Nueces County Non-Disclosure Reality Check
In short: Sealing a record in Nueces County through an order of nondisclosure follows statewide Texas law under Government Code Chapter 411, but the local filing and hearing mechanics matter. Nondisclosure hides the record from most public view; it does not destroy it the way an expunction does.
- Sealing is not the same as expungement. Non-disclosure hides the record from most public view; it does not destroy it. Nueces County law enforcement and certain licensing boards keep access.
- Nueces County District Clerk filing fee: $450. Pull the current number from the Nueces County civil fee schedule before filing.
- Any affirmative finding of family violence on a Nueces County judgment permanently disqualifies you under Gov. Code 411.074(b). Check the judgment first.
- Nueces County judges routinely set best-interest-of-justice hearings on 411.0725 petitions. Show up unprepared and you will lose.
- Non-disclosure does not bind Gulf Coast private background-check vendors the way expunction does. They must stop disclosing but can keep the record in their database. Expect to dispute.
- A denied Nueces County non-disclosure can bar you from refiling for 2+ years. One mistake and you lose the next two years of clean background checks.
- Sealing vs. Expunging in Nueces County
- Filing in Nueces County — Quick Reference
- The Gov. Code Chapter 411 Pathways
- Statutory Disqualifiers Under 411.074
- Where to File in Nueces County
- Nueces County Filing Fees
- The 12-Step Nueces County Walkthrough
- The Best-Interest Hearing at Nueces County Courthouse
- The eFileTexas Nightmare (Watch This)
- What Nueces County "Sealed" Actually Means
- 10 Nueces County Non-Disclosure Mistakes
- DIY vs. Attorney vs. Expunction360
- Nueces County Non-Disclosure FAQ
If you completed deferred adjudication in Nueces County — or got a qualifying first-offense misdemeanor conviction — and you want the record off your background checks, a non-disclosure is the remedy available to you. It is not expunction. It does not destroy the record. It seals the record from most public and private view.
Nueces County non-disclosure petitions go through the same court that handled your original deferred. For Class A/B misdemeanor deferreds, that is usually a Nueces County court at law. For felony deferreds, it is a district court at the Nueces County Courthouse. For Class C deferreds, it is the municipal or JP court that handled the original case. And regardless of level, the Nueces County Criminal DA has to be served and the judge has to find that sealing is in the best interest of justice — which, in Nueces County, almost always means a live hearing.
This guide walks through the Nueces County non-disclosure process as it stands in 2026. For the statewide framework, our Texas non-disclosure pillar guide covers the Gov. Code 411 foundation. Read both before you file.
Sealing vs. Expunging in Nueces County
In short: Expunction destroys a record and is only available when a case ended without a conviction; nondisclosure seals a record from public view and is the path after deferred adjudication or certain convictions. Most Nueces County record-clearing questions come down to which of these two you actually qualify for.
Same rule in Nueces County as everywhere else in Texas: if you are eligible for expunction, file that instead. Expunction destroys the record; non-disclosure just seals it. Use the table below to confirm which one applies:
| Nueces County Expunction | Nueces County Non-Disclosure | |
|---|---|---|
| Governing statute | CCP Chapter 55A | Gov. Code Chapter 411 |
| What happens to the record | Destroyed by every served agency | Sealed from public; retained by agencies |
| Eligible Nueces County cases | Dismissed, acquitted, no-billed, Class C deferred | Most Class A/B and felony deferred adjudications |
| Filing fee at Nueces County District Clerk | $450 | $450 |
| Typical hearing requirement | Rare (uncontested) | Usually — best-interest-of-justice |
| Gulf Coast private vendor coverage | Must purge record | Must stop disclosing; record can remain |
| Licensing board access after order | None | Education, healthcare, criminal justice, financial retain access |
If you completed Class A/B or felony deferred adjudication in Nueces County, you are most likely looking at non-disclosure — not expunction. If you had a Nueces County dismissal, acquittal, or no-bill, see our Nueces County expunction guide instead.
Filing in Nueces County — Quick Reference
In short: This is the at-a-glance version of sealing a record in Nueces County: which pathway applies, where to file, the waiting period, and the typical fee. Each point is expanded below.
