Family Code Section 201.015 Does Not Strip Associate Judge Authority | In re Leake (2026)
In Re Maj. Christina I. Leake, 07-26-00228-CV, June 10, 2026.
On appeal from 137th District Court of Lubbock County, Texas
Synopsis
A written objection under Texas Family Code section 201.015 does not automatically disable an associate judge from receiving filings, sending hearing-related communications, or conducting proceedings in a SAPCR. The Amarillo Court held that section 201.015 addresses de novo review by the referring court after an associate judge’s order; it is not a jurisdiction-stripping mechanism, and mandamus fails absent a showing that the associate judge acted outside the authority granted by Family Code section 201.007.
Relevance to Family Law
This is a practical family-law decision, especially for litigators handling SAPCRs, custody modifications, temporary orders, and referral-heavy dockets where associate judges do much of the day-to-day work. The opinion clarifies that filing a section 201.015 objection is not a procedural freeze button: in custody and related family litigation, counsel should not assume that an objection to an associate judge’s ruling halts the associate judge’s ongoing administrative or adjudicative role unless the complained-of act actually exceeds the powers conferred by Chapter 201. The case also reinforces two recurring family-law realities—mandamus requires a disciplined record, and delay can destroy extraordinary relief even where the underlying complaint sounds serious.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The underlying proceeding was a long-running SAPCR that had been pending since 2016 and remained unresolved without a final order. By late 2025, the relator was proceeding pro se and had generated an unusually large volume of filings in the trial court and, later, in the court of appeals. In the mandamus proceeding, she advanced numerous complaints touching nearly every aspect of case administration, including the failure to rule on motions, the authority of the associate judge, clerk-routing practices, alleged post-recusal involvement by a former district judge, and asserted defects in prior temporary orders.
The issue with the most durable significance for family practitioners concerned the relator’s argument that two written objections under Texas Family Code section 201.015 stripped the associate judge of authority to continue participating in the case. She characterized the associate judge’s receipt of filings, issuance of hearing-related communications, and conduct of proceedings as void because, in her view, section 201.015 functioned as an automatic bar to further associate-judge action. She also attacked the routing of filings to the associate judge rather than directly to the district judge.
The Amarillo Court rejected that premise. Reading Chapter 201 in context, the court distinguished between the powers affirmatively granted to associate judges under section 201.007 and the de novo review procedure established by section 201.015. Because the relator did not identify conduct falling outside section 201.007’s authorization, she failed to establish an abuse of discretion or a basis for mandamus.
Issues Decided
- Whether a written objection under Texas Family Code section 201.015 divests an associate judge of authority to receive filings, issue hearing-related communications, or conduct proceedings in a pending SAPCR.
- Whether section 201.015 operates as an automatic bar on further action by the associate judge before a de novo hearing in the referring court.
- Whether mandamus relief is available when the relator does not show that the associate judge acted outside the authority granted by Texas Family Code section 201.007.
- Whether complaints about routing filings to the associate judge rather than the district judge support mandamus relief.
- Whether mandamus can compel rulings on pending motions absent proof of presentment and an unreasonable delay.
- Whether stale challenges to temporary orders and related emergency relief are barred by delay and mandamus-equity principles.
Rules Applied
The court applied several familiar mandamus and family-procedure rules:
- Mandamus requires proof of both a clear abuse of discretion and no adequate appellate remedy. The relator bears that burden.
- A trial court has a ministerial duty to consider and rule on a properly filed motion, but the relator must prove presentment—mere filing is not enough.
- Even where a motion has been presented, the trial court is entitled to a reasonable time to rule, and reasonableness depends on the circumstances.
- An appellate court may compel a trial court to rule, but it may not dictate the substance of that ruling.
- Texas Family Code section 201.007 delineates the powers of an associate judge in family-law matters.
- Texas Family Code section 201.015 concerns de novo review by the referring court following an associate judge’s order; it does not itself revoke the associate judge’s statutory authority in the pending case.
- Mandamus relief fails where the relator does not show that the complained-of action exceeded the associate judge’s statutory authority.
- Courts of appeals have limited mandamus jurisdiction over non-judicial actors such as clerks and coordinators absent a jurisdictional predicate.
- Mandamus is governed by equitable principles, including the rule that delay may waive extraordinary relief.
- Mandamus demands a precise, affirmative record; disputed facts and inferential allegations are usually fatal.
Application
The court treated the relator’s section 201.015 theory as a statutory interpretation problem embedded in a mandamus case. Her position was that once written objections were filed, the associate judge became functionally disabled from doing anything further in the matter. The court refused that reading because it could not be squared with the statutory structure. Section 201.007 grants specific powers to associate judges. Section 201.015, by contrast, addresses what happens after an associate judge has made an order and a party seeks de novo review by the referring court. In the court’s view, the latter provision creates a review mechanism; it does not silently negate the former provision’s grant of authority.
That framing mattered because mandamus is not available to test abstract disagreement with case administration. The relator needed to identify concrete acts by the associate judge that fell outside the powers enumerated in section 201.007. She did not do so. Instead, she relied on the premise that her objections alone disabled the associate judge. Once the court rejected that premise, the mandamus complaint collapsed for lack of a demonstrated ultra vires act.
The court took a similarly restrained approach to the related complaint about the coordinator or clerk routing filings to the associate judge. Even assuming some procedural irregularity, the court emphasized the limits of its mandamus jurisdiction and the relator’s failure to show interference with the court’s jurisdiction. That is an important distinction for appellate preservation: procedural dissatisfaction is not self-executing mandamus error.
