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CROSSOVER: Dallas Court Reaffirms Preponderance Standard and Error Preservation Rules in Deferred-Adjudication No-Contact Revocation

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

Headrick v. State, 05-25-00811-CR, June 05, 2026.

On appeal from 416th Judicial District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals reaffirmed two rules Texas trial lawyers ignore at their peril: revocation and adjudication decisions are reviewed for abuse of discretion, and the State need prove a supervision violation only by a preponderance of the evidence. The court also held that circumstantial evidence identifying the probationer as the sender of a prohibited email was enough, and that a notice complaint about the motion to adjudicate was waived because no motion to quash was filed.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, this opinion matters less for its criminal outcome than for its evidentiary and preservation logic. The court’s acceptance of identity proof through surrounding circumstances—shared patterns of communication, access to devices and accounts, timing, and witness familiarity—translates directly into divorce enforcement, protective-order litigation, custody modification, and harassment-related disputes where a party denies sending emails, texts, DMs, or app-based messages. Just as important, the court’s strict preservation analysis is a reminder that complaints about inadequate pleading specificity, lack of notice, or ambiguity in an enforcement motion must be raised in the trial court or they are likely gone on appeal.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Mark Allen Headrick had pleaded guilty to three felony offenses—burglary of a habitation with intent to commit a felony, repeated violation of a protective order, and stalking. Under plea agreements, the trial court deferred adjudication and placed him on community supervision for six years. A central supervision condition barred any contact with his daughter, P.H., until January 1, 2028. Headrick signed and acknowledged those terms.

Within weeks, the State moved to adjudicate, alleging that Headrick violated the no-contact condition by contacting P.H. At the hearing, P.H. testified she received an email sent from her own account with the subject line “Wordle?” and a link to the daily puzzle. That detail mattered because she and Headrick had frequently played Wordle together, he had previously communicated with her in this same manner, and he had access to her email account through an iPad kept at his home and logged into her account. Based on those facts, P.H. testified she had no doubt the email came from her father.

Headrick denied sending the email and advanced an alternative theory: after an alleged break-in at his house while he was in custody, his estranged wife or one of her friends may have taken or accessed the device and sent the message. The State, however, also elicited evidence from a jail call in which Headrick referred cryptically to a “device like a phone that’s bigger and flatter” and cautioned the recipient not to say the device’s name on the call. He claimed he meant an external hard drive rather than an iPad. The trial court rejected his explanation, found the no-contact violation true, adjudicated guilt, and imposed ten-year sentences.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court applied several familiar revocation and appellate-review principles:

Application

The appellate court treated the case as a straightforward revocation-proof dispute. It did not require direct digital-forensics evidence tying Headrick to the email. Instead, it focused on whether the trial court could reasonably infer authorship from the surrounding circumstances. Those circumstances were specific and mutually reinforcing: the “Wordle?” subject line matched the father-daughter pattern of communication; Headrick had historically emailed P.H. through her own account; he had access to that account through an iPad maintained at his residence; and P.H. testified unequivocally that she recognized the email as coming from him.

Against that evidence, Headrick offered an alternative explanation involving a break-in, possible tampering with electronics, and third-party misuse by his estranged wife or her friend. But that merely created a credibility dispute. Under abuse-of-discretion review, the appellate court was not free to reweigh the testimony or choose among competing inferences. Once the trial court was entitled to believe P.H. and discount Headrick’s account, the record supported a reasonable belief that he violated the no-contact condition. That was enough under the preponderance standard.

The preservation issue was even more categorical. Headrick argued on appeal that the State’s pleading—alleging only that he “made contact with P.H.”—was too vague because it omitted the manner, date, and location of the alleged violation. But because he had not filed a motion to quash in the trial court, the complaint was unpreserved. The court therefore did not reach the merits of whether the allegation was in fact too indefinite.

Holding

The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in adjudicating guilt and revoking supervision based on a violation of the no-contact condition. Circumstantial evidence was sufficient to establish that Headrick sent the email to P.H., and the trial court was entitled to credit her testimony and draw reasonable inferences from the parties’ established communication pattern, account access, and device evidence.

The court also held that any complaint regarding the vagueness or lack of specificity in the State’s petition to adjudicate was forfeited. Because Headrick did not file a motion to quash, he failed to preserve an inadequate-notice challenge for appellate review.

Although not the main takeaway for family lawyers, the court further rejected the disproportionality complaint, emphasizing that the sentences imposed were within the applicable statutory ranges.

Practical Application

Family lawyers should read this case as a roadmap for proving or defeating disputed electronic-contact allegations in protective-order, SAPCR, modification, contempt, and divorce-enforcement settings. When a party denies authorship of a message, the battle is often won not through a single smoking-gun exhibit but through layered circumstantial proof: prior communication habits, shared phrases, timing, access to accounts, linked devices, metadata, corroborating call logs, and testimony from a recipient who can identify the sender from context. Headrick reinforces that trial judges may infer identity from that mosaic and that appellate courts will rarely disturb those inference calls if the record supports them.

The case also has direct pleading and preservation consequences in family practice. If an enforcement motion, contempt pleading, or modification petition is too vague to permit preparation of a defense, counsel must specially except, move to quash, or otherwise make a clear trial-court record. Waiting to complain on appeal is usually fatal. In practical terms, that means family litigators should be as disciplined about error preservation in enforcement and emergency-hearing practice as criminal lawyers are supposed to be in revocation proceedings.

Strategically, the opinion is particularly useful in cases involving no-contact orders, injunctions, mutual temporary restraining orders, family-violence protective orders, monitored communication platforms, and allegations of indirect contact through children’s devices or accounts. A party who uses a child’s email, a shared iPad, or a familiar family routine to communicate may think the absence of direct forensic attribution creates reasonable doubt. In civil family court, and even in this revocation context, that is the wrong benchmark. The operative question is whether the trial judge can reasonably conclude, from the greater weight of credible evidence, that the contact occurred and that the accused party was behind it.

Checklists

Proving Electronic Contact in Family Court

Preserving Pleading-Notice Complaints

Defending Against Electronic-Authorship Allegations

Using This Opinion in Custody and Protective-Order Litigation

Citation

Headrick v. State, Nos. 05-25-00810-CR, 05-25-00811-CR, 05-25-00812-CR, memorandum opinion, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas June 5, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This opinion can be weaponized in Texas divorce or custody litigation in two principal ways. First, it supports a narrative that indirect digital contact is still contact, and that authorship may be proven through circumstantial markers rather than direct admission or forensic certainty. In a modification, enforcement, or protective-order case, that means a parent can build a compelling record from communication patterns, access evidence, and recipient identification testimony even where the accused party insists someone else sent the message. Second, the opinion is a preservation warning shot: if opposing counsel files a vague enforcement motion or contempt pleading, the receiving party must attack the defect in the trial court. Otherwise, the defect may become strategically useless on appeal. For the party seeking relief, that asymmetry is valuable—if the pleading survives without a preservation challenge, the case may ultimately turn not on technical pleading defects but on whether the judge believes the circumstantial story.

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