LaMorgese Law Report

LaMorgese Law Report Educational analysis of Texas family law and appellate decisions, offering context, commentary, and perspective from a Texas family law appellate practice.

Texas Supreme Court – June 5, 2026 (2 of 2)4. In re C.S. (25-0008)Whether a case was automatically dismissed under Famil...
06/05/2026

Texas Supreme Court – June 5, 2026 (2 of 2)

4. In re C.S. (25-0008)
Whether a case was automatically dismissed under Family Code § 263.401
Holding
Case AUTOMATICALLY DISMISSED
Trial court and court of appeals lacked jurisdiction
Key Reasoning
Trial court:
Intended to grant extension
But never actually did so properly
Extension must be:
Written OR on the record before a court reporter
Post-deadline actions:
Cannot revive jurisdiction
Why It Matters (High Impact for Your Practice)
Absolute clarity:
Intent is irrelevant—formal compliance is everything
This is a strict-liability procedural rule
Practical lesson:
You cannot rely on the court to “fix it later”
Strong appellate weapon:
If deadline missed → case is dead, full stop

5. In re S.H. (26-0030) – Mandamus
Core Issue
Trial court removing a party’s chosen counsel
Holding
Mandamus conditionally GRANTED
Trial court must reinstate chosen counsel
Key Reasoning
Public defender:
Was not acting as court-appointed counsel
Therefore:
Trial court had no authority to remove counsel
Party has:
Right to counsel of choice
Why It Matters
Important for crossover cases (criminal + family):
Public defenders can participate in civil matters
Reinforces:
Limits on trial court control over representation
Good mandamus reminder:
Structural error involving counsel → proper for immediate relief

Texas Supreme Court – June 5, 2026 (1 of 2)1. In re H.S. (24-0307)Termination of both parents’ rights where Father commi...
06/05/2026

Texas Supreme Court – June 5, 2026 (1 of 2)

1. In re H.S. (24-0307)
Termination of both parents’ rights where Father committed violence, and Mother failed to protect.
Holding
Termination of Father → AFFIRMED
Termination of Mother → REVERSED AND RENDERED
Key Reasoning
Trial court wrongfully denied extension of dismissal date
Evidence insufficient on best interest as to Mother
Why It Matters
Strong signal on best-interest sufficiency:
Mere “failure to protect” is not enough if the parent shows rehabilitative progress
Also reinforces:
§ 263 dismissal extensions matter procedurally and substantively

2. In re K.N. (24-0881)
Sufficiency of termination findings
Preservation of jurisdictional challenge
Holding
Mother’s termination → AFFIRMED
Father’s termination → REVERSED
Jurisdiction challenge → WAIVED (not preserved)
Key Reasoning
Mother:
Discipline crossed line into abuse
Father:
Insufficient evidence of endangerment
Jurisdiction argument failed because:
It attacked statutory compliance, not subject-matter jurisdiction
Clean distinction:
Harsh discipline ≠ automatically permissible “traditional discipline”
Important appellate takeaway:
“Jurisdiction” arguments must be true SMJ issues or they’re waived
Another example of:
Court splitting parents based on individualized evidence

3. State v. City of McAllen (24-1060)
Who is the proper defendant in a constitutional challenge to a statute?
Holding
Case DISMISSED FOR LACK OF JURISDICTION
Key Reasoning
Cities sued the State of Texas, but:
Did not identify a state actor responsible for the alleged injury
Courts require:
A real, redressable dispute
A declaration against the State alone:
Would not bind the telecom companies actually involved
Why It Matters
Big procedural reminder:
You must sue the actor causing the injury—not just “the State”
Reinforces limits on:
Declaratory judgment jurisdiction
Useful beyond public law:
Applies to any case where clients try to challenge statutes in the abstract

Texas Supreme Court – Statistical SummaryOrders Pronounced June 5, 20261. Overall Case Volume (Substantive Buckets)Order...
06/05/2026

Texas Supreme Court – Statistical Summary

Orders Pronounced June 5, 2026

1. Overall Case Volume (Substantive Buckets)
Orders on Causes (Merits Dispositions)
Total: 5 cases
Affirmed in part / reversed in part: 2
Vacated & dismissed for lack of jurisdiction (full or partial): 2
Mandamus (conditionally granted): 1

Key takeaway:
Heavy procedural posture—40% jurisdictional dismissals, and both merits cases were split PFR outcomes (partial affirm/reverse).

Motions for Rehearing (on Causes)
Total: 2 cases
All rehearing requests denied

Petitions for Review (PFRs)
Total denied: 16 cases
With written opinions or statements:
5 cases
Justice Young (3 occurrences: concurrence respecting denial or joining)
Justice Sullivan (multiple concurrences; most active in denials)

Without opinions:
11 cases

Key takeaway:
Roughly 31% (5/16) of denials generated written commentary
Denials remain the dominant docket activity (as expected)

Motions for Rehearing (PFR stage)
Total: 3 cases
All denied

Mandamus (Original Proceedings)
Granted:
1 conditional grant
In re S.H.
Denied:
5 mandamus petitions

Direct appeal dismissed: 1

Supreme Court of Texas — Case SummariesOrders Pronounced May 29, 20261. Huffman Asset Management, LLC v. ColterDispositi...
05/29/2026

Supreme Court of Texas — Case Summaries

Orders Pronounced May 29, 2026

1. Huffman Asset Management, LLC v. Colter

Disposition: Reversed court of appeals; remanded to trial court

Core Issue

Whether substituted service through the Secretary of State strictly complied with statutory requirements—specifically, whether process was forwarded to the entity’s "most recent address on file.”

