Simply... yes.
If your license is, say, a Colorado license, and you are driving in Texas- and are charged with violating Texas law, then yes, you DO have to go to court, and yes, the judge COULD suspend your license. And yes, Colorado will honor that suspension.
If Texas has not already filed a suspension you will be able to. If they've already filed, probably not. Pay the ticket. It's just plain easier.
The only way it could be mandated is if you have a CDL. If you don't have one, they can't, although they can send a request to the DMV in Texas to do so. Whether or not Texas complies is up to them. Additionally, the Department of Revenue (it's not the DMV in Colorado) can suspend your driving privilege in the state of Colorado, meaning you won't be permitted to drive in the state of Colorado.
The general rule of out of state citations is that if you quickly pay the fine without disputing it, the state where you have your license never finds out.
All states permit any legal resident to have a driver's license and a number of states process drivers license applications without asking about legal residence status. Thus a drivers license is not proof of citizenship.
i have a California license and i need to get a license (online) from Texas.
No, Texas does not have the 'Enhanced Driver's License'
texas license BS4 1061
It is Austin, Texas but it is not the Colorado River that begins in Colorado and flows through the Grand Canyon to the Sea of Cortez. It is the Colorado River of Texas whose drainage basin is in Texas and New Mexico.
Colorado is the width of the Okklahoma Panhandle away from Texas while Texas and Arkansas share a common border.
TEXAS LICENSE PLATE CRP8970 BELONGS TO