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Craddock Notice and Conscious Indifference | Calbow v. Calbow (2024)

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

Eboni Lunsford Calbow v. Shawn Phillip Calbow, 03-24-00456-CV, May 19, 2026.

On appeal from 395th District Court of Williamson County

Synopsis

A party who had actual notice of a final trial setting cannot satisfy Craddock’s first element merely by saying she assumed her motion for continuance would be decided without her appearing. In Calbow v. Calbow, the Third Court of Appeals held that where the record showed notice of the trial date and no adequate explanation negating conscious indifference, the trial court acted within its discretion in refusing to set aside a post-answer default divorce decree.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters directly to Texas family-law trial practice because post-answer defaults arise frequently in divorce, SAPCR, modification, and property-division cases when a party fires counsel, proceeds pro se temporarily, or assumes a pending continuance request will halt the final setting. Calbow reinforces that notice of the setting remains the central fact, and that a litigant’s unilateral assumption that a continuance will be handled administratively—or granted without an in-court appearance—will rarely defeat a finding of conscious indifference. For family-law litigators, that affects how trial settings, withdrawal orders, continuance requests, and default-proof records should be handled when one side becomes unrepresented shortly before final trial.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The divorce was filed in Williamson County. Both parties appeared in the case, and the wife answered and asserted her own counterclaims, including disproportionate division theories. The case was later set for final trial by scheduling order for the week of April 15, 2024. During the life of the case, the wife changed counsel and then lost counsel again when her attorney withdrew. The withdrawal filings and the withdrawal order both referenced the impending trial setting.

Shortly before trial, the wife—then pro se—filed a form “Agreed Motion for Continuance.” The motion itself undercut the “agreed” label because opposing counsel had not signed it. More importantly, the motion expressly acknowledged that the final hearing or trial was set for April 17, 2024, and sought additional time so anticipated new counsel could prepare. On the date of trial, the husband and his counsel appeared and announced ready. The wife did not appear. The trial court noted on the record that the wife had filed a continuance motion, but had not set it for hearing, had not appeared to present it, and was not there when the case was called. The court denied any implicit request for continuance and proceeded with a bench trial, ultimately rendering a final divorce decree.

The wife then moved to set aside the post-answer default. In her form motion, she relied on “accident or mistake,” not lack of notice. She asserted that she had been in contact with the court coordinator, that she believed a continuance was being pursued, that new counsel was expected to enter, and that she did not know she needed to appear in person for the continuance request or risk default. At the hearing on her motion to set aside, she testified that she believed the court would review and either approve or deny the motion for continuance and that she thought the court would address the continuance rather than proceed to final hearing.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on familiar post-answer default standards:

The court’s analysis also reflects a recurring practical rule in Texas trial practice: filing a motion for continuance does not suspend the trial setting, and an unpresented motion does not itself excuse a party’s nonappearance.

Application

The court began with notice because that point controlled much of the wife’s theory. Her appellate argument was that the setting had shifted from April 15 to April 17 without adequate formal notice. But the court found that argument foreclosed by her own filing. Her motion for continuance expressly referred to the “final hearing scheduled for April 17, 2024” and stated under penalty of perjury that its factual statements were true and within her personal knowledge. That filing was, in the court’s view, conclusive evidence that she knew the final trial was set for April 17. Once actual notice was established from the face of her own motion, the lack-of-notice argument failed.

The case then turned to Craddock’s first prong. The wife did not dispute that she knew about the final setting. She also did not claim a calendaring error, a medical emergency, transportation failure, or misinformation from the court that trial would not proceed. Instead, her explanation was that she believed the court would review her continuance motion and that she did not understand she needed to attend in person to present it or protect against default. The court treated that as a deliberate decision not to appear, based on an unsupported assumption about procedure, rather than an accident that negated conscious indifference.

That distinction is important. Texas courts do not equate every mistaken belief with a Craddock-qualifying mistake. The inquiry is whether the explanation, taken as true, negates intentional or consciously indifferent conduct. Here, the wife knew there was a final trial, filed an unagreed motion for continuance shortly beforehand, failed to set it for hearing, and then chose not to attend the very proceeding she acknowledged was scheduled. In that context, the trial court could reasonably conclude that the explanation did not satisfy Craddock’s first element. Because failure on the first element is fatal, the appellate court had no need to disturb the ruling.

Holding

The court held that the wife did have notice of the April 17 final trial setting. Her own verified motion for continuance expressly acknowledged that date as the scheduled final hearing, and that filing defeated any claim that the setting occurred without notice.

The court further held that the wife did not satisfy Craddock’s first element. Her explanation—that she believed the court would consider the continuance request without her appearing and would not proceed to trial—did not conclusively negate conscious indifference where she knew of the final setting, did not obtain a ruling in advance, did not set the motion for hearing, and failed to appear when the case was called.

Accordingly, the court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to set aside the post-answer default divorce decree. Under Craddock and Dolgencorp, denial of relief was within the trial court’s discretion on this record.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Calbow should be read as a trial-readiness and record-preservation case as much as a default case. If your opposing party is between lawyers, appears pro se, or signals that new counsel may be retained, do not assume the trial setting will move absent a signed order. Conversely, if your own client is unrepresented near trial, this case is a warning that filing a continuance motion is not a substitute for appearing and preserving the request in open court.

The opinion is especially relevant in final divorce trials involving contested property characterization, reimbursement, disproportionality, and expert tracing—precisely the kinds of matters that often tempt a party to assume the court will grant more time. It also has implications for SAPCR and modification practice. A parent who has notice of a final hearing on conservatorship, possession, support, or enforcement cannot safely skip the setting because a continuance request is pending. Unless there is a ruling continuing the case, the case remains live.

Practitioners representing the party seeking to proceed should make a clean default record. That means proving the notice history, referencing scheduling orders, withdrawal orders, docket communications reflected in the file, and the absence of any signed continuance order. If the absent party filed a motion acknowledging the setting, that filing should be highlighted because it may become dispositive on any later Craddock challenge.

For practitioners representing the party at risk of default, the takeaway is procedural discipline:

In short, Calbow narrows the usefulness of the “I thought the continuance would be handled” explanation in post-answer default practice, particularly in family-law cases where trial dates are often discussed repeatedly in status conferences and temporary-orders proceedings.

Checklists

Preventing a Post-Answer Default When Counsel Has Withdrawn

Building a Record to Defeat a Later Craddock Motion

Presenting a Strong Continuance Request in Family Court

Evaluating Whether Craddock Relief Is Realistically Available

Citation

Eboni Lunsford Calbow v. Shawn Phillip Calbow, No. 03-24-00456-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___ (Tex. App.—Austin May 19, 2026, no pet.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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