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Fourth Court of Appeals Dismisses Child Support Modification Appeal for Lack of Final Order

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

In re M.A.R., 04-26-00185-CV, April 15, 2026.

On appeal from 293rd Judicial District Court, Maverick County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourth Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal because there was no final, appealable order to review. The trial court’s dismissal for want of prosecution had already been vacated, and the case had been reset for a trial de novo, leaving nothing final on which appellate jurisdiction could attach.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a useful jurisdictional reminder for Texas family law litigators handling post-divorce modification, enforcement, SAPCR, and child-support proceedings. In family law, lawyers often confront a stream of interlocutory rulings, temporary orders, dismissals, reinstatements, de novo settings, and post-associate-judge activity; this case underscores that an appeal filed before a final signed order exists will be dismissed, even where the underlying dispute involves child support. The lesson extends beyond support modifications to divorce, custody, and property litigation: before perfecting appeal, confirm that the operative order is both signed and final, and that it has not been vacated or superseded by a later order.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The appellant attempted to appeal from what the opinion identifies as a trial court order dismissing his motion to modify child support for want of prosecution. After the notice of appeal was filed, the clerk’s record showed a critical procedural development: the trial court had vacated the dismissal order and granted the appellant a trial de novo, setting the matter for April 9, 2026.

That procedural posture was dispositive. Once the dismissal order was vacated, the case was no longer concluded in the trial court. Instead, the modification proceeding remained live and pending for further adjudication. Recognizing the apparent absence of a final order, the Fourth Court issued a show-cause order directing the appellant to explain why the appeal should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction and, if necessary, to ensure that a supplemental clerk’s record containing a signed final order was filed.

The appellant did not respond to the show-cause order, and no supplemental clerk’s record was filed. On that record, the court had before it only a vacated dismissal and a setting for trial de novo, not a final judgment disposing of the case.

Issues Decided

  • Whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction over an appeal from an order dismissing a child-support modification proceeding for want of prosecution when the trial court had already vacated that dismissal order.
  • Whether, in the absence of a signed final order or statutory authorization for interlocutory review, the appeal could proceed.
  • Whether dismissal was appropriate when the appellant failed to respond to the appellate court’s show-cause order or supplement the record to establish jurisdiction.

Rules Applied

Texas appellate jurisdiction is generally limited to final judgments unless a statute expressly authorizes interlocutory review. The court relied on the familiar finality principles stated in:

  • McFadin v. Broadway Coffeehouse, LLC, 539 S.W.3d 278, 283 (Tex. 2018), for the rule that Texas appellate courts have jurisdiction only over final judgments unless specifically authorized by statute.
  • Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W.3d 191, 195 (Tex. 2001), for the bedrock final-judgment framework.

The court also cited Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3(a) and (c), which permit dismissal where an appellant fails to comply with a court order or where the court lacks jurisdiction.

The opinion also reflects a practical appellate rule that every family law litigator should internalize: the burden rests on the appellant to establish appellate jurisdiction, including ensuring that the record contains a signed, appealable order.

Application

The court’s analysis was straightforward and procedural. The appellant sought review of a dismissal for want of prosecution, but the clerk’s record established that the dismissal order was no longer operative because the trial court had vacated it. Once vacated, that order ceased to function as a final adjudication. The trial court’s additional act of granting a trial de novo and setting the case for a future hearing confirmed that the controversy remained pending below.

That left the court of appeals without a final judgment to review. The court gave the appellant an opportunity to cure the jurisdictional problem by responding to the show-cause order and by filing, or causing to be filed, a supplemental clerk’s record containing a signed final order if one existed. That step is significant: the court did not dismiss reflexively, but instead afforded the appellant a chance to demonstrate jurisdiction. When the appellant did neither, the jurisdictional defect remained unrebutted.

In that posture, dismissal was inevitable. The appellate court cannot decide the merits of a child-support modification dispute, or even procedural complaints arising from its dismissal, unless appellate jurisdiction is properly invoked. Because the only order identified by the appellant had been vacated and no final signed order appeared in the record, the appeal could not proceed.

Holding

The Fourth Court held that it lacked jurisdiction over the appeal because there was no final, appealable judgment in the record. The trial court had vacated the dismissal order that the appellant attempted to challenge and had set the matter for trial de novo, meaning the case remained pending in the trial court.

