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CROSSOVER: Restricted Appeal Win: Default Judgment Fails When Secretary of State Forwards Service to Wrong Address

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

Kian Motors, Inc. v. VBI Group, Inc., 05-25-01094-CV, May 26, 2026.

On appeal from County Court at Law No. 5, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

A no-answer default judgment will not survive restricted appeal when the record shows the Texas Secretary of State forwarded process to the wrong address under Business Organizations Code §§ 5.251 and 5.253. The Dallas Court of Appeals held that strict compliance failed on the face of the record, the Whitney certificate did not cure the defect, and the default judgment had to be reversed and remanded.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a commercial case, but the holding translates directly into Texas family litigation wherever default practice matters—divorce, SAPCR, modification, enforcement, turnover, and post-judgment proceedings. If a petitioner obtains substitute or statutory service and the appellate record affirmatively shows that process was routed to the wrong address, strict compliance fails, personal jurisdiction is absent, and the default is vulnerable on restricted appeal. For family lawyers, that means two things: first, a default can be lost years of work and leverage if service mechanics are not airtight; second, when stepping into a case after a default, the face of the record should be audited immediately for address mismatches, defective returns, and any disconnect between the address authorized by rule or statute and the address actually used.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

VBI sued Kian Motors on sworn account and for breach of contract after a dispute under a consignment agreement. VBI first attempted personal service on Kian’s registered agent at a Denton address, but the process server reported the business had moved to Plano. VBI then amended its pleading to reflect Kian’s Plano address—1212 Commerce Drive—and pursued service through the Texas Secretary of State under Business Organizations Code § 5.251.

That is where the record became fatal to the default. Although VBI’s own filings consistently identified Kian’s address as 1212 Commerce Drive, the Secretary of State’s Whitney certificate showed that process was actually forwarded to 1213 Commerce Drive. The mailing was returned as undeliverable. Kian did not answer, and the trial court signed a no-answer default judgment. Later collection activity apparently gave Kian its first actual notice of the suit, and Kian filed a restricted appeal.

The appellate issue was narrow but dispositive: whether service strictly complied with the statutory scheme when the Secretary of State forwarded citation to the wrong address, and whether that defect was apparent on the face of the record.

Issues Decided

  • Whether Kian satisfied the jurisdictional requirements for a restricted appeal.
  • Whether error was apparent on the face of the record because the Secretary of State forwarded citation and petition to an incorrect address.
  • Whether a Whitney certificate, standing alone, creates any presumption that service was valid.
  • Whether the no-answer default judgment could stand when the record affirmatively showed lack of strict compliance with the governing service statute.

Rules Applied

The court applied the familiar restricted-appeal framework from Alexander v. Lynda’s Boutique, 134 S.W.3d 845 (Tex. 2004), and Ex parte E.H., 602 S.W.3d 486 (Tex. 2020): the appellant must show timely notice of restricted appeal, party status, nonparticipation in the hearing resulting in judgment, no timely post-judgment attack, and error apparent on the face of the record.

On service, the court relied on the strict-compliance line of authority:

  • Primate Constr., Inc. v. Silver, 884 S.W.2d 151 (Tex. 1994): defective service is error apparent on the face of the record in restricted appeal.
  • Spanton v. Bellah, 612 S.W.3d 314 (Tex. 2020): strict compliance admits no exception; no presumptions favor valid service.
  • Uvalde Country Club v. Martin Linen Supply Co., 690 S.W.2d 884 (Tex. 1985): if the record does not affirmatively show strict compliance, attempted service is invalid and of no effect.
  • Shamrock Enters., LLC v. Top Notch Movers, LLC, 728 S.W.3d 693 (Tex. 2026): to survive restricted appeal, the face of the record must reflect that service was forwarded to the address required by statute.
  • Wachovia Bank of Del., N.A. v. Gilliam, 215 S.W.3d 848 (Tex. 2007): a Whitney certificate shows where the Secretary mailed process but does not create a presumption that the mailing satisfied the statute.
  • Whitney v. L & L Realty Corp., 500 S.W.2d 94 (Tex. 1973): a certificate from the Secretary of State is required to establish forwarding of process when service is made through the Secretary as statutory agent.

