In this case, we must decide whether the failure to timely appeal a turnover order deprived the court of appeals of jurisdiction. Our decision turns on the finality of an order that affected a non-judgment debtor's rights. The order directed funds subject to disputed ownership claims into the court's registry "without prejudice" to the rights of either the judgment creditor or non-judgment debtor to later seek the funds' release. We conclude that a turnover order is not a final, appealable judgment when it merely orders funds subject to an as-yet-unadjudicated ownership dispute into the court's registry. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the court of appeals to consider the merits.
I
This case arises from a post-judgment turnover proceeding to enforce a final, monetary judgment that the trial court entered in the underlying lawsuit (the lawsuit). Kingwood CrossRoads, L.P. brought this lawsuit against Chevron Phillips Chemical Company, LP (CPChem), Exxon Land Development, Inc., and others. Mayer Brown, LLP represented Kingwood at trial. The facts at issue in the lawsuit are not at issue here. However, the lawsuit was complex and involved multiple claims. Both CPChem and Exxon brought counterclaims against Kingwood.
In 2008, the trial court entered a final judgment (the underlying judgment), which CPChem then sought to enforce in the turnover proceeding now at issue. In the underlying judgment, the trial court ruled for CPChem on Kingwood's contract claim, but also awarded damages to Kingwood against CPChem on other claims. The trial court also ruled for Kingwood when it ordered Exxon to pay $637,612.50 in sanctions. As the prevailing party on Kingwood's contract action, CPChem was awarded attorneys' fees.
CPChem and Exxon appealed the trial court's judgment (the 2008 appeal). On appeal, Alexander Dubose Jefferson & Townsend, LLP (ADJT) represented Kingwood. The court of appeals affirmed CPChem's judgment for attorneys' fees and reversed Kingwood's judgments *579against CPChem. Thus, CPChem became a judgment creditor and Kingwood became CPChem's judgment debtor.
Also, in the 2008 appeal, ADJT successfully defended Kingwood's sanctions judgment against Exxon.
Meanwhile, Kingwood failed to pay its judgment debt to CPChem. Therefore, in 2013, CPChem applied for turnover assistance, seeking to collect its debt from the $1 million paid by Exxon. Before the turnover hearing, ADJT sought to intervene in the proceeding, seeking a declaration that it owned 50% of the funds CPChem sought due to its contingency-fee agreement. ADJT argued that CPChem had no claim against ADJT's portion of the payment as Kingwood, the judgment debtor, did not own those funds. Alternatively, ADJT contended its contractual claim to the funds had priority over CPChem's claim as a judgment creditor. CPChem filed a motion to strike the intervention and an answer opposing the relief ADJT sought.
At a hearing on both CPChem's application for a turnover order and ADJT's plea in intervention, the trial court orally denied CPChem's motion to strike the intervention. But it also expressly doubted the merits of ADJT's position. The trial court indicated it would grant CPChem turnover assistance as to the uncontested 50% of the Exxon payment and ordered the disputed 50% of the payment deposited into the court's "registry ... pending appeal." It also requested that its rulings be put into a final judgment.
On November 8, 2013, the trial court signed an order (the Turnover Order) directing Kingwood to turn over half of the funds directly to CPChem and that the other half be placed in the court's registry. The Turnover Order concluded by saying the "Turnover Order is without prejudice to any right of either CPChem or ADJT to seek the release of the $494,427.32 to be held initially in the Court's Registry." It was silent as to ADJT's intervention and request for a declaration, as well as CPChem's motion to strike. Neither CPChem nor ADJT appealed the Turnover Order. To be timely, a notice of appeal was due December 8, 2013.
In April 2014, nearly six months after the trial court signed the Turnover Order, CPChem filed a motion for final judgment on ADJT's intervention. ADJT filed a response opposing the final judgment motion and moving the court to release the funds *580in the registry that same day. CPChem then filed a motion to enforce the Turnover Order and to have the registry funds released to it on the grounds that ADJT triggered a condition for releasing the funds when it neglected to appeal the Turnover Order.
