Fourteenth Court Modifies Divorce Decree to Delete Vexatious-Litigant Finding
Diana Reismann Sexton v. Gilbert Sexton, 14-25-00331-CV, March 31, 2026.
On appeal from 505th District Court, Fort Bend County, Texas
Synopsis
The Fourteenth Court largely affirmed a consolidated divorce/SAPCR and personal-injury judgment, but modified the final decree to delete the trial court’s vexatious-litigant finding under Chapter 11 because the appellate record did not support it. Most of the appellant’s other complaints were either unreviewable (no reporter’s record / preservation problems), previously decided (Rule 145 indigency appeal), or moot (temporary orders superseded; possession/access moot once the child turned 18).
Relevance to Family Law
This opinion is a reminder that in family cases—especially consolidated matters with tort claims—the appellate “battlefield” is often defined by record-design, mootness, and the procedural vehicle used (e.g., Rule 145 indigency review). It also underscores that a Chapter 11 vexatious-litigant designation is not a discretionary “label” a court can add to a divorce decree without a record that affirmatively supports the statutory predicates; if the appellate record doesn’t carry the finding, the court of appeals can and will surgically modify the judgment to remove it while leaving the rest of the decree intact.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The case arose from a Fort Bend County divorce filed in 2019, later joined by a personal-injury suit the wife filed against the husband three years into the divorce. At the husband’s request, the trial court consolidated the personal-injury case with the divorce/SAPCR proceeding. The trial court granted summary judgment against the wife on her personal-injury claims.
Conservatorship and access issues were tried to a jury, which found (among other things) a history/pattern of family violence and a pattern/practice of child abuse or neglect by the wife, and recommended the husband be appointed sole managing conservator. The trial court adopted the verdict, rendered a final decree including a standard possession order, and divided property (including awarding the marital residence to the husband subject to an $85,000 lien in the wife’s favor and awarding the wife retirement/pension interests, with QDRO preparation at her expense). The decree also included a vexatious-litigant finding against the wife.
On appeal, the wife (pro se) attempted to challenge numerous rulings: indigency, temporary orders, possession/access, the jury findings, the property division, the summary judgment on her tort claims, and the vexatious-litigant finding. The appellate record did not include a reporter’s record.
Issues Decided
- Whether the appellate court could revisit the trial court’s indigency ruling after a Rule 145(g) motion had already been decided.
- Whether challenges to temporary orders were reviewable after entry of a final decree.
- Whether challenges to possession/access provisions in the final decree were moot after the child turned 18.
- Whether challenges to jury-tried issues (family-violence/abuse findings; conservatorship) and to the property division were reviewable without a reporter’s record.
- Whether the summary judgment disposing of the consolidated personal-injury claims could be reviewed on the clerk’s record.
- Whether the Chapter 11 vexatious-litigant finding was supported on the appellate record, and the proper appellate remedy if not.
Rules Applied
- Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 145 (indigency procedure; review by motion under Rule 145(g), and finality of that appellate disposition).
- Mootness / subject-matter jurisdiction principles, including:
- Heckman v. Williamson Cnty., 369 S.W.3d 137 (Tex. 2012).
- Guardianship of Fairley, 650 S.W.3d 372 (Tex. 2022).
- In re J.J.R.S., 627 S.W.3d 211 (Tex. 2021) (temporary orders typically superseded by final order).
- Appellate preservation and record requirements:
- Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a) (preservation).
- Authorities on the consequences of an absent reporter’s record and the presumption that missing evidence supports the judgment, including Bryant, Schafer, and Guthrie as cited by the court.
- Summary judgment review:
- De novo standard, Boerjan v. Rodriguez, 436 S.W.3d 307 (Tex. 2014) (per curiam).
- Chapter 11 vexatious litigant (Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code ch. 11): the finding must be supported by the appellate record; absent support, modification deleting the finding is appropriate.
Application
The court first triaged reviewability. The indigency dispute was not a live issue because the appellant had already used the Rule 145 mechanism to obtain appellate review, and the court had previously affirmed the trial court’s indigency determination—ending that controversy.
Next, the court treated temporary orders as jurisdictionally moot because final judgment had superseded them. Then, even as to final-decree possession/access provisions, the court held the issues were moot because the child turned 18 during the appeal and the decree’s possession/access terms applied only while the child was under 18 and not emancipated.
The opinion then turned to the appellant’s attempts to attack jury findings and the property division. Without a reporter’s record, the court could not evaluate error preservation (objections, rulings, offers of proof, charge conferences), and even if a complaint had been preserved, the court would presume the missing record supported the jury’s findings and the judgment. That doctrinal one-two punch—preservation opacity plus evidentiary presumption—ended most challenges.
Two matters were nonetheless reachable on the existing appellate record: the summary judgment on the personal-injury claims and the vexatious-litigant determination. On the personal-injury claims, the court noted that the husband’s motion lacked evidence, and the trial court’s order indicated the ruling effectively rested on no-evidence grounds (no evidence of causation and no numerical damage calculation). The court affirmed the summary judgment.
On the vexatious-litigant finding, however, the court concluded the appellate record did not support the Chapter 11 designation. Rather than reverse the entire decree, the court used a narrow remedy—modifying the final judgment to delete the vexatious-litigant finding—while otherwise affirming the decree and the summary judgment.
