      TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN


                                        NO. 03-13-0041-CV



                   Walter Lee Hall, Jr. and Gina Marie Sanchez, Appellants

                                                   v.

             Federal National Mortgage Association a/k/a Fannie Mae, Appellee


            FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 2 OF TRAVIS COUNTY
       NO. C-1-CV-12-002908, HONORABLE J. DAVID PHILLIPS, JUDGE PRESIDING



                             MEMORANDUM OPINION


                On December 19, 2012, the trial court signed an interlocutory judgment, and on

January 1, 2013, appellants filed their notice of appeal. On January 8, appellant Walter Lee Hall,

Jr. filed an affidavit of indigence in the trial court, and on January 18, he filed an affidavit in this

Court. Appellant Gina Marie Sanchez did not file an affidavit of indigence.1 On February 13,

appellants filed a motion for an extension of time to appeal from the trial court’s order sustaining

a contest to their indigence, which was signed January 23. See Tex. R. App. P. 20.1(j)(2) (motion

challenging order sustaining contest to indigence must be filed within ten days of date order is

signed or notice of appeal is filed).


       1
          Appellant Sanchez is named in the pleadings as Hall’s wife. The pleadings, all of which
are identical in form to Hall’s filings in his numerous earlier appeals and most of which are signed
by Hall alone “on behalf of” Sanchez, list a different address for her than for Hall, but mail to that
address has been returned as “not deliverable as addressed.” Despite a message left for Sanchez
requesting an updated address, we have not received any new information.
               On March 7, this Court denied appellants’ motion for an extension of time to

challenge the trial court’s order sustaining the contest and informed appellants that they were to

make arrangements to pay for the record no later than March 27. Rather than complying with those

directions, appellants instead filed a “Reurged Motion to Review Order Sustaining Indigence

Contest” on March 12. On March 27, the trial court clerk’s office informed this Court that no

arrangements had been made to pay for the record. On April 3, appellants provided this Court with

their “Notice of Request for Preparation of the Record on Appeal,” in which they asserted that

because this Court had not ruled on their “reurged” motion, it was granted by operation of law

pursuant to rule 20.1(j)(4). See id. Appellants attached to their notice copies of emails Hall sent

to the trial court clerk and the court reporters on March 29. Hall told the clerk and reporters that

he was “proceeding as an indigent,” but said that if the clerk or reporters disagreed “with my

indigence assertion, feel free to reply with an estimate for the cost of” preparing the clerk’s and

reporter’s records.

               Rule 20.1(j) allows a party asserting indigence to file a motion challenging the trial

court’s order sustaining a contest to the party’s indigence. Id. R. 20.1(j)(1). The motion must be

filed within ten days of the date the trial court signs its order or must request a discretionary

extension from the appellate court by way of a motion that complies with rule 10.5(b). Id.

R. 20.1(j)(2) (“appellate court may extend the time for filing on motion complying with Rule 10.5(b)”

(emphasis added)). If the motion is timely filed or an extension is granted, the appellate court must

rule on the motion within ten days or it is deemed granted by operation of law. Id. R. 20.1(j)(4).

Rule 20.1(j) does not contemplate the “reurging” of a motion challenging an order sustaining a



                                                 2
contest, much less provide that such a motion is deemed granted by operation of law if not ruled

on within ten days. See id. Appellants’ motion is not subject to the granted-by-operation-of-law

provision of rule 20.1(j)(4) and is dismissed as not complying with rule 20.1(j).

                Our March 7 notice gave appellants until March 27 to arrange for the record to be

filed and explained that the appeal would otherwise be subject to dismissal. On March 29, two days

after our deadline, Hall sent emails to the trial court clerk and court reporter, asking for an estimate

of costs of preparing the record. To date, the record has not been filed, nor have appellants made

arrangements to pay for it.2 We therefore dismiss the appeal for want of prosecution.



                                                __________________________________________

                                                David Puryear, Justice

Before Justices Puryear, Pemberton and Rose

Dismissed for Want of Prosecution

Filed: April 5, 2013




       2
          Appellant Hall is well-known to this Court and was declared a vexatious litigant following
his repeated abuse of the judicial system. His pleadings, including his affidavits of indigence, were
rarely in full compliance with the rules, but we generally allowed them due to Hall’s pro se status,
and his affidavits of indigence were rarely challenged by the opposing parties or court reporters.
In this Court’s dealings with Hall, he has repeatedly come close to abusing the rules of timing,
usually filing on the last possible day and often seeking extension after extension. Following Hall’s
repeated abuse of the appellate process, this Court started to apply a strict approach to Hall’s
cases, resulting in a number of them being dismissed for want of prosecution or failure to comply
with our instructions.

                                                   3