The controlling statutes were Business Organizations Code §§ 5.251, 5.252, and especially § 5.253(b), which requires the Secretary of State to send notice to the entity’s most recent address on file and by certified mail, return receipt requested.

Application

The Dallas Court treated the case as a straightforward strict-compliance problem. Kian cleared the jurisdictional gate for restricted appeal because it filed within six months of judgment, was a party, did not participate in the default proceeding, and did not timely file a post-judgment attack. That left the merits question: whether the face of the record showed proper service.

The answer was no, because the record itself supplied the defect. VBI invoked Secretary-of-State service using 1212 Commerce Drive as Kian’s address. But the Whitney certificate—the very document offered to establish forwarding—showed the Secretary sent the citation and petition to 1213 Commerce Drive. The court emphasized that a Whitney certificate is not self-proving as to validity. It proves only what the Secretary did, not that what the Secretary did satisfied the statute. Here, the certificate affirmatively disproved strict compliance because it showed forwarding to an address different from the one the statute required.

That made the case even stronger than Shamrock and Wachovia, where the record was defective because it was silent about whether the forwarding address matched the statutory address. In Kian Motors, the record was not merely incomplete; it affirmatively showed the wrong address was used. Under Texas default jurisprudence, that is game over. Once the face of the record demonstrates that statutory service went to the wrong address, there is no presumption to rescue the judgment, no harmless-error glide path, and no room to argue substantial compliance.

Holding

The court held that Kian established the requisites for restricted appeal and that the appellate court therefore had jurisdiction to reach the service issue. That portion of the opinion is important for family-law practitioners confronting old default orders: if your client truly did not participate and the notice of restricted appeal is timely, the vehicle remains available even when the underlying defect concerns service mechanics.

The court further held that strict compliance with Business Organizations Code § 5.253 was lacking because the Secretary of State forwarded process to 1213 Commerce Drive rather than 1212 Commerce Drive. Since service through the Secretary is only effective if the statutory steps are strictly followed, the mailing to the wrong address defeated service.

Finally, the court held that the Whitney certificate did not create a presumption of valid service. To the contrary, because the certificate itself reflected forwarding to the wrong address, it made the jurisdictional defect apparent on the face of the record. The no-answer default judgment was therefore reversed and the case remanded.

Practical Application

For family litigators, Kian Motors is a reminder that default practice is won or lost in the clerk’s record. In divorce cases, this matters when a spouse is served through substituted means after evasion, when service is attempted through a registered agent for an entity tied to marital property, or when post-decree enforcement seeks coercive relief based on a prior default. In SAPCR and modification practice, the risk is even more acute because litigants often rely on older addresses, stale pleadings, or parallel service efforts that create internal inconsistencies in the record.

A few practical consequences stand out:

  • If you are taking a default, treat every address in the record as a jurisdictional fact. The petition, motion, return, Secretary-of-State certificate, Rule 239a certificate, and any post-judgment notice should all align.
  • If service is accomplished through the Secretary of State, do not assume the Whitney certificate helps you unless you have verified that it reflects mailing to the correct statutory address.
  • If you are attacking a default in a divorce, SAPCR, modification, or enforcement matter, compare the address used in the operative pleading with the address shown on the return or statutory forwarding certificate. A one-digit discrepancy may be enough.
  • If your opponent argues actual notice from later collection activity, later enforcement efforts, or eventual awareness of the case, remember that actual notice does not cure defective service in a no-answer default setting.
  • If a family case involves an LLC, corporation, or professional entity—common in property characterization, reimbursement, fraud-on-the-community, or receivership disputes—this opinion gives a clean appellate roadmap for challenging a default entered after defective statutory service on the entity.

