Dismissal for Want of Prosecution Without Perfected Service | Balderas v. Balderas (2025)
Balderas v. Balderas, 09-24-00325-CV, June 11, 2026.
On appeal from 410th District Court, Montgomery County, Texas
Synopsis
A trial court does not abuse its discretion by dismissing a divorce case for want of prosecution when service has never been perfected and the petitioner fails to file a timely, compliant motion to retain after receiving a notice of intent to dismiss. The Beaumont Court of Appeals also made clear that issuance of citation, attempted certified-mail service, or website publication alone does not establish the diligence necessary to keep the case on the docket when service has not been completed under the applicable rules.
Relevance to Family Law
This opinion matters directly to Texas family-law practice because dismissal risk often arises in divorce, SAPCR, modification, and enforcement cases when one party cannot be located, is evasive, or service logistics stall. Balderas reinforces that family cases are not insulated from ordinary docket-control principles: if service is not perfected, and counsel does not respond to dismissal notices with a rule-compliant motion to retain showing concrete diligence and good cause, the trial court may dismiss without abusing its discretion. For litigators handling default divorces, missing spouses, substituted service, or publication practice, the case is a pointed reminder that activity in the file is not the same as perfected service.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Miguel Balderas filed for divorce in February 2024. In his pleading, he indicated that his spouse would be served through ordinary formal process. He requested issuance of citation, including service by sheriff or constable and, alternatively, by certified mail. Those attempts did not produce executed service. The clerk later informed him that the certified-mail return came back unexecuted.
The trial court then issued a notice of intent to dismiss because the case had remained on file for more than ninety days without service being perfected. That notice set a dismissal hearing by submission and expressly advised that, if Miguel wanted the case retained, he had to file a motion to retain at least seven days before the submission date, specify the diligence undertaken, and show good cause against dismissal.
Miguel filed a motion to retain in response to the first dismissal notice, and the court temporarily retained the case. But the same day, the trial court issued a second notice of intent to dismiss, setting a later submission date in August 2024 and again requiring a timely motion to retain. Meanwhile, Miguel obtained an order for substituted service under Rule 106, allowing service at Janette’s address by leaving the papers with a person over sixteen or affixing them to the front door. Critically, the order also stated that service would not be deemed perfected unless the return complied with Rule 107.
The clerk later advised Miguel that citation by publication had been posted on the Office of Court Administration’s website for a specified period. Miguel also pursued posting at the courthouse under Family Code section 6.409, but the clerk informed him that he needed to forward the packet to the constable because the clerk would not perform the posting. He then filed prove-up and default-related paperwork, including a motion for default judgment, asserting that service by publication had been executed and that Janette had failed to answer.
Shortly before the second dismissal setting, the court administrator wrote Miguel to advise that the case remained set for dismissal and that service still had not been perfected in accordance with the substituted-service order. Miguel nevertheless did not file a motion to retain in response to the second notice. The trial court dismissed the case without prejudice for want of prosecution, expressly finding that no motion to retain had been filed and that due diligence had not occurred. The Beaumont court affirmed.
Issues Decided
- Whether the trial court abused its discretion by dismissing a divorce case for want of prosecution when the petitioner had attempted service but had not perfected service.
- Whether issuance of citation, unexecuted certified-mail attempts, substituted-service authorization, or publication on the OCA website required the trial court to retain the case on the docket.
- Whether the petitioner’s failure to file a timely motion to retain in response to the second notice of intent to dismiss supported dismissal for want of prosecution.
Rules Applied
The court relied on both Rule 165a and the trial court’s inherent authority to manage its docket and dismiss stale cases. The opinion reiterates several familiar principles:
- Under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 165a, a trial court may dismiss for want of prosecution when a party seeking affirmative relief fails to appear at a hearing or when the case is not disposed of within applicable time standards.
- Independently of Rule 165a, a trial court has inherent authority to dismiss when the plaintiff fails to prosecute the case with due diligence.
- Before dismissal, the court must provide notice of its intent to dismiss and an opportunity to be heard.
- Appellate review of a dismissal for want of prosecution is for abuse of discretion.
- Service is not merely “attempted” or “initiated”; it must be perfected in compliance with the governing rules, including Rules 106, 107, and 109 where applicable.
The court cited Villarreal v. San Antonio Truck & Equip., 994 S.W.2d 628 (Tex. 1999), for the trial court’s inherent dismissal power and notice requirements; MacGregor v. Rich, 941 S.W.2d 74 (Tex. 1997), and Smith v. Babcock & Wilcox Construction Co., 913 S.W.2d 467 (Tex. 1995), for abuse-of-discretion review; and Downer v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc., 701 S.W.2d 238 (Tex. 1985), for the governing abuse-of-discretion standard.
Application
The Beaumont court’s analysis was straightforward and procedural. The dispositive facts were not that Miguel had done nothing, but that he had never completed the steps required to move attempted service into perfected service and had not complied with the trial court’s docket-retention instructions after receiving the second dismissal notice.
The record showed repeated effort: requests for citation, attempts at certified-mail service, pursuit of publication, a motion for substituted service, and later default-related filings. But the appellate court did not treat those efforts as legally sufficient substitutes for completed service. The trial court had expressly told Miguel that service remained unperfected under the substituted-service order. That mattered because the order itself required a Rule 107-compliant return before service would be deemed accomplished. In other words, obtaining an order authorizing substituted service was only an intermediate step; it did not itself perfect service.
