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Third Court Dismisses Mandamus Over Austin County QDRO for Lack of Jurisdiction

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

In re Anabel Lopez Perez, 03-26-00393-CV, April 30, 2026.

On appeal from Austin County Court at Law

Synopsis

The Third Court of Appeals dismissed a mandamus petition seeking to compel an Austin County Court at Law judge to execute or clarify a QDRO, holding that Austin County is outside the Third Court’s appellate district and therefore outside its ordinary mandamus reach under Texas Government Code section 22.221. The relator also failed to show that mandamus relief was necessary to protect or enforce the Third Court’s appellate jurisdiction.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters to Texas family law litigators because post-divorce enforcement and clarification disputes frequently center on QDROs, decree implementation, retirement division language, and trial-court inaction. The case is a clean reminder that even where the underlying dispute is unquestionably family-law in nature, extraordinary relief still depends on the correct appellate forum. If you are pursuing mandamus over a divorce-related property issue—especially a QDRO, decree clarification, or enforcement ruling—you must confirm that the respondent judge sits within the territorial jurisdiction of the court of appeals you are asking to act. Filing in the wrong court does not just weaken the petition; it ends the proceeding.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The relator, proceeding pro se, filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the Third Court of Appeals complaining that the presiding judge of the Austin County Court at Law had failed to execute and clarify a QDRO associated with her 2024 divorce. The opinion does not elaborate on the underlying retirement-division dispute, the language of the decree, or whether a prior QDRO had already been signed and later challenged as defective, incomplete, or ambiguous. What mattered to the court’s analysis was far more basic: the respondent judicial officer was an Austin County judge, and the petition was filed in the Third Court of Appeals.

That territorial fact was dispositive. The Third Court looked to the statutory limits on its mandamus authority and noted that Austin County is not one of the counties assigned to the Third Court of Appeals District under the Government Code. The court also observed that the relator did not establish any basis for the court to exercise extraordinary writ power as necessary to enforce its own appellate jurisdiction.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court applied the territorial and jurisdictional limits set out in the Texas Government Code.

The opinion is short and statutory. It does not rely on an extended line of mandamus precedent because the jurisdictional defect was facial and conclusive.

Application

The court’s application was straightforward. The relator asked the Third Court to direct an Austin County trial judge to act on a QDRO matter arising from a divorce case. But the court began, and ended, with the threshold question of power. Section 22.221 does not grant a court of appeals statewide mandamus authority over all Texas trial judges. Rather, the authority is district-bound unless the writ is necessary to protect the court’s appellate jurisdiction.

Because the respondent was a judge in Austin County, the Third Court examined whether Austin County falls within its appellate district under section 22.201(d). It does not. That meant the court lacked ordinary statutory mandamus authority over that judge. The court then turned to the only possible alternative basis for jurisdiction: whether extraordinary relief was needed to enforce the Third Court’s own appellate jurisdiction. On the record before it, the relator made no such showing. There was no indication of a pending appeal within the Third Court requiring protection, no threat to the court’s ability to decide a case already within its jurisdiction, and no identified nexus between the requested writ and the preservation of appellate authority. With both routes closed, dismissal for want of jurisdiction followed.

Holding

The court held that it lacked mandamus jurisdiction to issue relief against the presiding judge of the Austin County Court at Law because Austin County lies outside the Third Court of Appeals District. As a result, the petition could not proceed under the court’s ordinary mandamus authority against trial judges within its district.

The court further held that the relator did not demonstrate that issuance of a writ was necessary to enforce the Third Court’s appellate jurisdiction. Without that independent basis for writ power, the court dismissed the petition for want of jurisdiction rather than reaching the merits of the QDRO complaint.

Practical Application

For family law litigators, this case is less about QDRO doctrine than about forum discipline in extraordinary-writ practice. QDRO disputes often arise after the decree is final, when a plan administrator rejects draft language, one side insists the proposed order impermissibly modifies the decree, or the trial court delays action on competing forms. In those situations, counsel may quite reasonably think in mandamus terms. But this opinion underscores that before drafting the merits section, you need to validate the appellate court’s territorial authority over the respondent judge.

In practice, that means aligning the mandamus filing with the court of appeals district that includes the county of the trial court that signed—or refused to sign—the QDRO, clarification order, or enforcement ruling. It also means recognizing that “family law urgency” does not create jurisdiction where the statute withholds it. If a retirement division problem emerges from a county outside your home appellate district, the proper forum may be unfamiliar, but it is still the only viable one.

This case also has implications for appellate strategy in broader property-division litigation. The same jurisdictional problem can arise in post-divorce motions to clarify, turnover-related disputes tied to property division, enforcement proceedings, or orders implementing the decree. Before filing any original proceeding, counsel should confirm:

  1. the identity and office of the respondent,
  2. the county in which the trial court sits,
  3. the court of appeals district assigned to that county, and
  4. whether any argument about protecting appellate jurisdiction is real and supportable, rather than formulaic.

Where a mandamus petition concerns a refusal to sign or clarify a QDRO, counsel should also consider whether the complaint is truly about inaction, an abuse of discretion, or a substantive disagreement over whether the proposed order tracks the decree. Jurisdiction is only the first gate, but it is absolute. If you miss it, the court will never reach the family-law substance.

Checklists

Pre-Filing Mandamus Jurisdiction Check

QDRO Mandamus Evaluation Checklist

Post-Divorce Property Enforcement Strategy Checklist

Avoiding the Relator’s Problem

Citation

In re Anabel Lopez Perez, No. 03-26-00393-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Austin Apr. 30, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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