Nueces County District Clerk & Nueces County Courts
- Filing location
- Nueces County Courthouse
901 Leopard St., Room 313, Corpus Christi, TX 78401 - District Clerk phone
- (361) 888-0450
- Hours
- Monday–Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
- Filing method
- eFileTexas (primary) or in-person at the clerk's window
- Filing fee
- $450 civil petition filing fee
- Which court
- Court of original jurisdiction — the same court that handled your deferred
- DA service address
- Nueces County District Attorney
901 Leopard St., Room 313, Corpus Christi, TX 78401
The Gov. Code Chapter 411 Pathways
In short: Texas nondisclosure runs through several Government Code Chapter 411 pathways, including automatic nondisclosure, nondisclosure after deferred adjudication, and nondisclosure after certain convictions, each with its own waiting period and conditions. Identifying the correct pathway for your case is the first step.
Texas non-disclosure lives in Chapter 411, Subchapter E-1 of the Government Code. Unlike expunction, which has a single primary statute, non-disclosure is spread across multiple sections. The correct section depends on your fact pattern. In Nueces County, the five most commonly invoked sections are:
Gov. Code 411.072 — Automatic non-disclosure for Class C deferred adjudications.
Gov. Code 411.0725 — Petition-based non-disclosure for felony and misdemeanor deferred adjudications.
Gov. Code 411.0726 — Automatic non-disclosure for certain first-offense deferreds completed on or after Sept. 1, 2017.
Gov. Code 411.0729 — Petition-based non-disclosure for certain first-offense misdemeanor convictions.
Gov. Code 411.074 — General eligibility limits; lists offenses permanently excluded from any non-disclosure.
Citing the wrong section is a technical denial on its face, even in Nueces County where the clerks see these petitions daily.
Statutory Disqualifiers Under 411.074 — Check Your Nueces County Judgment First
In short: Government Code 411.074 lists offenses and circumstances that permanently bar nondisclosure, such as a family-violence finding and certain serious crimes, regardless of county. Check your Nueces County judgment against this list first, because a statutory disqualifier cannot be waived.
Before you spend a filing fee, confirm your Nueces County offense is not on the permanently excluded list under Gov. Code 411.074(b):
- Offenses requiring sex offender registration (Chapter 62 CCP)
- Aggravated kidnapping
- Murder and capital murder
- Trafficking of persons and continuous trafficking
- Injury to a child, elderly, or disabled individual
- Abandoning or endangering a child
- Violations of protective orders and bond conditions in family-violence cases
- Stalking
- Any offense with a family-violence finding under Family Code 71.004
- DWI with BAC ≥ 0.15 (automatic non-disclosure barred; petition-based may still be available in limited circumstances)
Nueces County judges routinely enter affirmative findings of family violence on deferred adjudication judgments, even when the underlying offense is something like Assault Class A or Terroristic Threat. That finding alone disqualifies you from non-disclosure under Gov. Code 411.074(b). Pull your Nueces County judgment and look specifically for language like "the Court finds family violence" or "affirmative finding of family violence." If it is there, non-disclosure is not available — no matter what any online template suggests.
Where to File in Nueces County
In short: A nondisclosure petition is filed with the Nueces County District Clerk in the court that handled your case. Filing in the wrong court or county is a common reason Nueces County petitions are rejected.
Non-disclosure petitions go to the court of original jurisdiction — the same Nueces County court that handled your deferred. Not a new court, not a different division. Getting this wrong is a clean denial.
| Your Deferred Was In | File Your Non-Disclosure In |
|---|---|
| Nueces County district court (felony deferred) | Same Nueces County district court at Nueces County Courthouse |
| Nueces County Criminal District Court 1–7 | Same Criminal District Court |
| Nueces County court at law (Class A/B misdemeanor deferred) | Same Nueces County court at law at Nueces County Courthouse |
| Corpus Christi Municipal Court (Class C deferred) | Corpus Christi Municipal Court, 120 N. Chaparral St., Corpus Christi, TX 78401 |
| JP court in a Nueces County precinct | Same JP court |
| Suburban municipal court (Robstown, Port Aransas, Bishop, etc.) | Same municipal court |
The clerk does not reassign non-disclosure petitions filed in the wrong court. You will get a rejection and have to refile in the correct court. Wasted filing fee unless Nueces County refunds on a clerk error — which it sometimes does, but not always.
Nueces County Filing Fees
In short: Expect a Nueces County filing fee of about $450 for a nondisclosure petition, plus minor costs for certified copies. Automatic nondisclosures handled by the court may carry different or reduced costs.
Same reality check as expunction: Nueces County charges a civil filing fee for non-disclosure petitions. Rather than list a specific dollar amount that will be stale by the time you read this, confirm the current fee from the source:
Nueces County District Clerk — Civil/Family/Juvenile Court Fees
$450 for a civil petition. Always verify on the official page.
