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Bill of Review Fails for Lack of Diligence | Yeddula v. Yeddula (2026)

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

Yeddula v. Yeddula, 07-26-00024-CV, May 18, 2026.

On appeal from 219th District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

A bill of review is not a substitute for a motion for new trial or direct appeal. In Yeddula v. Yeddula, the Amarillo Court of Appeals held that equitable relief was unavailable where the husband received the divorce decree, retained counsel, and had available post-judgment remedies, but failed to pursue them; under those facts, alleged fraud in the property division could not satisfy the requirement that the failure be unmixed with the petitioner’s own negligence.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a significant family-law diligence case. For Texas divorce litigators, Yeddula reinforces that complaints about an allegedly erroneous or even fraud-affected property division ordinarily must be pursued through ordinary post-judgment channels—motion for new trial, findings, notice of appeal, restricted appeal where available—not saved for a later equitable bill of review after enforcement begins. The case also underscores a recurring divorce-litigation point: claims framed as “fraud” in asset allocation or equalization math will often be treated as attacks on matters that could and should have been litigated in the original proceeding, especially where the complaining party had notice, received the decree, and consulted counsel in time to act.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The case arose from a post-answer default divorce. The wife filed for divorce in Collin County in 2022. The husband appeared pro se and filed a general denial, listing the marital residence in Plano as his homestead and providing his email address. He then failed to appear at the divorce hearing after receiving notice, and the trial court signed a final decree on October 16, 2022.

The decree awarded the wife a $140,000 interest tied to the sale of the marital residence, secured through an owelty-of-partition structure. The decree further required sale of the property, with the wife to receive the first $140,000 in net proceeds and the husband to receive any remainder. The husband later received the decree and hired counsel to challenge the property division. Counsel timely requested findings of fact and conclusions of law and explored a motion for new trial. But within the post-judgment window, counsel notified the court and opposing counsel that the husband no longer wished to pursue a motion for new trial or appeal.

The decree became final. In 2023, the wife moved to enforce the property division and sought appointment of a receiver because the husband had not complied with the decree’s sale provisions. In 2025—roughly two years after enforcement proceedings began and three years after the decree—the husband filed a bill of review. He claimed he had discovered extrinsic fraud in the property division, contending that mortgage debt had been counted twice and that this allegedly inflated the equalization amount from roughly $75,000 to $140,000. He also argued that his prior attorney failed to exercise due diligence and effectively abandoned him by not pursuing post-judgment relief.

The trial court denied the bill of review, granted enforcement, and appointed a receiver to sell the homestead. The husband appealed.

Issues Decided

The court decided, in substance, the following issues:

Rules Applied

The court applied the settled bill-of-review framework from the Supreme Court of Texas.

The court also referenced the four-year residual limitations period for equitable bills of review under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 16.051, although limitations was not the dispositive issue in the analysis reflected in the opinion excerpt.

Application

The court’s analysis turned on diligence, not merely on whether the husband could articulate a potentially colorable complaint about the property spreadsheet. The record showed that he had notice of the divorce setting, filed an answer, failed to appear, received the signed decree, and then retained counsel in time to challenge the judgment through ordinary post-judgment remedies. Those facts were fatal to equitable relief.

Most importantly, the husband did not lose access to judicial review because of some external obstacle wholly independent of his conduct. To the contrary, once he received the decree, he hired counsel, requested findings, and had a live opportunity to pursue a motion for new trial and appeal. The record reflected that counsel later informed the court the husband no longer wished to proceed. Even taking the husband’s later position at face value—that counsel acted improperly or failed to continue the challenge—the opinion points to the husband’s own testimony that financial constraints and his failure to continue paying counsel contributed to the abandonment of those remedies. That evidentiary point mattered because Valdez requires the petitioner to show that the failure to assert the claim was unmixed with any negligence of his own.

The court therefore treated the case as one in which the husband had an available legal remedy, knew enough to invoke it, and then let it lapse. Under that posture, later allegations that the wife or her counsel concealed miscalculations in the property division could not rescue the bill of review. The claimed fraud related to the merits of the property division and was raised only after the husband had bypassed the direct mechanisms for correcting any error. In practical terms, the court refused to allow a bill of review to become a delayed substitute for ordinary appellate process.

That approach is fully consistent with Frost National Bank and Valdez: equitable relief disappears when the record shows the petitioner had notice, had counsel, had procedural avenues open, and failed to pursue them with diligence.

Holding

The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the husband’s bill of review. A party seeking bill-of-review relief must establish not only a meritorious claim and fraud or wrongful prevention, but also that the failure to assert that claim was unmixed with the party’s own fault or negligence. Because the husband received the decree, retained counsel, and had available post-judgment remedies that were not pursued, the diligence element failed.

The court further held, in substance, that alleged fraud in the divorce decree’s property division did not justify equitable relief under these facts. Whatever the husband’s complaints about the mortgage calculations, those complaints could have been pursued through a motion for new trial or appeal once he had actual notice of the decree and counsel in place. That procedural history foreclosed bill-of-review relief.

By affirming the denial of the bill of review, the court also left intact the trial court’s enforcement rulings, including appointment of a receiver to effectuate the sale of the homestead as required by the decree.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Yeddula is a useful opinion to cite when the opposing party tries to repackage a missed post-judgment challenge as an equitable fraud case. The opinion gives trial and appellate counsel a clean diligence analysis: notice of judgment, retention of counsel, and abandonment of available remedies are usually enough to defeat bill-of-review relief, even where the movant insists the property division was mathematically wrong or procured by concealment.

In divorce litigation, this matters most in three recurring settings. First, in post-answer default divorces, counsel should assume that any later bill of review will rise or fall on the notice-and-diligence record created immediately after judgment. Second, in property cases involving spreadsheets, reimbursement theories, mortgage offsets, tracing, equalization payments, and owelty structures, a litigant cannot safely defer review of an apparent calculation error. If the issue is visible from the decree, exhibits, or record, it belongs in the new-trial or appellate timetable. Third, in enforcement proceedings, Yeddula is a reminder that a stale attack on the underlying decree will rarely stop enforcement if the challenger had a meaningful earlier chance to seek relief.

The opinion also has a client-management lesson. When a client vacillates about filing a motion for new trial or funding an appeal, counsel should document advice regarding deadlines, available remedies, and the likely consequences of inaction. If the client later claims “fraud” after enforcement begins, the written record will often determine whether a court sees the matter as true wrongful prevention or merely a forfeited complaint.

For those seeking to preserve a possible bill of review in the rare case where one is justified, Yeddula highlights what must be developed: a record showing the client lacked a meaningful opportunity to challenge the judgment through ordinary channels, and that the inability to do so was caused by external fraud, official mistake, or wrongful conduct—not by indecision, nonpayment, nonappearance, or litigation choices.

Checklists

Protect the Record After a Default Divorce Decree

Vet a Potential Bill of Review Before Filing

Defend Against a Bill of Review in a Family-Law Case

Counseling Clients on Property-Division Error Claims

Enforcement Strategy When the Other Side Threatens a Collateral Attack

Citation

Yeddula v. Yeddula, Nos. 07-26-00023-CV, 07-26-00024-CV, memorandum opinion issued May 18, 2026 (Tex. App.—Amarillo May 18, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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