Civil vs. Criminal Law in Texas: Key Distinctions and Procedures

Texas law divides legal disputes into two foundational categories — civil and criminal — each governed by distinct codes, procedural rules, standards of proof, and consequences. Understanding how these two systems differ shapes every aspect of how a case is filed, argued, and resolved in Texas courts. This page covers the definitional boundaries, procedural mechanics, common real-world scenarios, and the critical decision points that determine which body of law applies to a given situation.

Definition and Scope

Civil law in Texas governs disputes between private parties — individuals, corporations, government entities, or other legal persons — over rights, obligations, contracts, property, or injuries. The goal of a civil action is typically compensation or equitable relief, not punishment. Criminal law, by contrast, addresses conduct that the State of Texas has defined by statute as an offense against the public order, authorizing the government to prosecute individuals and impose penalties including fines, probation, or imprisonment.

The governing authority for Texas civil procedure is the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, promulgated by the Texas Supreme Court under authority granted by the Legislature. Criminal procedure is governed by the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure (Tex. Code Crim. Proc.), first codified in 1965 and substantially revised since. Substantive criminal offenses are defined primarily in the Texas Penal Code, which classifies offenses from Class C misdemeanors through first-degree felonies.

For a broader map of how both systems fit within the state's judicial architecture, the conceptual overview of how the Texas legal system works provides foundational context. Additional terminology distinctions — including "plaintiff," "defendant," "complainant," and "accused" — are addressed in the Texas legal system terminology and definitions reference.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page applies exclusively to Texas state law as administered through Texas state courts. It does not address federal criminal prosecutions brought under Title 18 of the U.S. Code, federal civil rights actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, tribal court jurisdiction, or civil or criminal matters arising exclusively under federal statutes. Situations involving both state and federal claims present overlapping jurisdictional questions not fully resolved on this page.

How It Works

Civil Procedure: Phases and Structure

Civil litigation in Texas follows a structured sequence established by the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure:

  1. Pleadings — The plaintiff files an original petition with a court of appropriate jurisdiction. The defendant responds with an answer, which may include affirmative defenses or counterclaims.
  2. Discovery — Both parties exchange evidence through depositions, interrogatories, requests for production, and requests for admission under Rules 190–215.
  3. Pretrial motions — Either party may seek summary judgment (Rule 166a) if no genuine dispute of material fact exists.
  4. Trial — Cases may be tried before a judge (bench trial) or a jury. In civil cases, the Texas jury system requires a unanimous verdict in most jury trials, though Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 292 permits a 10-of-12 verdict in certain civil matters.
  5. Judgment and enforcement — The prevailing party obtains a judgment, which may be enforced through writs of execution, garnishment, or other collection mechanisms detailed under Texas enforcement and judgment collection.
  6. Appeal — Parties may appeal to the appropriate Court of Appeals, and ultimately to the Texas Supreme Court for civil matters.

The standard of proof in civil cases is preponderance of the evidence — meaning the claimed facts are more likely true than not, a threshold sometimes described as greater than 50 percent probability.

Criminal Procedure: Phases and Structure

Criminal cases in Texas follow the sequence established by the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure:

  1. Arrest or citation — Law enforcement detains or cites an individual based on probable cause.
  2. Magistration — A magistrate informs the accused of charges and sets bail under Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Art. 15.17.
  3. Grand jury or information — Felony charges require a grand jury indictment (Texas Constitution, Art. I, § 10); misdemeanor charges may proceed by information filed by the prosecutor.
  4. Arraignment — The defendant enters a plea.
  5. Pretrial hearings — Suppression motions, competency hearings, and plea negotiations occur at this stage.
  6. Trial — The State bears the burden of proof. The Texas district attorney and prosecution system initiates and maintains the prosecution. Defendants may be represented by retained counsel or, if indigent, by appointed counsel through the Texas public defender and indigent defense system.
  7. Verdict and sentencing — Conviction requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the highest standard in American jurisprudence.
  8. Appeal — Criminal appeals from trial courts go to the Courts of Appeals and ultimately to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which has exclusive final jurisdiction over criminal matters at the state level.

The regulatory context for the Texas legal system details the agency and legislative framework that shapes both civil and criminal enforcement priorities.

Common Scenarios

Civil Law Scenarios

Criminal Law Scenarios

A single incident can give rise to both civil and criminal proceedings simultaneously. A defendant acquitted in a criminal trial may still face civil liability because the two standards of proof are independent.

Decision Boundaries

Key Distinctions at a Glance

Feature Civil Law Criminal Law
Initiating party Private plaintiff State of Texas (prosecution)
Purpose Compensation or equitable relief Punishment and public protection
Standard of proof Preponderance of the evidence Beyond a reasonable doubt
Outcome Judgment (damages, injunction) Conviction (fine, probation, incarceration)
Right to appointed counsel No (with narrow exceptions) Yes, for indigent defendants facing incarceration
Jury size (typical) 6 or 12 jurors 6 (misdemeanor) or 12 (felony)

The Texas legal rights of individuals page addresses constitutional protections — including the Sixth Amendment right to counsel and Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination — that apply specifically in criminal proceedings and generally do not transfer to civil matters in the same form.

The Texas due process protections framework governs both systems but imposes stricter procedural requirements in criminal cases due to the potential for loss of liberty.

Jurisdictional scope: Texas state courts handle the vast majority of civil and criminal cases arising within the state's geographic boundaries. Federal courts in Texas assert jurisdiction over federal question cases, diversity actions exceeding $75,000 between citizens of different states (28 U.S.C. § 1332), and federal criminal prosecutions. The home page of this resource situates these distinctions within the broader landscape of Texas legal authority.

Statute of limitations rules — which set the maximum time after an event within which a legal action may be filed — differ significantly between civil and criminal matters and are catalogued in the Texas statute of limitations reference.

References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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