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Fourteenth Court Denies Habeas Relief in Galveston County Family Contempt Proceeding

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

In re Steven Joseph Slivinski, 14-26-00414-CV, April 22, 2026.

On appeal from County Court at Law No. 2, Galveston County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals denied habeas relief in a Galveston County family-law contempt proceeding because the relator did not show that his restraint was unlawful, that he was denied due process, or that the underlying order was void. The court also denied interim relief, underscoring that habeas relief in civil contempt settings remains narrow and requires a concrete showing of a due-process defect or jurisdictional invalidity.

Relevance to Family Law

This decision matters directly to Texas family-law litigators because habeas practice most often arises in enforcement and contempt proceedings tied to divorce decrees, child-support orders, possession schedules, turnover directives, and property-division obligations. The opinion is a reminder that in post-decree and SAPCR enforcement work, appellate courts will not use habeas as a vehicle to broadly reexamine the merits of the contempt finding; instead, the relator must tightly frame the challenge around unlawful restraint, a genuine due-process deprivation, or a void order. For practitioners handling divorce, custody, and property-enforcement disputes, that means the appellate record, the wording of the underlying order, service and notice, and preservation of liberty-based complaints remain critical from the outset.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The memorandum opinion is brief, but the procedural posture is clear. Steven Joseph Slivinski, as relator, filed an original proceeding in the Fourteenth Court of Appeals seeking a writ of habeas corpus arising out of a restraint on liberty imposed through a trial-court order in a civil matter from County Court at Law No. 2 in Galveston County. The matter stemmed from trial-court process or commitment associated with an alleged violation of a prior court order, judgment, or decree in a family-law case.

The relator also sought interim relief while the habeas petition was pending. The court identified the governing framework for civil habeas jurisdiction under Texas Government Code section 22.221(d), noted the limited purpose of habeas review in this context, and then concluded that the relator had not made the required showing. The opinion does not recount the underlying enforcement facts in detail, but its reasoning indicates that whatever challenge was presented, the relator failed to establish either a due-process defect sufficient to invalidate the restraint or a jurisdictional or facial defect rendering the judgment void.

Issues Decided

The court decided the following issues:

  • Whether the relator established entitlement to habeas corpus relief from restraint arising out of a trial court order in a civil/family matter.
  • Whether the relator showed that he was deprived of liberty without due process of law.
  • Whether the relator showed that the judgment or order underlying the restraint was void.
  • Whether interim relief should issue pending the court’s consideration of the habeas petition.

Rules Applied

The court relied on the familiar habeas framework applicable to civil contempt and related restraint proceedings:

  • Texas Government Code § 22.221(d) authorizes a court of appeals in civil cases to issue a writ of habeas corpus when a person is restrained in liberty by virtue of a trial court order, process, or commitment arising from violation of a previous order, judgment, or decree.
  • Ex parte Gordon, 584 S.W.2d 686, 688 (Tex. 1979) (orig. proceeding) states that the purpose of habeas corpus is not to determine guilt or innocence, but to determine whether the person is unlawfully restrained.
  • In re Mancha, 440 S.W.3d 158, 162 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, orig. proceeding) recognizes that a relator is entitled to habeas relief upon showing either that liberty was denied without due process or that the restraining judgment is void.

The opinion reflects the standard distinction Texas family-law appellate lawyers confront repeatedly: habeas relief is available for unlawful restraint, not simply for arguable error. A void order, a lack of due process, or some other fundamental defect is required; mere disagreement with the contempt ruling will not suffice.

Application

The court’s application was concise but telling. It began by situating the petition within its limited original habeas jurisdiction and by restating that habeas review is aimed at the legality of the restraint itself. That framing matters because family-law litigants often attempt to use habeas petitions to revisit substantive disputes embedded in enforcement proceedings. The court made clear that the proper inquiry is narrower.

Against that standard, the relator’s showing fell short. The court expressly held that he had not demonstrated entitlement to habeas relief. In practical terms, that means the petition did not establish one of the two principal pathways to relief: a deprivation of liberty without due process, or a void judgment ordering the restraint. The opinion’s brevity suggests the deficiencies were straightforward from the appellate court’s perspective. Either the relator did not identify a cognizable due-process defect, did not substantiate it with an adequate record, did not show that any defect rendered the restraint unlawful, or failed to demonstrate that the underlying order was void on jurisdictional or facial grounds.

The denial of interim relief follows naturally from that conclusion. If the petition itself does not establish a probable entitlement to habeas relief, there is no basis for extraordinary temporary intervention by the appellate court.

