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Dallas Court of Appeals Affirms Divorce Decree After Pro Se Appellant Fails to File Rule-Compliant Brief

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

In the Interest of S.S.F.R. and S.J.F.R., Children, 05-25-00505-CV, March 30, 2026.

On appeal from 429th Judicial District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed a divorce decree after striking the pro se husband’s original brief and concluding his amended brief still failed to comply with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(h). Because the brief did not present identifiable issues supported by argument, authority, or record citations, the court refused to speculate about complaints or independently search the record for error.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a reminder that family-law appeals are won (or lost) on briefing discipline, not on the intensity of post-trial dissatisfaction. Divorce decrees—property division, SAPCR terms, and standard possession orders included—are particularly vulnerable to “death by waiver” on appeal when the appellant fails to (1) articulate cognizable appellate issues, (2) tie them to preserved trial-court error, and (3) support them with record references and controlling authority. For appellees defending decrees, this case provides a clean roadmap for briefing-based affirmance where the appellant’s presentation is noncompliant or incoherent.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Husband and Wife litigated a divorce in the 429th Judicial District Court in Collin County. Although both parties were represented by counsel in the trial court, Husband prosecuted the appeal pro se. The trial court signed a final decree on March 27, 2025, dividing the marital estate and entering a standard possession order for two minor children.

On appeal, Husband filed a brief that the Fifth Court struck for noncompliance with Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure 9 and 38, ordering him to re-brief and warning that continued noncompliance could result in dismissal. Husband filed an amended brief, but it still presented only a generalized “litany of complaints” about the trial process without framing reviewable issues, providing legal analysis, citing authority, or referencing the clerk’s or reporter’s record. The court also noted the absence of any showing that complaints were preserved below.

Issues Decided

  • Whether the court of appeals should consider challenges to a divorce decree when the pro se appellant’s brief fails to comply with TRAP 38.1(h) by omitting cognizable issues supported by argument, authority, and record citations.
  • Whether the appellate court must speculate about potential issues or independently review the record to identify reversible error when the appellant fails to properly brief complaints.

Rules Applied

  • TRAP 38.1(h): Appellant’s brief must contain “a clear and concise argument” with “appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.”
  • TRAP 38.8(a)(1) and TRAP 42.3(b), (c): Authorize dismissal for want of prosecution or failure to comply with court rules/orders (invoked as warnings in the re-briefing order).
  • TRAP 33.1: Preservation of error requirement—appellate complaints generally must be raised in the trial court.
  • Mansfield State Bank v. Cohn, 573 S.W.2d 181 (Tex. 1978): Pro se litigants are held to the same standards as licensed attorneys.
  • Strange v. Continental Cas. Co., 126 S.W.3d 676 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2004, pet. denied): Court will not speculate as to issues; no duty to independently review record/law to find error.
  • Birnbaum v. Law Offices of G. David Westfall, 120 S.W.3d 470 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2003, pet. denied): Issues unsupported by argument or legal authority present nothing for review.

Application

The court started from a baseline principle that matters constantly in family-law appeals: pro se status does not relax appellate briefing requirements. After striking the initial brief, the court gave Husband a second opportunity to comply—an important procedural detail when defending affirmance because it undercuts any argument that the court acted precipitously.

But the amended brief remained noncompliant. The court emphasized three interlocking deficiencies that prevented merits review: (1) no clearly identified issues for review, (2) no substantive argument with citations to authority, and (3) no citations to the record demonstrating where error occurred and how it was preserved. The court underscored that it cannot function as an advocate by drafting issues, supplying legal theories, or combing the record to locate support. In a family context—where parties often challenge discretionary rulings in property division and conservatorship—this point is decisive: without a properly briefed abuse-of-discretion analysis tied to the record, the appellant effectively forfeits review.

Holding

The court held that Husband’s amended brief still failed to comply with TRAP 38.1(h) because it did not present reviewable issues supported by argument, authority, or record citations. As a result, the court resolved the appellant’s “issue(s)” against him and affirmed the divorce decree.

The court further held—consistent with Dallas precedent—that it would not speculate about what Husband intended to challenge and had no duty to independently review the record and law to identify potential error. The opinion also highlighted the preservation problem under TRAP 33.1, noting there was no indication the complained-of matters were raised and preserved in the trial court.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, the strategic takeaway is not merely “briefs must comply,” but how to weaponize (or avoid) briefing failures in divorce/SAPCR appeals:

  • When defending a decree (appellee posture): Consider an early, targeted briefing-waiver section that documents the absence of TRAP 38.1(h) components—issue statement, standard of review, record cites, and authority—then argue that the appellant has presented nothing for review under Birnbaum and Strange. If the court previously ordered re-briefing, emphasize the appellant’s failure to cure; it strengthens the case for affirmance without reaching discretionary merits.
  • When prosecuting a decree challenge (appellant posture): In property division challenges, identify the complained-of findings/rulings with pinpoint record cites and frame the issue under abuse of discretion (and, where applicable, legal/factual sufficiency as components). In conservatorship/possession disputes, connect each appellate complaint to (1) a preserved objection/offer of proof, (2) the governing statutory framework, and (3) the specific evidentiary record supporting harm.
  • When dealing with a pro se opposing party: If the opponent proceeds pro se on appeal, do not assume the court will “figure it out.” Preserve the waiver narrative in your appellee brief and, where appropriate, move to strike noncompliant filings or request enforcement of TRAP 38/42.3. Many family appeals turn on whether the court can reach the merits at all.
  • When trial counsel anticipates an appeal: Build the record for preservation (offers of proof, requested findings, objections on the correct grounds, post-judgment motions when needed). The court’s TRAP 33.1 reference is a reminder: even a perfectly formatted brief cannot resurrect unpreserved complaints.

Checklists

Appellant Brief Compliance (TRAP 38.1(h) “Merits Gatekeeping”)

  • State each issue presented as a clear, reviewable legal question
  • Provide the applicable standard of review for each issue (abuse of discretion; legal/factual sufficiency components where relevant)
  • Include pinpoint record citations for every material factual assertion
  • Cite controlling authority (Texas Supreme Court, relevant COA precedent, Family Code provisions) for each legal proposition
  • Explain how the cited record demonstrates error under the standard of review
  • Include a harm analysis (why the error probably caused an improper judgment or prevented proper presentation)

Preservation Audit (TRAP 33.1) for Divorce/SAPCR Appeals

  • Identify the precise trial-court ruling being challenged (order, finding, evidentiary ruling, or judgment provision)
  • Confirm the objection/request/motion in the record was timely and specific
  • Ensure the trial court ruled (or refused to rule) and that refusal was preserved
  • For excluded evidence, include an offer of proof/bill of exception
  • For findings-dependent issues, request findings of fact and conclusions of law when appropriate and track deadlines

Appellee Strategy: Turning Noncompliance Into Affirmance

  • Compare appellant’s brief against TRAP 38.1 requirements and cite specific omissions
  • Argue waiver under Birnbaum (no authority/argument = nothing to review)
  • Emphasize Strange (court will not speculate or search the record)
  • If re-briefing was ordered, highlight failure to cure as a credibility and procedure point
  • Add a preservation section: even if the court reaches the merits, identify TRAP 33.1 failures
  • Request affirmance on briefing waiver grounds before addressing the merits in the alternative

Citation

In the Interest of S.S.F.R. and S.J.F.R., Children, No. 05-25-00505-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 30, 2026, mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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Tom Daley is a board-certified family law attorney with extensive experience practicing across the United States, primarily in Texas. He represents clients in all aspects of family law, including negotiation, settlement, litigation, trial, and appeals.