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In re John F. Ross

COA05March 26, 2026

Litigation Takeaway

"In emergency family-law mandamus practice, TRAP 52 compliance is not optional—it is the ticket to get the court to consider your complaint. A missing/defective certification, appendix, or complete authenticated record can trigger a flat denial (even with a hearing the next day), and a stay request will fail with the petition."

In re John F. Ross, 05-26-00434-CV, March 26, 2026.

On appeal from 468th Judicial District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals denied mandamus relief without reaching the merits because the relator’s petition and record failed to comply with multiple mandatory requirements of TRAP 52. With mandamus denied, the relator’s emergency motion to stay the next-day hearing was denied as moot.

Relevance to Family Law

Family-law mandamus practice in Texas is increasingly common—especially around accelerated, high-stakes rulings involving recusal, temporary orders, discovery sanctions, and the timing/validity of purported final decrees. This opinion is a reminder that even when the underlying dispute is quintessentially “family” (divorce decree validity, recusal, discovery, and imminent hearings), the court of appeals will not troubleshoot a deficient mandamus filing; TRAP 52 compliance is a merits gateway, and noncompliance can be case-dispositive on an emergency timetable.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The relator sought extraordinary relief in an ongoing divorce proceeding out of Collin County’s 468th District Court. On March 26, 2026—the day before a scheduled March 27 hearing—he filed (1) a petition for writ of mandamus and (2) an emergency motion to stay. Substantively, the relator asked the Dallas Court of Appeals to: (a) stay the imminent hearing; (b) vacate what he characterized as a “final decree of divorce” entered January 13, 2026; (c) restore a January 12, 2026 motion to recuse to the trial court’s docket; and (d) “mandate discovery” sought in a prior emergency motion. The court did not evaluate whether any of those requests could satisfy the mandamus standards (clear abuse of discretion and no adequate appellate remedy). Instead, it focused on the threshold problem: the petition and record did not comply with “numerous” TRAP 52 requirements, including rules governing the appendix/record and certifications.

Issues Decided

  • Whether the court of appeals should consider and grant mandamus relief when the relator’s petition and record fail to comply with TRAP 52 requirements.
  • Whether the court should stay the next-day trial-court hearing via emergency motion when mandamus relief is denied.

Rules Applied

The court grounded its disposition in the mandatory procedural requirements for original proceedings:

  • Tex. R. App. P. 52.3(k) (certification requirement; note the Supreme Court of Texas renumbered former 52.3(j) to 52.3(k) effective January 1, 2026).
  • Tex. R. App. P. 52.3(l)(1)(B) (appendix/contents requirements for mandamus petitions).
  • Tex. R. App. P. 52.7(a) (mandamus record requirements).

The court also relied on its prior decisions enforcing these gatekeeping rules:

  • In re Integrity Mktg Grp., LLC, No. 05-24-00922-CV, 2024 WL 3770377, at *1 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 13, 2024, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (denying mandamus solely for absence of the TRAP 52.3 certification).
  • In re Bennett, No. 05-23-00302-CV, 2023 WL 3451040, at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas May 15, 2023, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (incomplete record prevents relator from demonstrating entitlement to relief).

Application

The court treated TRAP 52 compliance as a prerequisite to any merits review. Although the relator sought sweeping relief (stay, vacatur of a purported final decree, reinstatement of a recusal motion, and compelled discovery), the petition failed “in numerous respects” to satisfy the rules governing what must be presented to the appellate court in an original proceeding. By citing TRAP 52.3(k), 52.3(l)(1)(B), and 52.7(a), the court signaled deficiencies in the relator’s certification and in the materials necessary for the court to verify what happened in the trial court and evaluate entitlement to extraordinary relief. The opinion’s citations to Integrity Marketing and Bennett underscore the practical point: the Dallas Court of Appeals will deny mandamus relief based solely on procedural defects, including a missing certification or an incomplete mandamus record, because those defects prevent the relator from carrying the burden to show entitlement to relief. Once the petition was denied, the emergency motion to stay the next-day hearing necessarily fell with it; without an underlying vehicle for relief, there was nothing to “preserve” by stay in that original proceeding.

