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Dallas Court of Appeals Affirms Denial of Motion to Vacate in UIFSA Child-Support Case Due to Inadequate Briefing

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

In the Interest of O.E.S., a Child, 05-25-00903-CV, March 30, 2026.

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

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of Father’s motion to vacate a post-remand UIFSA child-support order because his appellate brief did not comply with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(i). The court held that conclusory, record-unsupported complaints—even when sprinkled with legal citations—waive appellate review. It also reaffirmed that a prior jurisdiction ruling became law of the case and could not be re-litigated on remand via inadequate briefing.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a family-law appellate cautionary tale with daily applicability in divorce and SAPCR practice: even meritorious complaints about a support order, service, jurisdiction, evidentiary rulings, or post-remand procedure can be lost on appeal if briefing does not connect the dots with record cites and coherent legal analysis. It also underscores a recurring family-litigation reality—post-remand hearings and enforcement/support modifications often generate “jurisdiction” re-arguments—but the law-of-the-case doctrine and briefing-waiver principles can end those arguments quickly if the appellant does not properly tee them up. For trial lawyers, the opinion reinforces the importance of building a clean record at remand and framing post-judgment attacks (motion to vacate/new trial) with precision because the appellate court will not reconstruct the theory or hunt the record.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The Office of the Attorney General filed a UIFSA petition in 2020 alleging Texas jurisdiction under Texas Family Code chapter 159. Father, appearing pro se, filed a responsive pleading asserting the court lacked “personal jurisdiction,” not on traditional service/notice grounds, but on the theory that he did not “consent” to be bound by state statutes and codes. The trial court signed a 2020 UIFSA order establishing paternity and support; Father appealed.

In the first appeal, the Dallas Court held the record showed Father was personally served and that he waived any special appearance by seeking general relief. The court affirmed jurisdiction but reversed and remanded the portions addressing parentage and duty of support. After mandate issued, the trial court held a remand hearing and again found Father to be the child’s father with support obligations; the order recited that Father appeared but declined to participate or be sworn. Father then moved to vacate, arguing (again) lack of jurisdiction and that the court improperly refused to “consider” various documents. At the motion-to-vacate hearing, Father offered no evidence. The trial court denied relief, and Father appealed again.

On appeal, the Fifth Court struck Father’s initial brief for noncompliance and ordered a corrected brief. Father filed an amended brief, but the court found it still failed to present clear issues with appropriate record citations and legal analysis.

Issues Decided

  • Whether Father preserved and adequately briefed appellate complaints challenging the denial of his motion to vacate under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(i).
  • Whether Father could re-urge a personal-jurisdiction/service challenge to the post-remand order when jurisdiction had already been decided in the prior appeal (law of the case).
  • Whether Father’s generalized complaints that the trial court refused to “consider” documents presented reversible error absent record-guided explanation of what was offered, when, and why it mattered.

Rules Applied

  • Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(i): Appellant must provide “a clear and concise argument” with “appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.” Conclusory statements do not satisfy the rule; inadequate briefing waives error.
  • Pro se litigant standard: Pro se parties are held to the same procedural standards as lawyers. (Citing Mansfield State Bank v. Cohn and Dallas precedent.)
  • Appellate neutrality / no record-mining: The court will not craft arguments, search the record, or speculate about the substance of issues.
  • Law of the case doctrine: Legal questions resolved in a prior appeal govern later stages of the same case, including post-remand proceedings. (Citing J.O. Lockridge General Contractors, Inc. v. Morgan.)
  • UIFSA context: The dispute arises under Texas Family Code chapter 159 (jurisdictional and interstate support framework), but the dispositive rulings in this appeal turned on briefing waiver and law-of-the-case.

Application

Justice Garcia’s opinion is fundamentally about appellate gatekeeping: the court cannot reach the merits until it receives an appellant’s issues in a form the rules require. The panel emphasized that Rule 38.1(i) is not satisfied by accusations, broad assertions of error, or strings of authorities with no explanation of how they control the outcome under the actual record.

The court noted Father’s amended brief still lacked the connective tissue that makes an appellate complaint reviewable—pinpoint record references, a coherent chronology tied to the specific hearing/order being challenged, and a legally supported explanation of harm. For example, Father complained the trial court refused to “consider” documents, but he did not identify whether the documents were offered at the initial hearing, the remand hearing, or the motion-to-vacate hearing, nor did he explain relevance to the motion to vacate. That absence of analysis left the court with nothing it could adjudicate without becoming an advocate.

