This question has been addressed in 1 Texas court opinion:
SCOTX — February 13, 2026
In a dispute over a decedent's estate, a trial court admitted a will to probate but explicitly limited its ruling to objections filed before a specific date, effectively ignoring a pending will contest filed just one day after that cutoff. The Supreme Court of Texas analyzed the case under the Crowson test, which determines finality in probate proceedings by whether an order unequivocally disposes of all parties and issues within a discrete phase of the litigation. The Court held that because the order's express language carved out a specific timeframe that excluded the pending contest, the order remained interlocutory, meaning the appellate timetable had not yet begun to run.
Litigation Takeaway
“To avoid the 'finality trap,' practitioners must verify that an order unequivocally disposes of all pending pleadings within a specific phase of litigation; if the order contains limiting language or fails to address a live contest, it may be interlocutory, preserving the right to appeal even after the standard 30-day window.”