Dallas Court of Appeals Dismisses Pro Se Divorce Appeal for Inadequate Briefing
Shepard v. Shepard, 05-25-00208-CV, April 21, 2026.
On appeal from 255th Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas
Synopsis
The Dallas Court of Appeals dismissed a pro se wife’s divorce appeal after concluding that her amended brief still failed to comply with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1. Because the brief did not present clear argument, meaningful record citations, and supporting legal authority, the court held there was nothing to review and did not reach the merits of her complaints regarding recusal, due process, evidentiary rulings, ADA accommodations, temporary orders, or property characterization.
Relevance to Family Law
For Texas family-law litigators, this case is a useful reminder that appellate preservation does not end with trial-level error preservation. Even where a divorce appeal raises potentially serious complaints—recusal practice, trial-management constraints, evidentiary exclusions, temporary orders, disability accommodations, or separate-property findings—the appellant can still lose outright if the briefing does not satisfy Rule 38.1. The opinion also underscores a recurring family-law point: interlocutory rulings such as temporary orders and partial summary judgments may become reviewable after the final decree, but only if they are properly presented in a compliant appellate brief.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The parties’ divorce case involved more than the final decree alone. During the proceedings, Wife obtained a protective order based on findings of family violence, including a provision awarding her exclusive use of the Garland residence. Later, however, the trial court granted Husband’s partial no-evidence summary-judgment motion concerning that residence and confirmed it as Husband’s separate property. The associate judge then entered further temporary orders giving Husband possession of the residence and requiring Wife to vacate; the protective order was modified to remove Wife’s exclusive-use provision.
The case also featured extensive recusal activity. According to the opinion, Wife filed at least nine motions to recuse various judges. Some judges voluntarily recused, the case was reassigned, and later motions were treated under the tertiary-recusal framework. Trial ultimately proceeded before Judge Bailey, and after a short bench trial, the court signed the final decree of divorce on February 21, 2025.
On appeal, Wife—appearing pro se—asserted eleven issues attacking judicial impartiality, due process, exclusion of evidence, witness limitations, ADA accommodations, property characterization, and cumulative error. Two additional appeals from the partial summary judgment and temporary orders had been consolidated because those interlocutory rulings were reviewable, if at all, through the final divorce appeal.
The Fifth Court did not reach the substance of those complaints. Instead, it focused on the threshold problem: Wife’s amended brief did not provide the kind of developed appellate presentation Texas law requires.
Issues Decided
The court effectively decided the following issues:
- Whether Wife’s pro se status excused compliance with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1.
- Whether Wife’s amended brief contained sufficiently clear argument, record citations, and legal authority to preserve appellate review.
- Whether dismissal was appropriate after the court notified Wife of briefing defects and gave her an opportunity to amend.
- Whether the court should address Wife’s substantive complaints concerning recusal, due process, evidentiary rulings, ADA accommodations, temporary orders, and property characterization despite inadequate briefing.
Rules Applied
The court relied on familiar but unforgiving appellate-briefing rules:
- Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(i): an appellant’s brief must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.
- Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(c): an appeal may be dismissed for failure to comply with a requirement of the appellate rules.
- Bolling v. Farmers Branch Indep. Sch. Dist., 315 S.W.3d 893, 895 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.): pro se litigants are held to the same procedural standards as licensed attorneys.
- Huey v. Huey, 200 S.W.3d 851, 854 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.): failure to cite applicable authority or provide substantive analysis waives an appellate issue.
- Horton v. Stovall, 591 S.W.3d 567, 569 (Tex. 2019) (per curiam): briefing rules are construed liberally to avoid waiver where possible.
- Wells v. MSW 1221 S. Lamar, LLC, No. 05-23-01288-CV, 2026 WL 188025, at *14 (Tex. App.—Dallas Jan. 23, 2026, no pet. h.): even under liberal construction, an appellant must still provide specific argument and analysis showing how the record and law support the complaint.
- In re O.E.S., No. 05-25-00903-CV, 2026 WL 871862, at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 30, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.): Rule 38.1’s requirements are mandatory.
The opinion also referenced recusal authorities, including Rule 18a, Rule 18b, and Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 30.016, but only in the course of explaining complaints the court ultimately did not reach on the merits because of defective briefing.
Application
The court took a methodical approach. It first acknowledged that Wife was pro se, but immediately emphasized the settled rule that self-representation does not relax briefing requirements. That framing matters: the dismissal was not based on the nature of Wife’s allegations, but on the manner in which they were presented.
The Fifth Court then noted that it had already given Wife a procedural opportunity to cure. In July 2025, it notified her that the original brief did not comply with Rule 38 and warned that failure to file a compliant amended brief could result in dismissal. Wife did file an amended brief, so the court reviewed it with the usual liberal construction that appellate courts apply when trying to avoid waiver. Even so, the court concluded the amended brief still failed the minimum threshold.
The core defect was not merely imperfect organization or inartful drafting. The court found that the brief lacked the required “clear and concise argument” and did not supply appropriate citations to the appellate record and governing authorities. In other words, the brief identified grievances but did not convert them into legally reviewable appellate complaints. The opinion reflects the familiar divide between asserting that error occurred and demonstrating reversible error under the record and governing standards of review.
That was particularly significant here because Wife’s appeal attempted to challenge a broad collection of rulings: recusal decisions, due-process claims, evidentiary exclusions, witness limitations, ADA accommodation issues, temporary orders, protective-order enforcement, and characterization of the marital residence as separate property. Each of those categories carries its own preservation rules, standards of review, and substantive doctrine. The court’s message is that broad accusations of unfairness, even when numerous, do not substitute for issue-by-issue appellate analysis.
