in the Guardianship of James E. Fairley ( 2022 )


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  •           Supreme Court of Texas
    ══════════
    No. 20-0328
    ══════════
    In the Guardianship of James E. Fairley
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    On Petition for Review from the
    Court of Appeals for the Fourth District of Texas
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    Argued September 30, 2021
    JUSTICE HUDDLE delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
    Chief Justice Hecht, Justice Lehrmann, Justice Boyd, Justice Busby,
    Justice Bland, and Justice Young joined.
    JUSTICE DEVINE filed a dissenting opinion, in which Justice
    Blacklock joined.
    After Mauricette Fairley acted as her husband’s guardian for the
    last three years of his life, their daughter Juliette Fairley—the
    petitioner here—asks us to void all orders entered in the guardianship
    proceeding because the proposed ward, her now-deceased father, was
    personally served by a private process server.       Specifically, Juliette
    claims personal service on her father by a private process server was
    insufficient to vest jurisdiction in the probate court because, she asserts,
    Chapter 1051 of the Estates Code requires a proposed ward in Texas to
    be personally served by a sheriff, constable, or other elected officeholder.
    We hold the probate court’s orders are not void. While the Estates
    Code directs that personal service on a ward be effected in a particular
    manner, it does not reflect an intent by the Legislature that the failure
    to satisfy each technical requirement—as opposed to the failure to
    personally serve the ward altogether—is jurisdictional. Thus, we hold
    that a technical defect in personal service on the ward does not deprive
    the probate court of subject-matter jurisdiction or personal jurisdiction
    over the ward where the ward is personally served and participates in
    the proceedings through counsel without objection. We affirm the court
    of appeals’ judgment.
    I.     Background
    Juliette seeks a guardianship in Texas, and her application is
    dismissed.
    This dispute between James Fairley’s wife, Mauricette, and his
    daughter, Juliette, has a tortured procedural history and has spanned a
    decade. The parties first involved the courts in Bexar County in 2011,
    when James was 81 and Juliette alleged that he needed a guardian. The
    probate court appointed a guardian ad litem who determined a
    guardianship was not necessary, so that proceeding was closed.1 The
    following year, Juliette filed another application asking to be appointed
    James’s permanent guardian.          But Juliette agreed to nonsuit her
    application in exchange for certain promises regarding both James’s
    care and Juliette’s access to James. The probate court thus entered an
    1 None of the pleadings or orders from this initial application are part
    of the record on appeal. Mauricette asserts the guardianship was deemed
    unnecessary because James was adequately protected through various powers
    of attorney James had given to Mauricette.
    2
    order       dismissing   Juliette’s   second guardianship    application    in
    September 2014.
    Juliette moves James to New York, and dueling proceedings are
    filed in Texas and New York.
    One month after the Bexar County probate court dismissed her
    application to serve as James’s permanent guardian, Juliette took her
    father from his San Antonio assisted-living facility to New York, where
    she lived. Mauricette then requested that a Bexar County probate court
    appoint her as James’s temporary guardian under Estates Code Section
    1251.001.2 Mauricette alleged that Juliette had unlawfully removed
    James from his residence and defrauded him into signing powers of
    attorney, which Juliette used to take money from James’s bank account.
    Mauricette claimed that Juliette endangered James’s health and safety
    and that Mauricette’s appointment as James’s temporary guardian was
    necessary for his protection.
    James was personally served with this temporary-guardianship
    application in New York in November 2014. According to an Affidavit
    of Service signed by Sara M. Clark, she served James with the
    application and citation at a New York residence “by personally
    delivering and leaving the same with JAMES E. FAIRLEY.”                    The
    affidavit describes James’s physical appearance and location within the
    residence where he was served. In her affidavit, Clark states that she
    is over the age of 18 and is “not a party to this action.”
    Section 1251.001 of the Estates Code authorizes courts to appoint a
    2
    temporary guardian based on substantial evidence that a person may be
    incapacitated and probable cause that the immediate appointment of a
    guardian is required. TEX. EST. CODE § 1251.001(a).
    3
    Three days after Mauricette filed her temporary-guardianship
    application in Texas, Juliette filed a petition in New York state court
    asking that she be appointed James’s guardian. Mauricette opposed,
    and the New York court held a hearing on December 1, 2014. After
    determining that James was “able and willing to attend,” the New York
    court recessed the hearing to allow James to be brought to the
    courthouse.    The court received evidence from a court-appointed
    evaluator who personally observed the “warm and affectionate” reunion
    between James and Mauricette at the courthouse. The New York court
    appointed Mauricette and the court evaluator “special temporary co-
    guardians” of James for the limited purpose of returning James to Texas
    so the Bexar County probate court could resolve any further dispute over
    the guardianship. The New York court also revoked the powers of
    attorney in favor of Juliette and reinstated those in favor of Mauricette.
    Mauricette files an application for permanent guardianship of
    James.
    Back in Texas, on December 8, 2014, Mauricette filed (in the same
    probate court and under the same cause number as her application for
    temporary guardianship) an application seeking appointment as
    James’s permanent guardian.3        Mauricette alleged that James was
    totally incapacitated and that Juliette was a threat to his welfare.
    3 Section 1101.151 of the Estates Code authorizes courts to appoint a
    guardian with full authority over a person who is found to be totally without
    capacity to care for himself, manage his property, operate a motor vehicle,
    make personal decisions regarding residence, and vote in a public election.
    TEX. EST. CODE § 1101.151(a).
    4
    Shortly after Mauricette filed her application for permanent
    guardianship, the probate court held a hearing on Mauricette’s
    application for temporary guardianship. James was represented by a
    court-appointed attorney ad litem, who had filed an answer on James’s
    behalf in this proceeding and had served as James’s attorney ad litem
    during the 2012 proceedings in which Juliette sought to be appointed as
    James’s guardian. Following an evidentiary hearing, the probate court
    appointed Mauricette as James’s temporary guardian pending the
    resolution of Juliette’s contest to the application for a permanent
    guardianship.   See TEX. EST. CODE § 1251.052(b)(1) (authorizing a
    temporary guardian to serve until the conclusion of the hearing
    contesting an application for guardianship). The probate court also
    ordered that James’s attorney ad litem “continue[] . . . to represent the
    interests of the Proposed Ward during the pendency of this contest.”
