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CROSSOVER: Post‑Verdict Sentencing Deal Waives ‘Vindictive Judge’ Narrative: Preservation Lessons for Family‑Law Parallel Proceedings

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

Erique Howard v. The State of Texas, 14-24-00284-CR, March 31, 2026.

On appeal from 339th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals rejected a due-process “vindictive sentencing” narrative where the record did not demonstrate actual judicial vindictiveness in a 50-year sentence imposed after guilty verdicts. Critically, the court held the defendant’s challenges to the voluntariness of a post-verdict sentencing agreement—and the complaint that the judge failed to inquire into voluntariness—were not preserved because no timely objection or post-judgment motion was filed.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family litigators routinely negotiate “post-ruling” agreements—e.g., after a temporary orders hearing, after an adverse evidentiary ruling, or on the courthouse steps once a judge signals likely relief. Howard is a preservation cautionary tale: if you intend to later claim coercion, judicial retaliation, or an involuntary agreement induced by the bench, you must make a record immediately (objection, offer of proof, motion to recuse if appropriate, and/or timely post-judgment motions). Otherwise, the “judge pressured me into it” theme often becomes an unreviewable story—especially damaging in parallel family-law proceedings where the same facts and credibility disputes may echo into SAPCR modifications, protective orders, or fee-shifting fights.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

A jury convicted Erique Howard of two aggravated sexual assaults and an aggravated robbery. Howard elected to have the trial court assess punishment. In a short post-verdict setting, the judge made comments emphasizing (1) the broad punishment range, (2) that Howard was “exposed to a lot” of time, and (3) that if Howard wanted “a say” over the number, he should confer with counsel and attempt to reach an agreement with the State before the court made its decision.

The judge asked about pretrial bargaining positions and referenced having previously been “inclined” toward a lower number before hearing testimony—framed as reflecting the “benefit” of sparing victims from trial. After a recess, the court announced that “in accordance with the plea agreement,” it would sentence Howard to 50 years, while noting Howard was “retaining” appellate rights. The record reflected no contemporaneous objection that the court’s comments were coercive or retaliatory, and no motion for new trial or other post-judgment motion raising involuntariness or lack of judicial inquiry.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

On vindictiveness, the Fourteenth Court focused on what the record did—and did not—show. The sentencing judge expressly stated multiple times that she had not decided punishment, cautioned against reading her comments as a predetermination, and framed the recess as an opportunity for the parties to negotiate within a range before the punishment hearing proceeded. That posture, coupled with the absence of an actual Pearce-type procedural setting (no retrial with an increased sentence), left Howard with the burden to demonstrate actual vindictiveness from the record.

The court then addressed the “sentencing deal was involuntary” and “judge had a duty to inquire” theories through the lens that appellate courts apply most often in both criminal and civil contexts: preservation. Howard did not object when the court made the comments, did not claim on the record that he was being coerced, and did not file a motion for new trial or other post-judgment motion to develop the claim. With no timely complaint presented to the trial court, the appellate court treated those arguments as waived for review—even if they might have been rhetorically appealing on appeal.

Holding

The court affirmed the judgment, holding the record did not establish that the trial court vindictively sentenced Howard to 50 years as punishment for exercising the right to a jury trial. The opinion emphasized the inapplicability of a Pearce presumption and the failure to show actual vindictiveness on this record.

Separately, the court held Howard’s complaints that the post-verdict sentencing agreement was involuntary and that the court failed to inquire into voluntariness were not preserved for appellate review because he made no timely objection and filed no post-judgment motion raising those issues.

Practical Application

Family-law litigators should treat Howard as a reminder that the “judicial pressure” narrative is only as strong as the record you build while you still can.

Checklists

Preserving “Coercion” or “Judicial Pressure” in a Family Case

Building a Record When the Court Signals a “Range”

Post-Agreement Appellate Hygiene (Family Law)

Citation

Erique Howard v. The State of Texas, Nos. 14-24-00283-CR, 14-24-00284-CR, 14-24-00285-CR (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Mar. 31, 2026) (mem. op.) (affirmed).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

Even though Howard is a criminal sentencing case, the opinion is tailor-made for family-court weaponization in disputes where one side later claims, “I only agreed because the judge backed me into a corner.” The counterpunch is straightforward: (1) the party had counsel, (2) the judge repeatedly disclaimed predetermination, (3) the party voiced no objection, and (4) the party filed no timely post-judgment motion—so the later coercion narrative reads like litigation repositioning rather than a contemporaneous deprivation of choice. In custody modifications, enforcement actions, and MSA fights, expect Howard-style reasoning to be cited to argue waiver, to undermine credibility, and to support the proposition that strategic decisions made after judicial commentary are still voluntary unless promptly challenged with a record.

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