This question has been addressed in 1 Texas court opinion:
COA02 — February 5, 2026
In this case, a trial court orally waived a $6,000 statutory fine for a defendant found to be indigent, yet the subsequent written judgment erroneously included the fine. On appeal, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals addressed the conflict between the judge's verbal ruling and the written record. The court analyzed the 'bench controls the pen' doctrine, which dictates that an oral pronouncement made in open court is the legally binding judgment, while the written order is merely a record of that act. Finding a clear conflict, the court held that the oral waiver must prevail and modified the written judgment to delete the $6,000 fine.
Litigation Takeaway
“The 'bench controls the pen': in Texas, if a trial judge’s oral ruling contradicts the written decree, the oral version wins. Always compare the court reporter’s transcript to the final written order to catch 'judgment creep'—additional terms or fees added by opposing counsel that the judge never actually ordered.”