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Fourteenth Court of Appeals Grants Appellant’s Motion to Dismiss Appeal from Brazoria County Family Court Judgment

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

Gladish v. Villalta, 14-25-00388-CV, April 16, 2026.

On appeal from 300th District Court, Brazoria County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals granted the appellant’s voluntary motion to dismiss the appeal under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.1 and dismissed the appeal from the trial court’s April 23, 2025 judgment. The opinion is short, but it reinforces a basic appellate point with real family-law consequences: once an appellant elects to abandon the appeal and the court grants dismissal, the trial court’s judgment remains in place.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, this is a procedural opinion with practical significance. In divorce, SAPCR, modification, and property-division appeals, a voluntary dismissal can end appellate risk, but it also leaves the underlying judgment intact unless some other relief is pursued. That matters in cases involving conservatorship, possession, support, enforcement exposure, or disproportionate property division, because a client who dismisses the appeal is typically choosing finality over further appellate review. Counsel should therefore treat a Rule 42.1 dismissal as a strategic decision, not an administrative afterthought.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The opinion reflects a narrow procedural posture. Donn Diego Gladish appealed from a judgment signed on April 23, 2025, by the 300th District Court of Brazoria County in trial court cause number 132129-F, a family-law styled case against Yolanda Villalta. While the appeal was pending in the Fourteenth Court of Appeals, the appellant filed a motion on March 31, 2026, asking the court to dismiss his own appeal pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.1.

The memorandum opinion does not describe the underlying merits of the dispute, the nature of the judgment, or whether the parties reached a settlement. What matters to the court’s reasoning is the procedural fact that the appellant himself sought dismissal of the pending appeal. On that basis, the court granted the motion and dismissed the appeal.

Issues Decided

  • Whether the Fourteenth Court of Appeals should grant the appellant’s voluntary motion to dismiss the appeal under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.1.

Rules Applied

Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.1 governed the disposition. That rule authorizes an appellate court, in civil cases, to dismiss an appeal in accordance with a motion by the appellant, subject to the rule’s terms and the court’s authority over its docket and judgment.

Although the court did not engage in extended analysis, the opinion implicitly applies the routine principle that when an appellant moves to dismiss his own appeal and no procedural barrier appears, the court may grant the request and terminate the appeal without reaching the merits. The dismissal ends the appellate proceeding and leaves the appealed judgment undisturbed absent some separate order or proceeding affecting that judgment.

Application

The court’s application was straightforward and entirely procedural. The appeal had been taken from an April 23, 2025 judgment. Before the appellate court issued any merits decision, the appellant filed a Rule 42.1 motion asking to dismiss the appeal. The court cited Rule 42.1, granted the motion, and dismissed the appeal.

What is notable for practitioners is not complexity, but consequence. The court did not modify the judgment, vacate the judgment, or remand for further proceedings. It simply dismissed the appeal. In practical terms, the appellant’s decision to abandon appellate review meant the court of appeals would not reach any complaint that might otherwise have been raised against the Brazoria County judgment.

Holding

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals held that the appellant’s motion to dismiss should be granted under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.1. On that basis, the court dismissed the appeal.

By dismissing the appeal without addressing the merits, the court necessarily left the April 23, 2025 trial-court judgment in place. The holding is therefore limited but significant: a party who voluntarily dismisses an appeal ordinarily forfeits merits review of the complained-of judgment.

Practical Application

Family-law appellate strategy often turns on whether continued review is worth the cost, delay, and risk. This opinion is a reminder that a Rule 42.1 dismissal is a clean procedural exit, but usually at the price of leaving the final order exactly where the trial court put it. In a divorce appeal, that may mean the property division stands. In a SAPCR or modification appeal, conservatorship, possession, geographic restrictions, child support, or attorney’s-fee provisions may remain fully operative. In an enforcement-related posture, the dismissal may leave contempt-adjacent consequences, clarifying provisions, or money judgments untouched.

Practitioners should also think beyond the appellant. If you represent the appellee, a voluntary dismissal may deliver exactly what your client wants: finality and preservation of the judgment without merits briefing. If you represent the appellant, you need a disciplined review before filing the motion:

  • Is there a settlement, and if so, does dismissal alone adequately protect the client?
  • Does the client understand that dismissal generally does not erase the underlying judgment?
  • Are supersedeas, enforcement, or implementation issues still live?
  • Is there any need for a joint motion, agreed disposition, or other relief beyond simple dismissal?
  • Have appellate deadlines in any related proceedings been considered?

In family-law litigation, these questions are especially important because judgments are often operational immediately. Clients may assume that dismissing an appeal “resets” the case or neutralizes the order. It does not. More often, it cements the status quo established by the judgment being appealed.

Checklists

Before Filing a Voluntary Dismissal in a Family-Law Appeal

  • Confirm the client’s objectives in writing.
  • Explain that dismissal of the appeal ordinarily leaves the trial court’s judgment intact.
  • Review whether any settlement agreement requires more than a unilateral dismissal.
  • Determine whether any temporary orders, supersedeas issues, or enforcement proceedings remain pending.
  • Evaluate whether the judgment includes ongoing obligations involving support, possession, conservatorship, property transfer, or fees.
  • Confirm whether a joint motion or agreed disposition would better accomplish the client’s goals.
  • Verify that dismissal will not adversely affect related appeals, restricted appeals, mandamus proceedings, or post-judgment remedies.

Protecting the Appellant Before Abandoning Review

  • Reassess the appellate issues one last time for reversible error with practical value.
  • Identify whether dismissal waives meaningful leverage in settlement.
  • Advise the client about the immediate and long-term effect of the judgment remaining in force.
  • Confirm whether any deadlines remain for compliance with the judgment after dismissal.
  • Consider collateral consequences, including enforcement exposure and fee recovery.
  • Document the client’s informed consent to dismiss.

Responding for the Appellee When the Appellant Moves to Dismiss

  • Decide whether simple dismissal serves the client’s interests.
  • Review whether the appellee needs costs, clarification, or other terms addressed.
  • Confirm that dismissal will preserve the favorable portions of the judgment.
  • Assess whether any pending enforcement or implementation proceedings should move forward immediately after dismissal.
  • Communicate with the client about next steps in trial court once appellate jurisdiction ends.

Trial-Court Coordination After Appellate Dismissal

  • Obtain and circulate the dismissal order promptly.
  • Calendar all compliance dates triggered by the continued validity of the judgment.
  • Resume or initiate enforcement where appropriate.
  • Address transfer documents, QDROs, support withholding, turnover obligations, or possession exchanges affected by the judgment.
  • Ensure the client understands that dismissal of the appeal does not itself modify the underlying order.

Citation

Gladish v. Villalta, No. 14-25-00388-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 16, 2026, mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full 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.