    One month later, James was personally served with the
    application for permanent guardianship at the San Antonio assisted-
    living facility to which he had returned. The return of citation shows
    that James was personally served with the application and citation by a
    Texas licensed private process server.
    The probate court appoints Mauricette as James’s permanent
    guardian.
    Mauricette served as James’s temporary guardian under the
    probate court’s order for most of 2015. Then, following a November 2015
    hearing, the probate court appointed Mauricette as James’s permanent
    guardian. The probate court found James was “totally incapacitated”
    and that it was in his best interest that Mauricette be appointed
    5
    guardian of his person. The probate court’s order notes that James
    “appeared by and through his court appointed attorney ad litem.”
    Juliette challenges the appointment order through appeal and
    mandamus.
    Juliette appealed the probate court’s order appointing Mauricette
    as James’s permanent guardian. She argued the probate court abused
    its discretion by requiring her to deposit $20,000 as security for the
    probable costs of the guardianship proceeding and then dismissing her
    cross-application when she failed to do so. The court of appeals affirmed,
    and we denied Juliette’s petition for review. In re Guardianship of
    Fairley, No. 04-16-00096-CV, 
    2017 WL 188103
     (Tex. App.—San Antonio
    Jan. 18, 2017, pet. denied).
    Juliette then filed a pro se petition for writ of mandamus in March
    2018. She argued that the order requiring her to pay $20,000 as security
    and later orders based on her failure to comply were void because they
    violated “the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, the 8th Amendment, the
    Due Process and Equal Protection Clause [and] the Texas Estates Code.”
    The court of appeals denied Juliette’s mandamus petition.           In re
    Guardianship of Fairley, No. 04-18-00190-CV, 
    2018 WL 1610924
     (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio Apr. 4, 2018, orig. proceeding).
    Juliette files a mandamus petition in this Court, asserting the
    probate court never acquired jurisdiction over James.
    Juliette filed a pro se petition for writ of mandamus in this Court
    in June 2018, then retained new counsel.          Because some of the
    challenged orders were issued by probate court judges who no longer
    presided over the case, the Court abated the mandamus proceeding
    under Rule of Appellate Procedure 7.2(b) to allow the current judge to
    6
    reconsider those orders. Juliette then filed in the probate court a motion
    to reconsider in which she argued, for the first time, that all the probate
    court’s orders after September 2014 were void because the court never
    obtained jurisdiction over James.       Specifically, Juliette argued that
    Mauricette’s applications for guardianship were served on James by
    private process servers in violation of Section 1051.103 of the Estates
    Code, which Juliette contended required James to be served by “[t]he
    sheriff or other officer.” TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.103(a)(1). The probate
    court denied Juliette’s motion, finding that “citation was properly served
    upon [James] in this cause as required by the TEXAS ESTATES CODE and
    the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure [and] that this Court has jurisdiction
    over the pending guardianship proceeding in this Cause.”
    James dies, and Juliette’s mandamus petition is denied.
    After the probate court denied reconsideration, we reinstated the
    mandamus proceeding, and Juliette filed a redrawn petition asserting
    that every order issued after September 2014—the date her 2012
    application was dismissed—was void due to what she contends was
    improper service of Mauricette’s guardianship applications. James died
    soon thereafter, and Mauricette then argued that his death rendered
    moot any dispute over the guardianship orders.            We denied the
    mandamus petition in January 2019.
    Juliette files a wrongful-death suit, which is transferred to the
    probate court.
    Juliette sued Mauricette and Mauricette’s other daughter (and
    James’s step-daughter), Dorothy, in Bexar County district court for
    wrongful death and to enjoin embalming or cremation of James’s body.
    7
    On Mauricette and Dorothy’s motion, the probate court transferred the
    wrongful-death suit to itself under Estates Code Section 1022.007(a).4
    Mauricette requests dismissal of the wrongful-death suit, and
    Juliette files a TCPA motion.
    Following the transfer and consolidation of the wrongful-death
    suit into the guardianship proceeding, Mauricette and Dorothy sought
    dismissal of Juliette’s claims under Rule of Civil Procedure 91a. Juliette
    responded with a motion to dismiss under the Texas Citizens
    Participation Act (TCPA), TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE §§ 27.001–.011,
    in which she asked the probate court to vacate the transfer order and
    dismiss Mauricette’s Rule 91a motion. Juliette argued that the probate
    court never acquired jurisdiction over the guardianship proceeding. She
    also argued that the TCPA applied both to Mauricette’s motion to
    transfer and the Rule 91a motion to dismiss and that Mauricette failed
    4   Section 1022.007(a) of the Estates Code provides:
    A judge of a statutory probate court, on the motion of a party to
    the action or of a person interested in the guardianship, may:
    (1) transfer to the judge’s court from a district, county, or
    statutory court a cause of action that is a matter related to a
    guardianship proceeding pending in the statutory probate
    court, including a cause of action that is a matter related to
    a guardianship proceeding pending in the statutory probate
    court and in which the guardian, ward, or proposed ward in
    the pending guardianship proceeding is a party; and
    (2) consolidate the transferred cause of action with the
    guardianship proceeding to which it relates and any other
    proceedings in the statutory probate court that are related to
    the guardianship proceeding.
    TEX. EST. CODE § 1022.007(a).
    8
    to establish by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for each
    essential element of the claims in those motions.
    The probate court denies Juliette’s TCPA motion, and the court
    of appeals affirms.
    The probate court denied Juliette’s motion to dismiss under the
    TCPA, and Juliette appealed.       See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    § 51.014(a)(12) (allowing an interlocutory appeal from an order denying
    a motion to dismiss under the TCPA). The court of appeals affirmed.
    
    604 S.W.3d 450
     (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2020).             The court first
    concluded that service of Mauricette’s application for permanent
    guardianship by a private process server complied with Estates Code
    Section 1051.103. Id. at 457. The court also concluded that neither
    Mauricette’s motion to transfer the wrongful-death suit nor her Rule 91a
    motion to dismiss was a “legal action” under the TCPA and, therefore,
    the probate court did not err in denying Juliette’s motion to dismiss. Id.
    at 457–60.
