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Family Code § 263.4011 Is Mandatory but Not Jurisdictional | In re J.A.E. (2026)

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

In the Interest of J.A.E., III, J.R.E, J.A.E., J.E.E., and J.E.W.E., Children, 14-25-01088-CV, May 28, 2026.

On appeal from 312th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

Section 263.4011’s 90-day deadline to render a final order after trial commences is mandatory, but it is not jurisdictional. In In re J.A.E., the Fourteenth Court held that a final order signed outside that 90-day window is not void for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, because the Legislature did not attach a jurisdictional consequence to that deadline; by contrast, Family Code § 263.401 expressly ties jurisdictional loss to failure to timely commence trial.

Relevance to Family Law

Although J.A.E. arises from a Department conservatorship case, the opinion matters to Texas family law litigators more broadly because it sharpens how courts distinguish between mandatory case-management deadlines and true jurisdictional bars. That distinction affects strategy in SAPCRs, modification suits, and even divorce-related custody litigation: if a statute imposes a deadline without an express dismissal or jurisdictional consequence, the better remedy may be mandamus, preservation, or accelerated complaint practice—not a later collateral attack branding the judgment void. For trial lawyers, the case is also a reminder that docket-management agreements, continuance requests, and “commence and recess” procedures can have dispositive appellate consequences.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The Department filed suit and obtained temporary managing conservatorship of Mother’s five children in October 2022 based on allegations of neglectful supervision and physical abuse. The children were placed with family members, including Grandmother, who ultimately became the permanent conservatorship placement.

The statutory dismissal framework under Chapter 263 quickly became central. The original dismissal date passed, but the trial court extended the deadline after evidence that Mother had made substantial progress in services, needed additional time to complete them, and that the extension would also allow placement issues to develop further. Trial was then called on April 18, 2024, before the extended dismissal date. On that date, the parties appeared, Mother urged a continuance, the court addressed preliminary matters, an exhibit was admitted, and the Department called and swore its caseworker, who gave brief testimony before the matter was recessed.

The case did not conclude quickly. Trial resumed in December 2024, again in July 2025, and finally concluded in October 2025. The court signed its final order in November 2025, appointing Grandmother sole managing conservator and Mother possessory conservator. On appeal, Mother argued that the judgment was void because the statutory timing requirements in Chapter 263 had not been satisfied.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court worked from the Chapter 263 dismissal structure.

The court also relied on the jurisdictional analysis from In re G.X.H., 627 S.W.3d 288 (Tex. 2021), which teaches that Chapter 263 deadlines are not jurisdictional unless the Legislature clearly says so. The opinion also drew from intermediate appellate authority holding that § 263.4011 is mandatory but not jurisdictional, including In re A.N., In re G.L.J., and similar cases. On the trial-commencement issue, the court followed its own precedent in In re J.L.J. and related cases examining whether meaningful trial activity occurred on the putative commencement date.

Application

The Fourteenth Court first rejected the attack on the extension order. The record showed Mother had made significant progress in services but had not completed them, and the Department represented that more time could facilitate reunification efforts and allow the caregiver to solidify the placement. In the court’s view, those facts were enough to support a finding of extraordinary circumstances and to justify the extended dismissal date under § 263.401(b).

The court next addressed the increasingly common argument that a pre-deadline “commencement” was merely ceremonial. It held that this record showed real trial activity, not a sham setting. Counsel appeared, Mother affirmatively requested that trial commence and then recess because the case was approaching dismissal, the court ruled on preliminary matters, an exhibit was admitted, and the Department called a sworn witness who gave testimony. That combination was sufficient to constitute commencement under existing precedent, even though the case was recessed shortly thereafter and the parties did not give opening statements or announce ready in formal terms.

The most significant part of the opinion concerned § 263.4011. Mother argued that because the final order was not rendered within 90 days of April 18, 2024, the trial court lost jurisdiction. The court rejected that argument by focusing on text and legislative design. Section 263.401(a) expressly says the court’s jurisdiction terminates and the case is automatically dismissed if trial is not timely commenced. Section 263.4011 says no such thing. Instead, § 263.4011(d) provides a mandamus remedy if the court fails to render a final order within the required time. That remedial choice mattered. Under G.X.H., courts do not infer jurisdictional consequences when the Legislature has omitted them, especially in a statutory scheme where it plainly knew how to impose them elsewhere.

The court also noted a practical feature of the record that appellate lawyers will recognize immediately: Mother herself requested continuances and asked the court to commence trial and recess it. That did not waive every complaint, but it made the later voidness argument particularly weak where the statute supplied a direct remedy—mandamus—that she did not pursue.

Holding

The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in extending the dismissal date under Family Code § 263.401(b). Evidence that Mother was making progress in services but needed additional time, coupled with placement-related concerns and ongoing reunification efforts, was sufficient to support the finding of extraordinary circumstances.

The court further held that trial commenced on April 18, 2024, before the extended dismissal deadline. The combination of party appearances, consideration of preliminary matters, admission of an exhibit, and testimony from a sworn witness was enough to qualify as commencement under Chapter 263.

Most importantly, the court held that Family Code § 263.4011 is mandatory but not jurisdictional. A final order rendered more than 90 days after trial commences is not void for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, because the statute does not impose that consequence. The Legislature expressly made failure to timely commence trial jurisdictional in § 263.401, but it chose a different enforcement mechanism—mandamus—for failure to timely render a final order under § 263.4011.

Practical Application

For Department-case practitioners, J.A.E. is a clean reminder to separate three distinct appellate concepts that often get blurred together: dismissal deadlines, commencement, and rendition. Failure to timely commence trial under § 263.401 can still be jurisdictional and fatal. Failure to render a final order within 90 days after commencement under § 263.4011 is not.

That distinction should reshape how you litigate these cases in real time. If you represent a parent and the case has actually commenced but the court is drifting beyond the 90-day rendition period, the serious remedy is mandamus—not waiting for an appeal and arguing the final order is void. If you represent the Department, a relative, or another conservatorship claimant, J.A.E. gives you a strong response to a post-judgment jurisdictional attack based solely on § 263.4011 delay.

The case also has practical force outside Department litigation. Family lawyers in private SAPCRs and divorce suits regularly deal with statutes and rules phrased in mandatory terms. J.A.E. reinforces a broader appellate principle: mandatory does not automatically mean jurisdictional. When assessing whether a late ruling can be attacked as void, start with text. Ask whether the Legislature expressly imposed dismissal, loss of jurisdiction, or some other consequence. If not, the complaint may require preservation, interlocutory action, mandamus, or harmless-error analysis rather than a jurisdictional challenge.

There is also a trial-management lesson here. The “commence and recess” maneuver remains viable if the record shows substantive trial activity. But if you are going to rely on commencement before a dismissal date, make a record that looks unmistakably like trial: appearances, rulings, admission of evidence, sworn testimony, and a clear statement in the order identifying the commencement date. Conversely, if you intend to challenge commencement as pretextual, attack the lack of meaningful activity immediately and preserve a mandamus-ready record.

Checklists

Protecting the Record on Chapter 263 Deadlines

Establishing a Valid Trial Commencement

Challenging a Defective “Commencement”

Responding to a Missed 90-Day Rendition Deadline

Drafting and Opposing Extension Requests

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Appellate Problem

Citation

In the Interest of J.A.E., III, J.R.E., J.A.E., J.E.E., and J.E.W.E., Children, No. 14-25-01088-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] May 28, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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