The result was that the court never arrived at the merits. Once it concluded the amended brief still did not satisfy Rule 38.1, there was no justiciable appellate presentation before it. Dismissal followed.
Holding
The Fifth Court held that Wife’s amended pro se brief did not comply with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1 because it failed to present clear argument supported by appropriate citations to the record and legal authorities. As a result, the court determined that Wife had not properly presented anything for appellate review.
The court further held that dismissal was appropriate under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(c), particularly because Wife had already been notified of the deficiencies and given an opportunity to amend. Her amended filing did not cure the defects.
Because the appeal was dismissed on briefing grounds, the court did not reach the merits of Wife’s substantive complaints, including recusal, judicial bias, due process, exclusion of evidence, limitations on witnesses and cross-examination, ADA accommodations, temporary orders, protective-order issues, or the separate-property characterization of the residence.
Practical Application
This opinion should be on every family-law appellate radar because it illustrates a common disconnect between high-conflict domestic litigation and appellate execution. Family cases often generate sprawling records, serial interlocutory orders, emergency rulings, associate-judge proceedings, recusal practice, and emotionally charged allegations of unfairness. But appellate courts do not reverse based on volume, intensity, or perceived inequity standing alone. They reverse when a brief ties a preserved complaint to the record, states the governing standard, cites controlling authority, and explains why the complained-of ruling was harmful.
For trial lawyers, the case is a reminder to build the record with appellate briefing in mind. If you expect a later challenge to temporary orders, recusal rulings, exclusion of evidence, trial-time limitations, or property characterization, the appellate pathway must be visible from the record itself. For appellate counsel, the case reinforces that consolidated review of interlocutory family-law rulings after final judgment is only as useful as the brief presenting those issues.
In practical family-law settings, Shepard has at least four immediate applications:
- Divorce property litigation: If a party intends to challenge a no-evidence summary judgment confirming an asset as separate property, the appellate brief must identify the specific evidentiary gaps, the response evidence, the preservation points, and the governing authorities on characterization and review.
- Temporary-orders disputes: Even where temporary rulings become reviewable after final decree, they are not self-presenting. Counsel must explain appealability, preservation, standard of review, and harm.
- Recusal-heavy cases: Multiple recusal filings can trigger the tertiary-recusal statute. Any appeal from those rulings requires precise treatment of section 30.016, Rule 18a procedure, the extrajudicial-bias doctrine, and the abuse-of-discretion standard.
- ADA and due-process complaints: These arguments must be developed with record cites showing the request, the ruling, the prejudice, and the specific authority establishing error.
Strategically, this case is also useful when responding to a loosely drafted opposing brief. If the appellant has not actually briefed the issues under Rule 38.1, Shepard supports an argument that the court should decline merits review altogether rather than attempt to reconstruct the appellant’s theories.
Checklists
Appellate Brief Compliance in Family Cases
- State each issue distinctly and consistently in the issues-presented section and the body of the brief
- Identify the applicable standard of review for each issue
- Provide record citations for every material factual assertion
- Cite controlling authority for each legal proposition
- Explain how the cited law applies to the cited facts
- Address preservation, including where the complaint was raised and ruled on
- Explain harm, not just error
- Ensure interlocutory orders are tied procedurally to the final appealable judgment
- Confirm that the requested relief matches the issues actually briefed
Preserving Review of Recusal Complaints
- Identify each recusal motion by date, target judge, and disposition
- Include record citations showing referral and ruling under Rule 18a
- Analyze whether section 30.016’s tertiary-recusal framework applies
- Address the abuse-of-discretion standard expressly
- If alleging bias, identify the claimed extrajudicial source
- Do not rely solely on adverse rulings as proof of bias
- Show how the alleged bias deprived the client of a fair trial
- Explain the remedy sought and why the error is reversible
Challenging Property Characterization on Appeal
- Identify the asset at issue and the precise characterization ruling
- Cite the pleadings, motion, response, exhibits, and hearing record relevant to characterization
- Distinguish legal-sufficiency, factual-sufficiency, and summary-judgment arguments
- Address tracing, reimbursement, mutation, or inception-of-title doctrines as applicable
- Explain why the trial court’s ruling affected the just-and-right division
- Link the legal error to a requested remand or rendition theory
Presenting Due Process, ADA, and Trial-Management Complaints
- Cite the specific request for accommodation or procedural relief
- Identify the trial court’s ruling or refusal to rule
- Show where the denial affected trial presentation
- Tie witness-exclusion or time-limit complaints to concrete prejudice
- Demonstrate what evidence would have been admitted or what testimony would have been elicited
- Cite authority specific to due process, evidentiary exclusion, or accommodation obligations
- Explain why the asserted error was preserved and harmful
Responding to an Opponent’s Deficient Family-Law Appeal
- Evaluate whether the appellant has provided argument, authority, and record citations for each issue
- Highlight inconsistencies between the issues presented and the arguments actually developed
- Argue waiver where the brief contains only conclusions or generalized unfairness allegations
- Point out failures to address preservation or standard of review
- Resist the invitation to brief the appellant’s case for them
- Consider requesting dismissal or affirmance based on Rule 38.1 noncompliance
- Use Shepard, Huey, and Bolling to reinforce that even pro se appellants must comply with mandatory briefing rules
Citation
Shepard v. Shepard, No. 05-25-00208-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas Apr. 21, 2026, mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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