Holding
The court held that the indigency ruling was not subject to further review because it had already been reviewed and affirmed via the Rule 145(g) procedure.
The court held that complaints about temporary orders were moot because the final decree superseded them, and that possession/access complaints were also moot because the child reached age 18 during the appeal, depriving the court of jurisdiction to adjudicate those now-expired provisions.
The court held that challenges to jury findings and the property division could not be reviewed without a reporter’s record, both because preservation could not be assessed and because the missing record triggers presumptions favoring the judgment and findings.
The court affirmed the summary judgment on the wife’s personal-injury claims, concluding the record supported the disposition as a no-evidence summary judgment on essential elements (including causation and damages).
Finally, on the merits, the court held the Chapter 11 vexatious-litigant finding lacked support on the appellate record and modified the final judgment to delete that finding; the judgment was otherwise affirmed.
Practical Application
For Texas family litigators, the opinion is less about new substantive family-law doctrine and more about appellate survivability—what will (and will not) be reachable on appeal in a consolidated divorce/SAPCR that also includes civil tort claims.
- Treat “vexatious litigant” as a record-driven remedy, not a rhetorical flourish. If you want Chapter 11 relief in a family case, build it like a dispositive issue: plead it, prove the statutory predicates with admissible evidence, obtain clear findings, and ensure the record reflects the evidentiary basis. If you oppose it, focus on the statutory elements and the evidentiary gaps—because even in a broad affirmance, the court may excise an unsupported Chapter 11 finding.
- Mootness is predictable in SAPCR appeals; plan around it. Temporary orders challenges almost always die after final judgment. Possession/access disputes can become moot if the child is near 18. If the relief you need is time-sensitive, consider accelerated strategies (including seeking temporary relief in the appellate court where appropriate) rather than relying on merits review years later.
- No reporter’s record is often case-dispositive. Attacks on jury findings, charge error, evidentiary rulings, and property division discretion are commonly nonstarters without a reporter’s record. If you anticipate appeal, ensure the record exists and is ordered; if you represent the appellee, recognize how often a missing reporter’s record can be outcome-determinative.
- Consolidated tort claims inside divorce litigation raise summary-judgment traps. If you are prosecuting an interspousal tort alongside the divorce, you must marshal evidence on causation and damages early enough to defeat a no-evidence motion—and ensure that what you submit is admissible (authentication, hearsay exceptions, business-records predicates, etc.). If you are defending, a targeted no-evidence motion can cleanly sever and dispose of tort exposure without requiring a trial record.
Checklists
Chapter 11 Vexatious-Litigant Finding (Proponent’s Checklist)
- Plead Chapter 11 expressly and identify the statutory grounds you are invoking.
- Compile a case list with cause numbers, courts, filing dates, dispositions, and how each matter fits the Chapter 11 predicates.
- Obtain certified copies or other admissible proof of the prior litigation history you rely on.
- Request written findings or ensure the order recites the statutory basis and supporting facts with specificity.
- Confirm the clerk’s record contains the motion, evidence, notice, and the court’s ruling.
- Consider how consolidation (divorce/SAPCR + tort) affects the “same transaction/occurrence” narrative and the evidentiary presentation.
Chapter 11 Vexatious-Litigant Finding (Opponent’s Checklist)
- Force element-by-element proof: identify which Chapter 11 predicate is claimed and challenge any missing statutory component.
- Object to non-evidence (argument, unsworn allegations, unauthenticated documents).
- Ensure the hearing is recorded and that the reporter’s record is requested and paid for (or arrangements made).
- Request findings (or at minimum, clarify on the record what the court is relying on).
- Preserve error: timely objection, ruling, and—if needed—post-judgment requests that ensure the issue is appellate-ready.
Preventing Mootness Problems in SAPCR Appeals
- Identify early whether the child will turn 18 during the likely appellate timeline.
- If challenging possession/access, consider whether any relief remains meaningful post-18 (and plead/argue accordingly).
- If relief is time-sensitive, evaluate appellate temporary relief options and accelerated paths.
- Do not spend briefing capital on temporary-orders complaints after final judgment unless tied to a surviving issue (e.g., sanctions or collateral consequences).
Protecting the Record for Jury-Trial and Property-Division Appeals
- Confirm a court reporter is present for all critical phases (trial, charge conference, evidentiary disputes, post-judgment hearings).
- Make offers of proof for excluded evidence and obtain clear rulings on objections.
- Preserve charge error precisely (requested language, objections, rulings).
- For property division issues, build a clean evidentiary record on characterization, valuation, and just-and-right factors.
- Order and verify the reporter’s record immediately after judgment; confirm completeness (including exhibits).
Summary Judgment on Interspousal Tort Claims (Plaintiff-Side)
- Calendar the no-evidence deadline and prepare admissible evidence on:
- Causation (medical testimony/records tied to alleged conduct).
- Damages (past medicals, future care, lost wages, impairment, etc.).
- Authenticate records (business-records affidavits where applicable) and cure hearsay issues.
- Disclose witnesses and damages computations timely to avoid “no evidence” findings tied to disclosure failures.
- File a response that directly addresses each challenged element and cites competent summary-judgment evidence.
Citation
Diana Reismann Sexton v. Gilbert Sexton, No. 14-25-00331-CV (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Mar. 31, 2026, mem. op.) (affirmed as modified).
Full Opinion
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