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CROSSOVER: Mandamus Limits Trial Court’s Sanction Power Over Pro Hac Vice Disclosure Orders After Counsel’s Handling of an Opposing Party’s Sensitive Personal Records

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

In re Lugenbuhl, Wheaton, Peck, Rankin, & Hubbard and Todd Crawford, 01-25-00116-CV, June 23, 2026.

On appeal from 113th District Court of Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

The First Court of Appeals held that a trial court’s non-monetary sanctions power has limits: it may not require pro hac vice counsel to disclose a sanctions order to every future Texas court in which they seek admission for the next ten years when that remedy exceeds the court’s authority under TransAmerican. Mandamus lies to vacate that disclosure requirement because the sanction is not sufficiently tethered to the complained-of conduct and is more severe than necessary.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family law cases routinely involve the most sensitive categories of evidence in civil practice: mental-health records, substance-abuse treatment records, children’s records, financial account data, private communications, and electronically stored personal information obtained through estranged spouses, partners, or third parties. This opinion matters because it reinforces two parallel propositions that arise constantly in divorce, SAPCR, and enforcement litigation: first, counsel handling sensitive records obtained outside formal discovery face real exposure to disqualification and sanctions; second, even in emotionally charged cases, trial courts must keep non-monetary sanctions within TransAmerican limits. For family lawyers, that means this case is both a cautionary tale about acquiring and using private materials and a potent appellate tool when a sanctions order attempts to regulate future practice in ways untethered to the underlying misconduct.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The mandamus proceeding arose from consolidated Hurricane Zeta litigation pending in Harris County. The relators were out-of-state counsel Todd Crawford and his firm, Lugenbuhl, Wheaton, Peck, Rankin, & Hubbard, who represented Transocean. One of the underlying plaintiffs, Kent Bates, alleged injury claims against Transocean. Bates had lived with his fiancé, Paulisha Harris, and their children for years. After the relationship ended, Harris anonymously contacted Transocean and claimed she had proof Bates’s case was fraudulent.

Harris was directed to Crawford and met with him at the firm’s Mississippi office. She provided text messages, emails, audio and video recordings, images of prescription medications and prescriptions, and photographs of other documents, including a compact disc containing MRI images. Crawford prepared an affidavit for Harris to authenticate the materials. The opinion also notes that a legal assistant from the firm asked Harris whether she had a child-support attorney, gave her the name of a family lawyer, and that Harris later averred the fee for that lawyer was paid by Transocean.

After holding the materials for nearly two months, Transocean produced them to Bates in discovery. Bates moved to disqualify counsel and sought sanctions, contending relators had wrongfully obtained his privileged or protected information through Harris. The trial court ultimately disqualified Crawford and then later disqualified the firm, imposed a $500,000 monetary sanction jointly and severally against Crawford, the firm, and Transocean, revoked the pro hac vice status of the firm’s attorneys admitted in the MDL, required those attorneys to disclose the sanctions order to any Texas court in which they sought pro hac vice admission for the next ten years, and referred the attorneys to disciplinary authorities in Texas and Louisiana. Relators sought mandamus relief from the sanctions and from the denial of severance. The court of appeals conditionally granted relief only as to the ten-year disclosure sanction and denied the petition in all other respects.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court worked from familiar mandamus and sanctions principles.

Application

The First Court treated the case as presenting both ordinary sanctions-review principles and a narrower question about the outer limit of non-monetary sanctions. The underlying facts gave the trial court a substantial basis to react strongly. Counsel had accepted and held highly personal records and communications furnished by an adverse party’s former fiancé, used an affidavit to authenticate the materials, and became entangled with collateral family-law issues through referral to child-support counsel allegedly funded by the client. Those facts explain why the trial court viewed the conduct as serious enough to justify disqualification, monetary sanctions, revocation of pro hac vice status, and disciplinary referral.

But the appellate court drew a line at the ten-year compelled disclosure requirement. Under TransAmerican, a sanction must be specifically directed at the abuse found and calibrated so that it is no more severe than necessary to promote compliance, deter repetition, and punish misconduct in a just way. Requiring attorneys to carry a sanctions order into every future Texas pro hac vice application for a decade operates less like a case-management remedy and more like a reputational penalty extending into unrelated future proceedings. That kind of prospective burden is difficult to justify as a sanction tailored to the handling of Bates’s records in the MDL. In the court’s view, the sanction swept too broadly beyond the underlying case and therefore exceeded the permissible sanction power.