Indigency waivers under TRCP 145 are accepted in Nueces County but reviewed carefully. Expect to submit a full Statement of Inability to Afford Payment with supporting documentation.
Before You Pay Anything, Confirm Eligibility.
Most DIY filers pick the wrong Gov. Code section or miss a family-violence finding on their Nueces County judgment. A free 10-minute check catches both.
The 12-Step Nueces County Non-Disclosure Walkthrough
In short: Filing for nondisclosure yourself in Nueces County runs from confirming your Chapter 411 pathway and drafting the petition through the best-interest hearing. Each step has a statutory or formatting requirement that DIY filers frequently miss.
Step 1 — Pull the Nueces County deferred adjudication order
Request a certified copy from the Nueces County District Clerk (for Class A/B and felony) or from the municipal/JP court (for Class C). Read it carefully for a family violence affirmative finding.
Step 2 — Confirm the offense is not excluded under 411.074
If the offense itself or any finding on the judgment disqualifies you, stop — non-disclosure is not available.
Step 3 — Identify the correct Gov. Code section
Work through 411.072, 411.0725, 411.0726, or 411.0729 depending on offense level and timing. Most Nueces County deferred completers land on 411.0725.
Step 4 — Calculate the waiting period from discharge
No waiting period for most Class A/B deferreds. 2 years for family or sexual contact misdemeanor deferreds. 5 years for felony deferreds. 2 years after sentence completion for 411.0729 first-offense misdemeanor convictions.
Step 5 — Pull a current DPS criminal history
Any intervening conviction or deferred (other than a minor traffic offense) during or after community supervision is a disqualifier. Do not assume — pull the current record.
Step 6 — Draft the Petition for Order of Non-Disclosure
Cite the correct section. Plead completion of community supervision, waiting period satisfied, no intervening convictions, and a best-interest-of-justice paragraph that is not boilerplate. Nueces County judges read it.
Step 7 — Draft the Proposed Order of Non-Disclosure
Mirror the petition. Include the clerk's obligation to forward the order to DPS within 15 business days.
Step 8 — E-file through eFileTexas
Select the court of original jurisdiction. Upload petition, proposed order, and civil case information sheet. Pay the filing fee.
Step 9 — Serve the Nueces County Criminal DA
Certified mail to 901 Leopard St., Room 313, Corpus Christi, TX 78401 Keep the green card.
Step 10 — Prepare the best-interest-of-justice hearing packet
This is where most pro-se Nueces County non-disclosures are won or lost. See the detailed hearing section below.
Step 11 — Attend the hearing at the Nueces County Courthouse
Bring exhibits, declarations, and your narrative. Arrive 30 minutes early for the Nueces County Courthouse security.
Step 12 — Confirm DPS sealing and dispute any stale vendor reports
Clerk forwards the signed order to DPS within 15 business days. DPS updates within 45–90 days. Background-check vendors refresh within 90–180 days. If the record keeps appearing, dispute under FCRA with a certified copy of the order.
The Best-Interest Hearing at Nueces County Courthouse
In short: Most Nueces County nondisclosure petitions require the court to find that sealing is in the best interest of justice, which often means a hearing. Being prepared to show eligibility and rehabilitation is what carries the petition.
In Nueces County, petition-based non-disclosures under 411.0725 almost always get set for a best-interest-of-justice hearing — even when the Nueces County DA does not object. This is different from expunction, where uncontested petitions are usually granted on the papers.
A Nueces County best-interest hearing typically runs 15–30 minutes in front of the same judge that handled the original deferred. You are asking the court to find that sealing is in the best interest of justice. The court is not required to grant it; you are carrying the burden.
What Nueces County judges want to see:
- Employment evidence. W-2s, pay stubs, a letter from an employer — anything that shows you are productively employed since discharge.
- Specific prejudice from the unsealed record. A declined job offer, a denied apartment, a licensing denial. Bring the declination letter if you have it.
- Rehabilitation. Certificates from community-supervision programs, education records, counseling completions.
- Community involvement. Church attendance, volunteer work, letters from supervisors or religious leaders.
- A coherent narrative. "I am not the person I was then. Here is what I have done since. Here is what sealing this record will unlock for my family."
