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.
Agree or disagree?
The judge literally helped me organize my evidence during the hearing. Small claims court is designed for non-lawyers. Don't be intimidated.