Holding

The Fourteenth Court held that the relator was not entitled to habeas corpus relief. The court concluded that he failed to show that his restraint was unlawful within the meaning of Texas civil habeas jurisprudence.

The court further held that the relator did not establish that he had been deprived of liberty without due process of law. Because due process is one of the recognized bases for habeas relief in civil contempt and analogous family-law restraint settings, that failure was independently fatal to the petition.

The court also held that the relator did not show the underlying judgment or order was void. Absent a void order or a due-process violation, habeas relief was unavailable.

Finally, the court denied the relator’s motion for interim relief, consistent with its determination that the petition lacked merit.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, the strategic lesson is straightforward: if you are pursuing appellate habeas relief from a contempt commitment or comparable liberty restraint, you must build the petition around the narrow grounds Texas courts actually recognize. In enforcement cases involving child support, possession and access, injunction violations, turnover provisions, or property-division commands, the appellate court will not function as a second merits tribunal. It will ask whether the client is unlawfully restrained because the order is void or because the process was constitutionally defective.

That means trial-level precision remains the best appellate strategy. The underlying order must be specific enough to support enforcement. The contempt motion must track the order and identify the alleged violations with precision. Notice, hearing settings, and service need to be beyond challenge. If you represent the respondent, your best habeas issues are usually facial invalidity of the order, lack of jurisdiction, inadequate notice, ambiguity in the commanded act, or another due-process defect tied directly to the restraint. If you represent the movant, this case is a reminder that a clean record and a carefully drafted enforcement order dramatically reduce the risk of emergency appellate intervention.

The opinion also has value in counseling clients. Parties frequently assume that an appellate habeas filing itself creates leverage or pause. It does not. Without a developed record demonstrating unlawful restraint, the petition may be summarily denied, and any request for interim relief may go with it. In high-conflict divorce or custody enforcement matters, practitioners should therefore treat habeas as a targeted extraordinary remedy, not a substitute for trial-court preservation and drafting discipline.

Checklists

Evaluating a Potential Habeas Petition

  • Confirm that the client is actually restrained in liberty or subject to an enforceable commitment/order sufficient to invoke habeas jurisdiction.
  • Identify the precise trial-court order, process, or commitment causing the restraint.
  • Determine whether the challenge is truly habeas-appropriate rather than an ordinary complaint about legal or factual error.
  • Frame the petition around one of the recognized grounds:
  • deprivation of liberty without due process; or
  • a void underlying judgment or commitment order.
  • Obtain all operative documents, including the prior decree or order allegedly violated, the enforcement motion, the contempt order, commitment papers, docket entries, and reporter’s record.

Building the Due-Process Record

  • Verify that the enforcement or contempt motion gave specific notice of each alleged violation.
  • Confirm that the respondent received proper notice of the hearing.
  • Review whether the underlying order was sufficiently clear, definite, and unambiguous to support contempt.
  • Examine whether the contempt order identifies the violations with adequate specificity.
  • Check whether the respondent had the opportunity to be heard and present a defense.
  • Preserve objections on notice, ambiguity, service, and procedural irregularities at the trial-court level whenever possible.

Testing Whether the Underlying Order Is Void

  • Confirm the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction.
  • Confirm the trial court had personal jurisdiction over the respondent.
  • Review whether the challenged order exceeds the trial court’s authority under the Family Code or governing decree.
  • Examine the face of the order for jurisdictional defects or fatal uncertainty.
  • Distinguish between a merely erroneous order and a void one; only the latter supports habeas relief on that ground.

Defending an Enforcement Order Against Habeas Attack

  • Draft underlying divorce, SAPCR, support, and property-division orders with enforcement in mind.
  • Use precise, command-based language that identifies who must do what, when, and how.
  • In enforcement pleadings, match each alleged violation to the exact language of the underlying order.
  • Create a reporter’s record at the enforcement hearing.
  • Ensure the contempt and commitment orders are internally consistent and specific.
  • Anticipate appellate scrutiny of notice, specificity, and the scope of the relief granted.

Handling Requests for Interim Relief

  • Do not assume interim relief will be granted merely because a habeas petition has been filed.
  • Tie any request for interim relief to the same core showing that supports the petition itself.
  • Provide the appellate court with a complete, organized, and immediately usable record.
  • Explain concretely why the restraint is unlawful now, not just why the trial court may have erred.
  • Be prepared for summary denial if the petition does not clearly establish a recognized basis for habeas relief.

Citation

In re Steven Joseph Slivinski, No. 14-26-00414-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 22, 2026, orig. proceeding) (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.