    Juliette petitioned for review in this Court. Here, she does not
    challenge the court of appeals’ ruling on her TCPA motion. Rather, she
    advances two jurisdictional arguments: either (1) James’s death caused
    the probate court to lose jurisdiction and prevented it from transferring
    Juliette’s wrongful-death case to itself or (2) the probate court lacked
    jurisdiction and all orders in the guardianship proceeding are void
    because James was not served by a sheriff, constable, or “other officer,”
    which Juliette interprets to exclude private process servers.
    II.   Jurisdictional Principles
    Juliette urges us to hold that all the probate court’s orders issued
    after September 2014 are “void for lack of jurisdiction over James
    9
    Fairley.” Because the parties’ briefing does not consistently distinguish
    between them, we begin by setting forth some principles of the different
    types of jurisdiction at issue here.
    A.    Subject-matter jurisdiction
    To issue a valid and binding judgment or order, a court must have
    both subject-matter jurisdiction over a case and personal jurisdiction
    over the party it purports to bind. Luciano v. SprayFoamPolymers.com,
    LLC, 
    625 S.W.3d 1
    , 7–8 (Tex. 2021). Subject-matter jurisdiction refers
    to a court’s statutory or constitutional power to adjudicate a case. Steel
    Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 89 (1998). The subject-
    matter jurisdiction of Texas courts derives solely from the Texas
    Constitution and state statutes. In re Allcat Claims Serv., L.P., 
    356 S.W.3d 455
    , 459–60 (Tex. 2011). Because subject-matter jurisdiction
    cannot be conferred on a court by consent or waiver, a judgment is never
    considered final if the court that issued it lacked subject-matter
    jurisdiction. Dubai Petroleum Co. v. Kazi, 
    12 S.W.3d 71
    , 76 (Tex. 2000).
    Partly out of a desire to “reduce the vulnerability of final judgments to
    attack,” 
    id.
     (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS § 11 cmt. e
    (AM. L. INST. 1982)), we are reluctant to conclude that a statutory
    requirement affects a court’s subject-matter jurisdiction absent clear
    legislative intent to that effect. City of DeSoto v. White, 
    288 S.W.3d 389
    ,
    393 (Tex. 2009).
    But courts do lack subject-matter jurisdiction to decide a moot
    controversy. State ex rel. Best v. Harper, 
    562 S.W.3d 1
    , 6 (Tex. 2018).
    The prohibition against deciding moot controversies is rooted in the
    separation-of-powers doctrine that prohibits courts from rendering
    10
    advisory opinions. Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Jones, 
    1 S.W.3d 83
    ,
    86 (Tex. 1999) (citing TEX. CONST. art. II, § 1). A suit may become moot
    at any time, including on appeal. Heckman v. Williamson County, 
    369 S.W.3d 137
    , 166 (Tex. 2012). A case is moot when a live controversy no
    longer exists or the parties have no legally cognizable interest in the
    outcome. City of Krum v. Rice, 
    543 S.W.3d 747
    , 749 (Tex. 2017).
    B.       Personal jurisdiction
    In contrast to subject-matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction
    concerns the court’s power to bind a particular person or party to a
    judgment. Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 8. Personal jurisdiction is composed
    of two elements: (1) the defendant must be amenable to the jurisdiction
    of the court, and (2) the plaintiff must validly invoke that jurisdiction by
    valid service of process on the defendant.       Kawasaki Steel Corp. v.
    Middleton, 
    699 S.W.2d 199
    , 200 (Tex. 1985). Establishing personal
    jurisdiction over a party requires “citation issued and served in a
    manner provided for by law.” In re E.R., 
    385 S.W.3d 552
    , 563 (Tex. 2012)
    (quoting Wilson v. Dunn, 
    800 S.W.2d 833
    , 836 (Tex. 1990)). However,
    unlike challenges to subject-matter jurisdiction, objections to personal
    jurisdiction generally can be waived, and a party may consent to the
    personal jurisdiction of a court. In re Fisher, 
    433 S.W.3d 523
    , 532 (Tex.
    2014).
    III.   Analysis
    Juliette brought an interlocutory appeal from the probate court’s
    order denying her TCPA motion, which sought dismissal of Mauricette
    and Dorothy’s Rule 91a motion against her wrongful-death suit. She
    asserts this order and the court’s previous order transferring that suit
    11
    to the probate court—as well as all orders issued after September
    2014—are void because James was never properly served with a
    guardianship application.
    The parties’ briefs principally address the questions of whether
    service on James complied with Estates Code Chapter 1051 and whether
    defective service deprived the probate court of personal jurisdiction over
    James. Before considering those questions, however, we first address
    two threshold issues relating to subject-matter jurisdiction: Mauricette’s
    claim that James’s death rendered this appeal moot; and Juliette’s
    related claim that James’s death terminated the guardianship and the
    probate court’s subject-matter jurisdiction, such that any orders entered
    after his death are void.
    A.    Did James’s death moot the appeal?
    Mauricette argues James’s death in December 2018 mooted
    Juliette’s appeal. We disagree. As noted, a case is moot when a live
    controversy no longer exists. City of Krum, 543 S.W.3d at 749. Juliette
    contends that the probate court lacked jurisdiction to transfer to itself
    her wrongful-death suit. If Juliette is correct, the result would be a
    reinstatement of Juliette’s wrongful-death suit in the district court.
    Juliette’s appeal thus presents a live controversy notwithstanding
    James’s death: whether the district court is the proper court to
    adjudicate her wrongful-death suit.      Because this live controversy
    remains, we reject Mauricette’s argument that James’s death rendered
    this appeal moot. See id.
    12
    B.    Did James’s death end the guardianship proceeding and
    thereby deprive the probate court of subject-matter
    jurisdiction?
    Juliette advances a different theory of how James’s death
    deprived the probate court of subject-matter jurisdiction to transfer the
    wrongful-death suit to itself. She argues that James’s death terminated
    the guardianship over him and, therefore, there was no longer a
    “guardianship proceeding pending” into which the probate court could
    transfer her wrongful-death suit. See TEX. EST. CODE § 1022.007(a)
    (authorizing statutory probate court to transfer to itself claims related
    to “a guardianship proceeding pending in” that court). We disagree.
    To initiate a proceeding to appoint a guardian, a person must file
    a written application in the proper court. TEX. EST. CODE § 1101.001(a).
