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Fort Worth Court of Appeals Dismisses SAPCR Appeal for Want of Prosecution After Father Fails to File Brief

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

In the Interest of N.L., N.L., and V.F., Children, 02-26-00020-CV, April 16, 2026.

On appeal from 233rd District Court, Tarrant County, Texas

Synopsis

The Second Court of Appeals dismissed Father’s accelerated SAPCR appeal for want of prosecution after he failed to file his appellant’s brief by the March 3, 2026 deadline and then failed to respond to the court’s notice requiring a brief and a motion reasonably explaining the delay by March 26, 2026. Applying Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure 38.8(a)(1) and 42.3(b), the court concluded dismissal was appropriate after notice and noncompliance.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, this opinion is a reminder that appellate deadlines in SAPCR and child-protection matters are not merely administrative—they are outcome-determinative. The same discipline applies across family litigation: in custody disputes, post-divorce modification appeals, conservatorship orders, and even property-related appeals arising from divorce, counsel who miss accelerated deadlines or fail to respond to a notice from the appellate court risk losing appellate review altogether, regardless of the potential merits of the underlying complaint.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Father appealed from a January 6, 2026 final order in a suit affecting the parent–child relationship. The order removed the Department of Family and Protective Services as managing conservator, appointed Mother as sole managing conservator of the children, and appointed Father as possessory conservator.

Because the case was a child-protection appeal, it proceeded on an accelerated timetable. Under that timetable, Father’s appellant’s brief was due March 3, 2026. He did not file the brief by that deadline.

On March 16, 2026, the Second Court of Appeals sent notice that the brief had not been filed as required by Rule 38.6(a). The court advised Father that the appeal could be dismissed for want of prosecution under Rule 42.3(b) unless, by March 26, 2026, he filed both the overdue brief and a motion reasonably explaining the failure to timely file and the need for an extension. Father did not respond. With no brief and no explanation on file, the court dismissed the appeal.

Issues Decided

  • Whether an accelerated appeal from a final SAPCR order may be dismissed for want of prosecution when the appellant fails to timely file an appellant’s brief.
  • Whether dismissal is proper when, after notice from the appellate court, the appellant still fails to file a brief and fails to provide a reasonable explanation for the delay.
  • Whether the court’s notice procedure under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure satisfied the predicate for dismissal.

Rules Applied

The court relied on the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure governing briefing deadlines, extensions, and dismissal for noncompliance:

  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 28.4(a)(2)(B): identifies child-protection appeals as accelerated.
  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.6(a): sets the deadline for filing an appellant’s brief.
  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 10.5(b): governs motions for extension of time and requires a reasonable explanation for the need for additional time.
  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.8(a)(1): authorizes dismissal for want of prosecution when an appellant fails to timely file a brief, unless the appellant reasonably explains the failure and the appellee is not significantly injured.
  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(b): permits dismissal for want of prosecution after ten days’ notice to the parties.
  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 43.2(f): authorizes the appellate court to dismiss the appeal.

Although the memorandum opinion is concise and does not engage in extended precedent analysis, its reasoning is squarely rule-based and reflects the Fort Worth court’s routine enforcement of accelerated appellate deadlines in family cases.

Application

The court’s application was straightforward and procedural. It first identified that this was an accelerated child-protection appeal, which meant the ordinary appellate timetable did not apply. From there, the court noted the operative briefing deadline: March 3, 2026. When that date passed without an appellant’s brief, the court did not dismiss immediately. Instead, it issued a notice on March 16, 2026 informing Father that the appeal was subject to dismissal for want of prosecution.

That notice mattered. The court expressly gave Father an opportunity to cure the default by March 26, 2026. The required cure was not just the late brief; the court also required a motion reasonably explaining the untimely filing and the need for an extension, tracking Rule 10.5(b) and Rule 38.8(a)(1). In other words, the court gave Father both notice of the defect and a final chance to preserve appellate review through compliance.

Father did nothing. He filed no brief, no extension motion, and no explanation. On that record, the court had before it an accelerated appeal, a missed deadline, a ten-day notice of potential dismissal, and total nonresponse. Under those circumstances, the rules authorized dismissal, and the court exercised that authority.

Holding

The Second Court of Appeals held that dismissal for want of prosecution was proper under Rule 38.8(a)(1) because Father failed to timely file his appellant’s brief and failed to reasonably explain that failure.