On June 9, 2014, the trial court signed the "Order and Final Judgment on Pending Matters" (the Release Order), which: (1) denied ADJT's motion to release registry funds; (2) ordered the Turnover Order enforced and registry funds released to CPChem with accrued interest upon the order becoming final and appellate remedies being exhausted; and (3) declared "this Order and Final Judgment is a Final Judgment" and "as such is appealable." ADJT filed its notice of appeal on July 9, 2014.
The court of appeals dismissed ADJT's appeal for want of jurisdiction, holding ADJT should have appealed the Turnover Order, not the Release Order, because the Turnover Order was the final, appealable judgment.
The court of appeals stated that courts determine disputes pertaining to the finality of an order by ascertaining a trial court's intent from the language of the order and the record, as well as the parties' conduct when appropriate.
The court of appeals also construed the record to reflect the trial court's intent for the Turnover Order to be final because of the trial court's oral rulings at the turnover proceeding-namely that the trial court denied CPChem's motion to strike, while simultaneously expressing its intent to deny all relief sought in ADJT's plea in intervention.
Finally, the court of appeals regarded ADJT's motion to release as requesting the same relief ADJT previously sought in the intervention and, thus, viewed it as essentially a motion to reconsider.
II
The Texas turnover statute provides judgment creditors with a procedural device to assist them in satisfying their judgment debts.
Generally, every court with jurisdiction to render a judgment also has the inherent authority to enforce its judgments.
Usually, only final judgments are subject to appeal.
A. The Trial Court's Merits Determinations
Since the Turnover Order listed the disputed portion of the funds among Kingwood's assets, the court of appeals imferred that the trial court determined Kingwood owned the funds. Although the court of appeals viewed the Turnover Order as unambiguously indicating Kingwood owned the funds, such a conclusion is refuted by the Turnover Order's statement that ordering the disputed half of the funds into the court's registry was "without prejudice to any right of either CPChem or ADJT to seek the release of the $494,427.32 to be held initially in the Court's Registry."
We also cannot reasonably construe the trial court's oral statements at the hearing as expressing a present intent to render judgment on ADJT's plea in intervention when the judge's remarks included statements like:
• "Motion to Strike Intervention, let me just tell you what I think -what I'm going to do and what I think the law is and that's why I'm going to do it ....";
• "[T]he Motion to Strike Intervention is denied. However, I'm going to deny any relief in the intervention ...." (emphasis added).
While the trial judge said "I'm going to order [the funds] to be held in the registry of the Court ... pending appeal," his lack of a present intent to resolve the dispute is demonstrated by his subsequent request for a judgment that brings finality to the issues and continuously saying what he was "going to" do.
The Turnover Order also did nothing to dispose of ADJT's intervention and request for a declaration pertaining to its rights to the disputed funds. Ordering the funds into the registry of the court pending appeal and "without prejudice to any right" of either claimant does not reflect a ruling on who is entitled to the funds. It does precisely the opposite.
The court of appeals' analysis also runs counter to precedent that regards turnover proceedings as being limited to their purely procedural nature and, thus, bars use of the turnover statute to determine parties' and non-judgment debtors' substantive rights.
*584Admittedly, however, in 1991, this Court issued conflicting opinions that have caused much confusion in this area and have blurred the contours that once clearly defined the permissible scope of turnover proceedings.
CPChem's contention is further weakened by looking at the two other cases it relies on. The court of appeals in In re deShetler supports this intervention exception by citing Cre8 and its earlier opinion in this very case now before the Court.
However, the absence of any other judgment regarding ADJT's claims, in addition to our conclusion that the trial court's order does not reflect a decision on ADJT's substantive claims, is dispositive as to whether a court has ever determined ADJT's ownership claims. Therefore, because it is clear no such ruling exists in this case, we need not delineate the appropriate mechanism for resolving competing substantive claims to property sought in a turnover application.