The single most common reason a Nueces County non-disclosure is denied is under-preparation at the best-interest hearing. DIY filers show up without exhibits, without a prepared narrative, assuming the court will grant the order because the statute appears to apply. It does not work that way. The judge is looking for a reason to say yes — but you have to supply it. An unprepared hearing typically triggers a 2-year waiting period before a refile is credible.
Do Not Walk Into Nueces County Courthouse Alone.
Best-interest hearings are where Nueces County DIY non-disclosures go to die. We prepare the petition, serve the DA, build the hearing packet — exhibits, declarations, narrative — and the only thing you have to do is show up and tell your story. Flat fee. Money-back guarantee.
The eFileTexas Nightmare — Watch This Before You Start
In short: Nueces County takes nondisclosure filings through the eFileTexas portal, which bounces petitions for technical issues like combined exhibits or unreadable scans. These avoidable rejections are a common reason Nueces County filings stall.
Nueces County non-disclosure petitions go through eFileTexas. Same portal as expunction, same rejection traps, same filing-code quirks. Spend 10 minutes on this walkthrough before your first filing.
Nueces County non-disclosure-specific traps on the portal:
- Filing type. Nueces County handles non-disclosure petitions in a couple of different ways — some courts reopen the original criminal case, others treat it as a new civil matter. If you pick the wrong mode on eFileTexas, the clerk rejects.
- Sealed filing flag. Some Nueces County courts require the non-disclosure petition itself to be filed under seal so the petition is not public record tied to the original criminal case. You have to flag this manually on the portal.
- Correct court queue. Non-disclosure goes to the court of original jurisdiction. The portal does not warn you if you pick the wrong court.
- Filing code specificity. "Petition for Order of Non-Disclosure" — not "Motion to Seal," not "Petition." Wrong code routes to wrong queue and delays review.
What Nueces County "Sealed" Actually Means — and Doesn't
In short: A Nueces County nondisclosure order seals the record from most public and private background checks, but it does not erase it: law enforcement, the courts, and certain licensing agencies can still see it. Sealed is not the same as destroyed.
After a Nueces County judge signs a non-disclosure order:
- Within 15 business days — the Nueces County clerk forwards the order to DPS.
- Within 45–90 days — DPS updates its criminal-history system and notifies other Texas criminal justice agencies.
- Within 90–180 days — private background-check vendors that subscribe to DPS data pick up the sealing and stop reporting the record.
What Nueces County non-disclosure does not do:
- Does not erase the record — it remains at the Nueces County District Clerk, DPS, and the arresting agency, flagged as non-disclosed.
- Does not bind Corpus Christi PD, Nueces County Sheriff, the DA, or the courts. Law enforcement retains full access.
- Does not bind certain licensing boards listed in Gov. Code 411.0765 — the State Board for Educator Certification, Texas Medical Board, Texas Board of Nursing, Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, and others. These boards can still see the record.
- Does not erase federal records. FBI, ICE, and other federal agencies keep copies.
- Does not require private vendors to purge. They must stop disclosing but can retain the record in their database.
Gulf Coast is one of the heaviest background-check markets in the country. Even after Nueces County non-disclosure, you should expect to dispute at least one or two vendor reports that keep showing the record. Keep a certified copy of the signed order on hand for FCRA disputes.
10 Nueces County Non-Disclosure Mistakes That Kill DIY Petitions
In short: The most common Nueces County DIY nondisclosure mistakes are filing under the wrong Chapter 411 pathway, missing a 411.074 disqualifier, miscalculating the waiting period, and failing to prepare for the best-interest hearing. Each one is avoidable.
- Filing on a Nueces County deferred with a family-violence finding. Automatic disqualifier under 411.074. Read the judgment before filing.
- Wrong Gov. Code section. Confusing 411.0726 (automatic) with 411.0725 (petition) or 411.0729 (post-conviction).
- Filing in the wrong Nueces County court. Non-disclosure goes to the court of original jurisdiction — not a new court.
- Assuming automatic non-disclosure happened without confirming with DPS. Even when 411.0726 applies, the automatic process fails often enough that a petition or motion to compel is sometimes still needed.
- Outdated Nueces County DA service address. The current Nueces County DA service address is Room 206 (2nd Floor), 901 Leopard Street, Corpus Christi, TX 78401 (Nueces County Courthouse). Old templates may point to a stale address — verify before mailing or your service will be returned.
- Walking into the best-interest hearing unprepared. No exhibits, no narrative, no witnesses — common Nueces County pro-se result.
- Boilerplate best-interest paragraph in the petition. Nueces County judges read these. Generic language triggers denials.