The mandamus posture mattered. A future-disclosure requirement tied to pro hac vice applications cannot be meaningfully cured after final judgment in the underlying merits litigation. Once disclosure is compelled in later proceedings, the damage is done. That practical reality supported mandamus relief as to that component of the order.

At the same time, the court did not disturb the remainder of the challenged rulings. That is strategically important. The opinion does not signal hostility to robust sanctions in the right case; it signals that even serious sanctions must remain within the doctrinal boundaries set by TransAmerican.

Holding

The court conditionally granted mandamus relief as to the non-monetary sanction requiring certain Lugenbuhl attorneys to disclose the sanctions order to any Texas court in which they later sought pro hac vice admission for ten years. That disclosure sanction exceeded the trial court’s permissible sanctions authority because it was not a just sanction within the meaning of TransAmerican.

The court denied mandamus relief in all other respects. Based on the opinion snippet and disposition, the appellate court did not find a basis on mandamus to disturb the trial court’s denial of severance or the remainder of the challenged sanctions-related rulings, including the broader sanctions framework imposed in response to counsel’s handling of the opposing party’s sensitive personal records.

Practical Application

For Texas family litigators, this case should immediately be read alongside the daily realities of divorce and custody practice. Many cases involve one spouse or co-parent arriving with screenshots, cloud downloads, therapy records, school records, medical records, location data, or material taken from a shared device after separation. This opinion underscores that lawyers cannot treat such information as fair game merely because a client or intimate partner can physically access it. When the provenance of sensitive material is questionable, counsel should slow down, assess privilege, privacy interests, standing, and possible statutory restrictions, and consider seeking in camera review or a protective order before using the information offensively.

Just as important, the case is a useful appellate counterweight when the sanctions pendulum swings too far. In family cases, trial courts understandably react forcefully to misconduct involving children’s records, revenge-motivated disclosures, hacked accounts, or strategic dissemination of private health information. But if the court imposes a non-monetary sanction that is designed to stigmatize counsel in unrelated future matters, interferes with future admissions, or otherwise extends beyond what is necessary to address the conduct at issue, In re Lugenbuhl gives practitioners a concrete mandamus framework. The question is not whether the conduct was bad. The question is whether the specific sanction is directly related to that conduct and no more severe than necessary.

Several litigation uses follow naturally:

Checklists

Vetting Sensitive Third-Party Materials Before Use

Building a Sanctions Record Against Opposing Counsel

Defending Against Overbroad Non-Monetary Sanctions

Internal Protocols for Family Law Firms

Citation

In re Lugenbuhl, Wheaton, Peck, Rankin, & Hubbard and Todd Crawford, No. 01-25-00116-CV, slip op. (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] June 23, 2026, orig. proceeding).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This is the kind of civil ruling that can be weaponized effectively in a Texas divorce or custody case from both sides of the “v.” If you represent the aggrieved party, use it to argue that opposing counsel crossed the line by receiving or operationalizing private records from a spouse, boyfriend/girlfriend, adult child, nanny, or family member outside formal discovery. The opinion helps you frame the misconduct as not merely evidentiary but structural—something that can justify disqualification, suppression, fee-shifting, and targeted sanctions because counsel’s handling of the material itself compromised the integrity of the proceeding.

If you represent the accused lawyer or party, the opinion is equally useful as a limiting principle. Family courts sometimes craft creative remedies in high-conflict cases, especially where children’s therapy records, sexual communications, addiction treatment records, or hidden financial files are involved. In re Lugenbuhl provides a disciplined appellate argument that a sanction cannot be transformed into a long-tail professional disability untethered from the pending case. In practical terms, that means you can concede the court’s authority to police misconduct while attacking sanctions that are designed to brand counsel for future unrelated matters. That distinction may be the difference between surviving a difficult sanctions hearing and carrying a case-specific problem into the next decade of practice.

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