The court further held that dismissal was proper under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 42.3 after the appellant failed to respond to the court’s show-cause order and failed to ensure that a supplemental clerk’s record containing a signed final order was filed. In short, the appellant did not carry the burden to establish appellate jurisdiction.

Practical Application

For family law practitioners, this case is less about child support doctrine than about appellate timing and record control. In modification practice, especially in courts using associate judges or de novo procedures, counsel must verify which order is presently operative before filing a notice of appeal. A DWOP, a post-hearing ruling, or even a signed order that appears dispositive may not be appealable if it has been vacated, superseded, or followed by a de novo setting.

This matters in several recurring family-law settings:

  • In child support modification cases, a dismissal for want of prosecution may feel final, but if the court reinstates the case or grants de novo review, appellate jurisdiction disappears until a true final order is signed.
  • In SAPCR and custody litigation, lawyers often confront mixed orders disposing of some issues while leaving others pending. Unless a statute permits interlocutory review, appeal must wait for final disposition.
  • In divorce cases, partial rulings on conservatorship, property characterization, reimbursement, enforcement, or attorney’s fees may not be final if any claim remains unresolved.
  • In associate-judge practice, requests for de novo hearing can alter finality in ways that make an otherwise appeal-looking order nonfinal.
  • In post-judgment enforcement and modification proceedings, counsel should always check for vacatur orders, reinstatement orders, nunc pro tunc activity, and subsequent signed settings or de novo orders before perfecting appeal.

Strategically, this opinion reinforces three habits. First, examine the clerk’s record before assuming appealability. Second, if the court of appeals raises jurisdiction sua sponte, treat the show-cause order as an emergency. Third, if there is a final order somewhere in the trial court file, it is appellant’s job to get it into the appellate record promptly. Silence is usually fatal.

Checklists

Confirm Finality Before Filing Notice of Appeal

  • Review the entire docket sheet, not just the order your client wants to challenge.
  • Confirm that the order is signed.
  • Confirm that the order has not been vacated, withdrawn, or superseded.
  • Confirm that all claims and parties in the proceeding have been disposed of, unless a statute authorizes interlocutory appeal.
  • In family cases, determine whether any de novo hearing has been granted after an associate judge’s ruling.
  • Verify whether any post-dismissal reinstatement or trial setting keeps the case alive in the trial court.

Audit the Record for Jurisdictional Defects

  • Obtain and review the clerk’s record as soon as it is filed.
  • Compare the notice of appeal to the actual signed orders in the record.
  • Check for later orders that affect finality, including vacatur orders and de novo settings.
  • If there is a final order missing from the appellate record, request a supplemental clerk’s record immediately.
  • Do not assume the court of appeals will search for jurisdictional support on your behalf.

Respond to a Show-Cause Order Effectively

  • Calendar the response deadline the day the order issues.
  • File a written response addressing finality and appellate jurisdiction directly.
  • Attach or arrange filing of a supplemental clerk’s record with the signed final order, if one exists.
  • If no final order exists, consider dismissal or other procedural options rather than ignoring the order.
  • Explain any unusual family-law procedural posture, including associate-judge referral, de novo request, severance, or reinstatement.

Avoid Premature Appeals in Family Law Cases

  • In modification cases, confirm whether the ruling is truly dispositive or merely interim.
  • In divorce cases, verify that property division, conservatorship, support, and fee issues are all resolved.
  • In enforcement matters, determine whether the order is final as to all requested relief.
  • In SAPCR cases, distinguish temporary orders from final orders.
  • If uncertainty exists, analyze whether mandamus—not direct appeal—is the proper vehicle.

Preserve Appellate Options After a DWOP or Vacatur

  • If the case is dismissed for want of prosecution, assess whether reinstatement, motion to retain, or de novo review is available and timely.
  • If the dismissal is vacated, reassess whether any basis for immediate appeal remains.
  • Update the client promptly about the effect of vacatur on appellate deadlines and strategy.
  • Track the new trial or de novo setting and preserve error in the ongoing proceedings.
  • Wait for a final signed order after the de novo or reinstated proceeding before perfecting appeal, absent statutory authority to proceed earlier.

Citation

In re M.A.R., No. 04-26-00185-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—San Antonio Apr. 15, 2026, no pet.) (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.