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CROSSOVER: Revoked Consent Before Judgment Defeats Enforcement of Mediated Settlement by Mere Motion Hearing

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

Quesada v. Bonilla, 04-24-00639-CV, May 27, 2026.

On appeal from 225th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas

Synopsis

A Texas trial court cannot render judgment on a mediated settlement agreement after a party has revoked consent before rendition. Once consent is withdrawn, the MSA may still be enforceable, but only as a contract through proper pleadings and admissible proof—not by a bare motion hearing that functions as an end run around a merits determination.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family law litigators, this is a useful crossover decision because it reinforces a foundational distinction that often gets blurred in post-mediation practice: an agreement may be binding, yet still not support rendition of an agreed judgment if consent is revoked before judgment is signed. In divorce, SAPCR, modification, and property-enforcement settings, that distinction matters whenever one side tries to convert a disputed mediation outcome into a final order through a short motion-to-enter hearing rather than through the procedural vehicle the law actually requires. Although family-law MSAs under Family Code sections 6.602 and 153.0071 operate under a different statutory framework than a general civil MSA under Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 154.071, Quesada is strategically important because it sharpens arguments about rendition, withdrawal of consent, proof, preservation, and the limits of summary enforcement when the validity or enforceability of the settlement is contested.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The dispute arose from a construction case, not a family law matter. After storm-related damage to a residence, the homeowners hired the contractor to perform repairs, including roof work. The relationship deteriorated after substantial work had been performed and roofing materials had been delivered. The contractor claimed he was denied access to complete the job and was not paid amounts allegedly due; the homeowners counterclaimed, asserting DTPA violations and other misconduct.

The parties attended a one-day mediation on April 19, 2024, and signed a mediated settlement agreement calling for a mutual walk-away, mutual releases, dismissal of the litigation with prejudice, and covenants not to sue. Shortly afterward, the contractor’s mediation counsel moved to withdraw, citing a conflict. At the withdrawal hearing, the contractor objected to the MSA and told the court he had not understood what he was signing. The trial court granted the withdrawal and advised him about filing a motion to set aside the MSA.

The contractor then filed a motion to set aside the MSA before judgment was rendered, asserting that he signed while in a frantic mental state and after suffering what he described as a nervous breakdown. The homeowners responded with a motion to enforce the MSA, characterizing the agreement as a binding contract and asserting breach based on the contractor’s refusal to dismiss his claims. At the ensuing hearing, the contractor continued to object, now expressly invoking duress and coercion. The trial court nevertheless granted the motion to enforce, dismissed the contractor’s claims with prejudice, dismissed the counterclaims, and awarded attorney’s fees to the homeowners. The San Antonio Court of Appeals reversed.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on the familiar line of Texas authorities distinguishing agreed judgments from contract enforcement of settlement agreements.

Application

The appellate court first addressed whether consent had in fact been withdrawn before rendition. On that point, the answer was straightforward. The contractor filed a motion to set aside the MSA on May 29, 2024. The trial court did not render its final judgment enforcing the agreement until June 7, 2024. That filing was enough to place both the opposing parties and the court on notice that the contractor no longer consented to an agreed judgment based on the MSA.

That timing changed everything procedurally. Once the contractor revoked consent, the MSA could no longer serve as the basis for an agreed judgment. At that point, the homeowners’ only path to enforcement was a contract theory. The court acknowledged that their motion to enforce likely did enough to raise a breach-of-contract claim because it alleged the MSA was valid, attached the agreement, and asserted noncompliance. But that only solved the pleading problem.

The dispositive failure was proof and procedure. The appellate court examined whether the June 7 hearing was effectively an evidentiary bench trial on the contract claim. It concluded that it was not. The record reflected argument by counsel and by the self-represented contractor, but no indication that the trial court received testimonial or documentary evidence beyond the MSA itself. The judgment recited only that the court considered the motion, its exhibits, and argument. That was not enough where enforceability had been contested on grounds including duress, coercion, and lack of understanding. Because Texas law does not authorize a special summary proceeding to adjudicate a disputed settlement agreement merely because it arose in mediation, the trial court abused its discretion by enforcing the MSA through motion practice alone.

Holding

The court held that the contractor revoked consent to the mediated settlement agreement before the trial court rendered judgment. Because consent did not exist at the time of rendition, the trial court could not properly render an agreed judgment based on the MSA.

