OPINION
Opinion by
Jason Blakeney has filed a petition for writ of mandamus in which he asks this Court to order District Judge Clay Gossett to rule on two motions Blakeney states he filed against the mother of his child and the mother’s attorney. His purported motions seek an order of contempt against the mother and sanctions against her attorney, based on the mother’s alleged statements about him made to the court and the attorney’s purportedly outrageous contentions made in pleadings seeking to terminate Blakeney’s parental rights. Because the mandamus record is insufficient to support relief, we deny Blakeney’s petition.
A trial court is required to consider and rule on a properly filed and pending motion within a reasonable time.
See In re Shaw,
While we have jurisdiction to direct the trial court to make a decision, we may not tell the court what that decision should be.
Crofts v. Court of Civil Appeals,
Any such mandamus relief, however, must be predicated on an adequate showing that a request for a ruling has been properly and adequately presented to the trial court and that the court has de-dined to rule. Mandamus relief requires existence of a legal duty to perform a nondiscretionary act, a demand for performance of that act, and a refusal to so act.
Foreman v. Jarrett,
One problem with Blakeney’s petition is that his record is insufficient because of its form. In this case, rather than attaching file-marked copies of the motions which he claims to have filed, Blakeney has evidently retyped the entirety of various documents (including typed purported filestamps indicating filing of the original document with the district clerk). Although he labels each as a “Duplicate Copy,” they are not copies of the originals, they are retyped representations purporting to show the contents of such documents. 1 Given the state of today’s technology, and the ready ability to create photocopies of extant documents, we are not inclined to accept retyped documents as adequate proof of the content of the actual documents themselves. We also note that, although Blakeney has stated that the facts stated in his petition are true, there is no similar statement as to the “duplicate copy” documents attached to his petition.
For all practical purposes, Blakeney has included no record or appendix. See, e.g., Tex.R.App. P. 52.3(j)(l) (necessary contents of appendix), 52.7(a) (record required to be filed).
It is the relator’s burden to provide this Court with a sufficient record to establish his or her right to mandamus relief.
Walker,
Another problem with Blake-ney’s petition is that there is no showing that Blakeney’s motions have been brought to the attention of the appropriate trial court. The trial court is not required to consider a motion unless it is called to the court’s attention.
In re Smith,
No. 01-06-00532-CV,
We further note that, even if Blakeney had established with a proper record (1) that the motion for sanctions and motion for contempt exist in the form stated and were filed on the dates indicated (November 13, 2007), (2) that motions to proceed were filed December 12, 2007, and January 2, 2008, (3) that those motions were brought to the appropriate trial court’s attention on a timely basis, and (4) that court has known about them for some time, but not yet held a hearing on them, we still would not reach the threshold necessary to grant the mandamus relief. There is also no showing that a reasonable time to rule has expired.
Trial courts are required to consider and rule on motions within a reasonable time.
In re Burden,
No. 06-08-00013-CV,
Although eighteen months is clearly too long, supporting mandamus relief,
In re Ramirez,
[A reasonable time to rule] is dependent upon a myriad of criteria, not the least of which is the trial court’s actual knowledge of the motion, its overt refusal to act on same, the state of the court’s docket, and the existence of other judicial and administrative matters which must be addressed first. Ex parte Bates,65 S.W.3d 138 (Tex.App.-Amarillo 2001, orig. proceeding). So too must the trial court’s inherent power to control its own docket be factored into the mix. See Ho v. University of Texas at Arlington,984 S.W.2d 672 , 694-95 (Tex.App.-Amarillo 1998, pet. denied) (holding that a court has the inherent authority to control its own docket).
Chavez,
For all of these reasons, we conclude Blakeney has not shown himself entitled to the extraordinary remedy of mandamus. Therefore, we deny his petition for writ of mandamus.
Notes
. There is no suggestion that the pleadings or motions were lost.
. Judge Gossett, named as respondent in Blakeney’s petition, has filed a response indicating that the court which should have been referenced in Blakeney's petition is the County Court at Law of Rusk County, Texas, not the district court sitting in that county. In other words, Judge Gossett has stated that he is not even the right judge to be the object of the petition. While the retyped documents attached to Blakeney’s petition recite that they were directed to the district court, we have concluded that the form of Blakeney’s attachments is inadequate as a record. Avoiding this sort of fact dispute over the proper court is one excellent reason an adequate record is necessary.