Holding

The Supreme Court held that strict compliance was not shown, because the record did not establish that service was forwarded to the entities’ most recent addresses on file with the Secretary of State. The Court emphasized that:

Whitney certificates confirm forwarding but do not establish that the correct statutory address was used

Entities may have multiple addresses on file, and the statute requires use of the most recent one

The record demonstrated the addresses used were not the most recent on file

Accordingly, the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion for new trial.

Concurrence

Justice Huddle (concurring):

Emphasized the Court’s increasing skepticism toward default judgments

Signals a continued tightening of strict-compliance standards in service cases

2. Studio E. Architecture & Interiors, Inc. v. Lehmberg

Disposition: Affirmed

Core Issue

Whether claims dismissed without prejudice for failure to file a certificate of merit may be reasserted by amended petition in the same case, or must be brought in a new lawsuit.

Holding

The Supreme Court held that the claims may be reasserted in an amended petition.

Key reasoning:

A dismissal without prejudice returns the parties to their pre-suit posture

Under ordinary procedural rules, the plaintiff may replead as if bringing the claims for the first time

The statute requires a certificate of merit with the first pleading—but after dismissal without prejudice, the amended pleading functions as that “first” pleading

The Court left the relation-back / limitations question for the trial court.

Concurrence

Justice Hawkins (concurring):

Agreed the interpretation properly harmonizes the statute with general procedural rules

Noted the statute’s failure to impose a clear timing limitation, which could invite gamesmanship

Dissent

Justice Sullivan (dissenting):

Would require the plaintiff to file a new lawsuit

Interprets the statute as mandating that the certificate of merit be attached to the first petition in a new cause of action, not a repleading in the same case

3. Staub v. BBVA USA

Disposition: Affirmed

Core Issue

Whether a lender forfeits the entire loan principal under the Texas Constitution for overcharging interest on a home equity loan.

Holding

The Supreme Court held that the forfeiture provision applies only to constitutional violations, not to all contractual breaches.

Key points:

The phrase “obligations” in Article XVI, Section 50(a)(6)(Q)(x) refers to constitutional obligations only

The forfeiture remedy is limited, not a broad penalty for any breach

Historical context and precedent support a textually constrained reading of the forfeiture provision

Thus, overcharging interest—even if a breach—does not trigger full forfeiture of principal unless it violates a constitutional requirement.

Clean Takeaways for Practice

Service / Default Judgments:
The Court continues to demand strict, record-based proof of statutory compliance, especially where multiple possible service addresses exist.

Certificate of Merit Practice:
A dismissal without prejudice preserves flexibility—plaintiffs can correct defects through amendment without refiling.

Home Equity Lending:
The Court cabins constitutional forfeiture remedies tightly, limiting exposure for lenders to true constitutional violations only.

Supreme Court of Texas — Statistical SummaryOrders Pronounced May 29, 2026Orders on causes (merits dispositions): 3Motio...
05/29/2026

Supreme Court of Texas — Statistical Summary
Orders Pronounced May 29, 2026

Orders on causes (merits dispositions): 3
Motions for rehearing of causes denied: 2
Petitions for review granted: 5
Petitions for writ of mandamus set for oral argument: 2
Petitions for review denied: 33
Motions for rehearing of petitions for review denied: 7
Motion for rehearing of petition for writ of mandamus denied: 1
Petitions for writ of mandamus denied: 8
Petitions for writ of habeas corpus denied: 2
Stay issued in mandamus proceeding: 1
Board of Disciplinary Appeals decision affirmed: 1

Petitions for review granted
The Court granted 5 petitions for review today.
Of those 5 grants:
4 were set for oral argument
1 was granted and then dismissed as moot under TRAP 56.2
Granted-and-set cases
Lattimore Materials Corp. v. Trinity Industries Leasing Company
Oral argument: October 6, 2026
Orleans Harbour Homeowners Association, Inc. v. West Harbour, LLC
Oral argument: September 17, 2026
Don Clark et al. v. Rodriguez et al.
Oral argument: September 17, 2026
Estate of Charles Edward Long, Deceased
Oral argument: October 7, 2026
Granted but dismissed as moot
Paxton v. Garza / Creuzot / Middleton
Joint motion for dismissal granted
Court vacated the court of appeals’ judgment and dismissed the case as moot
Mandamus Activity
Mandamus cases set for oral argument
The Court set 2 mandamus proceedings for oral argument:
In re Delta Equine Center, Inc., Chamblee Ryan, P.C., and The Deaton Law Firm
Oral argument: September 17, 2026
In re Patrick Hughey
Oral argument: October 6, 2026
Mandamus denials

That is a very denial-heavy order list, with grants making up a relatively small share of petition-for-review activity.