    Texas law permits the creation of a guardianship of a person or an
    estate, or both. See id. §§ 1002.012(b) (defining “guardian” to include
    both the guardian of an incapacitated person and the guardian of an
    incapacitated person’s estate), 1101.001(b)(3) (requiring the application
    to state whether it is for guardianship of the person or estate, or both).
    It is undisputed that the applications in this case sought only
    guardianship of a person—James—and not guardianship of James’s
    estate.
    The Legislature created the statutory probate court in Bexar
    County from which this appeal arises.            See TEX. GOV’T CODE
    § 25.0171(c). The Legislature gives statutory probate courts original
    jurisdiction   over   guardianship    proceedings.     TEX. EST. CODE
    § 1022.002(c); see also TEX. CONST. art. V, § 8 (“District Court
    jurisdiction consists of exclusive, appellate, and original jurisdiction of
    13
    all actions, proceedings, and remedies, except in cases where exclusive,
    appellate, or original jurisdiction may be conferred by this Constitution
    or other law on some other court, tribunal, or administrative body.”).
    The Estates Code defines a “guardianship proceeding” as “a matter or
    proceeding related to a guardianship or any other matter covered by this
    title,” including “the appointment of a guardian of a minor or other
    incapacitated person” and “an application, petition, or motion regarding
    guardianship or a substitute for guardianship under this title.” TEX.
    EST. CODE § 1002.015.
    Section 1022.002 of the Estates Code expressly states when a
    guardianship proceeding begins and ends. A guardianship proceeding
    begins with “the filing of the application for the appointment of a
    guardian of the estate or person, or both.” Id. § 1022.002(d). It ends
    when “the guardianship is settled and closed under this chapter.” Id.
    Accordingly, the probate court acquired subject-matter jurisdiction over
    this guardianship proceeding when Mauricette filed her first application
    for guardianship, seeking a temporary guardianship.             See id.
    § 1002.012(a) (defining “guardian” to include a person appointed as a
    temporary guardian).
    A ward’s death will necessarily bring the guardianship of the
    person to an end. See Zipp v. Wuemling, 
    218 S.W.3d 71
    , 74 (Tex. 2007)
    (“It is axiomatic that, with the death of the ward, the guardianship of
    the person must end.”).    But the guardianship proceeding does not
    automatically terminate on the ward’s death.       Instead, the probate
    court’s jurisdiction continues until the court settles and closes the
    guardianship and discharges the guardian. See Easterline v. Bean, 49
    
    14 S.W.2d 427
    , 428 (Tex. 1932) (stating that a ward’s death causes the
    probate court to lose jurisdiction over the guardianship matter “save and
    except that the guardianship shall be immediately settled and closed,
    and the guardian discharged”). Consistent with this, the Estates Code
    expressly authorizes a guardian to take certain actions on behalf of a
    deceased ward before the closing of the guardianship. See TEX. EST.
    CODE       §§ 1204.051   (authorizing    a   guardian     to   make    funeral
    arrangements “[b]efore a guardianship of the person . . . is closed on the
    ward’s death”), 1204.108(a) (requiring a guardian of the person to
    deliver a deceased ward’s property to the personal representative of the
    ward’s estate or other person entitled to the property).
    Here, it is undisputed that the probate court had not yet settled
    and closed the guardianship proceeding at the time it transferred
    Juliette’s wrongful-death suit to itself. See TEX. EST. CODE § 1204.001
    (establishing the procedures for settling and closing a guardianship).
    Thus, contrary to Juliette’s argument, there remained a “guardianship
    proceeding pending” into which the probate court could have transferred
    the wrongful-death suit.         Aside from claiming the guardianship
    proceeding automatically terminated on James’s death, Juliette does not
    challenge the probate court’s authority under the Estates Code to
    transfer the wrongful-death suit to itself.5 We accordingly conclude that
    5 Of course, a probate court deciding whether to transfer a related cause
    of action under Section 1022.007 should take into account the death of the ward
    and the forthcoming closure of the guardianship proceeding, as well as whether
    there is a pending or imminent probate proceeding into which the cause of
    action should be transferred instead.
    15
    James’s death did not deprive the probate court of subject-matter
    jurisdiction to enter the transfer order.
    C.    Service of citation
    Juliette contends the probate court never acquired personal
    jurisdiction over James because service on James did not comply with
    Chapter 1051 of the Estates Code. Therefore, according to Juliette,
    every order issued by the probate court after September 2014 is void.
    We address whether service of the applications for guardianship
    complied with the requirements in the Estates Code, then turn to
    Juliette’s contention that any defect in service would deprive the probate
    court of personal jurisdiction and render its orders void.
    1.     Was James served in accordance with the Estates
    Code?
    Chapter 1051 of the Estates Code governs the issuance of notice
    and service of citation in guardianship proceedings. Two sections within
    Chapter 1051 are particularly important here. Section 1051.103, titled
    “Service of Citation for Application for Guardianship,” identifies five
    categories of persons who must be personally served with the application
    and citation. TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.103(a)(1)–(5). As relevant here,
    that section provides:
    (a)    The sheriff or other officer shall personally serve
    citation to appear and answer an application for
    guardianship on:
    (1)    a proposed ward who is 12 years of age or
    older . . . .
    Id. § 1051.103(a)(1).
    16
    Section 1051.051, titled “Personal Service,” addresses the manner
    in which personal service of citation or notice is effected in a variety of
    different circumstances:
    (a)    Except as otherwise provided by Subsection (b), if
    personal service of citation or notice is required, the
    citation or notice must be served on the attorney of
    record for the person to be cited or notified.
    Notwithstanding the requirement of personal
    service, service may be made on that attorney by any
    method specified by Section 1051.055 for service on
    an attorney of record.
    (b)    If the person to be cited or notified does not have an
    attorney of record in the proceeding, or if an attempt
    to serve the person’s attorney is unsuccessful:
    (1)    the sheriff or constable shall serve the citation
    or notice by delivering a copy of the citation or
    notice to the person to be cited or notified, in
    person, if the person to whom the citation or
    notice is directed is in this state; or
    (2)    a disinterested person competent to make an
    oath that the citation or notice was served
    may serve the citation or notice, if the person
    to be cited or notified is absent from or is not
    a resident of this state.
