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Twelfth Court of Appeals Denies Habeas Petition Where No Signed Contempt Order Exists

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

In re Cruz, 12-26-00080-CV, April 15, 2026.

On appeal from County Court at Law No. 2, Smith County, Texas

Synopsis

The Twelfth Court of Appeals denied habeas relief because there was no signed contempt order in the record and therefore nothing for the court to review. The court also noted that the relator was not actually incarcerated, underscoring a basic appellate point family-law litigators ignore at their peril: extraordinary relief depends on a clean, reviewable record anchored by an actual signed order.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion has immediate consequences for Texas family-law practice because contempt, commitment, attorney’s-fee enforcement, and suspended commitments routinely arise in SAPCR, divorce, and post-decree enforcement litigation. Whether the dispute involves unpaid child support, possession-and-access violations, injunction enforcement, or fee awards tied to discovery abuse, appellate relief will usually fail if counsel cannot produce a signed, file-marked order or other competent record material showing the complained-of ruling; in practical terms, this case is a reminder that enforcement strategy and appellate preservation begin with getting the order signed, entered, and properly included in the appendix.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The relator, appearing pro se, filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus attacking what he described as a March 16, 2026 contempt order that allegedly required him to pay attorney’s fees and submit to commitment. But the Twelfth Court determined that the supposed order did not exist in signed form in the trial-court record.

The court did not stop at the face of the habeas filing. It took judicial notice of its own records from a related pending appeal involving the same purported order. In that companion matter, the Smith County District Clerk’s case information sheet reflected: “Ruling under advisement; No order filed.” Although the relator had furnished an order revoking suspension and for commitment to county jail, that document was neither signed by the trial court nor file marked. The appellate clerk’s office further confirmed directly with the district clerk that no signed order existed. Even the State’s response appeared not to recognize the existence of any March 16 order.

The court also observed that the relator had personally filed several documents with the appellate court, which indicated that he was not incarcerated at the time of the proceeding. Against that procedural backdrop, the court denied habeas relief.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court principally relied on Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 52.3(l)(1)(B), which requires the appendix in an original proceeding to include “a certified or sworn copy of the relevant trial court order, or any other document showing the matter complained of.” That rule is not a technical afterthought. In original proceedings, it is the mechanism by which the relator establishes that there is an actual ruling capable of review.

The court also invoked the principle that an appellate court may take judicial notice of its own records in the same or a related proceeding involving the same or nearly the same parties. For that proposition, the court cited:

The opinion also rests on a foundational premise of Texas appellate procedure: courts review orders, not allegations about orders. If no signed order exists, there is generally no operative directive to enforce, suspend, supersede, attack by mandamus, or challenge by habeas.

Application

The Twelfth Court approached the relator’s filing as a threshold record problem, not as a merits dispute about contempt. That is the key strategic lesson. Before addressing whether the trial court lawfully imposed attorney’s fees, whether commitment was proper, or whether contempt procedures were followed, the appellate court first asked the indispensable question: what order are we reviewing?

The answer was that there was no signed March 16 order. The court confirmed that conclusion from multiple sources. It looked to its own records in a related appeal, where the district clerk’s materials affirmatively indicated that no order had been filed. It examined the document the relator provided and found that it lacked both the trial judge’s signature and a file mark. It then had its clerk’s office verify with the Smith County District Clerk that no signed order existed. That accumulation of record signals left no procedural room for habeas review.

The court then noted that the relator was not incarcerated, as evidenced by his in-person filings with the court. The opinion does not frame that fact as an independent, fully developed basis for denial, but it plainly reinforced the court’s conclusion that the extraordinary remedy sought did not fit the actual procedural posture. In other words, the relator was attempting to invoke the most urgent form of appellate intervention without presenting either the signed order allegedly authorizing confinement or circumstances demonstrating present restraint.

For family-law litigators, this is familiar terrain. Enforcement hearings often conclude with oral pronouncements, handwritten docket notes, or unsigned proposed orders circulating among counsel. But appellate relief turns on the written order, not on what everyone believes the court intended to sign later. The court’s reasoning in Cruz is a stark reminder that until the order is signed and placed into a competent record, the appellate process has nothing concrete to engage.

Holding

The Twelfth Court held that habeas corpus relief was unavailable because no signed March 16 contempt order existed in the record. Without a certified or sworn copy of a signed order—or at minimum some competent document showing the matter complained of as required by Rule 52.3(l)(1)(B)—there was nothing for the court to review.

The court further observed that the relator was not incarcerated, as shown by his personal filing activity in the appellate court. While the opinion’s principal holding rests on the absence of a reviewable order, that factual observation underscored the mismatch between the requested habeas remedy and the actual procedural facts before the court. The petition was therefore denied, and all pending motions were overruled as moot.

Practical Application

In family-law litigation, this case should change how you handle contempt and enforcement records the moment the hearing ends. If your client is the movant, do not assume an oral rendition, docket entry, or circulated draft will support downstream enforcement or appellate defense. Reduce the ruling to a precise written order, secure the judge’s signature, confirm file-marking, and make sure the operative order matches the pronouncement. If your client is the respondent and you anticipate seeking habeas or mandamus relief, obtain certified or sworn copies immediately; if there is no signed order, your first problem is not appellate argument but record existence.

The case also matters in suspended-commitment scenarios common in child-support and possession enforcement proceedings. Lawyers sometimes treat revocation or commitment paperwork as ministerial follow-through. It is not. If the order revoking suspension or directing commitment is unsigned, unfiled, or otherwise procedurally defective, the appellate court may never reach your substantive complaints because the proceeding will fail at the record stage.

Several concrete practice points follow:

Checklists

Pre-Filing Habeas Review

Family-Law Contempt Order Audit

Building a Reviewable Record

Avoiding the Relator’s Problem

Citation

In re Cruz, No. 12-26-00080-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Tyler Apr. 15, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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