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Texas Appellate Court Dismisses Appeal After Trial Court Grants Motion for New Trial

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

Trevino v. Trevino, 01-25-00807-CV, March 19, 2026.

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Galveston County, Texas.

Synopsis

The First Court of Appeals held that it lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over an appeal once a trial court timely exercises its plenary power to grant a motion for new trial. Because the grant of a new trial vacates the underlying judgment, there is no final, appealable order to support the court’s jurisdiction, necessitating a dismissal of the appeal rather than a mere abatement.

Relevance to Family Law

In Texas family law litigation, the post-judgment period is often a flurry of simultaneous activity where parties may perfect an appeal while concurrently seeking a motion for new trial to address issues of property division or conservatorship. This case serves as a critical reminder that the trial court’s plenary power under Tex. R. Civ. P. 329b remains potent even after the appellate record has begun to vest. For the practitioner, a successful motion for new trial is a total “reset” button; it does not merely pause the appeal but terminates it entirely. This requires family law litigators to be prepared for a jurisdictional dismissal and a return to the trial court docket, regardless of the resources already expended on appellate briefing.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The Appellant, Mark Anthony Trevino, initiated an appeal following a judgment rendered in a family law proceeding in Galveston County. While the appeal was pending before the First Court of Appeals, the trial court exercised its plenary power to grant a motion for new trial. Recognizing that the trial court’s action fundamentally altered the status of the judgment, the parties jointly moved the appellate court to abate the appeal pending the outcome of the new trial. However, the appellate court raised the issue of its own jurisdiction, questioning whether an appeal can remain live when the judgment it seeks to challenge has been legally vacated by the trial court.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court’s analysis focused on the structural necessity of a final judgment to support appellate jurisdiction. When the trial court granted the motion for new trial pursuant to Rule 329b(e), it effectively extinguished the finality of the original decree. The court reasoned that because the grant of a new trial “sets aside” the original judgment, there was no longer a “final judgment” for the court to review under the Lehmann standard.

The parties’ request for an abatement—a procedural move often used to cure minor jurisdictional defects or await related trial court rulings—was insufficient in this context. The court determined that because the judgment was not merely suspended but entirely vacated, the appellate court was divested of jurisdiction. Consequently, the court found that the only appropriate action was to dismiss the appeal in its entirety, as the parties were returned to their original positions prior to the entry of the now-vacated judgment.

Holding

The court held that it lacked jurisdiction over the appeal because the trial court’s timely order granting a new trial vacated the finality of the underlying judgment. Without a final judgment, the appellate court has no power to hear the merits of the case or to hold the case in abatement.

The court further held that all pending motions in the appellate cause must be dismissed as moot, as the termination of the appeal’s jurisdictional basis renders all ancillary requests for relief irrelevant.

Practical Application

Checklists

Post-Judgment Jurisdictional Audit

Navigating Dismissal After a New Trial Grant

Citation

Mark Anthony Trevino v. Candice Spivey Trevino, No. 01-25-00807-CV (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 19, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Link to Full Opinion

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