Equally important, the trial court had twice given notice that dismissal was imminent and had specifically instructed Miguel on how to avoid it. After the second notice of intent to dismiss, he did not file a motion to retain. The appellate court emphasized that omission. A party facing dismissal cannot rely on prior activity in the clerk’s file when the court has required a timely showing of diligence and good cause tied to the current dismissal setting. Once Miguel failed to respond as directed, the trial court was entitled to conclude that the case had not been prosecuted with due diligence.
The opinion also implicitly rejects a common practical argument in family cases involving difficult service: that pending publication, clerk processing, or a hoped-for default prove-up should forestall dismissal. Here, despite website publication and a pending effort to secure default relief, the court focused on whether service had actually been perfected under the rules and whether the litigant had complied with the retention procedure set by the dismissal notice. Because the answer to both was no, affirmance followed.
Holding
The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the divorce action for want of prosecution. The decisive considerations were that service had not been perfected and that the petitioner failed to file a motion to retain in response to the second notice of intent to dismiss.
The court further held, in substance, that issuance of citation and publication activity did not compel retention of the case where the record still lacked perfected service under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Mere process activity, without compliance with the applicable service and return rules, was not enough to negate the trial court’s finding of insufficient diligence.
Practical Application
For family-law litigators, Balderas is less about abstract dismissal doctrine and more about case-management discipline in hard-service files. In divorce and SAPCR cases, practitioners often assume that documented attempts at service will buy time. This opinion warns that the real inquiry is narrower: has service actually been perfected, and if not, has counsel promptly given the court a rule-compliant explanation tied to a pending dismissal setting?
In practice, the case has immediate consequences in at least four recurring family-law scenarios. First, in default divorces against absent spouses, counsel should treat every service pathway—personal service, certified mail, Rule 106 substituted service, Rule 109 publication, and any Family Code posting mechanism—as sequential procedural steps that each require exact completion and proof in the record. Second, in modification or enforcement proceedings involving evasive respondents, a signed substituted-service order is not the finish line; the return must still satisfy Rule 107. Third, in publication cases, lawyers should not assume that clerk-issued or OCA-posted citation alone establishes completed service for default or insulates the case from dismissal. Fourth, once a notice of intent to dismiss issues, the service problem and the dismissal problem become separate tasks, and both must be addressed.
Strategically, practitioners should also read Balderas as a reminder that motions to retain are not perfunctory. They should be timely, specific, and evidentiary in substance. A conclusory statement that counsel has been diligent is unlikely to matter if the record still shows no perfected service and no concrete plan for immediate completion. If the court’s notice requires filing seven days before a submission date, missing that deadline may itself become outcome-determinative.
Checklists
Dismissal-Notice Response Checklist
- Calendar the dismissal setting and the motion-to-retain deadline the day the notice is received.
- Read the notice closely for local or case-specific requirements, including whether the hearing is by submission.
- File the motion to retain within the deadline stated in the notice, not merely before the hearing date.
- Address both elements expressly:
- the diligence already undertaken; and
- the good cause for continued retention.
- Attach supporting material where appropriate, such as:
- affidavits or declarations;
- copies of issued citations;
- non-service returns;
- correspondence with the clerk, constable, or process server;
- publication materials; and
- a concrete timeline for completing service.
- Request a ruling and confirm the court actually receives the motion before the submission date.
Service-Perfection Checklist in Family Cases
- Verify the respondent’s address and all likely service locations early.
- Track each citation request and issuance date.
- If using certified mail, confirm whether the green card was signed by the proper person and whether the return is legally sufficient.
- If personal service fails, move promptly for substituted service under Rule 106 with evidence supporting the requested method.
- After obtaining a substituted-service order, ensure that:
- the process server follows the exact method authorized;
- service occurs within any deadline stated in the order; and
- the return complies with Rule 107.
- Do not assume service is perfected until the return is on file and facially compliant.
Publication and Posting Checklist
- Determine whether Rule 109 publication, Family Code posting provisions, or another method actually applies to the case.
- Confirm who is responsible for carrying out the publication or posting step—the clerk, constable, private server, or another official.
- Obtain and file the affidavit or proof necessary to support publication or posting.
- Verify that the publication or posting occurred for the required period and in the required manner.
- Make sure the record contains the proof necessary to establish completed service, not merely a request for publication.
- Before seeking default, confirm that all service prerequisites for default judgment are met.
Default-Prove-Up Checklist After Difficult Service
- Confirm that service has been perfected under the governing rule and any substituted-service order.
- Check the file for a compliant return before drafting default materials.
- Calculate the answer deadline from valid service, not from issuance or attempted service.
- File prove-up materials only after confirming the respondent is actually in default.
- Anticipate court scrutiny in family cases, particularly where service was by substituted means, publication, or posting.
- If a dismissal notice is pending, separately address retention of the case even if default papers have been filed.
File-Maintenance Checklist for Appellate Protection
- Keep a clean chronology of all service efforts.
- Save clerk correspondence, process-server communications, and returned mail documentation.
- File service-related materials promptly rather than leaving them in informal correspondence.
- When the court signals a defect, cure that specific defect and document the cure in the clerk’s record.
- If service remains incomplete, create a record showing exactly why, what has been done, and what remains.
- Never rely on generalized activity in the file as a substitute for a timely motion to retain.
Citation
Balderas v. Balderas, No. 09-24-00325-CV, 2026 Tex. App. LEXIS ___ (Tex. App.—Beaumont June 11, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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