    Id. § 1051.051(a), (b).
    It is undisputed that Section 1051.103(a)(1) required personal
    service of citation for an application for guardianship on James because
    he was a proposed ward older than twelve. It is also undisputed that
    James was personally served with both the application for temporary
    guardianship and the application for permanent guardianship.
    However, the parties part ways on the question of who was required to
    serve the citation and application. To answer that question, we must
    17
    first determine whether Section 1051.103 or Section 1051.051 controls
    this question.
    a.     Which statute dictates who must serve the
    citation?
    Section 1051.103(a) states that “[t]he sheriff or other officer” shall
    personally serve citation of an application for guardianship on those for
    whom personal service is required, including a proposed ward who is
    twelve or older. Throughout the proceedings below, and in their briefing
    to this Court, both parties appear to assume this section governs the
    question of who should serve the application and citation. The parties’
    briefing thus focuses on whether “other officer” as used in Section
    1051.103(a) includes a private process server. The court of appeals
    rejected Juliette’s contention that “officer” as used in Section
    1051.103(a) is limited to a sheriff, constable, or other elected official and
    concluded that “James was served in conformity with section
    1051.103(a).” 604 S.W.3d at 457.
    Amicus Texas College of Probate Judges (TCPJ) contends that the
    court of appeals should have looked instead to Section 1051.051.
    According to TCPJ, Section 1051.051 is the more specific statute with
    respect to who is authorized to serve citation in a guardianship
    proceeding. Juliette appeared to adopt this position at oral argument.
    We agree that Section 1051.051 is the controlling statute here.
    Section 1051.103(a) identifies those individuals who must receive
    personal service of an application for guardianship. Section 1051.051
    specifies who may serve when personal service is required and how
    service must be effected.
    18
    Section 1051.051 sets forth three different groups of persons who
    may serve, depending on whether the person to be served is represented
    by counsel and where the person is located. Under subsection (a), if the
    person to be served has an attorney of record in the proceeding, the
    citation must be served on that attorney. TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.051(a).
    Section 1051.051(a) then refers to Section 1051.055 for the method of
    service on an attorney.      Id. (“Notwithstanding the requirement of
    personal service, service may be made on that attorney by any method
    specified by Section 1051.055 for service on an attorney of record.”).
    Section 1051.055(c) provides that a citation may be served on an
    attorney by (1) another party, (2) another party’s attorney, (3) a sheriff
    or constable, or (4) any person competent to testify. Id. § 1051.055(c).
    Subsection (b) applies if the person to be served does not have an
    attorney of record or if service on the attorney is unsuccessful. Id.
    § 1051.051(b). In that case, the method of service is determined by the
    location of the person who must be served. If that person is in Texas,
    subsection (b)(1) provides that “the sheriff or constable shall serve the
    citation” by delivering a copy in person. Id. § 1051.051(b)(1). If the
    person to be served is either absent from or not a resident of Texas,
    however, subsection (b)(2) provides that citation may be served by “a
    disinterested person competent to make an oath that the citation . . .
    was served.” Id. § 1051.051(b)(2).
    Nothing in the text of Section 1051.103(a) suggests that the
    reference to service by a sheriff or “other officer” (an otherwise undefined
    term) was itself intended to limit those who could serve citation for
    guardianship applications.      We instead read “other officer” as a
    19
    reference to those persons who are authorized to serve citation
    elsewhere in the Estates Code.     As noted above, depending on the
    circumstances, Section 1051.051 expressly allows for service of citation
    to be performed by a sheriff or constable, a disinterested person
    competent to make an oath, another party, another party’s attorney, or
    any person competent to testify. Accordingly, we conclude that, for those
    persons entitled to personal service of an application for guardianship
    under Section 1051.103(a), the method of service (including who must
    serve the application and citation) must comply with Section 1051.051.
    b.    Did service of the guardianship applications
    on James comply with Estates Code Section
    1051.051?
    Having concluded that Section 1051.051 governs who must serve
    a citation and application for guardianship, we turn to whether service
    of each of the two applications for guardianship in this case—one served
    in New York, one in Texas—satisfied its requirements.
    Focusing on Section 1051.103(a), the court of appeals concluded
    that a private process server was an “other officer” authorized to serve
    an application for guardianship because a 1994 Bexar County probate
    court administrative order permitted licensed private process servers to
    serve process in the probate courts. 604 S.W.3d at 457. The court also
    relied on Rule of Civil Procedure 103, the general rule governing service
    of process, which authorizes service by “any person authorized by law or
    by written order of the court.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 103. But neither an order
    from the Bexar County probate courts nor a rule of procedure can trump
    a statute governing service of process in guardianship proceedings. See
    Johnstone v. State, 
    22 S.W.3d 408
    , 409 (Tex. 2000) (absent certain
    20
    circumstances not present here, “when a rule of procedure conflicts with
    a statute, the statute prevails”). The Estates Code establishes a detailed
    framework controlling service in these proceedings, and Section
    1051.051 specifies who is authorized to serve when personal service is
    required.   These statutory requirements cannot be overridden by a
    conflicting court order or by a rule of procedure of general application.
    i.     Service of application for temporary
    guardianship
    Mauricette filed her application for appointment as James’s
    temporary guardian in Bexar County in October 2014, shortly after
    Juliette took James to New York. James was personally served with
    this application and citation in New York by Sara Clark, a private
    process server. Juliette contends that Estates Code Section 1051.103(a)
    required service by a “sheriff or other officer” and contends that Clark
    was neither. But, as discussed above, Section 1051.103(a) does not
    prescribe who may effect service.         Section 1051.051 does.   Because
    James was absent from Texas, Section 1051.051(b)(2) authorizes
    personal service by “a disinterested person competent to make an oath
    that the citation . . . was served.” TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.051(b)(2). We
    thus reject Juliette’s argument that service of the temporary-
    guardianship application on James was defective because he was not
    served by a sheriff, constable, or other elected official.
    Juliette also argues that service of the application for temporary
    guardianship did not comply with Section 1051.051(b)(2) because the
    Affidavit of Service failed to establish that Clark was “disinterested.” A
    “disinterested” person is one who is “[f]ree from bias, prejudice, or
    partiality” and lacks “a pecuniary interest in the matter at hand.”
