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Third Court Says Trial Court May Modify Existing Temporary Orders Pending Divorce Appeal Beyond Original Terms

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

Paul O’Brien v. Tiffanie O’Brien, 03-25-00334-CV, April 30, 2026.

On appeal from 53rd District Court of Travis County

Synopsis

The Third Court of Appeals held that Family Code section 109.001 does not freeze a trial court’s temporary-order authority at whatever specific relief was included in the original order signed within the 60-day window after notice of appeal. Once a valid temporary order pending appeal exists, the trial court retains jurisdiction under section 109.001(b-3) and (b-4) to modify that order after notice and hearing, so long as there has been a material and substantial change in circumstances and the modification is equitable and necessary for the child’s safety and welfare. The court also made clear that Morris v. Veilleux does not bar this result, because Morris involved an untimely attempt to obtain a new temporary order after no such order had been granted in the first place.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a consequential procedural opinion for Texas divorce appeals, especially in high-conflict cases involving child support, interim fee shifting, enforcement leverage, possession-related restraints, and protection of the marital estate while appellate proceedings remain active. For family-law litigators, the opinion confirms that if the trial court timely enters temporary orders pending appeal, later modification is not confined to the exact topics or line items memorialized in the original order; the real statutory battleground becomes proof of materially and substantially changed circumstances and a showing that the requested modification is equitable and necessary for the child’s safety and welfare. That matters in divorce litigation because appellate timelines often outlast the utility of the original temporary framework, and parties frequently need additional child-related relief after mediation fails, arrearages accrue, or post-judgment conflict escalates.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

After the final divorce decree, an appeal was taken. During the appeal, the trial court signed a temporary order pending appeal on July 11, 2025, within the statutory period contemplated by Family Code section 109.001. That order required mediation and also directed Paul O’Brien to become current on child support and pay arrearages, transfer the children’s 529 plans to Tiffanie O’Brien, address other decree-related sums claimed to be owed, and pay $7,500 in attorney’s fees. Importantly, the order did not purport to finally resolve every request for temporary relief. Instead, it expressly stated that all other requested relief was “recessed and reserved without prejudice” until after mediation or further order.

Mediation failed. Tiffanie then filed an amended motion to modify temporary orders pending appeal. She sought additional relief, including current child support for the remaining minor child, temporary support, additional attorney’s fees tied to related litigation and enforcement efforts, appellate attorney’s fees, security if Paul sought suspension of the property division, and injunctive relief against disturbing the peace of a child or party. At the hearing, she grounded the request in changed circumstances occurring after the initial order, including additional support arrearages and Paul’s alleged noncompliance with the July temporary order.

Paul opposed the requested relief on a jurisdictional theory. His position was that the trial court’s authority to issue temporary orders expired 60 days after the notice of appeal and that any relief not actually included in the July order could not later be added through a “modification.” He relied primarily on Morris v. Veilleux. The trial court appeared to accept that concern and viewed the new requests as running into a jurisdictional defect. The Third Court disagreed and abated the appeal so the trial court could conduct further proceedings on the requested modification.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court focused on Texas Family Code section 109.001, particularly these provisions:

The court also analyzed Morris v. Veilleux, No. 03-22-00178-CV, 2023 WL 8191911 (Tex. App.—Austin Nov. 28, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.). In Morris, the trial court had denied a request for temporary orders pending appeal, then purported to award appellate attorney’s fees much later, after the appeal had already been resolved. The Third Court distinguished Morris as a case about the absence of a timely temporary order and a later untimely attempt to create one, not a case about modification of an existing temporary order under section 109.001(b-4).

The opinion also cited In re G.D.P., No. 14-21-00593-CV, 2023 WL 4883235 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Aug. 1, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.), signaling support for a practical reading of a trial court’s continuing authority where the original temporary-order structure anticipates later developments during the appeal.

Application

The Third Court read the statute in sequence. Section 109.001(b-2) governs the trial court’s authority to enter an initial temporary order pending appeal, and that authority is time-limited. But once such an order exists, sections 109.001(b-3) and (b-4) separately preserve the court’s power to enforce and modify it. The court emphasized that the modification language contains no textual limitation tying future relief to the same subject matter or categories listed in the original order. In other words, the statute does not say that the trial court may modify only the amount of an already-awarded item, or only revisit provisions that were expressly granted before. It says the court may modify a previous temporary order if the statutory predicates are satisfied.