Checklists

Plaintiff’s Default-Judgment Service Audit

  • Confirm the defendant’s correct address from the governing statute or rule, not merely from your file notes.
  • Verify that the operative petition uses the same address later used for service.
  • If using Secretary-of-State service, confirm the statutory basis under Business Organizations Code § 5.251.
  • Review the Whitney certificate line by line before taking a default.
  • Match the address in the Whitney certificate against the entity’s most recent address on file.
  • Check for digit transpositions, suite-number errors, directional errors, ZIP-code errors, and city mismatches.
  • Confirm the mailing method complies with the statute.
  • Ensure the clerk’s record contains every document needed to prove strict compliance.
  • If the certificate shows the wrong address, do not proceed to default; reserve and rebuild the record.

Defense Counsel’s Restricted-Appeal Triage Checklist

  • Calculate the six-month deadline from the date the default judgment was signed.
  • Confirm the client was a party to the underlying suit.
  • Confirm the client did not participate in the hearing that resulted in judgment.
  • Confirm no timely post-judgment motion, request for findings, or ordinary notice of appeal was filed.
  • Obtain the clerk’s record immediately.
  • Compare the address in the petition, citation, return, Whitney certificate, Rule 239a certificate, and notice of judgment.
  • Look for affirmative contradictions in the record rather than relying only on omissions.
  • Flag any mismatch between the address required by statute and the address actually used.
  • Frame the issue as lack of strict compliance and error apparent on the face of the record.

Family Law Default Checklist for Divorce and SAPCR Cases

  • Confirm service is authorized for the type of respondent and claim asserted.
  • Make sure the respondent’s address is consistent across the petition, affidavit, order authorizing substitute service if any, and return.
  • In SAPCR or modification matters, verify the address against the most recent pleadings and prior orders.
  • For out-of-state or evasive respondents, document each service step carefully and keep the record internally consistent.
  • Before prove-up, review whether the clerk’s record affirmatively establishes personal jurisdiction.
  • Do not assume actual notice, social-media awareness, or later communication cures defective service.
  • If taking a default affecting conservatorship, support, or property division, expect appellate scrutiny to be exacting.

Entity-Service Checklist in Property and Business-Valuation Disputes

  • Determine whether the entity is a necessary party or merely a source of records.
  • Identify the correct registered agent and registered office from current filings.
  • If using the Secretary of State as statutory agent, verify the exact address on file.
  • Cross-check the entity’s public filings, your petition, and the Secretary’s certificate for consistency.
  • Preserve proof of each attempted service route.
  • If the entity default is part of a broader divorce property strategy, remember that a service defect can destabilize downstream relief.

Citation

Kian Motors, Inc. v. VBI Group, Inc., No. 05-25-01094-CV, ___ S.W.3d , 2026 WL __ (Tex. App.—Dallas May 26, 2026, no pet. h.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in family litigation in two directions.

For the party attacking a default, it is a precision tool. In divorce or custody cases, counsel should inspect the face of the record for any mismatch between the address authorized by the governing rule, order, or statute and the address actually used by the clerk, process server, or statutory agent. If the record itself shows the wrong address, the argument is not equitable—it is jurisdictional. That is especially potent in post-default settings involving disproportionate property divisions, default conservatorship restrictions, child-support orders, turnover relief, or enforcement based on a default decree.

For the party seeking a default, the case is a warning that service errors are not merely procedural housekeeping; they are appellate vulnerabilities that can erase a strategic win. In a hard-fought family case, especially one involving an evasive spouse, an out-of-state parent, or an entity holding community assets, your adversary will look for exactly this kind of record defect on restricted appeal. Kian Motors reinforces that the best way to preserve a default is to create a record that is mechanically exact, internally consistent, and intolerant of even small address discrepancies.

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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.