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CROSSOVER: Mandamus Reins In Discovery Order: No Waiver of Attorney-Client Privilege by Partial Disclosure or Mere Use of Legal Advice

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

In re EOG Resources, Inc., 04-25-00574-CV, April 15, 2026.

On appeal from Probate Court No. 3, Bexar County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourth Court of Appeals conditionally granted mandamus and held that EOG did not waive attorney-client privilege merely by producing a redacted legal memorandum and an internal email that referenced counsel’s advice on the same subject. The court also rejected offensive-use waiver because EOG was a defendant asserting only defenses, not seeking affirmative relief independent of the plaintiff’s claims.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters in Texas family litigation because privilege-waiver fights frequently arise in divorce, SAPCR, enforcement, fiduciary-duty, and marital-property tracing cases, especially where one side has consulted transactional, tax, estate, business, or family-law counsel about asset structure, title, valuation, reimbursement, or litigation strategy. In re EOG Resources gives family-law litigators a strong mandamus-ready framework for arguing that partial disclosure, subject-matter overlap, or a client’s reliance on legal advice in decision-making does not automatically open the file—and that offensive-use waiver remains narrow when the party is defending rather than pursuing affirmative relief.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The underlying dispute involved title to mineral interests and related royalty rights in long-running probate litigation. One unresolved issue was whether EOG acquired certain mineral interests as a bona fide purchaser. In discovery, the opposing party sought documents bearing on that issue, and EOG withheld several items—identified as title opinions, attorney memoranda, and attorney-client communications—on attorney-client privilege grounds.

To support the privilege claim, EOG did what Texas mandamus practice expects: it served a detailed privilege log, submitted affidavits from corporate representatives explaining the nature of the communications, and tendered the disputed documents for in camera inspection. The trial court nevertheless ordered production of five withheld items after concluding that EOG had waived privilege.

The waiver theory rested primarily on EOG’s prior voluntary production of a redacted 2013 legal memorandum from its title attorney and an October 2013 internal email stating that EOG’s title attorney had advised that an amended correction mineral deed was needed. The real party in interest argued that because those disclosed materials addressed the same title problem as the withheld documents, privilege had been waived as to the withheld communications. It also argued offensive-use waiver. EOG sought mandamus.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on familiar Texas privilege and mandamus doctrine:

Application

The court began with the threshold question and found EOG had properly carried its prima facie burden. The privilege log was detailed, the supporting affidavits explained the privileged character of the documents, and the documents themselves were tendered for in camera review. That shifted the burden to the party claiming waiver.

From there, the court rejected the voluntary-disclosure theory because the disclosed materials did not reveal a significant part of the withheld communications. The redacted 2013 memorandum discussed the deed problem and gave legal advice about obtaining an amended correction mineral deed, but the court found that memorandum neither depended upon the content of the withheld items nor quoted from or revealed a significant part of them. The same was true of the October 2013 internal email. The email said counsel had advised that an amended correction deed was needed, but it did not disclose the underlying attorney-client communications in any meaningful way.

The court’s reasoning is strategically important: it treated “same subject matter” and “reference to legal advice” as insufficient by themselves. In other words, a party does not lose privilege simply because it discloses one attorney communication, a redacted portion of one communication, or an internal email reflecting that legal advice was received and acted upon. The focus remains on whether the disclosure exposed a significant part of the withheld privileged communication itself.

The court then rejected offensive-use waiver for a simpler reason: EOG was a defendant asserting defenses only. It was not seeking affirmative relief independent of the plaintiff’s claims. Because the first element of offensive-use waiver failed, the doctrine did not apply. Having found the documents privileged and not waived, the court held the trial court abused its discretion. And because disclosure of privileged information cannot be un-done on appeal, mandamus relief was appropriate.

Holding

The Fourth Court held that EOG established a prima facie claim of attorney-client privilege as to the disputed title opinions, attorney memoranda, and attorney communications through its privilege log, supporting affidavits, and in camera submission. That showing was sufficient to shift the burden to the party asserting waiver.

The court further held that EOG did not waive privilege under Rule 511(a)(1) by producing a redacted 2013 legal memorandum and an internal email referring to counsel’s advice. Those materials did not quote from, describe, or reveal a significant part of the withheld privileged communications, and disclosure of the same subject matter or mere use of legal advice does not constitute waiver.

The court also held that offensive-use waiver did not apply because EOG was not seeking affirmative relief. As a defendant asserting defenses only, it remained outside the narrow scope of that doctrine.

Finally, the court held that mandamus was proper because an order compelling production of privileged material leaves no adequate appellate remedy. The petition was conditionally granted, and the trial court was directed to vacate the production order as to the disputed privilege-log items.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, this case is most useful in high-conflict discovery involving separate-property tracing, business-entity ownership, estate-planning structures, post-marital partition agreements, reimbursement theories, valuation strategy, and custody matters where one side consulted counsel before acting. Opposing counsel often argues waiver after obtaining a single disclosed email, a redacted memo, a draft agreement with lawyer comments removed, or testimony that a client “acted on advice of counsel.” In re EOG Resources is a clean answer: disclosure of the topic is not disclosure of a significant part of the privileged communication.

In property litigation, this comes up when a spouse produces a redacted estate-planning memo, business-sale document, or title analysis touching the same asset at issue in divorce. The producing party can now more forcefully argue that the remainder of counsel’s file stays protected unless the disclosed material actually reveals the substance of the withheld communications. In fiduciary-duty or fraud-adjacent claims between spouses, the same principle should limit attempts to bootstrap a partial production into a broad subject-matter waiver.

The case is also important defensively. Family lawyers should be careful when framing pleadings and live positions so that defenses stay defensive. If your client is only resisting characterization, valuation, reimbursement, conservatorship restrictions, relocation, or fee claims, EOG helps argue there is no offensive-use waiver merely because your client’s theory is informed by legal advice. But if you plead affirmative claims—fraud on the community, rescission, declaratory relief, partition enforcement, fiduciary-duty recovery, reimbursement, or sanctions-based affirmative relief—you should expect a more serious offensive-use fight.

Practically, this opinion reinforces three habits: build the privilege record, disclose surgically, and separate “we received legal advice” from “here is what counsel said.” The more disciplined the record, the better the mandamus posture.

Checklists

Building the Privilege Record

Avoiding Waiver by Partial Production

Responding to Waiver Arguments in Family Cases

Defeating Offensive-Use Waiver

Using the Case Against Overreaching Discovery Requests

Preventing the Non-Prevailing Party’s Mistake

Citation

In re EOG Resources, Inc., No. 04-25-00574-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—San Antonio Apr. 15, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized effectively in Texas divorce and custody cases in at least two directions. First, for the privilege holder, it is a strong shield against efforts to pry into communications with family-law counsel, estate planners, tax lawyers, business lawyers, or prior counsel simply because the client produced a redacted draft, disclosed a timeline showing counsel was consulted, or testified that a decision was made after legal review. That is especially useful in disputes over separate-property origin, entity control, trust interests, post-marital agreements, relocation decisions, child-related risk management, and pre-suit strategy.

Second, for the requesting party, the case teaches precision. If you want privileged material, you will need to do more than show that the other side disclosed a related communication or invoked legal advice as part of the narrative. You must identify how the disclosure revealed a significant part of the withheld communication itself, or show that the other side has crossed into true offensive use by seeking affirmative relief that depends on the privileged material. In practice, In re EOG Resources narrows casual waiver arguments and rewards litigators who build a disciplined record, distinguish claims from defenses, and target the actual content of the disclosure rather than the topic alone.

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