Adequate Appellate Remedy Defeats Mandamus Relief | In re Cook (2026)
In re Mandy Jo Cook, 09-26-00217-CV, June 18, 2026.
On appeal from 411th District Court of San Jacinto County, Texas
Synopsis
Mandamus is not available to attack a judgment nunc pro tunc when the relator has already perfected an appeal from that same judgment and the complained-of issues can be addressed in that appeal. In In re Cook, the Beaumont Court of Appeals held that, under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 52.8(a) and the Prudential/Team Rocket adequate-remedy framework, the pendency of the direct appeal defeated extraordinary relief.
Relevance to Family Law
This opinion matters in family law because nunc pro tunc practice regularly appears in post-divorce litigation involving property division, conservatorship language, support provisions, and enforcement risk. When a trial court signs a substituted divorce decree after plenary power has expired, practitioners often frame the dispute as one involving voidness, clerical-versus-judicial error, and immediate harm from enforcement; Cook is a reminder that even in high-stakes family cases involving sale proceeds, contempt allegations, and ongoing enforcement activity, mandamus may still fail if the relator already has a live appellate vehicle that can address the challenged nunc pro tunc order.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The trial court signed a final decree of divorce and order for conservatorship and child support on December 4, 2025. On January 22, 2026, the real party in interest moved for judgment nunc pro tunc, alleging that the wrong proposed decree had been signed because multiple versions had been submitted by counsel.
After a hearing on April 16, 2026, the trial court signed both an order granting judgment nunc pro tunc and a substituted final decree. According to the relator, the substituted decree did far more than correct ministerial mistakes. She identified substantial revisions, including the insertion of specific debt amounts, the addition of new community liabilities, changes to responsibility for mortgage-related payments, insertion of an alleged family mortgage obligation, addition of sanctions and contempt findings with a fee award, changes to the disposition of animals, deletion of protective debt provisions, and modifications to possession-exchange and injunctive language affecting the children.
On May 7, 2026, the relator perfected a direct appeal from the judgment nunc pro tunc. She later sought mandamus relief, arguing that the trial court had abused its discretion by correcting judicial rather than clerical errors after plenary power expired. She also complained that the trial court had not acted on her motion to vacate the allegedly void order and emphasized that the substituted decree was already being treated as operative in a pending real-estate closing and in a Chapter 9 enforcement proceeding seeking contempt remedies.
The relator argued that appellate review was not enough because sale proceeds might be distributed under the challenged decree and because contempt-based enforcement could proceed while the appeal remained pending. The court, however, noted a missing feature in the record: the relator had not shown that she asked the trial court to protect disputed sale proceeds by depositing them into the registry of the court pending appellate resolution. The court also noted that no transcript of the nunc pro tunc hearing was included in the mandamus record.
Issues Decided
- Whether mandamus relief is available to challenge a judgment nunc pro tunc when the relator has already perfected a direct appeal from that judgment.
- Whether the existence of a pending appeal constitutes an adequate appellate remedy under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 52.8(a), thereby defeating extraordinary relief.
- Whether the circumstances asserted by the relator, including a pending closing and a property-enforcement contempt proceeding, justified mandamus despite the perfected appeal.
Rules Applied
Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 52.8(a) authorizes denial of mandamus when the relator is not entitled to the extraordinary relief requested. A foundational requirement for mandamus remains the absence of an adequate appellate remedy.
The court expressly relied on the modern balancing approach to adequacy of appellate remedies:
- In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 148 S.W.3d 124 (Tex. 2004), which instructs courts to evaluate adequacy pragmatically by balancing benefits and detriments rather than applying categorical formulas.
- In re Team Rocket, L.P., 256 S.W.3d 257 (Tex. 2008), which reiterates that the adequacy inquiry turns on balancing the benefits of mandamus review against its detriments.
The court also referenced procedural context under Rule 329b, including the appealability of the judgment nunc pro tunc. And in addressing the claimed urgency surrounding sale proceeds, the court cited Castilleja v. Camero, 414 S.W.2d 431, 433 (Tex. 1967), for the proposition that disputed funds may be deposited into the registry of the court when necessary to preserve them pending resolution of ownership or entitlement disputes.
The background enforcement issue arose under Chapter 9 of the Texas Family Code, governing post-divorce enforcement of property division.
Application
The court did not reach the merits of whether the substituted decree reflected clerical corrections or impermissible judicial changes after plenary power had expired. Instead, it resolved the original proceeding on remedial adequacy. That move is significant. The relator framed the nunc pro tunc as void and emphasized practical consequences: an imminent closing, disputed distribution of sale proceeds, and an enforcement petition invoking contempt. But the court treated those concerns as insufficient to bypass the ordinary appellate process because the relator had already invoked that process by perfecting an appeal from the judgment nunc pro tunc.
The court’s analysis follows a familiar appellate theme: mandamus is extraordinary not merely because error is alleged, but because the ordinary system cannot adequately correct the error. Once the relator had a pending appeal from the very order she sought to invalidate, the burden shifted to showing why that appeal was not an adequate vehicle. On the mandamus record presented, she did not carry that burden.
Two facts appear to have mattered. First, the record was underdeveloped. The relator did not include the hearing transcript, which is often critical when the issue concerns whether the changes were clerical or judicial. Second, the court identified a narrower, less extraordinary remedy to address the claimed harm associated with the closing: asking the trial court to place disputed proceeds into the registry pending resolution of the appeal. That observation undercut the argument that only mandamus could prevent irreversible consequences.
