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Twelfth Court of Appeals Dismisses Divorce Appeal for Lack of Final Judgment

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

In re Marriage of Bueso and Cruz, 12-26-00095-CV, April 15, 2026.

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

Synopsis

The Twelfth Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal because the appellate record contained no signed final judgment and no appealable interlocutory order. An unsigned, un-file-marked document attached to the appellant’s response could not invoke appellate jurisdiction, and the clerk confirmed that no signed order existed in the trial court’s file.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a straightforward but important jurisdictional reminder for Texas family-law litigators: in divorce, SAPCR, enforcement, contempt-related, and post-judgment proceedings, appellate deadlines and appellate jurisdiction depend on an actual signed order, not on an oral ruling, a proposed judgment, a docket notation, or a copy attached to a notice of appeal. In practice, this matters most when litigants try to appeal hurriedly after a hearing involving divorce relief, conservatorship, support, property division, or commitment-related enforcement consequences before confirming that the trial court has signed and the clerk has filed the operative order.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The case arose from a family-law matter styled as a marriage dissolution proceeding involving Maria Bueso and Marcelino Cruz and the interest of a child, R.A.C. The pro se appellant filed a notice of appeal representing that he sought review of a “final order/judgment” allegedly signed on March 16, 2026.

The court of appeals, however, received information from the district clerk showing a jurisdictional problem: the record did not contain a final judgment or any appealable order. The court notified the appellant under the appellate rules that the appeal would be dismissed unless the record was amended to establish jurisdiction. In response, the appellant maintained that the March 16 order disposed of all parties and issues and requested supplementation of the record.

That response did not solve the problem. The case information from the Smith County District Clerk stated, “Ruling under advisement; No order filed.” The document the appellant attached to his jurisdictional response—described as an order revoking suspension and for commitment to county jail—was neither signed by the trial court nor file-marked. The appellate clerk’s office separately confirmed with the district clerk that no signed order existed.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Texas appellate jurisdiction is generally limited to final judgments and those interlocutory orders made appealable by statute. The court cited McFadin v. Broadway Coffeehouse, LLC, 539 S.W.3d 278, 283 (Tex. 2018), for the proposition that, absent specific statutory authorization, appellate courts may review only final judgments and certain appealable interlocutory orders.

The court also referenced Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 51.014, which identifies categories of interlocutory orders that may be appealed before final judgment. Nothing in the opinion suggested that the purported order fell within any such statutory category.

Procedurally, the court relied on Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 37.2 in raising the defect after receiving information from the clerk indicating the record did not show appellate jurisdiction. It then invoked Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(a), which authorizes dismissal when the court lacks jurisdiction.

The core rule applied here is elementary but unforgiving: a trial court order must exist as a signed order of record before it can support an appeal. A party’s characterization of a ruling as “final” does not substitute for a signed, entered judgment.

Application

The Twelfth Court approached the case as a pure jurisdictional inquiry. It did not reach the merits of any divorce, child-related, enforcement, or commitment issue because it first had to determine whether there was an appealable order at all. Once the district clerk’s information showed no final judgment in the record, the court gave the appellant an opportunity to cure the defect. That procedural step is significant; the dismissal did not come without warning.

The appellant responded by insisting that the March 16 ruling was final and by asking the court to supplement the record. But the court looked past the appellant’s description and examined the actual indicia of an appealable order. Those indicia were absent. The attached document was not signed by the trial judge, was not file-marked, and was contradicted by the clerk’s notation that no order had been filed and that the ruling remained under advisement. The appellate clerk then independently verified with the Smith County District Clerk that no signed order existed.

From there, the court’s path was short. Without a signed final judgment, and without any interlocutory order made appealable by statute, there was nothing over which appellate jurisdiction could attach. The opinion is a reminder that jurisdiction turns on the existence of a signed order in the record, not on the parties’ assertions, not on an intended ruling, and not on an informal copy circulating outside the clerk’s file.

Holding

The court held that it lacked jurisdiction because the record contained no signed final judgment and no appealable interlocutory order. The absence of a signed and filed order was dispositive under settled Texas appellate-jurisdiction principles.

The court further held that the unsigned, un-file-marked document attached to the appellant’s response could not cure the jurisdictional defect. Because the district clerk verified that no signed order existed, the appeal had to be dismissed for want of jurisdiction under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(a).

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, this case is most useful as a process warning. In divorce and SAPCR practice, lawyers often leave hearings with a clear oral ruling on conservatorship, possession, support, property division, enforcement, or commitment-related relief and immediately begin calculating appellate deadlines or planning mandamus strategy. Bueso and Cruz underscores that the first question is more basic: is there a signed, file-backed order actually in existence?

That question matters in several recurring settings:

Strategically, if you represent the would-be appellant, confirm the existence of a signed order before filing the notice of appeal and before advising the client that plenary-power and appellate timetables are running. If you represent the appellee, scrutinize jurisdiction immediately. A missing signature, missing file mark, or incomplete finality language may create a viable dismissal path. In enforcement and contempt-adjacent matters, also remember that some complaints may belong in mandamus or habeas rather than direct appeal, depending on the nature of the order and the sanction imposed.

Just as importantly, trial counsel should not assume that an order “exists” because a judge announced a ruling, emailed comments, or approved a draft in principle. The order that matters is the order signed by the judge and entered through the clerk’s office. Until then, appellate jurisdiction may be nonexistent.

Checklists

Before Filing a Notice of Appeal

Finality Review in Family-Law Cases

Clerk’s Record Verification

Protecting the Appellate Timeline

Responding to a Jurisdictional Defect

Citation

In re Marriage of Bueso and Cruz, No. 12-26-00095-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Tyler Apr. 15, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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