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CROSSOVER: Chapter 74 Expert-Report Deadline Trumps Generic Docket Control Order in Medical-Neglect Suit

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

Ting Fang Chen v. Evan H. Suzuki and Oladipo A. Dada, 14-25-00833-CV, May 19, 2026.

On appeal from 149th District Court, Brazoria County, Texas

Synopsis

A generic docket control order does not extend the 120-day expert-report deadline imposed by Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.351(a). When a plaintiff asserts a health care liability claim and serves no Chapter 74 expert report within that statutory period, dismissal with prejudice is mandatory, notwithstanding later expert-designation or discovery deadlines in the court’s scheduling order.

Relevance to Family Law

Family lawyers should care about this opinion because Chapter 74 issues routinely surface in divorce, SAPCR, and fiduciary/property litigation through crossover claims involving medical neglect, elder care, psychiatric treatment, nursing-home conduct, capacity disputes, wrongful-death allegations, and reimbursement or waste theories tied to health care events. The opinion is also strategically important beyond Chapter 74: it reinforces a broader appellate theme that statutory deadlines and mandatory dismissal schemes are not displaced by generic scheduling orders, a point family litigators can use when confronting expert, jurisdictional, enforcement, or preservation deadlines in complex domestic cases.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The plaintiff, proceeding pro se, alleged that two physicians caused her husband’s death while he was being treated in the intensive care unit. Her pleadings accused the doctors of forcefully intubating the patient, failing to provide appropriate sedatives, manipulating his pacemaker with magnets, injecting “red venom” through an IV line, causing sepsis, and then failing to properly assess him before announcing his death. She sought damages exceeding $1.5 million.

The defendants answered on May 2, 2025. Later, the trial court entered a docket control order setting deadlines in January 2026 for the plaintiff’s expert designations and in April 2026 for completion of discovery. But no Chapter 74 expert report was served within 120 days after the defendants filed their answers. The physicians moved to dismiss under section 74.351(a), noticed the motion for oral hearing, and the trial court dismissed the case with prejudice and awarded attorney’s fees. The plaintiff appealed, arguing primarily that the docket control order superseded the Chapter 74 deadline and that her suit was not truly a health care liability claim.

Issues Decided

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals decided the following issues:

  • Whether a generic docket control order extending expert-designation and discovery deadlines can extend or displace the 120-day expert-report deadline in Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.351(a).
  • Whether dismissal was improper because the plaintiff allegedly lacked notice of the motion to dismiss and hearing.
  • Whether the plaintiff was entitled to a default judgment before the defendants answered.
  • Whether the dismissal was premature because, according to the plaintiff, fewer than 120 days had passed from her receipt of the answers.
  • Whether the plaintiff’s allegations were something other than a health care liability claim, such that Chapter 74 did not apply.

Rules Applied

The court relied on the core Chapter 74 framework and several familiar preservation and service presumptions:

  • Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.351(a), which requires a claimant asserting a health care liability claim to serve an expert report within 120 days after each defendant’s original answer is filed.
  • Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.351(b), which makes dismissal with prejudice and attorney’s fees mandatory when no timely report is served.
  • Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.002, which gives Chapter 74 controlling effect over conflicting law.
  • Spectrum Healthcare Res., Inc. v. McDaniel, 306 S.W.3d 249, 253 (Tex. 2010), holding that a generic docket control order setting expert-designation deadlines does not, without more, show an agreement or intent to extend the statutory Chapter 74 deadline.
  • Harvey v. Kindred Healthcare Operating, Inc., 525 S.W.3d 281, 284–86 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2017, no pet.), recognizing that Chapter 74 controls over conflicting scheduling provisions.
  • Leibman v. Waldroup, 715 S.W.3d 367, 373–74 (Tex. 2025), discussing the expert-report requirement and dismissal consequences for health care liability claims.
  • Authorities on certificates of service as prima facie evidence of receipt, and on the need to preserve notice complaints by post-judgment motion or evidentiary rebuttal.
  • Authorities establishing that default judgment is not automatic and must be requested before an answer is filed.
  • Lake Jackson Med. Spa, Ltd. v. Gaytan, 640 S.W.3d 830, 844 (Tex. 2022), and Leibman, on determining whether a claim is a health care liability claim based on the underlying facts and the need for expert medical testimony, rather than the pleader’s label.

