Texas Justice Court (small claims) handles disputes up to $20,000. No lawyer required. Here's the complete guide.
Filing:
- Go to the Justice of the Peace court in the precinct where the defendant lives or where the issue occurred
- Fill out a petition (the court clerk helps with this)
- Pay the filing fee ($54-75 depending on the county)
- The court serves the defendant (you don't have to)
Dallas County JP Courts:
- Precinct 1: 125 E. Main St, Grand Prairie
- Precinct 2: 7616 LBJ Freeway, Dallas
- Precinct 3: 2600 Lone Star Dr, Dallas
- Precinct 4: 114 W. Commerce St, Dallas
- Precinct 5: 7119 W. Camp Wisdom Rd, Dallas
Tarrant County JP Courts:
- Multiple precincts — check tarrantcounty.com for locations
What to bring to court:
- Copies of all evidence (3 sets: judge, defendant, yourself)
- Written contract or agreement
- Photos/videos
- Text messages/emails (printed)
- Receipts of payment
- Witness testimony (if available)
The hearing:
- Dress business casual
- Be organized. Judges handle dozens of cases per day.
- State the facts. What happened, what was promised, what went wrong, what you're owed.
- Let the evidence speak. Emotional arguments lose to documented facts.
After winning:
- If the defendant doesn't pay voluntarily, you can get a Writ of Execution (bank levy) or Abstract of Judgment (lien on property)
Cost-benefit: For disputes over $500, small claims is almost always worth it. The filing fee is recovered if you win.
Sources:
- Texas Government Code Chapter 28 (Justice Court jurisdiction)
- Texas Rules of Civil Procedure — Rules 500-507 (small claims)
- Dallas County JP Courts (dallascounty.org)
- Tarrant County JP Courts (tarrantcounty.com)
$20,000 limit. No lawyer needed. The court system works if you use it.
Hot take or facts?