Liberty County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Six JP Precincts, the Grand Parkway Growth Wave, and What Houston Exurb Growth Means for Landlords
Liberty County is not a market most institutional investors are talking about yet — and that is precisely what makes it interesting. Situated 30 to 40 miles northeast of downtown Houston along the Trinity River, the county has been quietly absorbing Houston’s outward pressure for years. The Grand Parkway (I-99) extension along the county’s western flank accelerated that trend dramatically, converting the Hwy 146 corridor from a rural two-lane into a serious industrial and residential growth spine. The county is growing at over 5% annually — faster than either Dayton or Liberty city individually — and the arrival of the Gulf Inland Logistics Park has confirmed that the industrial land use pattern catalyzed by the parkway is not speculative but real. For landlords who got in early, or who are considering the market now, the procedural details of Liberty County’s court system are the essential local knowledge to carry.
The Six-Precinct System: What Multi-County Landlords Must Know
The most critical operational fact about Liberty County for any landlord is that it runs six JP precincts, not the four found in most Texas counties. Texas law allows counties to establish between one and eight precincts depending on population, and Liberty County has exercised that authority to create a system that distributes courts across its 1,160 square miles — from Daisetta in the west to Cleveland on the northeast to the Liberty/Hardin corridor in the center.
Landlords who own in multiple Texas counties and are accustomed to filing at “Precinct 4” as the default last precinct may be surprised to find that Liberty County has a Precinct 5 and Precinct 6 as well — both located in Cleveland. The mandatory wrong-precinct dismissal rule applies in full force: a Dayton property must be filed at Precinct 4 (Dayton), not Precinct 1 (Liberty). A Cleveland property must be filed at the correct Cleveland court — either Precinct 5 or Precinct 6 — which are two separate courts at two different addresses within Cleveland itself. Confirming your precinct before every filing is not optional; it is the first step in every eviction procedure in this county.
Court Directory: All Six Precincts
JP Precinct 1, under Judge Stephen Hebert, is located at 2103 Cos Street in Liberty and can be reached at (936) 336-4558, extension 2. This is the primary court for Liberty city and the surrounding central county. JP Precinct 2, under Judge Jimmy L. Belt, serves the western county from 401 Main Street in Daisetta (phone 936-536-4091), covering the small oil-field communities of Daisetta, Hull, and surrounding areas. JP Precinct 3, under Judge Cody Parrish, is located at 5301 Hwy 146 N in Liberty (phone 936-298-9407) and also serves the Hardin community area along Hwy 146 northeast of Liberty city. JP Precinct 4, under Judge Larry Wilburn, is the Dayton court at 1300 W. Clayton in Dayton (phone 936-258-2461) and serves the county’s fastest-growing southern corridor. JP Precinct 5, under Judge Wade Brown, is at 22350 Hwy. 321 in Cleveland (phone 281-592-9229). JP Precinct 6, under Judge Ralph Fuller, is at 304 Campbell in Cleveland (phone 281-593-8422). Both Precinct 5 and Precinct 6 serve Cleveland and the northeast county — verify which applies to your specific property address.
Dayton: The Growth Engine
Dayton has grown 3.3% per year to a population of approximately 10,333 in 2025, making it one of the faster-growing small cities in the Houston metro area. The city’s growth story is built on two foundations: its role as an affordable Houston commuter community (about 30 miles to downtown), and its emerging industrial base anchored by Union Pacific Railroad operations, the Gulf Inland Logistics Park, and proximity to the major petrochemical manufacturing corridor along the Houston Ship Channel and Baytown. Workers at ExxonMobil’s Baytown Refinery and the Enterprise Products PDH plant commute from Dayton, generating demand for workforce housing with easy access to Hwy 146 southbound.
Rental prices in Dayton are still catching up to demand: average one-bedroom rents run approximately $875 to $1,091 per month, with a median gross rent of about $1,060. New residential construction permits exceeded 100 per year and continue at pace. The Dayton market is still in an early-growth phase compared to established Houston suburbs, which means entry prices and cap rates remain attractive for investors willing to manage the exurban characteristics: lower walkability, car-dependent lifestyle, and some concentration of lower-income households.
Flood Risk: The Essential Liberty County Disclosure
No Liberty County landlord guide is complete without addressing flood risk. The county sits along the Trinity River and is directly in the path of tropical storms and hurricanes that make landfall near the Gulf Coast. Texas Property Code § 92.0135 requires landlords to disclose in the lease if a dwelling is located in a 100-year floodplain. Liberty County’s flat, low-lying terrain near the Trinity means that a significant number of properties — particularly in Dayton and Liberty city proper — carry meaningful flood exposure. Document property condition at move-in with photographs and a signed checklist. Consider requiring renters insurance as a lease condition and note in the lease that the landlord is not responsible for flood damage to the tenant’s personal property. After major flood events, the habitability provisions of Texas Property Code § 92.058 may come into play if the premises become uninhabitable.
Security Deposits and the January 2026 Law Changes
Texas Property Code § 92.103 requires the return of the security deposit within 30 days of the tenant surrendering the property, with an itemized written accounting of any deductions. Bad-faith retention triggers a penalty of $100 plus three times the wrongfully withheld amount plus the tenant’s attorney’s fees. At Dayton’s median gross rent of $1,060, a typical one-month deposit creates potential bad-faith exposure of approximately $3,280 before legal fees. Use certified mail for the accounting, keep dated photographs, and never commingle deposit funds with operating accounts. Major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026, under SB 38. Verify current notice language and filing forms with the appropriate Liberty County JP court before initiating any eviction after that date.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Liberty County has six JP precincts (numbered 1–6). Verify your precinct at co.liberty.tx.us before filing; wrong-precinct filings will be dismissed. Flood risk disclosure is required for floodplain properties under Tex. Prop. Code § 92.0135. Major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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