OPINION
Hydi Wall appeals a judgment terminating the parent-child relationship with her children W.C.C. and T.C. In four issues, she contends that the district court erred by failing to strictly construe the language of her affidavit relinquishing her parental rights in a manner that would permit her to revoke the relinquishment; by refusing to hear evidence that her affidavit of relinquishment was obtained by fraud, duress, undue influence, or coercion; and by fail *180 ing to set a hearing on her motion for new trial. Because the district court erred by failing to conduct a hearing pursuant to section 263.405(d) of the family code, we abate the appeal and instruct the district court to conduct a hearing consistent with the statute and our opinion.
Procedural History
Although the issues raised by Wall do not require a discussion of the allegations supporting the department’s petition, a brief chronology of the litigation is useful. On November 6, 2003, the department filed a suit affecting the parent-child relationship seeking termination of the parent-child relationship between Wall and her children W.C.C. and T.C. After Wall’s retained counsel was permitted to withdraw, the district court appointed counsel to represent Wall. In September 2004, Wall filed a request for a jury trial. On October 15, Wall and her counsel attended a mediation with the department, and Wall signed a document entitled “Mother’s Affidavit of Relinquishment of Parental Rights to the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services.” This is a three-page document in which Wall states that she has decided that termination of her parental rights is in the best interest of her children, that she voluntarily and permanently relinquishes those rights, and that she would like the department to place the children for adoption. Wall and the department also entered into a rale 11 agreement in which the department agreed to “place the children with the first of three friends or family members named by Wall who completes a positive home study.” Under the agreement, if none of the individuals named by Wall qualified to adopt the children, the department would place the children elsewhere. The agreement begins by reciting that:
HYDI WALL is signing today an Irrevocable Affidavit of Relinquishment to the children [W-C.CJ and [T.C.], naming the Department of Family and Protective Services (“the Department”) Sole Managing Conservator of the children.
Within hours of signing the affidavit and rale 11 agreement, Wall contacted her attorney and expressed her desire to revoke the relinquishment of her parental rights.
The following day, Wall filed an affidavit attempting to revoke the relinquishment of her parental rights and a motion to vacate the rale 11 agreement. The affidavit does not explain Wall’s motivation in revoking the relinquishment of her parental rights but simply states that it is her “desire” to do so. Wall’s motion to vacate the rule 11 agreement is not in the record but is reflected on the district court’s docket sheet. Wall’s request to vacate the rule 11 agreement and revoke the relinquishment of her parental rights was denied at a hearing on October 22. An order terminating the parent-child relationship was signed by the district court on November 1.
Wall timely filed a motion for new trial but encountered some difficulty setting the motion for a hearing. She filed a petition for a writ of mandamus on January 5, 2005, raising essentially the same issues as in this appeal. The petition for a writ of mandamus was denied.
Discussion
In her first and second issues, Wall contends that the district court erred by refusing to allow her to revoke the relinquishment of her parental rights. Section 161.103(e) of the family code governs when an affidavit of relinquishment may be revoked:
The relinquishment in an affidavit that designates the Department of Protective and Regulatory Services or a licensed child-placing agency to serve as the managing conservator is irrevocable. A relinquishment in any other affidavit of relinquishment is revocable unless it ex *181 pressly provides for a stated period of time not to exceed 60 days after the date of its execution.
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 161.103(e) (West Supp.2004-05);
see also Martinez v. Texas Dep’t of Protective and Regulatory Servs.,
We agree that termination proceedings should receive strict scrutiny and that the statutes governing such proceedings are to be strictly construed in favor of the parent.
See Holick v. Smith,
In her third issue, Wall contends that Judge Covington 1 failed or refused to hear proffered evidence that Wall’s relinquishment of her parental rights was obtained through fraud, duress, undue influence, or coercion. Wall does not cite any portion of the record in support of her claim, and she has not included the motion accompanying her affidavit revoking her relinquishment of parental rights in the record. Having carefully reviewed the record, including the six-page transcript of the hearing on Wall’s motion, we find no attempt by Wall to offer evidence of fraud duress, undue influence, or coercion. Wall’s only contention at that hearing was that her affidavit was revocable because it did not contain precise language designating the department as managing conservator. Because the record does not support Wall’s eviden-tiary contention, we overrule her third issue.
In her fourth and final issue, Wall contends that the district court erred by fail *182 ing or refusing to hold a hearing on her motion for new trial. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 263.405(d) (West 2002). As such, the district court did not make the required determinations of (1) whether Wall’s motion for new trial should be granted, (2) whether her claim of indigence should be sustained, and (3) whether her appeal is frivolous. See id.
We first note that the failure to comply with section 263.405 does not deprive this Court of jurisdiction over the appeal.
See In re T.A.C.W.,
The language of section 263.405(d) of the family code makes a hearing on a motion for new trial mandatory in a termination case.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 263.405(d) (“trial court shall hold a hearing”);
In re M.G.D.,
The San Antonio court of appeals recently decided a similar issue in
In re T.A.C.W.,
The issue raised by Wall is that the district court should have held a hearing on her motion for new trial.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 268.405(d)(1). We agree that the hearing was mandatory and that the trial court erred by fading to hold a hearing.
See id; In re T.A.C.W.,
In her brief, Wall asks that we reverse the judgment and order the district court to set the underlying case for trial. We do not conclude that the failure to hold a hearing on a motion for new trial should result in the reversal of the judgment itself. Our opinion in an analogous criminal appeal provides some guidance. In
Mas-singill v. State,
we held that a defendant was deprived of his constitutional right to counsel during the time in which he was to file motions for new trial challenging his conviction in two separate causes.
If the district court grants the motions, appellant’s appeals will be dismissed. If the motions are overruled, the record will be supplemented and the parties will be permitted to brief any issues relating to the overruling of the motions.
Id. at 738-39 (omitted).
We must not affirm or reverse a district court’s judgment if the district court’s error (1) prevents the proper presentation of the case to the court of appeals, and (2) the district court can correct its action or failure to act. Tex.R.App. P. 44.4(a). Under these circumstances, we must direct the trial court to correct the error and then proceed as if the error had not occurred.
Id.
at 44.4(b). As in
Massingill,
the appropriate remedy for the district court’s failure to hold a hearing on Wall’s motion for new trial is to abate the appeal and instruct the district court to hold a hearing pursuant to section 263.405(d).
See
Tex.R.App. P. 44.4(b);
Massingill,
Conclusion
We overrule Wall’s first three issues. Because the district court erred by failing to hold a hearing pursuant to section *184 263.405(d), we sustain Wall’s fourth issue. The appeal is abated and the case remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with section 263.405(d) and our opinion.
Notes
. Although Judge Dietz signed the final judgment in this case, Judge Covington presided over the hearing on Wall’s motion and affidavit revoking her relinquishment of her parental rights.
. An order granting a motion for new trial is generally not reviewable on appeal.
See Wilkins v. Methodist Health Care Sys.,
