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Post-Answer Default Requires Trial Notice | Bracken v. Bracken (2026)

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

In the Matter of the Marriage of Jerry Bracken and Cristina Bracken and in the Interest of H.L.B., a Child, 07-25-00142-CV, June 09, 2026.

On appeal from 481st District Court, Denton County, Texas

Synopsis

A post-answer default in a Texas family case will not survive when the nonappearing party did not receive notice of the final trial setting. Under Mathis v. Lockwood and Highsmith v. Highsmith, lack of trial-setting notice satisfies the first Craddock element and entitles the complaining party to a new trial without having to prove the remaining Craddock prongs.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is especially important in divorce, SAPCR, custody, and property-division litigation because final family-law hearings often proceed after counsel withdrawal, changes in representation, or pro se appearances. When a respondent has answered, the petitioner cannot safely obtain a merits default on conservatorship, possession, support, injunction, or property issues unless the record affirmatively supports notice of the final setting; otherwise, even sweeping final relief can be undone on appeal or by motion for new trial.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Jerry Bracken filed for divorce a few months after the parties’ child was born. Cristina Bracken answered the case and was represented by counsel for periods of the litigation, but both sets of attorneys eventually withdrew, leaving her pro se before final trial. The trial court ultimately conducted a final hearing on February 24, 2025, when Cristina did not appear. After hearing evidence from Jerry, the court signed a default divorce decree awarding Jerry sole custody, denying Cristina access to the child, ordering child support and daycare contributions, imposing injunctive relief, and otherwise disposing of the family-law issues.

Cristina challenged the judgment, arguing among other things that she never received proper notice of the final trial setting. The appellate record, as summarized by the Amarillo court, reflected substantial notice problems. There was no notice of final trial in the clerk’s record, only a reference in the register of actions. A withdrawal motion filed by Cristina’s former counsel referred to a trial date, but the service materials did not clearly show service on Cristina, and the attached automated e-service certificate did not list her. The withdrawal order likewise referenced a final setting and directed that future notices be delivered personally or sent to Cristina by certified and regular first-class mail, yet the record did not contain proof that such service occurred. Later filings reflected electronic service, but not service in the manner required by the withdrawal order, and those later filings did not themselves recite the final trial date.

The record also lacked sworn proof or exhibits establishing Cristina’s actual or constructive knowledge of the final setting. Although Jerry’s counsel represented at trial that the withdrawal materials had been mailed and emailed to Cristina, the court identified no evidence establishing receipt. Cristina later filed post-judgment motions asserting she had not been properly served or notified and that she arrived at the wrong time after the hearing had already concluded.

Issues Decided

  • Whether this appeal should be treated as a direct appeal from a post-answer default judgment rather than as a restricted appeal.
  • Whether Cristina, having answered but failed to appear, was entitled to notice of the final trial setting.
  • Whether the record established notice through imputed knowledge from prior counsel or through presumed service of filings referencing the setting.
  • Whether lack of notice of the final trial setting satisfied the first Craddock prong and eliminated the need to prove the remaining Craddock elements.
  • Whether the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the post-answer default judgment to stand.

Rules Applied

The court relied on several settled principles governing post-answer defaults and due process:

  • A party who has appeared in the case is entitled to notice of the trial setting.
  • Post-answer defaults are disfavored, and doubts are resolved against the party who obtained the default.
  • Denial of a motion for new trial after a post-answer default is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
  • Under Craddock v. Sunshine Bus Lines, Inc., a party ordinarily must show that the failure to appear was not intentional or the result of conscious indifference, that a meritorious defense exists, and that granting a new trial will not cause delay or injury.
  • But under Mathis v. Lockwood, 166 S.W.3d 743 (Tex. 2005), when a party did not receive notice of the trial setting, the first Craddock element is established as a matter of law and the party need not prove the other two prongs.
  • Highsmith v. Highsmith, 587 S.W.3d 771 (Tex. 2019), underscores that trial-setting notice is a fundamental due-process requirement.
  • The opinion also invoked the broader policy expressed in Tabakman v. Tabakman that default judgments are disfavored and doubts should be resolved against the defaulting judgment’s proponent.

Application

The Seventh Court approached the case as a direct appeal from a post-answer default because Cristina filed a timely notice of appeal, albeit prematurely, and Rule 27.1(a) saved it as filed after the judgment was signed. That framing mattered because the court then analyzed the judgment under the familiar post-answer default framework.

From there, the court focused on notice. Jerry argued that notice could be inferred because Cristina’s counsel had supposedly agreed to the setting before withdrawing and because filings referencing the setting were allegedly served. The court was not persuaded. The record did not contain an actual notice of final trial. The withdrawal motion and withdrawal order referenced trial settings, but the service records did not clearly show service on Cristina, and the electronic service certificates omitted her. Compounding the problem, the withdrawal order itself required that future notices be delivered personally or by certified and regular first-class mail to Cristina’s address, yet the record did not reflect compliance with that directive. Nor was there sworn evidence establishing that Cristina actually knew of the final setting.

That evidentiary gap was dispositive. The court emphasized that once a party has appeared, due process entitles that party to notice reasonably calculated to apprise her of the trial setting and permit a meaningful opportunity to be heard. The appellate court carefully distinguished attorney knowledge from client notice, signaling that once counsel withdraws, the record must support notice to the party herself. The court would not permit assumptions, docket references, or unsupported statements of counsel to substitute for proof.