Application

The court treated the case as straightforward once it concluded the pleadings asserted a health care liability claim. Although the plaintiff characterized the case as a “criminal case” involving “assassination” rather than malpractice, the allegations all arose from physicians’ conduct during the patient’s hospital care and treatment. The court therefore looked past the rhetoric and labels to the factual substance of the pleadings. Because the claims challenged the medical decisions and conduct of physicians during ICU treatment, and because expert medical testimony would be necessary to prove or refute those allegations, Chapter 74 applied.

From there, the statutory deadline controlled the outcome. The defendants filed answers on May 2, 2025. Under section 74.351(a), the plaintiff had 120 days from that filing date—not from her alleged receipt date, and not from any later expert-designation deadline in a scheduling order—to serve an expert report. She served none. The July docket control order, which merely set generic expert-designation and discovery deadlines, did not mention section 74.351 or expressly extend the statutory report deadline. Under Spectrum Healthcare, that was not enough. A routine scheduling order cannot be repurposed into a Chapter 74 extension.

The court also rejected the plaintiff’s procedural objections. The motion to dismiss and notice of hearing both carried certificates of service, creating a presumption of receipt. Because the plaintiff filed no response, no post-judgment motion, and no evidence rebutting service, she failed to preserve the complaint. Her default-judgment argument failed because no default had been taken before the defendants answered, and a plaintiff must affirmatively request default relief before an answer is filed. Likewise, her timeliness argument failed because the statute measures from the date the answer is filed, and the dismissal occurred more than 120 days later.

Holding

The court held that a generic docket control order setting expert-designation or discovery deadlines does not extend or displace the 120-day expert-report deadline in section 74.351(a). Because no Chapter 74 expert report was served within the statutory period, dismissal with prejudice was required.

The court separately held that the plaintiff failed to preserve any notice complaint. Certificates of service constituted prima facie proof of service, and without a post-judgment motion or competent rebuttal evidence, the appellate record did not support reversal on lack-of-notice grounds.

The court also held that the plaintiff was not entitled to a default judgment because she did not request one before the defendants filed answers. The mere fact that an answer may not have been filed immediately does not automatically produce a default.

Finally, the court held that the pleadings asserted a health care liability claim notwithstanding the plaintiff’s attempt to characterize the suit as a criminal matter or assassination. The underlying facts concerned physicians’ conduct during treatment, and expert medical testimony would be necessary to litigate the merits.

Practical Application

For family litigators, this case is less about med-mal doctrine in isolation and more about deadline architecture. In divorce and custody cases, lawyers often encounter collateral tort or quasi-tort allegations embedded in domestic pleadings: improper psychiatric holds, negligent medication administration to a child, mishandling of an incapacitated spouse’s care, conduct by a treating physician influencing conservatorship disputes, or nursing-home neglect tied to reimbursement, waste, or fiduciary-duty theories. If those allegations qualify as health care liability claims, Chapter 74’s expert-report deadline is a trapdoor. A generic Level 3 scheduling order, trial setting, or expert designation deadline will not save the claim.

The opinion also offers a useful defense model. When opposing counsel tries to delay a threshold statutory obligation by pointing to a broad scheduling order, this case supports the argument that generic case-management deadlines do not override a more specific legislative command. In family litigation, that logic can be persuasive in disputes over UIFSA deadlines, restricted-appeal timelines, plenary-power limits, expert deadlines tied to statute, and enforcement mechanisms with mandatory prerequisites. The strategic lesson is simple: where a statute creates a specific trigger and consequence, do not assume a standard docket order silently modifies it.

