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CROSSOVER: Family-Violence Conviction’s Federal Firearm Ban Counts as Habeas ‘Restraint,’ Forcing Trial Court to Entertain Post-Conviction Challenge

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

In re Rebel Hayz Breaux, 09-26-00148-CR, May 06, 2026.

On appeal from 163rd District Court of Orange County, Texas

Synopsis

A misdemeanor family-violence conviction can create enough present restraint to support post-conviction habeas relief under article 11.09 when the applicant pleads ongoing collateral consequences, including the lifetime federal firearm prohibition under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9). But the Beaumont court also made clear that pleading restraint is only the first gate: the trial court still may require compliance with article 11.14’s application and verification requirements, and article 11.09 does not automatically entitle the applicant to an evidentiary hearing.

Relevance to Family Law

This decision matters in family-law practice because family-violence findings and assault-family-violence convictions routinely shape possession, conservatorship, protective-order strategy, and firearm-related relief in divorce and SAPCR litigation. For Texas family lawyers, Breaux strengthens the argument that a family-violence misdemeanor has continuing legal consequences long after the criminal sentence ends, which in turn affects how courts, clients, and opposing counsel should evaluate risk, leverage, settlement posture, and the durability of family-violence-based restrictions in custody and property disputes.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Breaux pleaded guilty in August 2024 to a lesser-included offense of assault family violence in Orange County. After discharging his sentence, he sought post-conviction habeas relief under article 11.09, initially filing an application that the trial court denied on the ground that he was no longer restrained because his sentence had expired. The Beaumont Court of Appeals previously dismissed his attempted appeal, noting that he had not identified a collateral consequence sufficient to establish present restraint.

Breaux then filed a second article 11.09 application in August 2025. This time, he specifically alleged ongoing restraints flowing from the conviction, including a lifetime federal firearm prohibition and a final protective order. He challenged the conviction on familiar post-conviction grounds—ineffective assistance, involuntary plea, and actual innocence—but the trial court again denied the application solely because the sentence had been discharged and Breaux was not, in the trial court’s view, currently restrained.

Because an appeal did not lie from that denial posture, Breaux sought mandamus relief. The State, significantly, conceded in the court of appeals that the pleaded lifetime federal firearm ban was enough to constitute a present restraint tied to the conviction. The remaining dispute concerned what relief the appellate court should compel—vacatur and reconsideration only, or also issuance of the writ, an evidentiary hearing, merits rulings, and appointment-of-counsel consideration.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on several interlocking authorities:

Application

The court’s analysis began with the core threshold question: whether Breaux was presently restrained for article 11.09 purposes despite having completed his sentence. On that point, the court accepted the State’s concession and held that the pleaded lifetime federal firearm prohibition tied to his misdemeanor domestic-violence conviction was a sufficient ongoing restraint on liberty. That mattered because the trial court had denied the application for the categorical reason that no present restraint existed once the sentence was discharged. Under the court’s reasoning, that premise was legally wrong.

The court then turned to mandamus. Because the earlier attempted appeal had already been dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, Breaux had no adequate appellate remedy. That left mandamus as the appropriate vehicle to correct the trial court’s refusal to entertain the application based on an erroneous view of restraint. In that sense, the trial court’s duty was ministerial only to the extent that it had to vacate the order resting on the incorrect legal premise and reconsider the application under the proper standard.

But the court stopped there. It declined to hold that article 11.09 mechanically required issuance of the writ, an evidentiary hearing, merits rulings, or a ruling on appointment of counsel in this procedural posture. Instead, the court emphasized that even where restraint is sufficiently alleged, the applicant must still satisfy article 11.14. That point became especially significant because the application included only an unsworn declaration bearing a typed or “/s/” signature rather than a proper sworn verification. Relying on Ex parte Russell, the court signaled that this type of defect can justify denial, even though article 11.14 defects are not jurisdictional under Ex parte Golden.

So the appellate court drew a careful line. It corrected the trial court’s legal error on restraint, but it refused to order downstream procedural steps that depended on whether the application itself was procedurally sufficient. That is a strategically important distinction for litigators: pleading a recognized collateral consequence gets the applicant past the “no restraint” objection, but it does not immunize a defective habeas application from denial on other grounds.

Holding

The court held that Breaux sufficiently alleged a current restraint on liberty under article 11.09 by pleading that his misdemeanor family-violence conviction subjected him to the lifetime federal firearm prohibition. On that basis, the trial court abused its discretion in denying the application solely because the sentence had been discharged and Breaux was supposedly not currently restrained.

The court further held that mandamus relief was appropriate in part because Breaux lacked an adequate remedy by appeal. It conditionally granted mandamus to require the trial court, after issuance of the appellate mandate in the related appeal, to vacate its August 27, 2025 order and reconsider the article 11.09 application.

The court did not hold that article 11.09 automatically required the trial court to issue the writ, hold an evidentiary hearing, rule on the merits, or rule on the motion for appointment of counsel. Instead, it held that Breaux had not shown a ministerial duty to take those steps, particularly given the continuing need to satisfy article 11.14’s application and verification requirements.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Breaux is useful in at least three recurring settings. First, in divorce and SAPCR cases involving a prior assault-family-violence conviction, the opinion reinforces that the conviction has continuing operational force because the firearm disability is not merely reputational; it is a recognized legal restraint. That can matter in temporary-orders hearings, risk assessments, and settlement negotiations where firearm possession, protective-order compliance, and access-to-child arguments intersect.

Second, the case offers a framework for handling collateral attacks on the underlying criminal conviction. If the opposing party in a custody or protective-order case suggests that the prior family-violence conviction is “old” or functionally irrelevant because the sentence is over, Breaux supplies authority for the contrary proposition: the conviction continues to impose legal disabilities. At the same time, if that party is actively trying to unwind the conviction through habeas, family lawyers should pay close attention to procedural defects in the habeas application, particularly verification and article 11.14 compliance.

Third, the case affects property and possession disputes involving firearms, hunting equipment, ranch operations, and business assets tied to lawful firearm use. In some cases, the practical consequences of a domestic-violence conviction may shape arguments about exclusive use, transfer, sale, inventory control, or injunction language. Breaux makes clear that the federal firearm ban is not a speculative concern; it is a present legal disability with real litigation consequences.

Checklists

Evaluating Whether a Family-Violence Conviction Still Matters

Pleading or Attacking Collateral Consequences in Related Litigation

Article 11.09 / 11.14 Habeas Compliance Checklist

Using the Case in Divorce or SAPCR Strategy

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Procedural Problems

Citation

In re Rebel Hayz Breaux, No. 09-26-00148-CR, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Beaumont May 6, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op., not designated for publication).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

In a Texas divorce or custody case, this opinion can be weaponized in two directions. If you represent the party relying on a prior family-violence conviction, Breaux supports the position that the conviction continues to impose a present legal restraint and therefore remains highly relevant to safety-based orders, firearm restrictions, and credibility arguments when the other side minimizes the conviction as “completed” or “in the past.” If you represent the party burdened by the conviction, Breaux also maps the only viable route for reducing that collateral damage: a carefully pleaded and properly verified article 11.09 habeas challenge that identifies a present restraint and avoids technical defects. In other words, the case gives family lawyers both a sword and a warning—old family-violence convictions still have present force, but collateral attacks on them are available only if handled with procedural precision.

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