    21
    Disinterested, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). In her Affidavit
    of Service, Clark states only that she is “not a party to this action.” This
    statement alone does not establish that Clark was “disinterested.” See
    Indus. Models, Inc. v. SNF, Inc., No. 02-13-00281-CV, 
    2014 WL 3696104
    ,
    at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 24, 2014, no pet.) (concluding that an
    affidavit stating that the person serving citation was “not a party” is
    insufficient to establish that person was “disinterested”); see also TEX.
    R. CIV. P. 103 (prohibiting service by someone who is either “a party to”
    a suit or “interested in the outcome” of a suit). Accordingly, we conclude
    the record does not establish that James was served by a disinterested
    person, as required by Section 1051.051(b)(2).6
    ii.    Service of application for permanent
    guardianship
    Mauricette filed her application for appointment as James’s
    permanent guardian in December 2014, by which time James had
    returned to Texas. James was personally served by a private process
    server at the assisted-living facility in San Antonio, and, because he was
    served in Texas, Section 1051.051(b)(1) applies. Under that provision,
    personal service must be by “sheriff or constable”—a private process
    6Juliette also asserts that the Affidavit of Service failed to comply with
    Section 1051.151, which requires the return of a person serving citation to be
    “endorsed on or attached to the citation.” TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.151(1). For
    the reasons we discuss below, this additional alleged technical defect in the
    method of service does not affect our ultimate disposition. Therefore, we
    assume without deciding that the Affidavit of Service was not endorsed on or
    attached to the citation, as required by Section 1051.151(1).
    22
    server is insufficient.7 Service of this application thus failed to satisfy
    Section 1051.051(b)(1)’s technical requirements.
    2.     Did the technical defects in service deprive the
    probate court of personal jurisdiction over James or
    void its orders?
    Juliette conceded during oral argument that her complaints
    about service concern personal jurisdiction, not subject-matter
    jurisdiction. As we explain above, the probate court acquired subject-
    matter jurisdiction over this guardianship proceeding when Mauricette
    filed her initial application. See TEX. EST. CODE § 1022.002(d). And
    Juliette does not contend the probate court lacked personal jurisdiction
    over her—her complaint is that the court lacked personal jurisdiction
    over James. Nevertheless, Juliette asks us to hold that technical defects
    in personal service on the now-deceased James voided all orders in the
    guardianship proceeding and deprived the probate court of jurisdiction
    to enter any orders, including the order transferring her wrongful-death
    suit to the probate court. We disagree because James never complained
    about these defects at a time at which they could have been corrected.
    7  By the time James was served with the permanent-guardianship
    application, his court-appointed attorney ad litem had entered an appearance
    and filed an answer on James’s behalf. Because James had an attorney of
    record, Section 1051.051(a) authorized service on James through that attorney
    by any method specified by Section 1051.055. TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.051(a).
    Although the record shows that a copy of the application for permanent
    guardianship was served on James’s attorney ad litem, the record does not
    reflect whether this attorney was also served with citation, as the statute
    requires. See id. § 1051.103(a) (requiring James to be personally served with
    “citation to appear and answer an application for guardianship”). And
    Mauricette does not argue that service was proper through James’s attorney
    ad litem. Therefore, we assume that James was never properly served through
    his attorney under Section 1051.051(a).
    23
    He instead entered a general appearance in the guardianship
    proceeding through his attorney ad litem and thereby consented to the
    personal jurisdiction of the probate court.
    Unlike with subject-matter jurisdiction, parties can consent to the
    court’s personal jurisdiction over them. In re Fisher, 433 S.W.3d at 532.
    One common way to consent to a court’s jurisdiction is by entering a
    general appearance in the proceeding. A party may enter an appearance
    in person or by attorney. TEX. R. CIV. P. 120. Such an appearance “shall
    have the same force and effect as if the citation had been duly issued
    and served as provided by law.” Id. Thus, a party’s appearance in a
    lawsuit cures any defect in the method of serving that party. Baker v.
    Monsanto Co., 
    111 S.W.3d 158
    , 161 (Tex. 2003).
    The mere presence of a party or that party’s attorney in court does
    not constitute an appearance. See Seals v. Upper Trinity Reg’l Water
    Dist., 
    145 S.W.3d 291
    , 297 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2004, pet. dism’d by
    agr.) (“[A] party who is a silent figurehead in the courtroom, observing
    the proceedings without participating, has not [made a general
    appearance].”). Instead, a party enters a general appearance when it
    (1) invokes the judgment of the court on any question other than the
    court’s jurisdiction, (2) recognizes by its acts that an action is properly
    pending, or (3) seeks affirmative action from the court. Exito Elecs. Co.
    v. Trejo, 
    142 S.W.3d 302
    , 304 (Tex. 2004). Our courts routinely hold that
    a court-appointed attorney who files an answer or seeks affirmative
    24
    action from the court invokes the court’s jurisdiction and thus enters a
    general appearance on behalf of the client.8
    Here, the probate court appointed an attorney ad litem to
    represent James’s interests in the guardianship proceeding. See TEX.
    EST. CODE § 1054.001 (requiring court to appoint an attorney ad litem
    for the proposed ward in a proceeding for the appointment of a
    8 See In re M.D.M., 
    579 S.W.3d 744
    , 760–61 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2019, no pet.) (attorney ad litem’s participation in final parental-
    termination hearing on behalf of the father through questioning of witnesses
    and argument constituted a general appearance by the father that waived
    complaints regarding service); Roberts v. Fargason, No. 13-17-00395-CV, 
    2019 WL 1716803
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Apr. 18, 2019, no
    pet.) (defendant made a general appearance and waived alleged defects in
    service when attorney ad litem appointed to represent him while in military
    service filed an answer on his behalf); In re A.L.H., 
    515 S.W.3d 60
    , 87 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2017, pet. denied) (father in parental-termination
    case made a general appearance and waived any complaints about service
    because appointed attorney ad litem filed an answer on father’s behalf); In re
    D.M.B., 
    467 S.W.3d 100
    , 103–04 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2015, pet. denied)
    (attorney ad litem’s objections to evidence and objection to entry of a temporary
    restraining order on behalf of the father in a parental-termination hearing
    constituted a general appearance by the father that waived his service
    complaints); In re P.Y.M., No. 04-13-00024-CV, 
    2013 WL 4009748
    , at *2 (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio Aug. 7, 2013, pet. denied) (father in parental-termination
    case made a general appearance and waived any complaints about service
    when attorney ad litem questioned a witness and presented argument on
    behalf of the father at the termination hearing); Gamez v. Tex. Dep’t of Fam. &
    Protective Servs., No. 03-09-00190-CV, 
    2009 WL 4456150
    , at *5 (Tex. App.—
    Austin Dec. 1, 2009, no pet.) (attorney ad litem’s answer and attendance at
    hearings and trial on behalf of mother in parental-termination case was a
    general appearance that waived complaints about service); Phillips v. Dall.