The balance of the opinion reinforces how unforgiving original proceedings can be. On the failure-to-rule complaints, the court held that filing motions is not enough; the record must show presentment and an unreasonable lapse of time. On the attack against older temporary orders, the court invoked mandamus delay principles, noting an approximately eighteen-month lag with no justification. On the recusal issue, the court found the record too imprecise to establish that the recused judge had actually acted. Across all of these points, the court returned to the same themes: exactness, statutory fit, and disciplined mandamus proof.
Holding
The court held that Texas Family Code section 201.015 does not divest an associate judge of authority to continue acting in a SAPCR. The statute governs de novo review by the referring court after an associate judge’s order; it is not an automatic stay, disqualification device, or jurisdictional bar. Because the relator failed to show that the associate judge acted outside the powers granted by section 201.007, mandamus relief was denied.
The court also held that complaints about filing-routing practices did not support mandamus on the record presented. Even if routing filings to the associate judge rather than the district judge were inconsistent with the relator’s reading of Chapter 201, the court lacked authority to compel changes by court staff absent a showing tied to its own jurisdiction.
As to the failure-to-rule complaints, the court held that the relator did not establish the required presentment or an unreasonable delay, especially given the complexity of the case and the extraordinary volume of filings. It further held that mandamus cannot be used to compel a particular ruling on a proposed order.
Finally, the court denied relief on the relator’s other complaints, including alleged action by a recused judge and attacks on prior temporary orders, because the record lacked the precision required for mandamus and because the delay in seeking extraordinary relief was unexplained and excessive.
Practical Application
For Texas family litigators, the immediate takeaway is straightforward: do not advise clients that filing a written objection under section 201.015 strips an associate judge of authority going forward. If you want to challenge an associate judge’s continuing role, the question is not whether an objection was filed, but whether the specific act complained of falls outside section 201.007 or violates some other enforceable statutory limit.
This matters in several common settings. In a contested custody case, counsel may object to an associate judge’s recommendation or order and pursue de novo review, but the case may still continue to move through referral procedures unless and until the referring court acts. In modification litigation, temporary-order practice and scheduling communications from the associate judge are not rendered void merely because a party has demanded de novo review. In enforcement and property-related family cases, the same principle cautions against building strategy around the assumption that the referral pipeline has been shut down by objection alone.
The case also has a strong procedural lesson for appellate-minded trial lawyers. If the complaint is failure to rule, create a presentment record. If the complaint is ultra vires action by an associate judge, tie the complained-of act to the limits of section 201.007 with specificity. If the complaint concerns clerk or coordinator practices, recognize the jurisdictional hurdles before converting an administrative grievance into a mandamus petition. And if the complaint concerns temporary orders or emergency writs, act promptly. Even a potentially meritorious issue can be lost through delay.
Practically speaking, lawyers should distinguish among three different steps that are often blurred together in family practice:
- Preserving complaint to the associate judge’s ruling.
- Perfecting de novo review in the referring court.
- Establishing a separate basis for extraordinary appellate relief.
This opinion confirms those are not interchangeable. A section 201.015 filing may preserve or invoke review, but it does not itself prove that subsequent associate-judge actions are void.
Checklists
Challenging an Associate Judge’s Authority
- Identify the specific act you contend was improper.
- Match that act against the powers granted in Texas Family Code section 201.007.
- Avoid arguing that a section 201.015 objection alone strips authority; this case rejects that premise.
- Determine whether your complaint is really about de novo review timing, referral procedure, or a genuinely ultra vires act.
- Build a record showing exactly what the associate judge did, when, and under what asserted authority.
- Request relief in the referring court where appropriate before seeking mandamus.
Preserving a De Novo Complaint Under Section 201.015
- File the request or objection within the statutory deadline.
- Attach or identify the associate judge’s order with precision.
- State clearly which portions of the ruling you seek to challenge de novo.
- Obtain file-stamped proof of the request.
- Set the matter for hearing or otherwise obtain a record that the referring court was asked to act.
- Do not assume the filing itself stays all proceedings before the associate judge.
Building a Mandamus Record on Failure to Rule
- File the motion with a file-stamped copy.
- Present the motion to the judge, not merely the clerk.
- Create proof of presentment through a hearing request, submission letter, coordinator correspondence, or hearing setting.
- Follow up in writing requesting a ruling.
- Allow a reasonable time based on complexity, docket conditions, and surrounding circumstances.
- In the mandamus appendix, include the motion, proof of filing, proof of presentment, and proof of elapsed time.
Avoiding Delay-Based Mandamus Problems
- Evaluate mandamus viability immediately after the complained-of ruling.
- Calendar deadlines and internal review points for emergency appellate action.
- If filing is delayed, document the reason and be prepared to explain it.
- Recognize that temporary orders, TRO-related rulings, and emergency family-law orders often require prompt action.
- Do not wait months while the case develops if the theory is that the order is void or immediately harmful.
- Address diligence expressly in the petition.
Complaints About Clerk or Coordinator Practices
- Separate administrative frustration from judicial error.
- Identify the legal source of the alleged duty violated.
- Determine whether the appellate court has mandamus jurisdiction over the actor.
- Show how the challenged practice caused concrete prejudice.
- If arguing jurisdictional interference, make that showing expressly and with record support.
- Consider seeking relief first from the referring court through a motion clarifying routing or assignment procedures.
Recusal and Void-Order Allegations
- Verify that the challenged document was actually signed or adopted by the recused judge.
- Include certified or authenticated copies where possible.
- Avoid inferential allegations based solely on captions, docket text, or clerical references.
- Tie the complained-of conduct to a specific post-recusal judicial act.
- Remember that mandamus requires exactness; disputed facts usually will not suffice.
- Frame the issue with record precision before asserting voidness.
Citation
In re Maj. Christina I. Leake, No. 07-26-00228-CV, 2026 Tex. App. LEXIS ___ (Tex. App.—Amarillo June 10, 2026, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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