Why This Case Is Here
Family court is the place where ordinary people lose winnable cases because nobody hands them a manual. Amanda Williams walked into the 71st District Court of Harrison County, Texas facing the full weight of a contested family matter — including a motion for temporary orders, a subpoena dispute, and opposing counsel's withdrawal — and had to make each filing land without missing the narrow procedural windows Texas law allows.
This is a case file, not a brief. Everything below is drawn from the public record on file with the Harrison County District Clerk under Cause No. 25-0877, along with the work product Faretta Legal contributed to Amanda's pro se response.
Case Overview
A contested family-law matter before Judge Brad Moran of the 71st District Court. The docket spans counterpetition, original answer, a motion for withdrawal of counsel, an order granting that withdrawal, a motion for the court to confer with the child, and competing motions for temporary orders. Faretta Legal was brought in to help Amanda build the timeline, exhibits, and procedural framework that a pro se litigant needs before walking into a hearing.
Procedural Timeline
The following filings are part of the public record in Cause No. 25-0877:
- Oct 2, 2025 — Notice of Hearing for Temporary Orders and Order to Appear filed
- Oct 16, 2025 — Respondent's Original Answer filed
- Oct 16, 2025 — Original Counterpetition for Divorce filed
- Nov 13, 2025 — Motion for Withdrawal of Counsel filed
- Nov 13, 2025 — Motion for Judge to Confer with Child filed
- Nov 14, 2025 — Order on Motion for Continuance entered
- Nov 14, 2025 — Order on Motion for Withdrawal of Counsel — Williams entered
- Nov 24, 2025 — Attorney of Appearance filed
- Jan 22, 2026 — Notice of Hearing for Temporary Orders and Order to Appear filed
- Jan 23, 2026 — Respondent's Motion for Temporary Orders filed
What Faretta Legal Helped Build
When the procedural clock was short and the stakes were high, we worked alongside Amanda to prepare the pieces of the response that had to land exactly right:
- Emergency Motion to Continue. A motion aimed at preserving Amanda's ability to be heard when the calendar didn't give her room to respond meaningfully. Drafted to Texas procedural standards and cross-checked against Tex. R. Civ. P. 251 (continuance procedures) and Tex. Const. art. I, § 19 (due course of law).
- Declaration in Support of the Emergency Motion to Continue. The sworn statement that attached to the motion, structured to present the facts the way a pro se litigant has to present them — clear, dated, and aligned with the relief requested.
- Continuance Core Filing Packet. The full packet that pulled the motion, declaration, exhibit references, certificate of service, and proposed order into one binder-ready file.
Alongside the filings, the work included chronology preparation, exhibit organization, and public records requests under the Texas Public Information Act (Tex. Gov't Code § 552.001 et seq.).
The Legal Framework That Governs This Matter
- Tex. R. Civ. P. 251 — Continuance: no application granted without sufficient cause supported by affidavit or consent of the parties.
- Tex. R. Civ. P. 176 — Subpoena scope and enforcement.
- Tex. R. Civ. P. 10 — Withdrawal of counsel procedures and the required notice to the client.
- Tex. R. Civ. P. 21, 21a — Filing and service of motions and responses.
- Tex. Fam. Code § 153.009 — Interview of child in chambers (relevant to the Motion for Judge to Confer with Child).
- Tex. Const. art. I, § 19 — Due course of law — the bedrock on which every procedural challenge rests in Texas civil courts.
Public Documents
The public filings listed above are on record with the Harrison County District Clerk under Cause No. 25-0877. Any member of the public may request copies directly from the clerk's office.
Copies of the Ryan-drafted Emergency Motion to Continue, the Declaration in Support, and the Core Filing Packet v2 are available on request — downloadable versions will be linked here shortly once document hosting is finalized.
What Faretta Legal Provides
- Chronology preparation — every filing, every hearing, every ruling in a clean one-page timeline
- Evidence organization and exhibit list preparation
- Public records requests under the Texas Public Information Act
- Courtroom procedural preparation — what to say, when to stand, how to preserve the record for appeal
- Pro se motion drafting support (the pro se litigant files and signs; we organize the facts and cite the rules)
This is investigative, organizational, and advocacy work. It is not legal representation. Any legal decisions are made by the pro se party themselves, or with the advice of a Texas-licensed attorney.
Why This Work Matters
Most pro se litigants lose winnable cases for one reason: they're disorganized when they walk in. Not because they're wrong. Not because their facts are bad. Because the people across the aisle have the paper and they don't. Amanda's case is the reason Faretta Legal exists — to close that gap, one binder at a time.