That statutory distinction drove the court’s treatment of Paul’s jurisdictional argument. His reading effectively collapsed initial-order jurisdiction and modification jurisdiction into the same 60-day constraint. The court rejected that approach because it ignored subsection (b-3)’s continuing-jurisdiction language and subsection (b-4)’s express modification mechanism. The decisive question was not whether the newly requested relief had appeared in the four corners of the July order, but whether the case involved a prior valid temporary order that could now be modified upon the required showing.

The procedural posture mattered. The July 2025 order was a valid temporary order pending appeal. It also expressly recessed and reserved other requested relief without prejudice until after mediation or further order. When mediation failed and the appeal resumed, Tiffanie sought additional relief based on developments occurring after the original order, including alleged nonpayment and new arrearages. The court viewed that setting as comfortably within the statutory framework for modification, not as an impermissible attempt to obtain an untimely original order.

The court then addressed Morris directly. In Morris, there had been no timely temporary order granting the requested appellate-fee relief. The later fee award came after the appeal was over, which meant the statutory purpose of protecting the child during the pendency of appeal could no longer be served. Here, by contrast, the appeal remained pending, a temporary order had already been rendered, and the party was asking to modify that order while the appellate proceeding was still alive. For that reason, Morris did not control.

Holding

The court held that Family Code section 109.001(b-3) and (b-4) permit a trial court to modify an existing temporary order pending appeal even after the 60-day deadline for entering the initial temporary order has passed. The statute’s continuing-jurisdiction language allows modification of a previously rendered temporary order unless the appellate court has superseded it.

The court further held that the statute does not limit modification to the precise relief categories or subject matter included in the original temporary order. The only statutory constraints identified by the court are procedural and substantive: there must be notice and hearing, a material and substantial change in circumstances since the prior order, and a determination that the requested modification is equitable and necessary for the safety and welfare of the child.

Finally, the court held that Morris v. Veilleux does not bar this form of modification. Morris addressed an untimely effort to obtain a temporary order after the trial court had denied temporary relief and after the appeal had already concluded. It did not hold that once an initial temporary order is entered, later modifications are confined to items expressly awarded in that original order.

Practical Application

For appellate-minded family lawyers, the immediate lesson is to stop treating section 109.001(b-2) as the end of the conversation. It is the deadline for the initial temporary order, not necessarily for meaningful post-judgment child-related relief during appeal. If you have a timely temporary order in place, you may still have room to seek additional relief later through modification, provided you build a record satisfying subsection (b-4).

That has concrete consequences in several recurring scenarios. In a divorce appeal with ongoing child-support nonpayment, a party may be able to seek modified temporary orders addressing newly accrued arrearages or child-related financial needs that worsened after the original order. In custody-heavy appeals, if conflict escalates after mediation fails or after a parent begins conduct affecting the child’s emotional stability, litigants should evaluate whether temporary injunctive or peace-preservation provisions can be pursued through modification. In mixed child/property appeals, attorneys should separate what can properly be framed as necessary for the child’s safety and welfare from what is merely decree enforcement or ordinary property protection, because the child-welfare nexus remains central to section 109.001.

The opinion also has drafting implications. Lawyers requesting initial temporary orders pending appeal should consider broad, properly grounded requests and should avoid presenting the first order as a final and exhaustive package if mediation or further factual development is expected. The reservation language in the July order here was not the sole basis for the Third Court’s reasoning, but it reinforced the practical reality that unresolved temporary matters might need to be revisited after mediation. Conversely, counsel resisting modification should focus less on a categorical “you missed the 60 days” objection and more on attacking the movant’s proof: no material and substantial change, no evidence that the modification is equitable, and no showing that the requested relief is necessary for the child’s safety and welfare.

A final strategic point: do not overread this case as authorizing unlimited post-judgment relief. The opinion does not erase the statute’s limits, and it does not transform section 109.001 into a general-purpose vehicle for every enforcement dispute during appeal. The prudent movant will tie each requested modification tightly to changed circumstances arising after the original order and will articulate why the child-welfare standard is actually met.

Checklists

Preserve Modification Jurisdiction Early

Build the Section 109.001(b-4) Record

Frame Relief to Fit the Statute

Avoid the Non-Prevailing Party’s Mistake

Oppose Modification Effectively

Draft Better Temporary Orders Pending Appeal

Citation

Paul O’Brien v. Tiffanie O’Brien, No. 03-25-00334-CV, slip op. (Tex. App.—Austin Apr. 30, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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