The court also held that dismissal was proper under Rule 42.3(b) because Father received notice that the appeal could be dismissed unless he filed the overdue brief and an explanatory motion by March 26, 2026, yet he did not respond. With the notice requirement satisfied and no cure attempted, the court dismissed the appeal.

Practical Application

This decision is less about substantive conservatorship law and more about appellate survival in family cases. But that is precisely why it matters. Family-law appeals frequently arise in accelerated settings—termination, child-protection, and some interlocutory contexts—and even when the appeal is not technically accelerated, the operational lesson is the same: appellate courts expect strict compliance, especially after a warning notice.

For trial lawyers handling the handoff to appellate counsel, this case underscores the danger of treating the notice of appeal as the end of the emergency. In family cases, the real risk often begins after the notice is filed. If appellate responsibility is unclear, if the clerk’s record and reporter’s record are not tracked, or if no one is calendaring the brief date under the accelerated timetable, the appeal can be lost without a merits review.

For appellate counsel, the strategic takeaway is equally direct. A missed due date is often still salvageable; silence usually is not. Courts routinely allow late briefs when counsel promptly files the brief, moves for extension, and gives a reasonable explanation. What this opinion shows is that once the court issues a dismissal warning, nonresponse is effectively fatal.

In divorce, custody modification, relocation, enforcement, and property-division appeals, practitioners should apply the same discipline even if the timetable is not accelerated:

  • confirm at intake whether the appeal is accelerated;
  • docket all appellate deadlines from the signed order, not from assumptions;
  • monitor for deficiency notices from the appellate court;
  • file an extension motion before or immediately after the deadline if needed; and
  • never ignore a Rule 42.3(b) notice.

The practical point is simple but consequential: preserving error at trial is meaningless if the appeal is later dismissed for procedural abandonment.

Checklists

Accelerated Family Appeal Intake Checklist

  • Determine immediately whether the order is subject to an accelerated appellate timetable.
  • Confirm the date the final order was signed.
  • Calculate the notice-of-appeal deadline and the appellant’s-brief deadline under the applicable rules.
  • Identify who is responsible for the appeal: trial counsel, appellate counsel, or substitute counsel.
  • Confirm all client contact information so any deadline issue can be addressed quickly.
  • Obtain the clerk’s record and reporter’s record status as early as possible.

Appellant’s Brief Deadline Control Checklist

  • Calendar the brief deadline in multiple systems with advance reminders.
  • Cross-check the deadline against the accelerated-appeal rules, not just the standard timetable.
  • Assign internal responsibility for drafting, review, filing, and final submission.
  • Confirm the record is complete enough to support briefing; if not, address supplementation immediately.
  • File early where possible to avoid e-filing or signature issues on the due date.
  • If the deadline cannot be met, prepare the extension motion before the due date passes.

Late-Brief Recovery Checklist

  • File the appellant’s brief as soon as possible, even if late.
  • File a motion to extend time under Rule 10.5(b).
  • Include a reasonable explanation for the missed deadline.
  • Address why the delay does not significantly injure the appellee.
  • Do not wait for the court to issue a warning notice before taking corrective action.
  • If a notice has already issued, comply fully within the deadline stated in the notice.

Rule 42.3(b) Notice Response Checklist

  • Read the notice carefully and identify every required filing.
  • Calendar the response deadline the same day the notice is received.
  • File both the overdue brief and the required explanatory motion if the court directs both.
  • Do not assume that filing only one of the required documents is sufficient.
  • Confirm filing acceptance through the e-filing system.
  • If extraordinary circumstances prevent compliance, communicate through a properly supported motion before the deadline expires.

Trial-to-Appellate Handoff Checklist for Family Lawyers

  • Specify in writing who will handle post-judgment motions, notice of appeal, and appellate briefing.
  • Provide appellate counsel with the signed order, docket sheet, and hearing transcripts promptly.
  • Flag whether the case involves DFPS, SAPCR relief, conservatorship, possession, or other issues that may trigger accelerated treatment.
  • Ensure the client understands that appellate deadlines are short and unforgiving.
  • Monitor the appellate docket until counsel substitution or appearance is confirmed.
  • Treat any appellate court notice as urgent, particularly in parent-child cases.

Citation

In the Interest of N.L., N.L., and V.F., Children, No. 02-26-00020-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Apr. 16, 2026, no pet.) (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.