    Cnty. Child Protective Servs. Unit, 
    197 S.W.3d 862
    , 865 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    2006, pet. denied) (filing of an answer on mother’s behalf by attorney ad litem
    in parental-termination case was a general appearance that waived any
    complaints about defects in service); In re $475,001.16, 
    96 S.W.3d 625
    , 628–29
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.) (party entered a general
    appearance in forfeiture proceeding and waived challenges to defects in service
    because court-appointed attorney ad litem filed an answer on his behalf).
    25
    guardian); see also 
    id.
     § 1002.002 (defining “attorney ad litem” as an
    attorney appointed by the court “to represent and advocate on behalf of
    a proposed ward . . . in a guardianship proceeding”). James’s appointed
    attorney filed an answer on James’s behalf. In advance of the hearing
    on Mauricette’s application for a temporary guardianship, he filed a
    request that James not be required to appear at the hearing. At the
    hearing on the temporary guardianship, the attorney ad litem
    represented to the court that he had spoken with James, and he
    conveyed James’s views regarding the guardianship to the court. He
    also appeared at the permanent-guardianship hearing and approved
    with his signature the 2015 order appointing Mauricette as James’s
    permanent guardian.
    An attorney ad litem is required by statute to review the
    application and relevant supporting materials; to interview the
    proposed ward before the appointment hearing; and to discuss with the
    ward, to the extent possible, the details of the case, the ward’s legal
    options, and the ward’s opinions regarding the necessity and scope of a
    guardianship. Id. § 1054.004. There is nothing in the record to suggest
    that this attorney’s representation of James was deficient in any way.
    And at no time during the guardianship proceeding did James’s attorney
    ad litem (or anyone else) assert any complaints about the manner in
    which James was served.
    We conclude that James made a general appearance in the
    guardianship proceeding through the affirmative actions of his attorney
    ad litem. Accordingly, he consented to the probate court’s personal
    26
    jurisdiction over him, waiving any technical defects regarding service.
    See Baker, 111 S.W.3d at 161.9
    Amicus TCPJ correctly notes that the Estates Code provides that
    an attorney ad litem “may not waive personal service of citation.” TEX.
    EST. CODE § 1051.055(e). But no one claims that occurred here—indeed,
    it is undisputed that James was personally served with both
    applications for guardianship.        While Section 1051.055(e) prohibits
    waiving service altogether, we do not read it to prohibit a general
    appearance and waiver of technical service defects when the proposed
    9 Contrary to our dissenting colleagues’ characterization, we do not
    suggest that technical defects in service “don’t matter” and are “perfectly fine.”
    Post at ___ (Devine, J., dissenting). And we emphatically do not suggest that
    courts are “free to ignore statutory requirements.” Id. at __. Indeed, if anyone
    had alerted the probate court to a defect in service in a timely manner, the
    probate court could have and no doubt would have remedied the defect so as to
    satisfy the statute’s requirements in every detail. But, alas, ours is an
    imperfect world—one in which no one brought the defect to the probate court’s
    attention in time for it to be cured. The real question is thus not whether courts
    should ignore statutory requirements—obviously they should not and do not—
    but, rather, whether the statutory text expresses the Legislature’s intent that
    anything short of strict compliance requires that the entire guardianship be
    voided when the attorney ad litem entered a general appearance for the ward,
    affirmatively invoked the probate court’s jurisdiction, and ably represented the
    ward. The text of the Estates Code reveals no such intent, and the dissent’s
    professed desire to read such a requirement into the statute is undermined by
    the Legislature’s decision to allow service on a ward to be accomplished by
    serving his attorney of record. See TEX. EST. CODE §§ 1051.051(a), 1051.055(c)
    (providing that service on a ward’s attorney may be delivered by a variety of
    persons, including another party, the attorney of record for another party, a
    sheriff or constable, or another person competent to testify). Because the
    Estates Code contemplates that personal jurisdiction attaches in a variety of
    ways that do not involve physical service on the ward by anyone, we cannot, in
    the absence of text signaling such an intent, conclude that the Legislature
    intended to attach jurisdictional significance to whether “the right person”
    serves a ward.
    27
    ward has been served and has opted through his attorney to submit to
    the court’s jurisdiction. See Ex parte Rodriguez, 
    466 S.W.3d 846
    , 851
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2015) (concluding that Family Code statute prohibiting
    juvenile from waiving “service of [the] summons” does not prohibit the
    waiver of defects in the manner of service).
    This reading coheres with our rules, which distinguish between a
    defendant’s appearance (which has “the same force and effect as if the
    citation had been duly issued and served as provided by law,” TEX. R.
    CIV. P. 120) and a waiver of service. Rule 124 provides that a judgment
    cannot be rendered unless a defendant is served, or upon “acceptance or
    waiver of process, or upon an appearance by the defendant.” TEX. R. CIV.
    P. 124.   In short, although James’s appearance in the proceeding
    through his attorney ad litem waived any complaints about the method
    of personal service, it was not a waiver of personal service of citation on
    James.
