific "penalty of perjury" language can result in the immediate dismissal of your claims.”
Ezekiel KEITH v. Nikki KEITH
COA04 — February 18, 2026
In Keith v. Keith, the San Antonio Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal because the trial court record lacked a written, signed judgment. Although the appellant sought to challenge a ruling made during a December 2025 hearing, the court clarified that oral renditions from the bench do not trigger appellate jurisdiction under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 26.1. Because the appellant failed to respond to a show-cause order or provide a signed written instrument, the court held it had no authority to hear the case and was not required to keep the appeal open indefinitely.
Litigation Takeaway
“A judge's oral ruling in court is not a final judgment. To protect your right to appeal in a family law matter, you must ensure the judge actually signs a written order or decree; otherwise, your appeal is legally premature and subject to dismissal.”
Jonathan Humber v. City of Palestine
COA12 — January 30, 2026
In Humber v. City of Palestine, the appellant filed a motion for new trial 32 days after the trial court signed the final judgment. The appellant later filed a notice of appeal nearly three months after the judgment, assuming the post-judgment motion had extended the appellate deadline. The Twelfth Court of Appeals analyzed Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 26.1, which requires a "timely" post-judgment motion to extend the filing deadline for a notice of appeal from 30 to 90 days. The court held that an untimely motion for new trial is a nullity for purposes of the appellate timetable and does not extend the court's jurisdiction, leading to the dismissal of the appeal.
Litigation Takeaway
“A motion for new trial must be filed within 30 days of the date the judge signs the order to extend the appellate deadline; filing even one day late means your notice of appeal remains due 30 days from the judgment, potentially terminating your right to appeal.”