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CROSSOVER: Tyler Court: ‘Try‑Out’ Day Can Defeat TWCA Exclusive Remedy—Jury Gets to Decide Employee Status Despite Comp Claim Payments

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

Antonio Munoz Aserradero, LLC v. Thomas, 12-25-00047-CV, March 11, 2026.

On appeal from the 2nd Judicial District Court, Cherokee County, Texas.

Synopsis

The Tyler Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of a directed verdict on the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act (“TWCA”) exclusive-remedy defense because the evidence did not conclusively establish a “contract of hire” during a “try-out” workday. Even with a pay stub and the carrier’s payment of medical and indemnity benefits, testimony that the worker was being “tried out” and that they would “talk about employment” later created a jury question on employee status.

Relevance to Family Law

Family-law litigators regularly litigate “employment” as a factual and legal status—most often when valuing earning capacity, characterizing benefits as community vs. separate, and framing fault narratives that influence conservatorship and disproportionate division. This opinion is a reminder that “employee” status can turn on contract formation (including consideration and mutual assent), not merely on payroll artifacts or third-party benefit payments—an analytic frame that translates cleanly to disputes over whether a spouse is truly employed, underemployed by design, or informally working “off the books” while still claiming employment-based benefits.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

A sawmill worker (Thomas) arrived a day late for his start date and spoke with the owner (Munoz). Thomas testified Munoz told him: “we will try you out. If you like it, we will talk about employment. For now, we will train you, and if you don’t like it, it is like you have never even been here.” Thomas was trained, given gloves, assigned to operate equipment, and worked through the morning. Shortly after lunch, he returned to the same workstation and was injured by the machine.

The incident was reported to the employer’s workers’ compensation carrier (Texas Mutual). The carrier opened a claim the day of the injury, paid medical expenses, and made substantial indemnity payments (including after suit was filed). The employer contended a paycheck was issued; Thomas denied receiving it, and the record reflected no deposit or negotiation. A pay stub showed $75 in gross wages with standard withholdings.

Thomas sued for negligence, pleading he was not an employee (instead an independent contractor or invitee). The defendants asserted TWCA exclusive remedy (and other defenses) and sought a directed verdict on the theory that the evidence conclusively proved employee status and TWCA coverage. The trial court denied the directed verdict, and the jury returned a substantial verdict for Thomas. On appeal, the defendants challenged—among other things—the denial of the directed verdict on exclusive remedy.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court framed exclusive remedy as an affirmative defense requiring the defendant to prove employee status and workers’ compensation coverage.

Key authorities and rules discussed include:

Application

The employer’s theory was straightforward: Thomas reported to work, was trained, was integrated into operations, was assigned to machinery, and a pay stub existed—therefore employee status was conclusively established, triggering TWCA exclusive remedy as a matter of law. The carrier’s prompt claim handling and long-running indemnity payments were used to reinforce the idea that everyone treated Thomas as an employee.

The Tyler court rejected that “conclusive proof” posture at the directed-verdict stage. The opinion’s center of gravity is contract formation: TWCA “employee” status depends on service “under a contract of hire,” and a contract—express or implied—requires consideration and mutual assent to essential terms (including remuneration). Thomas’s testimony about the “try-out” framing (“we will talk about employment” later; “if you don’t like it, it is like you have never even been here”) supplied evidence that the parties had not yet reached a meeting of the minds on employment and pay at the time of the accident.

In other words, even if the employer later generated payroll paperwork and the carrier paid benefits, the jury could still rationally conclude that, at the moment of injury, Thomas was performing services without an express or implied promise of remuneration—i.e., as a volunteer—meaning TWCA exclusive remedy was not established as a matter of law. That evidentiary posture is fatal to a directed verdict: once there is more than a scintilla supporting the absence of a contract of hire, the question becomes for the jury.

Holding

The court affirmed the trial court’s denial of a directed verdict on the TWCA exclusive-remedy defense. Because a volunteer—someone performing services without an express or implied promise of remuneration—is not an “employee” under the TWCA, and because the “try-out” evidence supported a finding that no contract of hire existed at the time of injury, employee status was not conclusively established and the defense could not be taken from the jury.

Separately (as background from the snippet), the case also reflects the trial court’s gatekeeping choices (e.g., excluding workers’ compensation benefit evidence), reinforcing the practical reality that exclusive-remedy litigation is often won or lost on framing employee status through admissible contract-formation proof rather than post-injury administrative breadcrumbs.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, the immediate utility is not TWCA doctrine per se—it is the court’s insistence on contract formation fundamentals when “employment” is asserted as a dispositive status. That translates into several recurring family-law battlegrounds:

Checklists

Proving (or Disproving) a “Contract of Hire” in Family-Law Income Disputes

Attacking “Employment” as a Label (When the Other Side Wants Imputation Avoided)

Building the Appellate Record (Temporary Orders, Enforcement, and Support Findings)

Citation

Antonio Munoz Aserradero, LLC v. Thomas, No. 12-25-00047-CV (Tex. App.—Tyler Mar. 11, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in divorce or custody litigation by reframing “employment” from a label into a contract-formation question: if the opposing party relies on payroll stubs, benefit payments, or third-party documentation to insist income is established (or to deny it exists), you can argue—using the opinion’s logic—that such artifacts are not dispositive when the underlying arrangement was contingent, informal, or lacking mutual assent on compensation. In practice, that becomes a targeted cross-examination theme (“What exactly was promised, when, and by whom?”), a discovery roadmap (banking proof of actual receipt of pay), and an appellate posture (employment/income findings unsupported when the record shows a fact issue on whether there was an enforceable agreement for remuneration at the critical time).

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