The pending Chapter 9 enforcement proceeding likewise did not persuade the court that extraordinary intervention was necessary. The opinion suggests that the existence of collateral enforcement pressure, even where contempt is alleged, does not automatically render an appellate remedy inadequate when the operative decree itself is already before the appellate court in a perfected appeal.
Holding
The court held that mandamus relief was unavailable because the relator’s challenge to the judgment nunc pro tunc could be addressed in her already-perfected appeal from that judgment. Under Rule 52.8(a), and applying the balancing framework from Prudential and Team Rocket, the benefits of immediate mandamus review did not outweigh the detriments where a direct appellate remedy was already in place.
The court also effectively held that the relator’s asserted urgency did not change the result on the mandamus record presented. The possibility that sale proceeds might be distributed under the challenged decree and that a property-enforcement contempt action might proceed did not establish the lack of an adequate appellate remedy, particularly where the relator had not pursued a trial-court mechanism to preserve disputed funds pending appeal. The petition for writ of mandamus and motion for temporary relief were therefore denied.
Practical Application
For Texas family law litigators, Cook is a procedural strategy case disguised as a nunc pro tunc case. The opinion teaches that once you perfect an appeal from a judgment nunc pro tunc, any parallel mandamus attacking that same judgment faces a serious adequacy problem. If your real objective is emergency protection against interim enforcement, closing disbursement, turnover, or Chapter 9 contempt pressure, your briefing must do more than repeat that the order is void. You must show why the appeal cannot practically protect the client and why narrower remedies in the trial court are insufficient.
In divorce-property cases, that means thinking beyond the merits of clerical versus judicial error. If sale proceeds are about to be disbursed, seek preservation relief immediately, including a request to deposit disputed funds into the registry. If enforcement proceedings are being threatened or pursued, make a record tying the relief sought to a present and non-speculative inability of the appellate process to protect the client. If a contempt risk is truly imminent, the procedural posture and the target of relief must be carefully framed; simply pointing to a pending enforcement filing may not be enough.
The case also underscores the importance of record assembly in original proceedings. A mandamus record that omits the hearing transcript invites denial, especially where the complained-of order turns on what the trial court intended at the time of rendition. In family cases, where decree language is often negotiated through competing drafts, the evidentiary record surrounding rendition, approval, and signature becomes central.
Finally, Cook is a caution against treating “void” as a self-executing label. Texas appellate courts still ask whether extraordinary relief is necessary. Even a forceful voidness argument may not justify mandamus when a direct appeal is already underway and practical interim protections were available but not pursued.
Checklists
Preserving a Nunc Pro Tunc Challenge in Family Cases
- Determine immediately whether the complained-of change is arguably clerical or judicial.
- Compare the original decree, the motion for nunc pro tunc, the substituted decree, and the reporter’s record of rendition line by line.
- Identify each alteration with precision, including whether it affects property division, conservatorship, injunctions, support, sanctions, or enforcement exposure.
- Perfect a direct appeal from the judgment nunc pro tunc within the applicable deadline.
- Avoid assuming that labeling the substituted decree “void” will itself justify mandamus relief.
Building a Mandamus Record That Can Survive Rule 52.8(a)
- Include the reporter’s record of the nunc pro tunc hearing.
- Include all competing proposed decrees if the theory is that the wrong decree was signed.
- Include the original final decree, the motion for judgment nunc pro tunc, the substituted decree, and any objections or post-judgment motions.
- Include evidence showing immediate, concrete harm that cannot be corrected on appeal.
- Address directly why the pending appeal is not an adequate remedy under Prudential and Team Rocket.
- Identify and negate lesser procedural alternatives the court may view as sufficient.
Protecting Sale Proceeds During Appeal
- Move promptly for an order requiring disputed proceeds to be deposited into the registry of the court.
- Define exactly what portion of the proceeds is disputed and why.
- Create an evidentiary record showing a risk of depletion, transfer, or irreversible distribution.
- Seek temporary orders tailored to preservation rather than broad merits relief.
- Coordinate with the title company and opposing counsel early so the dispute is narrowed to the amount actually at issue.
- Preserve written proof of the closing timeline and the practical consequences of immediate disbursement.
Responding to Chapter 9 Enforcement Pressure While Appeal Is Pending
- Analyze whether the enforcement petition depends on the validity of the challenged nunc pro tunc decree.
- Raise appellate posture and preservation arguments in the trial court promptly.
- Make a record of any imminent contempt setting or liberty-threatening relief.
- Distinguish between property-enforcement remedies and contempt exposure in your briefing.
- Seek targeted temporary relief tied to the specific enforcement harm, not just global invalidation of the decree.
- Ensure the appellate court is shown why ordinary appellate review will not adequately protect the client before enforcement occurs.
Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Strategic Problems
- Do not pursue mandamus as a substitute for a perfected appeal without a developed adequacy argument.
- Do not omit the hearing transcript in a mandamus proceeding centered on the nature of decree changes.
- Do not rely solely on assertions of urgency without showing that trial-court preservation remedies were requested and denied.
- Do not assume a pending closing or enforcement petition automatically makes appeal inadequate.
- Do not frame the issue only as “voidness”; explain the procedural consequences and why they are unmanageable through ordinary review.
- Do not let interim property distributions occur without first seeking registry protection or similar relief.
Citation
In re Mandy Jo Cook, No. 09-26-00217-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Beaumont June 18, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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