As to personal jurisdiction, the court recognized Father’s first issue as an attempt to re-argue service and jurisdiction. But that question had already been litigated and decided in the first appeal, the mandate had issued, and the prior jurisdiction holding therefore controlled under law of the case. Even if briefing had been better, the jurisdictional attack faced a doctrinal wall: the case had already crossed that bridge.

Holding

The court held that Father waived four of his five issues because his brief did not comply with Rule 38.1(i). The briefing was conclusory and did not provide record-supported analysis showing error and entitlement to relief, so the court resolved those issues against him without reaching merits.

Separately, the court held that Father’s personal-jurisdiction/service challenge was foreclosed by the law-of-the-case doctrine because the prior appeal decided jurisdiction, mandate issued, and that ruling governed subsequent proceedings. The court therefore affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion to vacate and affirmed the judgment.

Practical Application

Texas family-law appeals frequently turn less on “what happened” and more on “how it was presented.” This opinion is a reminder that appellate courts will enforce briefing rules strictly—even in child-support cases, even against pro se litigants, and even when a court has already given an opportunity to re-brief.

Common family-law scenarios where this matters:

  • Post-remand SAPCR proceedings: If a remand hearing results in a new support order or conservatorship finding, any appellate challenge must identify the remand record precisely (what was offered, admitted, excluded; what objections were made; and what findings were attacked). “The judge ignored my evidence” is not an issue; it’s a conclusion.
  • Motions to vacate / motions for new trial in support and paternity cases: If the complaint is evidentiary (documents not considered, testimony excluded), the appellant must explain preservation, the ruling complained of, and harm—tied to the correct hearing and order.
  • Service and jurisdiction re-litigation: UIFSA and parentage litigation attracts recurring “no jurisdiction” theories. Once an appellate court decides jurisdiction and the mandate issues, later attacks must contend with law-of-the-case; reframing the same argument in a motion to vacate is usually a dead end.
  • Represented parties dealing with pro se opponents: When the other side appeals pro se, you can often defend the judgment through targeted briefing-rule enforcement and law-of-the-case arguments—especially when the appellant’s brief fails to marshal the record.

Checklists

Rule 38.1(i) Briefing Compliance (Texas Family Law Appeals)

  • State each issue as a reviewable legal question (not a narrative grievance).
  • Provide pinpoint citations to the clerk’s record and reporter’s record for every key fact.
  • Identify the specific order being challenged (e.g., post-remand support order vs. order denying motion to vacate).
  • Include the applicable standard of review for each issue (abuse of discretion, de novo, etc.).
  • Tie each cited authority to a specific step in the analysis (rule → element → record proof → relief).
  • Explain preservation: objection, offer of proof, ruling, and where it appears in the record.
  • Address harm: why the alleged error probably caused an improper judgment (or prevented proper presentation).

Post-Remand Family-Law Strategy (Avoiding Law-of-the-Case Traps)

  • Read the prior appellate opinion as a set of binding instructions: identify what was affirmed, reversed, and remanded.
  • Track the mandate date and confirm the trial court’s authority is limited to remanded issues.
  • Do not re-argue issues decided in the first appeal without a recognized exception (e.g., materially changed facts or intervening law).
  • If jurisdiction was previously affirmed, focus remand litigation on the remanded merits (support calculation, parentage proof, etc.), not recycled service theories.
  • Ensure the remand hearing record is complete: exhibits offered, objections ruled upon, and findings requested where helpful.

Motions to Vacate / Attacking a Post-Remand Support Order

  • Identify the procedural vehicle and basis (plenary power, Rule 329b, bill of review standards, etc., as applicable).
  • Attach or offer the documents you claim the court “refused to consider,” and obtain a clear ruling on admissibility.
  • Make an offer of proof if evidence is excluded.
  • Connect each complaint to an element of the relief sought (e.g., lack of notice, extrinsic fraud, clerical vs. judicial error).
  • Build the appellate record at the motion hearing: testimony, exhibits, and explicit rulings.

Citation

In the Interest of O.E.S., a Child, No. 05-25-00903-CV (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 30, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the opinion here

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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.