Holding

The court denied mandamus relief because the relator’s petition did not satisfy multiple TRAP 52 requirements, including required appendices/record items and certifications; the noncompliance prevented the court from reaching the merits of the requested relief. The court also denied the relator’s emergency motion to stay as moot in light of the denial of mandamus relief.

Practical Application

Emergency mandamus filings in family cases often arrive at the court of appeals with minimal lead time—sometimes hours—and that reality tempts counsel to “file now, supplement later.” This opinion is a caution that, at least in the Fifth Court, a deficient TRAP 52 package can result in a flat denial that leaves your client exposed at the very hearing you were trying to stop. Common family-law scenarios where this matters:

  • Attacks on a “purported final decree” (e.g., alleged rendition/signing irregularities, plenary-power questions, or competing orders): if you want an appellate court to intervene immediately, the mandamus record must allow the court to determine what the trial court actually signed, when, and under what procedural posture.
  • Recusal disputes on compressed timelines: a request to “restore” a recusal motion (or compel referral) lives or dies on what was filed, what was heard, what was ruled, and whether the statutory/Rule 18a mechanics were triggered—none of which can be evaluated without a compliant record.
  • Discovery and enforcement emergencies: mandamus about compelled discovery, denied discovery, protective orders, or sanctions requires a tight record (requests, responses, objections, motions, orders, hearing transcripts if necessary) and proper authentication.
  • Stays pending mandamus: an emergency stay is not a standalone remedy; it depends on a procedurally viable mandamus petition that gives the court jurisdictional and evidentiary footing to act.

Strategically, the takeaway is not merely “be compliant.” It is that TRAP 52 compliance is an advocacy tool: a properly built appendix/record and certification lets the court reach the discretionary merits quickly—especially when you are asking for same-day or next-day relief.

Checklists

TRAP 52 “Merits Gateway” Filing Audit (Before You Hit Submit)

  • Confirm the petition includes the TRAP 52.3(k) certification (renumbered effective Jan. 1, 2026).
  • Confirm the petition includes an appendix that satisfies TRAP 52.3(l), including key orders and documents necessary to understand the requested relief.
  • Confirm you have a mandamus record compliant with TRAP 52.7(a) (file-stamped, authenticated, and complete for the issues raised).
  • Ensure the petition and record are internally consistent (dates, cause number, court, judge, and the specific ruling challenged).
  • Verify the relief requested is matched to the record (every factual assertion that matters should be supported by a record cite).

Emergency Stay Package (Divorce/Custody/Property Hearings)

  • Attach the signed order(s) you want stayed or vacated, and any docket sheet or clerk’s record items showing the status and setting.
  • Include proof of the hearing date/time (notice of setting, email notice, or clerk notice) and identify exactly what will occur absent a stay.
  • Provide a short, record-supported explanation of irreparable harm and why a stay is necessary to preserve the court’s ability to grant effective relief.
  • Confirm the petition is TRAP-52 compliant so the stay request is not dead on arrival.

Recusal/Disqualification Mandamus Record (Common Family-Law Trap)

  • Include the motion to recuse (file-stamped) and any amended motions.
  • Include any orders, correspondence, or notices reflecting referral/non-referral and the court’s actions.
  • Include hearing transcripts or other competent proof of what the trial court said/did (if relevant to the requested relief).
  • Make sure the record shows the procedural posture (plenary power, finality disputes, post-judgment motions) that affects available remedies.

“Purported Final Decree” Challenge (Build a Record the COA Can Use)

  • Include the decree (signed version) and any prior competing drafts/rendition evidence if the theory requires it.
  • Include post-judgment filings (motion for new trial, motion to modify/correct, enforcement filings) that frame finality and appellate remedy.
  • Include a timeline exhibit or record citations showing when the decree was signed, when notice was received, and what deadlines are implicated.
  • Ensure the requested mandamus relief is not merely an appeal substitute; frame why appeal is inadequate, supported by record facts.

Citation

In re John F. Ross, No. 05-26-00434-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 26, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here ~~2a265330-6f52-43ab-aa18-90656c4726d9~~

Thomas J. Daley

Analysis by Thomas J. Daley

Lead Litigation Attorney

Thomas J. Daley is a board-certified family law attorney. He has guided more than 225 clients to successful resolution of their cases over his 18 years of experience.

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