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Finality Under Lehmann Bars Appeal of Sanctions Order | Nelson (2026)

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

In the Matter of the Marriage of Michael Adam Nelson and Jhoelayne Paixao Nelson and in the Interest of M.P.N. and M.A.P.N., Children, 13-25-00655-CV, May 21, 2026.

On appeal from 148th District Court of Nueces County, Texas

Synopsis

A post-divorce sanctions order is not independently appealable merely because it fully resolves the sanctions dispute. If a subsequently filed petition to modify the parent-child relationship remains pending, the order is not final under Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., and absent a statute authorizing interlocutory review, the court of appeals must dismiss for want of jurisdiction.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters because Texas family cases rarely end cleanly with the divorce decree. Enforcement claims, sanctions motions, clarification requests, and SAPCR modification proceedings often overlap procedurally, and Nelson is a reminder that appellate finality is assessed across the live case, not issue-by-issue. For family litigators, that means a sanctions ruling entered after divorce may still be unappealable if custody, possession, support, or other modification claims remain pending in the same cause, creating a real trap for lawyers who treat sanctions orders as stand-alone judgments.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The trial court signed an agreed final decree of divorce on June 11, 2025. One month later, on July 11, 2025, the appellant filed a motion in opposition and motion for sanctions. Shortly thereafter, on July 31, 2025, the appellee filed an amended petition to modify the parent-child relationship.

On November 5, 2025, the trial court signed an order denying the respondent’s motion in opposition and motion for sanctions while granting the petitioner’s request for sanctions. The appellant attempted to appeal that sanctions order on December 5, 2025. The Thirteenth Court of Appeals then raised jurisdiction on its own motion and notified appellant that the record did not appear to contain a final, appealable order. Although appellant responded with arguments attacking the sanctions ruling on the merits, she did not cure the jurisdictional problem.

The key procedural fact was simple and dispositive: the petition to modify the parent-child relationship remained pending in the trial court. Because that live claim had not been resolved, the sanctions order did not dispose of all claims and parties and did not contain language clearly and unequivocally making it final.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied primarily on Texas finality doctrine and basic jurisdiction principles:

What is notable here is not a new rule, but the court’s straightforward application of familiar finality principles to a common family-law procedural posture: post-decree sanctions activity occurring while a modification proceeding is pending.

Application

The court treated the sanctions order as exactly what it was: an order deciding a sanctions dispute, not a judgment concluding the entire post-divorce proceeding. The appellant’s problem was not that the sanctions order lacked substantive completeness on the sanctions issue. Rather, the problem was that another live claim—the amended petition to modify the parent-child relationship—was already pending when the sanctions order was signed and remained unresolved when the notice of appeal was filed.

That procedural posture triggered Lehmann. The court reviewed the documents before it and determined that the November 5 order did not dispose of every pending claim and party. Nor did the order contain language that clearly and unequivocally stated that it finally disposed of all claims and parties. In family cases, lawyers sometimes assume an order is appealable because it conclusively decides the relief requested in the motion then under submission. Nelson underscores that this is the wrong frame. The proper question is whether the order ends the case—or at least the relevant proceeding—as to all claims and all parties, unless some statute independently permits interlocutory review.

The court also made short work of any implied interlocutory theory. Sanctions orders are not generally subject to interlocutory appeal absent specific statutory authorization, and none existed here. Because the unresolved modification claim deprived the order of finality and no interlocutory statute saved the appeal, the court could do nothing but dismiss. The appellant’s merits arguments about why the sanctions should be overturned were irrelevant until appellate jurisdiction existed.

Holding

The Thirteenth Court of Appeals held that the November 5, 2025 sanctions order was not a final, appealable order. Because the amended petition to modify the parent-child relationship remained pending in the trial court, the order did not dispose of all pending claims and parties as required by Lehmann.

The court further held that, absent a final judgment or a statute authorizing interlocutory appeal, it lacked jurisdiction to review the sanctions order. As a result, the appeal was dismissed for want of jurisdiction under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Nelson is a procedural warning shot. In post-decree practice, sanctions requests often travel alongside modification, enforcement, or contempt-related filings. If you obtain or suffer a sanctions ruling while a modification petition remains pending, do not assume the sanctions order is immediately appealable. Unless the order truly disposes of the entire live controversy or falls within a specific statute authorizing interlocutory review, the appellate clock may not have started at all.

This has several practical consequences:

The broader strategic point is that family-law files often become procedurally layered after divorce. Finality analysis must account for the full docket, not just the motion that prompted the appealed ruling.

Checklists

Jurisdictional Review Before Filing a Notice of Appeal

Creating an Appealable Sanctions Order

Avoiding a Premature Appeal in Post-Decree Family Litigation

Responding When Opposing Counsel Files a Premature Appeal

Citation

In the Matter of the Marriage of Michael Adam Nelson and Jhoelayne Paixao Nelson and in the Interest of M.P.N. and M.A.P.N., Children, No. 13-25-00655-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg May 21, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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