Site icon Thomas J. Daley

Family Code § 156.401 Bars Retroactive Support Termination | In the Interest of Z.R.Q. (2026)

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

In the Interest of Z.R.Q., a Child, 05-24-01514-CV, May 18, 2026.

On appeal from 256th Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas

Synopsis

Texas Family Code § 156.401(b) does not allow a trial court to terminate child-support or medical-support obligations retroactively to a date before the obligor was served or appeared in the modification proceeding. In In the Interest of Z.R.Q., the Dallas Court of Appeals held that even conclusive DNA exclusion and a later termination of parental rights do not authorize a court to erase previously ordered support back to the date of the original support order.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters well beyond Title IV-D practice. In divorce, SAPCR, and post-decree modification litigation, lawyers routinely confront retroactivity fights involving support, arrearages, parentage, and later-discovered facts. Z.R.Q. is a sharp reminder that once a support order exists, the procedural vehicle matters: unless the underlying order is actually vacated through a proper direct attack, modification relief is constrained by Family Code § 156.401(b), and accrued support cannot simply be unwound because later evidence undermines the original factual premise for the order. For family-law litigators, that has direct implications for strategy in paternity-based divorce pleadings, enforcement defense, modification timing, and the framing of bill-of-review claims.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The OAG filed a petition in 2022 to confirm a non-agreed child-support review order under Chapters 231 and 233 of the Family Code. The resulting order adjudicated Christian Cuevas as the child’s biological father and required him to pay monthly child support and cash medical support beginning April 1, 2022. A return of service reflected personal service on Cuevas in April 2022, and he did not answer or request a hearing.

Nearly two years later, Cuevas filed a modification suit that also purported to seek bill-of-review relief. He alleged he had never been served in the original proceeding, denied paternity, requested DNA testing, and asked the court either to set aside the 2022 order or to modify it. The OAG intervened and sought judgment for accrued child-support and medical-support arrearages.

Genetic testing then excluded Cuevas as the child’s biological father. The associate judge temporarily abated current support as of June 10, 2024. Cuevas later supplemented his pleadings, asking the court to disestablish paternity, set aside the 2022 order, and terminate all support retroactive to May 3, 2022—the date of the original order. He also filed an affidavit relinquishing parental rights.

After trial, the district court terminated Cuevas’s parental rights and ordered that all previously ordered child support, medical support, and dental support be terminated retroactive to May 3, 2022; set aside and cancelled; and reflected as zero owed from that date forward. The trial court also ordered that funds held by the OAG be paid to Cuevas and that OAG records be corrected. The OAG appealed.

Issues Decided

The court addressed these issues:

Rules Applied

The court’s analysis centered on the distinction between a successful direct attack on the original judgment and a mere modification of an existing support order.

Key authorities included:

The opinion also reflects a basic but critical family-law principle: Termination of parental rights may stop future support, but it does not itself vacate an earlier support judgment or authorize cancellation of previously accrued obligations absent statutory authority.

Application

The Dallas Court of Appeals first dealt with the bill-of-review question because it controlled the framework of the case. Cuevas had pled for bill-of-review relief in the alternative, but the appellate court concluded the trial court did not actually grant a bill of review. That conclusion turned on the language of the final order. The order was styled as an order on motion to modify; it did not vacate the 2022 order; it did not set aside the paternity adjudication itself; and it did not restore the parties to the posture necessary for retrial of the OAG’s original claims. Instead, the order granted new relief based on later events—genetic testing and an affidavit of relinquishment—while leaving the underlying 2022 judgment intact.

Once the appellate court determined the prior order had not been vacated, the trial court’s authority was limited to what the Family Code permits in modification and termination proceedings. That is where § 156.401(b) became dispositive. The statute bars retroactive modification of support for any period before service of citation or appearance in the modification suit. Cuevas filed his modification action in February 2024, almost two years after the original support order. So even if the trial court had authority to terminate support prospectively after the DNA results and termination of parental rights, it could not erase support obligations that had already accrued under the existing order for the period before the modification proceeding was initiated and served.

The later DNA exclusion did not change that analysis. The court treated the genetic results as significant for future relief, but not as a statutory exception to § 156.401(b). In other words, later proof that the adjudicated father was not the biological father did not create judicial power to reach back and nullify support previously ordered under an extant judgment. The same was true of termination: ending the legal relationship going forward is not the same as vacating the earlier order that imposed support.

That procedural distinction is the opinion’s real teaching point. If the litigant wants to undo the original adjudication and its consequences, he must obtain relief that actually vacates the prior judgment. If he obtains only a modification order, the retroactivity limits of § 156.401(b) remain in force.

Holding

The court held that the trial court did not grant bill-of-review relief. Although Cuevas asked for a bill of review in the alternative, the final order did not vacate the 2022 child-support review order, did not set aside the paternity adjudication, and did not grant a retrial of the OAG’s original claims. The order instead operated as a modification and termination order.

The court further held that Texas Family Code § 156.401(b) prohibited the trial court from retroactively terminating Cuevas’s child-support and medical-support obligations back to May 3, 2022. Because the original support order remained in place, the court could not modify support for periods predating service or appearance in the modification suit.

The court also made clear that later genetic testing excluding Cuevas as the child’s biological father did not authorize the retroactive cancellation of previously ordered support. DNA exclusion may support prospective relief, and termination may end future obligations, but neither permits a court to erase prior support that accrued under a still-valid order.

Accordingly, the appellate court reversed the portions of the trial court’s order relating to Cuevas’s support obligations and remanded for further proceedings consistent with its opinion.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Z.R.Q. should immediately affect how you plead, sequence, and try parentage-related support cases.

First, if your client seeks to undo an existing support order because he was wrongly adjudicated as a father, a modification claim alone is usually not enough. If the ultimate objective is to eliminate the original adjudication and the arrearage consequences flowing from it, counsel must carefully evaluate a direct attack—most commonly a bill of review—and then obtain an order that actually vacates the prior judgment. Pleading bill-of-review language in the alternative will not save the case if the final order only modifies support.

Second, this case should change how practitioners discuss expectations with clients after DNA exclusion. Many litigants assume that proving non-paternity automatically wipes out all support ever ordered. Z.R.Q. says otherwise. Unless and until the underlying judgment is vacated, the client may still face accrued child-support and medical-support liability through the effective date permitted by statute.

Third, the opinion has consequences in divorce and SAPCR litigation where parentage assumptions are embedded in agreed decrees, defaults, or Title IV-D orders. If there is any live parentage question, counsel should address it before support orders become final, or immediately pursue the correct direct-attack remedy once discovered. Delay materially narrows available relief.

Fourth, this case is a reminder that medical support and dental support follow the same retroactivity logic in this context. Practitioners should not focus only on base child-support arrearages; they should separately analyze medical and dental components in drafting and appeal strategy.

Finally, for OAG-adjacent practice, Z.R.Q. reinforces that trial courts cannot use equitable instincts to rewrite statutory arrearage rules. If the order purports to “cancel” past support under a still-valid judgment, that relief is vulnerable on appeal.

Checklists

Evaluating the Correct Procedural Vehicle

Drafting Pleadings in Non-Paternity Support Cases

Preserving Retroactivity Arguments

Trying the Case

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Mistake

Citation

In the Interest of Z.R.Q., a Child, No. 05-24-01514-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas May 18, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

~~b9219594-a29f-49ff-9ad6-48e0c3c0a2b8~~

Share this content:

Exit mobile version