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Due Process Bars Delayed Contempt Commitment Orders | In re Welsh (2026)

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

In re Bradley Welsh, 02-26-00334-CV, June 03, 2026.

On appeal from 477th District Court of Denton County, Texas

Synopsis

Due process does not permit a trial court to orally find a party in contempt, order confinement, and then wait thirty-six days to sign the written contempt and commitment order. In In re Welsh, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals held the delayed order void and granted habeas relief, confirming that under Ex parte Calvillo Amaya, the written order must follow within only a short and reasonable time.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion matters directly to family-law enforcement practice, especially child-support, possession-and-access, and divorce decree enforcement proceedings where contempt remains the principal coercive tool. For Texas family-law litigators, Welsh is a sharp reminder that contempt is not merely substantively demanding; it is procedurally unforgiving. A favorable oral ruling is not enough. If the court orally orders confinement but the written contempt and commitment papers are not promptly reduced to writing and signed, the resulting order may be void, even where the underlying violation is otherwise clear and provable. In practical terms, this case affects enforcement strategy in support cases, post-divorce decree litigation, and any proceeding in which jail time is sought as a remedy.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The underlying proceeding arose from a motion to enforce child support. At the April 8, 2026 hearing, the trial court heard the evidence, orally found Bradley Welsh in contempt, and orally ordered him confined in the Denton County jail for sixty days. The court also requested additional “testimony” concerning work release.

The appellate court read the record contextually. By the time that exchange occurred, the evidentiary portion of the hearing had ended, both sides had rested, and the real remaining question was the wording of the contemplated work-release provision. In other words, the contempt finding and confinement ruling had already been made; what remained was preparation and signing of the written contempt and commitment order.

That did not happen promptly. Instead, the trial court later set a separate Zoom setting on May 7, 2026 for entry of the enforcement order, and the written “Order of Confinement and Work Release” was not signed until May 14, 2026—thirty-six days after the oral contempt finding and oral confinement order. Welsh served weekend jail time beginning May 15 and then sought habeas relief on May 22.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

A contempt order is void if it exceeds the court’s power or violates due process. The court relied principally on:

The key doctrinal point is that Texas due process allows only a narrow administrative interval between oral pronouncement of contempt with confinement and the signed written order. Calvillo Amaya treated even a three-day delay as constitutionally impermissible. Against that backdrop, a thirty-six-day delay could not stand.

Application

The court treated the April 8 hearing as the operative event. On that date, the trial court had completed the merits determination, found Welsh in contempt, and ordered confinement. The later discussion about work release did not convert the matter into an unfinished evidentiary hearing or suspend the effect of the oral contempt ruling. Instead, the appellate court viewed the record as showing that the hearing was over and that only drafting remained.

That framing drove the analysis. Once the oral contempt finding and confinement order were made, due process required the written contempt and commitment order to follow within the very limited period recognized in Calvillo Amaya. The court emphasized that what happened next was not ministerial delay measured in hours, but a substantial postponement extending over more than a month. The trial court even set a later date specifically for entering the order, which only underscored that the delay was institutional and procedural, not a brief interval necessary to reduce an immediately rendered order to writing.

The real party in interest argued that Welsh himself was responsible for the delay and was effectively asserting invited error. The court rejected that position because nothing in the record showed that Welsh did anything on April 8, or within a short and reasonable time thereafter, that prevented preparation or signature of the order. To the contrary, the record showed the delay was attributable to the court’s own scheduling process. The opinion goes further: even if the order had been signed on May 7 rather than May 14, that timing still would have violated Calvillo Amaya. The defect, then, was not just the final thirty-six-day lapse; it was the fundamental failure to promptly memorialize the oral confinement ruling in a signed written order.

Holding

The court held that when a trial court orally finds a party in contempt and orally orders confinement, due process bars a delayed written contempt judgment and commitment order beyond the short and reasonable time allowed for preparation and signature. Under Ex parte Calvillo Amaya, the thirty-six-day delay in this case was unconstitutional.

The court further held that the later proceedings concerning work release did not save the order because the contempt adjudication and confinement ruling had already been made on April 8, 2026. The hearing had effectively concluded, and the remaining task was drafting the order.

The court also held that the relator did not invite the error. The delay was not attributable to any conduct by Welsh that prevented prompt drafting or signature of the contempt papers.

Because the signed May 14, 2026 contempt and commitment order violated due process, the court declared it void, granted habeas relief, vacated the order, and discharged Welsh from any obligation to report to jail under that order. The court additionally ordered his unconditional release if he remained in custody.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Welsh should immediately change how you handle contempt hearings where confinement is sought. If you represent the movant, do not assume that an oral contempt finding secures anything. Your remedy can evaporate if the written contempt and commitment order is not promptly prepared, presented, and signed. Build the order before the hearing, bring editable and clean execution copies, and be prepared to address every required contempt recital at the moment the court rules.

If you represent the respondent, Welsh is a potent habeas tool. Where the court orally pronounced contempt and confinement but the written order was signed days later—let alone weeks later—there may be a due-process challenge independent of the merits of the alleged violation. This is especially important in child-support enforcement, possession-enforcement, and decree-enforcement proceedings where courts sometimes bifurcate the merits ruling from later order-entry logistics. That sequencing can be fatal if confinement was orally ordered first and reduced to writing too late.

The case also has implications for hearing management. Trial courts and practitioners often treat work-release details, purge language, or proposed order revisions as matters that can be cleaned up later. Welsh warns that once the court has orally adjudicated contempt and ordered confinement, “later” may be too late. If additional issues remain truly unresolved, counsel should be careful about whether the court is actually rendering a completed contempt adjudication that includes confinement. Precision in the oral record matters.

Strategically, movants should distinguish between an oral announcement of intended ruling and an actual contempt adjudication with commitment. Respondents, by contrast, should scrutinize the record to pin down the exact moment confinement was orally ordered. That date may control the due-process analysis.

Checklists

Movant’s Contempt Hearing Preparation

Preserving a Valid Confinement Order

Respondent’s Due-Process Challenge Checklist

Hearing Management for Family-Law Enforcement Cases

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Problem

Citation

In re Bradley Welsh, No. 02-26-00334-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Fort Worth June 3, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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