The court further held that, after revocation of consent, enforcement of the MSA could proceed only as a contract claim under ordinary procedural rules. Although the motion to enforce may have been sufficient to plead breach of contract, the trial court still could not resolve the dispute through a non-evidentiary motion hearing. Because the record did not show proper pleading-and-proof adjudication of the contested contract issues, the judgment enforcing the MSA was reversed and the case remanded.

Practical Application

This opinion has immediate tactical value in Texas family litigation, especially in post-mediation contests over decree language, MSA enforceability, or “motion to enter” practice. Family lawyers routinely face a situation where one side signs at mediation and then, before rendition, attempts to withdraw, recast, or attack the agreement. In cases governed by Family Code sections 6.602 and 153.0071, the analysis is not identical because those statutes can make a qualifying family-law MSA binding and entitle a party to judgment notwithstanding later regret. But Quesada remains useful in at least four ways.

First, it is a strong reminder to separate three distinct questions that are too often conflated: whether the agreement is binding, whether the court may render judgment on it immediately, and what procedure is required if validity or enforceability is disputed. Even in family cases with a statutorily compliant MSA, collateral disputes may remain about scope, fraud, coercion, drafting overreach, conditions precedent, or whether the proposed order actually conforms to the mediated deal. Quesada supports the broader proposition that contested enforcement cannot be reduced to attorney argument if fact issues must be resolved.

Second, the opinion is highly useful in non-MSA settlement contexts within family law. Rule 11 agreements, informal settlement term sheets, partial property stipulations, post-decree compromise agreements, and settlement memoranda that do not satisfy the Family Code’s MSA requirements are vulnerable to the same consent principles discussed in Padilla, Quintero, and Gamboa. In those settings, revocation before rendition can be outcome-determinative. If the other side tries to obtain a decree or enforcement order through a simple motion hearing, Quesada gives you a clean appellate roadmap for resisting that effort.

Third, the case is valuable when the opponent styles the matter as a “motion to enforce” but offers no competent evidence. In family court, lawyers sometimes assume the judge can simply read the agreement, hear competing narratives from counsel, and sign an order. Quesada warns that, where the dispute is genuinely contested and the matter is proceeding on a contract-enforcement theory, the court needs a procedurally authorized merits determination—trial, summary judgment, stipulation, or equivalent—not an improvised summary process.

Fourth, the case is a preservation tool. If your client wants out of a settlement-based judgment, the timing of revocation matters. Put the revocation in writing before rendition. File the motion. Object on the record. Force the other side either to prove entitlement under the governing family statute or to proceed through ordinary contract adjudication. Conversely, if you represent the party seeking enforcement, do not assume the signed agreement alone wins the day. Build the record, plead the theory correctly, and choose the correct procedural path.

Checklists

Preserve Revocation Before Rendition

Enforce the Settlement the Right Way

Build the Evidentiary Record

Attack a Defective Motion-to-Enforce Procedure

Family-Law Specific Screening

Citation

Quesada v. Bonilla, No. 04-24-00639-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—San Antonio May 27, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

The practical “weaponization” of Quesada in divorce or custody practice is procedural rather than doctrinal. If the other side is trying to shortcut a contested settlement dispute into a final decree through a quick prove-up or motion-to-enter hearing, this case gives you a disciplined way to stop that momentum. The argument is that once consent to an agreed judgment is withdrawn—at least outside the narrow universe of statutorily binding family-law MSAs that compel rendition—the court cannot resolve disputed enforceability questions by listening to competing arguments and signing an order. That is especially potent in property cases involving alleged side deals, mediated inventory disputes, business valuation compromises, or reimbursement settlements, and in custody litigation where a party challenges whether a later proposed order matches the mediated terms.

From the offensive side, if you represent the party seeking enforcement, Quesada teaches that speed without procedure is vulnerable on appeal. In a divorce or SAPCR, that means you should decide early whether you are asking the court to render judgment on a statutorily compliant family-law MSA, or whether you are really pursuing contract enforcement of a disputed settlement. If it is the latter, plead it like a contract case, prove it like a contract case, and do not invite reversal by treating a contested enforcement dispute as a mere motion setting. In short, Quesada is a reminder that settlement enforcement is won not only by having the better agreement, but by choosing the correct path to judgment.

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