Because the record did not establish that Cristina received notice of the final trial setting, the first Craddock prong was satisfied without further inquiry. Under Mathis, that meant Cristina did not have to prove a meritorious defense or lack of delay/injury. The absence of trial-setting notice alone required a new trial.

Holding

The court held that this was a direct appeal from a post-answer default judgment and reviewed the denial of new trial under the abuse-of-discretion standard applicable to that posture. Cristina had appeared in the case and therefore was entitled to notice of the final trial setting before the trial court could proceed to judgment in her absence.

The court further held that the appellate record did not show Cristina received notice of the final trial setting. References to the setting in withdrawal papers, register entries, or counsel’s representations were not enough on this record, particularly where proof of service was deficient and the withdrawal order prescribed a specific method for future notice that the record did not show had been followed.

Finally, the court held that lack of trial-setting notice satisfied the first Craddock element and relieved Cristina of any obligation to establish the remaining Craddock prongs. The post-answer default judgment therefore could not stand, and the judgment was reversed for a new trial.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Bracken is a record-building case as much as it is a due-process case. In contested divorces and SAPCRs, especially where counsel withdraws close to trial, the party seeking final relief should assume that appellate scrutiny will focus less on whether someone in the courtroom believed notice was given and more on whether the clerk’s record affirmatively demonstrates notice to the nonappearing party. If the respondent has answered, a petitioner proceeds to a merits default at substantial risk unless the record contains competent proof of the final setting and service of that setting.

This matters acutely in cases involving conservatorship restrictions, supervised possession, no-access findings, family-violence injunctions, child-support orders, and disproportionate property awards. These are precisely the sorts of judgments that trial courts may be willing to render after an uncontested prove-up, but Bracken confirms that severe relief does not dilute the notice requirement; if anything, the constitutional stakes heighten it.

The opinion also has strategic implications for both sides. For the movant seeking default, the safest practice is to create a clean notice trail after any attorney withdrawal and to comply exactly with any withdrawal order directing the manner of future service. For the nonappearing party challenging the judgment, Bracken reinforces that the strongest appellate issue may be procedural, not substantive. If the record does not show notice of the final setting, counsel should lead with due process and Mathis, because that route avoids litigating the remaining Craddock elements.

A few practical takeaways stand out:

  • After counsel withdraws, do not rely on prior attorney awareness of a setting as a substitute for proof that the client herself received notice.
  • If the withdrawal order specifies how future notices must be sent, follow that order to the letter and preserve proof in the record.
  • In a family case, do not assume that references in motions, docket sheets, or registers of actions will carry the notice burden on appeal.
  • If your client suffered a post-answer default, examine the clerk’s record first for a filed notice of setting and proof of service before attacking the merits of the decree.
  • When moving for new trial, develop a clear record on nonreceipt, because even though Mathis eliminates the need to prove all Craddock elements, you still want the appellate record to squarely present the notice defect.

Checklists

Proving Up a Final Family-Law Default After an Answer

  • Confirm that the opposing party filed an answer or otherwise appeared.
  • Obtain a written notice of final trial setting that is included in the clerk’s record.
  • Serve the trial setting on the party in the manner required by the rules and any applicable court order.
  • If counsel has withdrawn, serve the party directly rather than assuming service through former counsel is enough.
  • File proof of service that identifies the recipient, method, date, and address or email used.
  • At the final hearing, offer the court a record basis for finding notice, not merely argument of counsel.
  • Ask the trial court to make an express record that notice of the final setting was provided.

Handling Notice After Opposing Counsel Withdraws

  • Review the withdrawal order immediately for any directive concerning future service.
  • Calendar all required service methods stated in the order, including certified mail, regular mail, personal delivery, or email if ordered.
  • Serve all future settings directly on the now-pro-se party.
  • Preserve green cards, tracking confirmations, affidavits of service, and file-stamped certificates.
  • Do not rely exclusively on electronic service if the withdrawal order requires another method.
  • Re-serve the final trial notice if there is any doubt about prior transmission or receipt.

Attacking a Post-Answer Default for Lack of Notice

  • Obtain the complete clerk’s record and reporter’s record.
  • Check whether the record contains an actual notice of final trial setting.
  • Compare the service proof with any withdrawal order or trial court directive regarding service.
  • Determine whether the record shows actual notice, constructive notice, or merely counsel’s unsworn representations.
  • File a motion for new trial raising lack of notice and due-process denial.
  • Support the motion with affidavit testimony denying receipt and explaining the failure to appear.
  • Cite Mathis v. Lockwood and Highsmith v. Highsmith for the proposition that lack of notice satisfies the first Craddock prong without proof of the other two.

Protecting Your Record in Divorce and SAPCR Trials

  • Ensure every setting notice is filed and traceable in the clerk’s record.
  • Confirm the reporter’s record reflects the basis for proceeding in the other party’s absence.
  • Avoid ambiguous references to settings in ancillary filings when a stand-alone notice of trial can be filed.
  • When seeking extraordinary relief such as no access, injunctions, or sole managing conservatorship, be especially careful that notice compliance is airtight.
  • If the court takes judicial notice of its file, make sure the file actually contains the documents needed to support notice.
  • Before requesting judgment, verify that the record would withstand appellate review under a due-process analysis.

Citation

In the Matter of the Marriage of Jerry Bracken and Cristina Bracken and in the Interest of H.L.B., a Child, No. 07-25-00142-CV, 2026 Tex. App. LEXIS ___ (Tex. App.—Amarillo June 9, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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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.