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Dallas Court Denies Mandamus for Missing TRAP 52.3(k) Certification and No Showing of Abuse

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

In re Nicholas David Kiselov, 05-26-00421-CV, March 26, 2026.

On appeal from 303rd Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals denied mandamus relief where the relator’s petition omitted the mandatory TRAP 52.3(k) certification—an independently sufficient basis to deny. The court also held, alternatively, that the relator failed to satisfy the two core mandamus prerequisites: a clear abuse of discretion and no adequate appellate remedy under Prudential.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a procedural gut-check for Texas family-law litigators who use mandamus to address trial-court management decisions in real time—particularly post-judgment skirmishes (e.g., enforcement, clarification, jurisdictional disputes, disqualification, and discovery orders with privilege implications). In family cases, mandamus is often pursued on compressed timelines and messy records; Kiselov underscores that even an arguable substantive complaint will not be reached if the petition is not rule-compliant, and that “findings after a hearing” disputes frequently fail the Prudential “no adequate remedy by appeal” requirement unless the record and relief theory are tightly built.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The relator filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the Fifth Court of Appeals arising from a Dallas County family case (trial court cause no. DF-19-23225). The complained-of conduct was the trial court’s failure to issue findings of fact and conclusions of law after a January 15, 2026 post-judgment hearing on two motions: a Motion for Jurisdictional Production and a Motion to Disqualify.

The mandamus petition was filed March 24, 2026. The court’s opinion focuses on two threshold deficiencies: (1) the petition omitted the certification required by Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 52.3(k) that the relator reviewed the petition and confirmed every factual statement is supported by competent evidence in the appendix or record; and (2) even if the petition were procedurally compliant, the relator did not carry the substantive mandamus burden to show a clear abuse of discretion and no adequate appellate remedy.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court began where appellate courts increasingly begin in accelerated original proceedings: rule compliance. Because the relator did not include the TRAP 52.3(k) certification, the petition was defective at the threshold. The court expressly held that this defect, standing alone, justified denial—citing its own recent precedent denying mandamus solely for that omission.

The opinion then proceeded “additionally and alternatively” to the merits framework. Applying Prudential, the court reviewed the petition and the record as filed and concluded the relator did not demonstrate entitlement to mandamus relief. Although the complained-of conduct was the absence of findings of fact and conclusions of law following a post-judgment hearing, the court found the relator failed to establish the two essential elements: a clear abuse of discretion by the trial court and the lack of an adequate remedy by appeal. The court’s analysis is brief, but the message is strategic: even if you fix the form, you still must prove the mandamus elements with a record that makes appellate inadequacy concrete—not assumed.

Holding

The court denied mandamus relief because the petition did not contain the mandatory TRAP 52.3(k) certification. The Fifth Court treated that omission as an independent, sufficient ground to deny the petition without reaching the requested relief.

Separately and alternatively, the court denied mandamus because the relator failed to show a clear abuse of discretion and no adequate appellate remedy under In re Prudential. On the record presented, the relator did not carry the burden to justify extraordinary relief compelling the trial court to issue findings and conclusions after the post-judgment hearing.

Practical Application

Texas family-law mandamus practice frequently arises in post-decree litigation—discovery fights over sensitive records, jurisdictional challenges, recusal/disqualification disputes, enforcement remedies, and procedural rulings that affect a party’s ability to fairly litigate. Kiselov is a reminder that, in Dallas in particular, you should treat TRAP 52 as a strict compliance regime, not a “substantial compliance” exercise.

A few family-law scenarios where this opinion should change how you litigate:

Checklists

TRAP 52 Petition “No-Denial” Compliance

Mandamus Record Building in Post-Judgment Family Hearings

Proving “No Adequate Remedy by Appeal” Under Prudential (Family-Law Framing)

Citation

In re Nicholas David Kiselov, No. 05-26-00421-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 26, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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