OPINION
Appellant Danny Harold Campsey brings this restricted appeal from the trial court’s granting of a final decree of divorce in favor of Appellee Diane Machelle Camp-sey. We affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
Appellee .sued Appellant for divorce on February 22, 2002. On February 25, 2002, the trial court signed a .temporary restraining order and set a hearing for temporary orders for March 11, 2002. The record contains no evidence that Appellant filed a written answer to Appellee’s petition.
Appellant and Appellee aрpeared at the March 11, 2002 TRO hearing. At the hearing, Appellant signed a form entitled “Pro Se Appearance 324th Court” in which he provided his name, address, date of birth, and social security number. The form included the following pre-printed statement:
IT IS ALSO YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO KEEP THE COURT INFORMED OF YOUR CURRENT ADDRESS AND A TELEPHONE NUMBER WHERE YOU MAY BE CONTACTED DURING BUSINESS HOURS. IF YOUR CASE PROCEEDS TO FINAL TRIAL AND WE ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE YOU FOR LACK OF CURRENT INFORMATION, A DEFAULT JUDGMENT MAY BE TAKEN. NOTICES OF TRIAL REQUESTS AND NOTIFICATION OF A TRIAL DATE AND TIME WILL BE MAILED TO THE LAST KNOWN ADDRESS PROVIDED. [Emphasis added.]
The associate judge swore in the parties, granted a continuance of the hearing until March 26, 2002, and ordered the parties to appear at 9:00 a.m. on March 26, 2002. The associate judge’s order was never appealed or set aside.
When hearings in the case reconvened on March 26, 2002, Appellant did not physically appear in the courtroom. 1 On that same day, Appellant’s waiver of service, which he had signed on February 25, 2002, was filed with the trial court. 2 In the waiver, Appellant waived issuance and service of citаtion, acknowledged that he had received Appellee’s original divorce petition, entered his appearance in the case for all purposes, and agreed that the case could be taken up and considered by the trial court withоut any further notice to him. The trial court entered the final decree of divorce on April 26, 2002.
In one point, Appellant first contends that he was denied due process because he did not receive notice of the April 26, 2002 trial setting. He argues that the “Pro Se Appearance 324th Court” form, with its preprinted statement that the trial court would mail notices of trial settings to him, was the trial court’s written, unrestricted assurance that notice of trial requests and
The Law
A restricted appeal (like its predecessor, a writ of error) directly attacks a default judgment and prevents this court from indulging in presumptions in support of the judgment.
See Wall v. Wall,
1. Participation
Appellant alleged in his restricted notice of appeal that he did not participate in the trial court proceedings below. Ap-pellee contends that Appellant participated in the trial that led to the final divorce decree and, therefore, he cannot bring this restricted appeal.
Participation in an actual trial is a matter of degree for purposes of appeal by restricted appeal, and should be construed liberally in favor of right to appeal.
Stubbs,
Appellee argues that Appellant participated in the proceedings because he stated in his waiver of service that he made an appearance for all purposes. A party’s mere statement that he has made a general appearance for all purposes does not rise to the level of participation at trial.
See Texaco,
We hold that Appellant’s mere statement in the wаiver of service that he entered his appearance for all purposes did not rise to the level of participation at trial. See id In addition, Appellant’s participation in the TRO hearing, which resulted in an extension of the temporary orders, was not рarticipation in “the decision-making event” that resulted in the final judgment adjudicating his rights. The purpose of the TRO hearing was to put guidelines on Appellant’s contact with Appellee and the children and to limit his entanglement with the parties’ personal property while the divorce case was pending. The TRO hearing was not the trial that resulted in final judgment adjudicating Appellant’s rights as to the division of marital property, conservatorship, and child support. Because we hold that Appellant did not participate in the trial, we next examine whether error appears on the face of the record.
2. Error on the face of the record
Appellant alleges that two errors are apparent on the face of the record. First, he argues that the trial court erred in not giving him proper notice of the final trial setting in which it entered the final divorce decree. Second, he claims that the final judgment was entered before the time limits required by the Local Rules of Court of Tarrant County.
In a restricted appeal, the “face of the record” consists of the paрers on file with the trial court when it rendered judgment.
Gen. Elec. Co. v. Falcon Ridge Apts.,
Appellant contends that the trial court erred by not presenting him with proper notice of the trial setting in which it entered the final divorce decree. A trial court’s failure to comply with the rules of notice in a contested case deprives a party of the constitutional right to be present at the hearing and to voice his objections in an appropriate manner, and results in a violatiоn of fundamental due process.
Platt v. Platt,
The trial court presumably will hear a case only when notice has been given to the parties.
Blanco v. Bolanos,
Appellant contends that because the final divorce decree was entered sixty-two days after Appellee filed her original petition, the minimum time between trial requеst and first trial setting did not occur, so he could not have received proper notice. Appellant maintains that the local rules of Tarrant County require a seventy-five-day waiting period before first trial setting. We disagree.
We begin our analysis by considering the applicable local and state rules of procedure together to determine what constitutes sufficient notice. This ease was set for trial in Tarrant County. 3 The Local Rules of Court of Tarrant County make an important distinction between general civil cases and family law cases. Part 3 of the rules governs disposition of general civil trials, and Part 4 specifically applies to disposition of family law cases such as this. Appellant cites to Part 3 of the rules, but overlooks Part 4.
Part 3 provides that a request for a trial setting “may ask for a setting on a specific trial week, but not sooner tha[n] 75 days from the date of the request for the initial trial setting.” TaRRAnt Cty. Loe. R. 3.01(c). This seventy-five-day period is not, as Appellant contends, a notice period. The remainder of 3.01(c) simply says that “partiеs will be notified in writing of the date that the case is set for trial.” Id. Thus, local rule 3.01(c) does not contain a notice period. Adequate notice is governed by state rule 245, which provides that a “[cjourt may set contested cases on written request of any party ... with reаsonable notice of not less than forty-five days to the parties of a first setting for trial .... ” Tex.R. Civ. P. 245. Rule 245 provides the applicable notice period, and the seventy-five-day period in local rule 3.01(c) is merely a waiting period for trial scheduling. Moreover, we do not believe the seventy-five-day period applies to family law cases.
Part 4 of the rules governs the disposition of family law cases. It provides that final trials will be set upon written request using the procedure and form as the specific court requires. TaeRánt Cty. Lоe. R. 4.03(a). Section 6.702 of the family code provides that a trial court “may not grant a divorce before the 60th day after the date the suit was filed. A decree rendered in violation of this subsection is not subject to collateral attack.” Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 6.702(a) (Vernоn 1998). Applying the local family law disposition rules, we hold that the trial court properly entered judgment sixty-two days after Appellee filed her original petition.
See id.;
TaRrant
Conclusion
Appellant has not demonstrated any error on the face of the record. We overrule Appellant’s point, and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. In her Report of Temрorary Orders, the associate judge indicated that Appellant did not appear and included a hand-written note, "waiver in file.”
. In her brief, Appellee erroneously states that Appellant signed the waiver on March 11, 2002, the date of the original TRO hearing.
. We take judicial notice of the Local Rules of Court of Tarrant County, Texas. Tex.R. Evid. 201(d).