B. Finality of the Turnover Order
Having concluded that no trial court had ever decided ADJT's substantive claims to the disputed funds before entry of the Turnover Order and until issuance of the Release Order, we turn to whether the Turnover Order was the final, appealable judgment that ADJT needed to appeal. The issue, therefore, is narrowly confined to whether the provision of the Turnover Order directing funds into the registry can qualify as a mandatory injunction when a court has never determined the non-judgment debtor's substantive ownership rights to the funds.
Schultz concluded a turnover order that functions as a mandatory injunction is a final, appealable judgment.
Most courts of appeals merely state that because turnover orders function similarly to mandatory injunctions, turnover orders are final and appealable judgments.
However, portions of an order can be injunctive in nature and, thus, final and appealable, while other provisions of the same order can be interlocutory and unreviewable because they do not resemble injunctive relief.
Similarly, when analyzing orders directing funds deposited into the court's registry of the court pending a final adjudication *588of ownership, most courts deem these orders as interlocutory and not subject to appeal.
And while ADJT's motion to release may have once again sought the funds, it simultaneously requested a final conclusion as to its pending, competing claims and an order conclusively establishing entitlement to the funds pending in the court's registry.
III
We hold ADJT timely appealed the Release Order. The Turnover Order's provisions on this issue did not function as a mandatory injunction, which means the Release Order was the final judgment on ADJT's claims. We remand the case to the court of appeals for its consideration of the *589merits of the appeal.
Justice Lehrmann and Justice Blacklock did not participate in the decision.
The court of appeals also remanded the case to the trial court to determine the amount of attorneys' fees Kingwood was to receive from CPChem. On remand, the trial court awarded Kingwood an attorney-fee recovery from CPChem at $3.7 million. On September 21, 2017, the court of appeals reversed Kingwood's attorney-fee recovery and remanded to the trial court for it to once again determine the proper amount.
Chevron Phillips Chem. Co. v. Kingwood Crossroads, L.P. ,
With post-judgment interest, the final amount of Kingwood's sanctions judgment totaled $988,854.64.
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 31.002.
Beaumont Bank, N.A. v. Buller ,
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 31.002(a) -(b)(1).
Arndt v. Farris ,
Tex. R. Civ. P. 329b(d).
Black v. Shor ,
See London v. London ,
Hinde v. Hinde ,
Tex. R. App. P. 25.1, 26.1.
Bahar ,
See
Schultz v. Fifth Judicial Dist. Court of Appeals at Dallas ,
See James v. Hubbard ,
See Madeksho v. Abraham, Watkins, Nichols & Friend ,
See Ex parte Swate ,
See Beaumont Bank, N.A. v. Buller ,
See Lozano v. Lozano ,
Compare Schultz v. Fifth Judicial Dist. Court of Appeals at Dallas ,
See, Maiz v. Virani ,
See Breazeale v. Casteel ,
Cre8 Int'l, LLC v. Rice , No. 05-14-00377-CV,
In re deShetler ,
Id. at *4-5.
Id. at *5.
Mitchell v. Turbine Res. Unlimited, Inc. ,
Schultz v. Fifth Judicial Dist. Court of Appeals at Dallas ,
See id. at 738 ("[A] post-judgment turnover order is an appealable final judgment ....").
See id. at 740 ("The turnover order at issue in this case resolved the property rights issues and acted as a mandatory injunction .... We therefore hold that the turnover order was in the nature of a mandatory injunction and was appealable." (emphasis added) (footnote omitted) ).
See Burns v. Miller, Hiersche, Martens & Hayward, P.C. ,
E.g. , Gerjets v. Davila ,
See Fe Express, LLC v. Contreras , No. 04-16-00723-CV,
See, e.g. , Schultz ,
See Kennedy ,
See Black ,
Cf. Kennedy ,
See Prodeco Expl., Inc. v. Ware ,
See
See Zhao v. XO Energy LLC ,
See Madeksho v. Abraham, Watkins, Nichols & Friend ,
Cf. Beeler v. Fuqua , No. 09-07-358-CV,
See Burns v. Miller, Hiersche, Martens & Hayward, P.C. ,