    Juliette urges us to adopt a rule requiring strict compliance with
    the statutory requirements for service of a guardianship application,
    similar to the rule we apply when reviewing a default judgment. See
    WWLC Inv., L.P. v. Miraki, 
    624 S.W.3d 796
    , 799 (Tex. 2021) (“For well
    over a century, this court has required that strict compliance with the
    rules for service of citation affirmatively appear on the record in order
    for a default judgment to withstand direct attack.” (quoting Primate
    Constr., Inc. v. Silver, 
    884 S.W.2d 151
    , 152 (Tex. 1994))). But even in
    the context of default judgments (which this case is not), that rule does
    not apply in every case. In PNS Stores, Inc. v. Rivera, 
    379 S.W.3d 267
    (Tex. 2012), we held that strict compliance with service requirements is
    28
    not required when a defendant seeks to void a default judgment through
    a collateral attack.    In that case, the defendant argued that the
    plaintiff’s failure to comply with all the requirements for service
    rendered the judgment void and, therefore, the default judgment could
    be set aside by a collateral attack. We disagreed, and we held that,
    because the defendant failed to establish either an absence of service or
    defects in service that deprived the defendant of a meaningful
    opportunity to appear and answer the lawsuit, the judgment was not
    void. Id. at 275.
    Our holding in PNS Stores was designed to strike “a reasonable
    balance between the need for finality of judgments and the requirement
    that the power underlying judicial authority must be based on a
    litigant’s fair opportunity to be heard.” Id. at 274 (footnote omitted).
    Our decision here strikes the same balance.             Even though the
    guardianship proceeding remained pending, the probate court’s order
    appointing Mauricette as James’s permanent guardian is “final” and is
    treated as such for purposes of appeal. See In re Guardianship of Jones,
    
    629 S.W.3d 921
    , 925 (Tex. 2021) (“[A]n order [in a guardianship
    proceeding] disposing of all issues and all parties ‘in the phase of the
    proceeding for which it was brought’ is final and appealable even when
    the proceeding remains pending as to other issues.” (quoting Crowson v.
    Wakeham, 
    897 S.W.2d 779
    , 783 (Tex. 1995))).           Because James was
    personally served, and because Juliette does not allege any defects in
    service that rise to the level of a due process violation, none of the orders
    in the guardianship proceeding are void.
    29
    The cases cited to us in which courts have held a guardianship
    order void are consistent with our holding here because they involve
    situations where the proposed ward was never personally served. See
    Gauci v. Gauci, 
    471 S.W.3d 899
    , 902 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
    2015, no pet.) (concluding that a guardianship order was void because
    the proposed ward was not personally served with citation and therefore
    the probate court lacked personal jurisdiction over the ward); In re
    Martinez, No. 04-07-00558-CV, 
    2008 WL 227987
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio Jan. 30, 2008, orig. proceeding) (holding that orders issued in
    guardianship proceeding were void because the proposed ward was
    never served with citation); In re Guardianship of B.A.G., 
    794 S.W.2d 510
    , 513 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 1990, no writ) (holding
    that all of the trial court’s actions regarding a guardianship were void
    because the proposed ward was never personally served).
    Juliette relies on dicta in several court of appeals opinions to
    support her contention that a probate court acquires jurisdiction of a
    guardianship proceeding only following “proper service” on the ward.
    See In re Guardianship of Phillips, No. 01-14-01004-CV, 
    2016 WL 3391249
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] June 16, 2016, no pet.)
    (“Service of citation on a proposed ward is jurisdictional and a court
    order appointing a guardian without proper service on the ward is
    void.”); In re Guardianship of V.A., 
    390 S.W.3d 414
    , 421 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio 2012, pet. denied) (“We do not dispute the contention that a
    probate court lacks jurisdiction over a guardianship proceeding where
    the proposed ward has not been properly served.”); Whatley v. Walker,
    
    302 S.W.3d 314
    , 321 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2009, pet. denied)
    30
    (“Failure to serve the proposed ward with citation is jurisdictional, and
    a court’s subsequent order appointing a guardian without proper service
    on the ward is void.”); In re Guardianship of Erickson, 
    208 S.W.3d 737
    ,
    740 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, no pet.) (“[O]nly through compliance
    with Section 633 of the Texas Probate Code [the precursor to Estates
    Code Section 1051.103] is the trial court’s jurisdiction invoked.”). But
    none of these cases involved a challenge to the method by which the
    proposed ward was served. In Phillips, V.A., and Whatley, the primary
    complaint was that the applicant failed to comply with a requirement to
    provide notice to certain third parties, including the ward’s relatives.
    See Phillips, 
    2016 WL 3391249
    , at *4–5; V.A., 390 S.W.3d at 418–19;
    Whatley, 
    302 S.W.3d at 322
    . None of the courts in those cases voided
    any orders for lack of jurisdiction, nor did they conclude that a defect in
    service deprived the probate court of jurisdiction.10
    *    *    *
    10 In Erickson, the court of appeals held that the probate court lacked
    jurisdiction not because of a service defect, but because the court failed to wait
    the required ten days after service before acting on the application for
    guardianship. 
    208 S.W.3d at
    740–41; see TEX. EST. CODE § 1051.106 (“The
    court may not act on an application for the creation of a guardianship . . .
    earlier than the Monday following the expiration of the 10-day period
    beginning on the date service of notice and citation has been made . . . .”).
    Thus, Erickson does not support Juliette’s argument that a defect in the
    method of service on a proposed ward automatically deprives the probate court
    of jurisdiction over the guardianship proceeding. Erickson is also inconsistent
    with the presumption that failure to comply with a mandatory statutory
    requirement is not jurisdictional unless there is clear legislative intent to the
    contrary. See, e.g., City of DeSoto, 288 S.W.3d at 394; see also In re
    Guardianship of Jordan, 
    348 S.W.3d 401
    , 408–10 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2011,
    no pet.) (calling into question the court’s holding in Erickson based on City of
    DeSoto and other decisions from this Court).
    31
    We conclude that the probate court obtained subject-matter
    jurisdiction over this guardianship proceeding when Mauricette filed
    her application for temporary guardianship and retained subject-matter
    jurisdiction after James’s death. We also conclude the probate court
    properly exercised personal jurisdiction over James and the technical
    defects in service did not void the probate court’s orders because it is
    undisputed that James was personally served with the applications for
    guardianship, James entered a general appearance and participated in
    the proceedings through his attorney ad litem, and Juliette failed to
    establish that any deficiency with respect to the method of personal
    service rose to the level of a violation of due process. We therefore affirm
    the court of appeals’ judgment.
    Rebeca A. Huddle
    Justice
    OPINION DELIVERED: March 4, 2022
    32