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CROSSOVER: Mandamus Forces RTP Designation Despite Limitations: Timely Disclosure Duties Don’t Trigger Until Due

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

In re PVF Industrial Supply, Inc., 06-26-00021-CV, March 11, 2026.

Original Mandamus.

Synopsis

Section 33.004(d) does not bar a responsible-third-party (“RTP”) designation merely because limitations has run—when the defendant’s Rule 194 initial-disclosure duty to identify potential responsible third parties did not arise until after limitations expired. When a trial court denies an RTP designation on that erroneous ground, mandamus is the correct remedy because the denial distorts the trial’s comparative-responsibility framework in a way that is not meaningfully curable on appeal.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family cases routinely incorporate civil-procedure mechanisms—especially where tort-like claims, business disputes, or third-party fault narratives are woven into divorce property characterization, reimbursement/economic contribution theories, fiduciary-duty allegations between spouses, or custody disputes featuring third-party misconduct. This opinion is a reminder that timing games around limitations and early disclosure can backfire: if a case is filed close to limitations (or a theory develops late through discovery), the responding party’s duty to “timely disclose” an RTP candidate does not retroactively accelerate simply because the limitations clock has run. Strategically, it strengthens the mandamus posture in family cases where an RTP denial would skew proportionate responsibility, offsets, or damages narratives (including derivative claims pled alongside SAPCRs).

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The underlying case was a personal injury suit arising from a vehicle collision. The plaintiff sued the driver and his employer (PVF) shortly before limitations expired. PVF’s Rule 194 initial disclosures were not due until after the limitations deadline passed; in those disclosures, PVF stated it believed the parties were correctly named.

As discovery progressed, PVF learned facts supporting a comparative-fault narrative involving the plaintiff’s employer, UPS—specifically, that the plaintiff parked partially in the lane of travel and that her parking decisions were influenced by her training (including testimony that she received no written training materials and parked where she did due to training). PVF moved to designate UPS as an RTP and supplemented disclosures to identify UPS as a potential responsible party. The plaintiff objected, arguing limitations had expired as to UPS, and the trial court denied the motion—apparently because PVF did not identify UPS in its initial disclosures.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The Texarkana Court of Appeals treated the trial court’s denial as a misapplication of § 33.004(d). The statute’s trigger is not simply that limitations has expired; it is that limitations has expired and the defendant “failed to comply” with “timely disclosure” obligations “if any” under the rules. Here, PVF’s initial disclosures were not due until after limitations ran, so PVF could not have violated a duty that had not yet come due. Moreover, PVF’s later RTP theory was anchored in discovery that unfolded after the suit was filed, and PVF supplemented once it had a basis.

The court also emphasized statutory purpose: § 33.004(d) aims to prevent sandbagging—waiting until limitations runs to name an RTP so the plaintiff loses the ability to sue that party. That concern was further undercut because UPS was a workers’ compensation subscriber and the plaintiff received benefits; under In re YRC, there is no applicable limitations period for the plaintiff to join the employer on a tort claim subject to exclusivity. Either way—timing of PVF’s disclosure obligations or the absence of an applicable limitations period as to UPS—§ 33.004(d) did not justify denial.

Finally, the court applied the established mandamus framework for RTP errors: an improper denial alters the comparative-responsibility architecture in ways that are difficult to reconstruct on appeal, making mandamus the proper corrective tool.

Holding

The court held that Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 33.004(d) does not bar an RTP designation when the defendant’s Rule-based disclosure obligations did not arise until after the statute of limitations expired, and the defendant otherwise complied with the rules (including supplementation based on discovery).

The court further held that mandamus relief is appropriate because erroneous denial of an RTP designation “skews the proceedings” and deprives the defendant of an adequate remedy by appeal; it conditionally granted mandamus and directed the trial court to vacate the order denying designation.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, the headline takeaway is procedural leverage: when an RTP designation matters to allocation of fault, damages, or financial responsibility, an erroneous denial is not something you must simply preserve for appeal—you should be thinking mandamus early.

Common family-law scenarios where this plays out:

Checklists

RTP Designation Timing (Defense-Side in Family-Adjacent Civil Claims)

Building a Record to Defeat a § 33.004(d) Objection

Mandamus Readiness (If the Trial Court Denies Designation)

Citation

In re PVF Industrial Supply, Inc., No. 06-26-00021-CV (Tex. App.—Texarkana Mar. 11, 2026) (mem. op.) (orig. proceeding).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

Used correctly, PVF is a timing-and-remedy weapon in family litigation when the other side tries to freeze your defensive narrative by rushing to the courthouse near a limitations deadline (or by insisting that only “initial disclosures” count). If your case includes consolidated civil claims (fiduciary duty, fraud, conversion, business torts) or any posture where allocation of responsibility affects outcome (damage model, reimbursement theories, or credibility determinations tied to causation), you can press two strategic points: (1) § 33.004(d) only penalizes an actual failure to comply with disclosure duties that were due, not a failure to predict an RTP before discovery matures; and (2) if the trial court nevertheless denies designation on the wrong legal premise, mandamus is not extraordinary—it is the intended corrective device because trying the case without the RTP option structurally “skews” the proceeding in ways that appellate review cannot reliably unwind.

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