Tex. R. App. P. 4.6

As amended through April 30, 2024
Rule 4.6 - No Notice of Trial Court's Order on Motion for Forensic DNA Testing
(a)Additional Time to File Notice of Appeal. If neither an adversely affected defendant nor the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge that the trial judge signed an order appealable under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 64 within twenty days after the signing, then the time periods under these rules that ordinarily run from the signing of an appealable order will begin to run on the earliest date when the defendant or the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge of the signing. But in no event shall such periods begin more than 120 days after the day the trial judge signed the appealable order.
(b)Motion to Gain Additional Time.
(1) A defendant's motion for additional time must:
(A) Be in writing and sworn;
(B) State the defendant's desire to appeal from the appealable order;
(C) State the earliest date when the defendant or the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge that the trial judge signed the appealable order; and
(D) Be filed within 120 days of the signing of the appealable order.
(2) To establish the application of paragraph (a) of this rule, the defendant adversely affected must prove in the trial court:
(A) The earliest date on which the defendant or the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge that the trial judge signed the appealable order; and
(B) That this date was more than twenty days after the signing of the appealable order.
(3) If the defendant's motion for additional time meets the requirements set out in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2), the motion may serve as the defendant's notice of appeal.
(c)The Court's Order. After hearing the motion for additional time, the trial judge must sign a written order that determines the earliest date when the defendant or the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge that the trial judge signed the appealable order and whether this date was more than twenty days after the judge signed the appealable order.
(d)The Clerk's Duties. The trial court clerk must immediately (as they are filed or entered in the record) forward to all parties in the case copies of the defendant's motion for additional time, the trial judge's written order under subsection (c), the order the defendant seeks to appeal, any State's response, and any exhibits and related documents.

Tex. R. App. P. 4.6

Adopted by Order dated June 13, 2017, effective 9/1/2017.

Notes and Comments

Comment to 1997 change: This is former Rule 5. Paragraph 4.1(b) is added. Former paragraph (b)(1) is omitted because it is covered by other provisions of the rules. Former paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) are omitted because they are duplicative of provisions in the Rules of Civil Procedure, which prescribes the applicable procedure. The phrase "modified, corrected or reformed in any respect" in paragraph 4.3(a) is changed to "modified in any respect," but no change in substance is intended. Former subdivision (e) regarding notice of judgment by the court of appeals is moved to Rule 12.6. Subdivision 4.5 is revised and now makes clear that the court must grant the motion for additional time if the court finds that the party did not receive the notice or acquire actual knowledge in time. Other changes are made throughout the rule.

Comment to 2002 change: Subdivision 4.5 is amended to clarify that a party may obtain additional time to file documents when the party fails to receive notice not only of an appellate court judgment, but of an appellate court order - such as one denying a motion for rehearing - that triggers the appeal period.

Comment to 2007 change: Subdivision 4.5 is changed, consistent with other changes in the rules, to specifically address a motion for en banc reconsideration and treat it as a motion for rehearing.

Comment to 2018 change: Rule 4.6 is intended to provide redress for criminal defendants who are entitled to appeal trial court rulings made pursuant to Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 64, but receive late or no notice of the rulings. The rule allows a defendant additional time to file a notice of appeal when neither the defendant nor the defendant's attorney received notice or acquired actual knowledge of the signing of the appealable order within the first 20 days after the signing. The rule is based on the framework of Rule of Appellate Procedure 4.2 and Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 306a, but is intended to apply only in the limited context of appealable rulings on Chapter 64 motions. The term "sworn" in Rule 4.6 includes the use of an unsworn declaration made under penalty of perjury. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 132.001. If a trial judge grants a defendant's motion for additional time filed under this rule, the court of appeals may treat the defendant's late-filed notice of appeal as timely or treat the motion for additional time itself as a notice of appeal for the purpose of determining compliance with Rules 25.2 and 26.2.