Mizell v. Coggins, 10-26-00045-CV, March 12, 2026.
On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 of Johnson County, Texas.
Synopsis
The Tenth Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal from a protective order due to the appellant's persistent failure to file the mandatory docketing statement required by Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 32.1. Despite receiving formal notice of the deficiency and a specific warning that non-compliance would result in dismissal under Rule 42.3(c), the appellant failed to remedy the defect or request an extension of time.
Relevance to Family Law
In the high-stakes environment of family law, particularly regarding protective orders and custody adjudications, procedural discipline is as critical as substantive advocacy. This case serves as a stark reminder that even when filing fees are paid, an appeal can be summarily dismissed for failure to comply with administrative requirements. For practitioners handling divorce or SAPCR appeals, the docketing statement is a mandatory gateway; failure to treat it with the same urgency as the notice of appeal or the brief can result in the irrevocable loss of a client’s right to challenge a trial court’s order. In cases involving protective orders—which carry significant collateral consequences for possession, access, and firearm rights—such a dismissal is a catastrophic outcome that can be easily avoided through diligent appellate management.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Appellant Kristina Mizell sought to appeal a protective order entered against her in the County Court at Law No. 1 of Johnson County. Following the perfection of the appeal, the Clerk of the Tenth Court of Appeals notified Mizell on February 3, 2026, that a docketing statement was required to be filed by February 13, 2026, pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 32.1. When the deadline passed without a filing, the Clerk issued a second letter on February 19, 2026. This second notice warned the appellant that the Court might dismiss the appeal without further notice if the docketing statement was not received by March 2, 2026. While the record indicates that the appellant eventually paid the required filing fee, she never filed the docketing statement nor submitted a motion for an extension of time.
Issues Decided
- Whether the Court of Appeals may dismiss an appeal when an appellant fails to comply with the mandatory docketing statement requirement and subsequent clerk's notices.
Rules Applied
- Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 32.1: Requires an appellant to file a docketing statement in the appellate court promptly upon perfecting the appeal to provide the court with necessary administrative information.
- Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(c): Grants the appellate court the authority to dismiss an appeal—after giving ten days' notice—because the appellant has failed to comply with a requirement of the appellate rules, a court order, or a notice from the clerk requiring a response or other action within a specified time.
Application
The court’s application of the law was purely procedural, focusing on the appellant's failure to engage with the court's administrative mandates. The court established a clear timeline showing that the appellant was given multiple opportunities to comply. The first notice set the initial obligation, and the second notice served as the formal warning required by Rule 42.3(c) to trigger the court's dismissal power. Notably, the court observed that the appellant had paid the filing fee after the warning letter was sent; however, this partial compliance did not alleviate the independent obligation to file the docketing statement. Because the appellant allowed the "drop-dead" date of March 2 to pass without any communication or filing, the court determined that dismissal was the appropriate and necessary sanction for the failure to follow the clerk's directives.
Holding
The Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal. The court held that under Rule 42.3(c), dismissal is warranted when an appellant fails to provide the mandatory docketing statement after being given specific notice and an opportunity to cure the defect. The court further held that payment of filing fees does not satisfy the separate and mandatory requirement to file a docketing statement under Rule 32.1.
Practical Application
For family law litigators, this case highlights the necessity of strict adherence to the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure from the moment a notice of appeal is filed.
- Administrative Oversight: Ensure that the "administrative" phase of the appeal (docketing statements, filing fees, and arrangements for the record) is not overshadowed by the substantive legal research phase.
- Monitoring Correspondence: Appellate courts communicate primarily through clerk’s notices. A failure to respond to a "warning letter" regarding a docketing statement is a jurisdictional death knell that no amount of subsequent substantive merit can fix.
- Pro Se Hazards: If you are taking over a case where a party originally filed pro se, immediately audit the appellate clerk's file to ensure that all Rule 32.1 requirements were met before your appearance.
Checklists
Appellate Onboarding & Compliance
- File the Notice of Appeal in the trial court and provide a copy to the appellate court.
- Immediately prepare and file the Docketing Statement using the specific form provided by the relevant Court of Appeals.
- Confirm that the filing fee has been paid or an Affidavit of Indigency has been filed.
- Verify that the trial court clerk and the court reporter have received requests for the record.
Avoiding Rule 42.3 Dismissals
- Designate a specific staff member to monitor the appellate portal for any notices from the Clerk of the Court.
- Treat any "Ten-Day Notice" or "Warning of Dismissal" as an emergency filing.
- If a deadline cannot be met, file a formal Motion for Extension of Time under Rule 10.5(b) before the deadline expires.
- Ensure that the appellant’s contact information is current with the court to prevent missing critical warning letters.
Citation
Mizell v. Coggins, No. 10-26-00045-CV, 2026 Tex. App. LEXIS (Tex. App.—Waco Mar. 12, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
The full opinion can be found here: [Full Opinion](https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=df26c444-6d0d-4add-a68c-a4f05d348652&MediaID=225c5679-fb45-4cf1-b2ca-e1118ded3bcc&coa=Tenth Court of Appeals&DT=Opinion) ~~2a865322-01b1-44f7-bd4d-3b0de7132be3~~