- Concatenated petition and proposed order. Nueces County requires separate PDFs.
- Not flagging sealed filing. Some Nueces County courts require the petition itself filed under seal. Pro-se filers miss the checkbox.
- Skipping vendor follow-up. The order seals the record in Texas criminal justice databases — but Gulf Coast background-check vendors need affirmative disputes. Not doing this undoes the value of the sealing.
DIY vs. Attorney vs. Expunction360 in Nueces County
In short: DIY is cheapest but riskiest for a Nueces County nondisclosure; a traditional hourly attorney is the most expensive; Expunction360 is a flat-fee Texas law firm that handles the Nueces County petition and hearing for you. The right choice depends on your case's complexity and the disqualifier risk.
| Pro Se (DIY) | Attorney | Expunction360 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing fee | $450 | $450 | $0 |
| Professional fee | $0 | $1,500–$4,000 | Flat, fraction of attorney cost |
| Your time commitment | 40–80 hours | ~2 hours | ~30 minutes intake |
| Gov. Code 411 section selection | Your research | Handled | Handled |
| Family-violence finding check | Your read of the judgment | Handled | Handled |
| Best-interest hearing prep | Alone | Attorney appears | Court appearance usually not needed. |
| Gulf Coast vendor dispute support | You alone | Attorney may or may not help | We handle vendor disputes |
| Risk of denial | High | Low | Low (money-back guarantee) |
For Nueces County non-disclosure, honest answer: contested best-interest cases often benefit from a full-service attorney who can appear at the hearing. For uncontested petitions with clean facts and clear eligibility, our flat-fee model is the best value in Gulf Coast. We will tell you which category you fall in on the intake call.
Texas House Bill 4504 (88th Legislature, 2023, effective January 1, 2025) was a non-substantive recodification of much of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. For expunctions, it relocated the rules from old Chapter 55 to new Chapter 55A and renumbered the relevant articles. The substantive eligibility rules and waiting periods were largely preserved — but every petition filed after January 1, 2025 should cite the new Chapter 55A numbering, and outdated templates that still cite Chapter 55 are a common reason for clerk rejection in Texas courts.
Will an Expunction Remove a Case From Google Search Results?
In short: A nondisclosure or expunction limits what agencies and background-check vendors can report, but it does not directly control Google. As the underlying public records are sealed or destroyed, third-party listings typically lose their source and fade over time, though no service can promise an instant Google removal.
The honest answer is no — not directly — but in practice the listings almost always fade. A Texas expunction order is directed at government agencies. Under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 55A, the court orders the Texas Department of Public Safety, the arresting agency, the Nueces County District Clerk, and every other named respondent to destroy or return their records. That order does not, by itself, command Google, a news site, or a private background-check vendor to delete anything.
Here is what actually happens. Most criminal records that surface in a Google search are republished by third-party data brokers and mugshot sites that originally scraped them from public court and jail databases. Once the underlying agencies destroy their copies under the expunction order, those third-party feeds lose their source. Over the following weeks and months the listings typically decay, and many vendors will remove an entry outright when you send them a certified copy of the signed expunction order. Major background-check companies such as Checkr, HireRight, and Sterling must maintain reasonable procedures for accuracy under the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act — the legal basis for demanding removal once a record is expunged.
So an expunction is still the most powerful tool for cleaning up an online criminal record; it simply reaches search engines indirectly. See if your record qualifies with a free review — Expunction360 serves every required agency and gives you certified copies of the order to send to any site still showing the case.
Nueces County Non-Disclosure FAQ
Through eFileTexas, routed to the Nueces County District Clerk at the Nueces County Courthouse, 901 Leopard St., Room 313, Corpus Christi, TX 78401.
$450 for the civil filing fee. Pull the current amount from the Nueces County court costs page.
TAMU-CC Police is a separate agency from CCPD with its own records system. List TAMU-CC Police as the arresting agency respondent.
Port Aransas is in Nueces County — file in Nueces County district court. Port Aransas PD is the arresting agency; list it separately from CCPD.
Robstown is in Nueces County. File in Nueces County district court at Corpus Christi. List Robstown PD as the arresting agency.
Typical pro-se timeline is 7–10 months.
One Shot at Sealing. Do It Right.
We file Nueces County non-disclosures every week and prep your best-interest hearing packet for the Nueces County Courthouse. Flat fee. Money-back guarantee if the court denies a properly prepared petition.