For pleading strategy, the case is a reminder that labels do not govern. A party cannot avoid Chapter 74 by recasting treatment-related allegations as assault, murder, conspiracy, fraud, or record falsification if the factual nucleus is still professional medical care requiring expert testimony. That matters in domestic cases where litigants attempt to import emotionally charged accusations into a divorce petition or custody modification to gain leverage. If the claim is substantively a health care liability claim, Chapter 74 likely follows it into the family-law battlefield.

Checklists

When a Family Case Contains a Medical-Care Component

  • Determine immediately whether the allegations arise from medical care, treatment, confinement, professional judgment, or health care standards.
  • Analyze whether expert medical testimony will be required to prove or refute the claim.
  • Do not rely on the label used in the pleading; evaluate the factual substance.
  • If the claim is against a physician or health care provider, assess Chapter 74 exposure at intake.
  • Calendar the 120-day deadline from the date the defendant’s original answer is filed.

If You Represent the Claimant

  • Confirm the date each health care defendant filed its original answer.
  • Retain a qualified Chapter 74 expert early enough to prepare a compliant report.
  • Serve the expert report within 120 days unless you obtain a valid, explicit extension recognized by law.
  • Do not assume a scheduling order’s expert-designation deadline extends the section 74.351 deadline.
  • If there is a genuine service or notice problem, create a record immediately with affidavits, verified motions, and a post-judgment motion if necessary.
  • If you intend to dispute whether Chapter 74 applies, raise that argument in the trial court and obtain a ruling.

If You Represent the Defendant

  • Evaluate at the outset whether the pleaded allegations constitute a health care liability claim despite alternative labels.
  • Track the 120-day deadline from your answer date.
  • Move promptly for dismissal once the deadline expires without a served report.
  • Cite Spectrum Healthcare and section 74.002 when the plaintiff relies on a generic docket control order.
  • Include clear certificates of service on the motion and hearing notice.
  • Seek attorney’s fees as authorized by Chapter 74.

Preserving Notice Complaints

  • Do not rely on appellate assertions of non-receipt.
  • File a motion for new trial, motion to set aside, or other post-judgment motion supported by evidence.
  • Use affidavits or other competent proof to rebut the presumption created by a certificate of service.
  • Distinguish between lack of service and late receipt, and document both precisely.
  • Build the record before appeal.

Avoiding the Default-Judgment Misstep

  • If the opposing party has not answered, affirmatively move for default before an answer is filed.
  • Confirm service, return, and the ten-day rule are satisfied.
  • Set the request for hearing or submission if required.
  • Do not assume silence by the defendant yields an automatic default.
  • Once an answer is filed before default is taken, reassess strategy immediately.

Citation

Ting Fang Chen v. Evan H. Suzuki and Oladipo A. Dada, No. 14-25-00833-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] May 19, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in a Texas divorce or custody case in at least three ways. First, if an opposing party pleads treatment-related allegations against a doctor, hospital, therapist, or facility as part of a broader domestic strategy, defense counsel can force the claimant into Chapter 74’s compressed expert-report regime and seek early dismissal with prejudice if no report is served. Second, when an adversary argues that a scheduling order gives them more time to satisfy a statutory prerequisite, this case is a strong analogy for the proposition that broad case-management language does not silently rewrite mandatory legislative deadlines. Third, in high-conflict custody litigation, where parties often deploy allegations of overmedication, improper restraint, psychiatric mistreatment, or negligent end-of-life decisions to influence conservatorship outcomes, this opinion helps separate emotionally charged accusations from legally cognizable claims and gives the court a framework for enforcing threshold dismissal rules before such allegations distort the merits of the family case.

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Tom Daley is a board-certified family law attorney with extensive experience practicing across the United States, primarily in Texas. He represents clients in all aspects of family law, including negotiation, settlement, litigation, trial, and appeals.