The Court set 6 future oral arguments today.

September 17, 2026: 3 arguments
October 6, 2026: 2 arguments
October 7, 2026: 1 argument

Texas Supreme Court — Opinions (May 22, 2026)K&K Inez Props., LLC v. Kolle (Tex. May 22, 2026) (No. 24-0045)Author: Just...
05/22/2026

Texas Supreme Court — Opinions (May 22, 2026)

K&K Inez Props., LLC v. Kolle (Tex. May 22, 2026) (No. 24-0045)
Author: Justice Huddle
Holding:
Exemplary damages cap applies based on defendant-specific economic damages, not plaintiff-by-plaintiff awards.
What happened:
Flooding dispute; jury awarded actual and exemplary damages. Court of appeals reduced actual damages but left punitive analysis largely intact.
SCOTX:
Reversed on exemplary damages:
Cap must be tied to damages attributable to each defendant
Cannot apply the cap separately to each plaintiff’s recovery when damages are joint
Requires reconsideration of constitutional excessiveness after reduction in actual damages
Practice takeaway:
Always re-run the exemplary damages cap after any change in actual damages.
Push for defendant-specific damage allocation—it directly affects punitive exposure.

Boerschig v. Rio Grande Electric Cooperative (Tex. May 22, 2026) (No. 24-0213)
Author: Justice Busby
Separate writings: Hawkins (concurrence), Bland (dissent joined by 3 justices)
Holding (short):
Easement by estoppel existed—but upgrades exceeded its scope as a matter of law.
What happened:
Electric company upgraded a 1947 line (more poles, taller structures, additional wires). Jury found no overreach.
Practice takeaway:
Easements by estoppel are real—but tightly confined.
Expansion of use = litigation risk unless you can prove necessity tied to original burden.
Expect courts to take scope questions away from juries in extreme expansions.

In re Greystar Dev. & Constr., L.P. (Tex. May 22, 2026) (No. 24-0293)
Author: Justice Busby
Separate writing: Huddle (partial dissent)
Holding (short):
Supersedeas cap under § 52.006(b)(2) applies per judgment debtor, not per bond.
What happened:
Multiple defendants tried to use a single $25M bond to supersede a large judgment.
SCOTX:
Cap applies per debtor
Joint bond insufficient
Trial court must allow opportunity to post compliant security [case-summa...ies-052226 | PDF]
Practice takeaway:
No stacking defendants into one capped bond.
Each judgment debtor must independently satisfy the cap.
Critical for structuring post-judgment supersedeas strategy.

Paxton v. City of Austin (Tex. May 22, 2026) (No. 24-1078)
Author: Chief Justice Blacklock
Holding (short):
Trial court must rule on plea to the jurisdiction—refusal is mandamus-worthy.
What happened:
Trial court took jurisdictional plea “under advisement” while proceeding to trial.
SCOTX:
No interlocutory appeal without ruling
BUT: refusal to rule = abuse of discretion
Mandamus issued to force a ruling
Practice takeaway:
Trial courts cannot sidestep jurisdiction.
If a court refuses to rule, mandamus is available.
Preserves your client’s interlocutory appeal rights.

I'm writing separately on the opinion in Gopalan.

Texas Supreme Court — Orders (May 22, 2026)Opinions (Orders on Causes): 5 total --- I'm writing separately on  the opini...
05/22/2026

Texas Supreme Court — Orders (May 22, 2026)

Opinions (Orders on Causes): 5 total --- I'm writing separately on the opinions this week.

Dispositions:
Reversed (at least in part) + remanded: 4
Affirmed in part / reversed in part + remanded: 1
Mandamus granted (incl. converted case): 2 (overlaps with total opinions)

Breakdown by type:
Traditional merits opinions: 3
Mandamus opinions: 2

Opinion Authorship
Justice Busby: 2 opinions
Justice Devine: 1 opinion
Justice Huddle: 1 opinion
Chief Justice Blacklock: 1 opinion

Separate Writings (High Activity Week)

Concurring opinions: 1
Concurrence/dissent: 1
Dissent: 1

Notable:
Full fracture in Boerschig (majority, concurrence, dissent)
Split alignment in mandamus (Greystar) with partial concurrence/dissent

Mandamus Activity (Merits Stage)
Conditional grants: 2
In re Greystar
Paxton v. City of Austin (converted from PFR)
Takeaway:
The Court continues its trend of using mandamus aggressively to correct legal error, including recharacterizing PFRs.

Petitions for Review
Denied: 12
Includes:
1 case with 2 petitions
Abated: 1
Observation: Still a low grant week—consistent with tight docket control.

Rehearing Activity
PFR rehearing denied: 3

Original Proceedings (Miscellaneous)
Mandamus:
Denied: 3
Abated: 1
Other:
No habeas or quo warranto activity this week

Address

5950 Sherry Lane, Ste 800
Dallas, TX
75225

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when LaMorgese Law Report posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to LaMorgese Law Report:

Share