Ninth Court of Appeals Dismisses Habeas Corpus Petition as Moot Following Discharge of Contempt Sentence
Memorandum Opinion Per Curiam, 09-25-00154-CV, January 29, 2026.
On appeal from the 410th District Court of Montgomery County, Texas.
Synopsis
The Ninth Court of Appeals dismissed a petition for writ of habeas corpus as moot after the relator completed his 180-day contempt sentence and was released from custody. Because the writ of habeas corpus exists solely to challenge the legality of current confinement, the relator’s discharge of his sentence extinguished the court’s jurisdiction to provide relief.
Relevance to Family Law
For family law practitioners, this case serves as a stark reminder of the “race against the clock” inherent in habeas corpus proceedings involving property division enforcement. When a client is held in contempt and remanded to custody for a fixed term—common in violations of property listing agreements or turnover orders—the window for appellate intervention via an original proceeding is narrow. Once the sentence is discharged, the ability to vacate a potentially void contempt order through habeas corpus vanishes. This underscores the necessity of seeking an emergency stay or personal recognizance bond from the court of appeals immediately upon the relator’s confinement to prevent the issues from becoming moot before the court can reach the merits.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The underlying dispute arose from a divorce proceeding between Michael and Samantha Lowman. The trial court found that Michael Lowman had violated specific property division provisions of the final divorce decree by failing to sign a listing agreement when it was presented to him on two separate occasions. Consequently, the trial court found him in contempt of court and sentenced him to a total of 180 days of confinement in the Montgomery County Jail. Michael was remanded to the custody of the Sheriff on April 1, 2025. While serving his sentence, he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the Ninth Court of Appeals, seeking to challenge the lawfulness of his imprisonment.
Issues Decided
The primary issue was whether a petition for a writ of habeas corpus challenging a contempt order remains a live controversy once the relator has been released from confinement and has fully discharged the ordered sentence.
Rules Applied
The Court relied upon several foundational principles of Texas appellate and habeas law:
- Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 22.221: Granting Courts of Appeals the authority to issue writs of habeas corpus.
- Ex parte Gordon, 584 S.W.2d 686 (Tex. 1979): Establishing that habeas corpus is a collateral attack intended not to determine ultimate guilt or innocence, but strictly to ascertain the lawfulness of imprisonment.
- Mootness Doctrine: The principle that a habeas corpus petition is rendered moot the moment the relator is released from confinement, as there is no longer a restraint on liberty for the court to address.
- Tex. R. App. P. 42.3: Providing the procedural mechanism for an appellate court to dismiss a case for want of jurisdiction or mootness after providing notice to the parties.
Application
In its analysis, the Ninth Court of Appeals tracked the timeline of the relator’s confinement against the procedural posture of the writ. Because the relator was remanded on April 1, 2025, for a 180-day term, the calendar suggested the sentence had been fully served by the time the court reached the matter in late 2025 and early 2026. The Clerk of the Court provided formal notice to the parties in December 2025, stating that the sentence appeared to have been discharged and inviting a response to show cause why the proceeding should not be dismissed as moot. When no party responded to the notice, the court concluded that the relator was no longer confined. Since the purpose of habeas corpus is to liberate the illegally confined, and there was no longer any confinement to remedy, the court determined it could no longer grant the requested relief.
Holding
The Court of Appeals dismissed the petition for writ of habeas corpus as moot. The court held that because the relator had been released and was no longer under the restraint of the contempt judgment, the underlying controversy regarding the lawfulness of his imprisonment had ceased to exist.
The court further held that any pending motions associated with the original proceeding were likewise denied as moot, as the dismissal of the main petition stripped those motions of their legal foundation.
Practical Application
This opinion reinforces the tactical necessity of staying the enforcement of a contempt order. If your client is facing a 180-day “punitive” contempt sentence for failing to sign property documents or other decree-mandated instruments, you must move for a writ of habeas corpus and an emergency bond simultaneously. If the client serves the time, even a blatantly void contempt order—perhaps one lacking the required specificity or based on an ambiguous underlying order—will remain on their record without the possibility of appellate review via habeas corpus.
Checklists
Preventing Mootness in Contempt Appeals
- Immediate Filing: File the Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus as soon as the client is “restrained of his liberty” (this includes being processed or held under a commitment order).
- Emergency Motion for Bond: Simultaneously file a motion with the Court of Appeals to set a bond or for personal recognizance under Tex. R. App. P. 52.10.
- Verified Record: Ensure the record includes the commitment order and the contempt judgment, as the appellate court cannot act without the “order complained of.”
- Monitor the Calendar: If the sentence is short (e.g., 30 or 60 days), provide the appellate court with a clear timeline of the discharge date to emphasize the need for expedited consideration.
Responding to a Mootness Notice
- Identify Collateral Consequences: If the client is released but still faces “collateral consequences” (such as a pending fine or impact on other litigation), argue that these consequences prevent the case from being truly moot, though this is a high bar in habeas corpus.
- Differentiate Between Punitive and Coercive: If the contempt is coercive (i.e., “stay in jail until you sign”), ensure the client hasn’t “purged” the contempt in a way that mootness applies if you still wish to challenge the underlying validity of the order.
Citation
In re Michael Wayne Lowman, No. 09-25-00154-CV, 2026 WL [TBD] (Tex. App.—Beaumont Jan. 29, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
~~51de9f1b-558c-4cec-b91d-68522679745b~~
Share this content:
