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CROSSOVER: Trial-Day Severance Request Is Too Late: Preservation Trap With Crossover Lessons for Texas Family Cases

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Luis Noguera v. The State of Texas, 01-24-00338-CR, March 19, 2026.

On appeal from the 209th District Court, Harris County, Texas.

Synopsis

A defendant’s statutory “absolute” right to sever consolidated offenses under Texas Penal Code § 3.04(a) is still subject to a timeliness requirement. Because a motion to sever is treated as a pretrial pleading governed by Code of Criminal Procedure art. 28.01, an oral severance request raised for the first time on the day of trial is untimely and can be denied without error.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family cases are saturated with consolidation/coordination dynamics—counter-petitions, modification plus enforcement, SAPCR plus protective order proceedings, and parallel suits affecting the parent-child relationship. This opinion is a preservation trap reminder: even when a party has a strong (or arguably mandatory) procedural entitlement—separate trials, bifurcation, limitations on prejudice, sequencing of issues—Texas appellate courts will frequently treat the request as a pretrial matter that must be raised in time for the court to manage the docket and avoid trial-day disruption. For family litigators, the crossover lesson is simple: if you wait until the morning of trial to ask for “severance” (or its civil analogs), you may be waiving the very relief you think is mandatory.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The State charged Luis Noguera in two cause numbers arising out of the same criminal episode: aggravated robbery and unlawful possession of a firearm. The firearm count included an allegation of a prior felony burglary conviction, which—practically speaking—carried obvious spillover prejudice concerns if tried alongside the aggravated robbery.

Six months before trial, the State provided notice of intent to consolidate the two cases for a single trial. Despite that runway, the defense did not file a written motion to sever. Instead, on the first day of trial, immediately before voir dire, the defense made an oral motion requesting severance. The trial court denied the request. The jury ultimately acquitted on the unlawful possession charge but convicted on aggravated robbery.

On appeal, Noguera argued (among other things) that severance was mandatory under Penal Code § 3.04(a) and the trial court erred by refusing it.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court treated the case as a straightforward timeliness problem rather than a debate about the substantive scope of § 3.04(a). Yes, § 3.04(a) creates an “absolute” severance right once offenses are properly consolidated under § 3.02(a). But the court emphasized that the right is triggered by a timely request, and Texas criminal procedure treats severance as a defendant’s pretrial pleading governed by Article 28.01.

The State gave notice of consolidation six months before trial—exactly the kind of notice that defeats any claim of surprise. The defense never filed a motion. Instead, the defense waited until the first day of trial, just before voir dire, and raised severance orally. Under Thornton and Writt, that is too late. Because the request was untimely, the trial court was not required to grant severance—even if severance would have been mandatory had the issue been properly preserved.

Holding

The court affirmed. It held that although § 3.04(a) provides an absolute right to sever consolidated offenses, the motion must be timely, and a motion to sever is a pretrial pleading governed by Article 28.01. Because Noguera first requested severance orally on the day of trial (without a pretrial filing), the request was untimely and the trial court did not err by denying it.

Practical Application

Texas family litigators should read this as a procedural posture case, not a criminal-law curiosity. Many of the most consequential family-law trial outcomes turn on whether the court hears issues together (with spillover prejudice) or separately (with cleaner evidentiary lanes). The preservation lesson maps cleanly onto civil tools: severance (TRCP 41), separate trials (TRCP 174), bifurcation, abatement, consolidation, and scheduling orders.

Practical takeaways for divorce and SAPCR practice:

Checklists

Pretrial Severance / Separate-Trial Preservation (Family Cases)

Trial-Day “Emergency Motion” Damage Control (If You Inherited the Problem)

Drafting Tips to Avoid the “Too Late” Finding

Citation

Luis Noguera v. The State of Texas, No. 01-24-00338-CR (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 19, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This case can be weaponized in family court in a very specific way: as a “trial-management waiver” narrative. If you (or opposing counsel) sit on a severance/separate-trial argument until the case is called for trial—especially after months of notice that claims were being combined—the court now has a clean, appellate-comfortable rationale to deny relief: you waited too long for a remedy that necessarily must be handled pretrial.

In practice, expect adversaries to cite this logic (if not the case itself) when opposing late-filed motions to sever tort claims from divorce, late requests to bifurcate fault/violence evidence from property division, or last-minute efforts to split modification from enforcement. The strategic response is equally direct: treat severance/bifurcation as a pretrial pleading problem, tee it up early, and force a ruling while the judge can grant relief without detonating the trial setting.

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