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Dallas Court Reverses Default SAPCR for Insufficient Child Support Proof and Conservatorship Evidence

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

In the Interest of I.R.R., a Child, 05-24-01512-CV, March 25, 2026.

On appeal from 255th Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas

Synopsis

In this restricted appeal from a default SAPCR, the Dallas Court of Appeals held service strictly complied with the Rules of Civil Procedure, so the default order was not void for lack of personal jurisdiction. But the court reversed because the record contained legally insufficient proof of Father’s net resources supporting current and retroactive child support, and factually insufficient evidence to overcome the Family Code presumption favoring joint managing conservatorship.

Relevance to Family Law

Default SAPCRs are not “evidence-light” proceedings: even when service is airtight, the record must still contain admissible, legally sufficient proof to support guideline child support (including net resources) and to justify conservatorship findings that depart from the joint-managing presumption. For Texas family law litigators—whether in divorce with children, modification suits, or Title IV-D/OAG dockets—this case is a reminder that appellate vulnerability in default settings usually turns less on procedural posture and more on whether the prove-up actually built a record that can survive sufficiency review.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The OAG, on Mother’s behalf, filed a SAPCR seeking “appropriate conservatorship” and current and retroactive child, medical, and dental support. Father was personally served; a return was filed. Father did not answer and did not appear at the default hearing. Mother testified at the prove-up. The trial court signed a default SAPCR order appointing Mother as managing conservator (Father possessory conservator) and ordering Father to pay (1) current child support of $1,319/month (plus cash medical and dental support) beginning July 1, 2024, and (2) retroactive child support from June 6, 2020 through June 25, 2024, reduced to a judgment of $63,312, payable in installments of $475/month.

Father pursued a restricted appeal. He attacked (a) service defects that would render the judgment void and (b) the sufficiency of the evidence supporting both the child-support awards and the conservatorship allocation—especially the decision to award Mother sole managing conservatorship rather than a joint managing arrangement.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The service attack failed because the return—though imperfectly drafted—still did what Rule 107 requires: it identified Father by name and provided a physical description of the person served, and it recited personal delivery. The “Other Features” narrative truncation did not create a discrepancy that undermined identification or compliance. The court also rejected the argument that service was defective because the petition/exhibits recited in the return were not physically attached to the return as filed; Rule 107 requires a description of what was served, not that each served document be appended to the return in the clerk’s file.

On the merits, however, the default prove-up record did not supply legally sufficient evidence of Father’s net resources to support the monthly child-support figure used for current support and, by extension, the retroactive support judgment. In practice, that means the appellate court could not confirm the guideline foundation—gross income inputs, allowable deductions, and resulting net resources—necessary to sustain the award as a matter of law.

The conservatorship allocation failed on a different axis: not legal sufficiency, but factual sufficiency against the statutory presumption. The record did not contain enough substantive best-interest evidence to justify bypassing joint managing conservatorship in favor of Mother as the managing conservator with Father as possessory conservator. In other words, even in a default setting, “best interest” is not self-proving; when the order deviates from the presumption, the record must explain why.

Holding

The court held the face of the record demonstrated strict compliance with service rules, overruling Father’s service challenge and confirming the default SAPCR order was not void for lack of personal jurisdiction.

The court held the evidence was legally insufficient to establish Father’s net resources, requiring reversal of the current and retroactive child-support determinations.

The court further held the evidence was factually insufficient to rebut the Family Code presumption favoring joint managing conservatorship, requiring reversal of the conservatorship determination. The court reversed the default SAPCR order and remanded for a new trial.

Practical Application

For litigators, this opinion is most useful as a roadmap for what must be built into a default SAPCR record if you want the judgment to withstand a restricted appeal.

Checklists

Default SAPCR Service Record (Restricted-Appeal Proofing)

Child Support Prove-Up: Net Resources Foundation

Retroactive Child Support: Judgment-Proofing

Conservatorship: Rebutting the Joint-Managing Presumption

Citation

In the Interest of I.R.R., a Child, No. 05-24-01512-CV (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 25, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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