OPINION
In this restricted appeal, appellants Valerie Thomas Bahar, M.D. and Valerie Thomas Bahar, M.D., P.A. (collectively “Bahar”) appeal two post-judgment orders, asserting that the trial court erred in compelling discovery, imposing discovery sanctions on Bahar and her attorney (including assessing attorney’s fees), amending a preexisting turnover order, and denying Ba-har’s motion for continuance. We will dismiss the appeal in part for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, reverse the imposition of attorney’s fees against Bahar, and otherwise affirm the trial court’s orders.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Appellee Lyon Financial Services, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation d/b/a U.S. Ban-corp Manifest Funding Services (“Lyon”), obtained a default judgment in Minnesota against Bahar that it later domesticated in Travis County. To aid in enforcing the judgment, the trial court signed a turnover order appointing Riecke Baumann as master in chancery and receiver of Ba-har’s non-exempt assets.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 31.002 (West 2008) (statute authorizing turnover order and appointment of receiver); Tex.R. Civ. P. 171 (rule authorizing appointment of master in chancery). Attempting to locate Bahar’s non-exempt assets, Baumann propounded various written discovery requests on Bahar and also took her deposition. Bahar’s counsel objected to numerous discovery requests and terminated her deposition early due to a dispute with
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Baumann. Baumann filed a motion to compel and a motion to amend the turnover order to expand his investigative powers. Baumann also requested attorney’s fees for the time he spent drafting and arguing both motions. Baumann scheduled these motions for hearing. Asserting that her attorney had a scheduling conflict, Bahar moved to continue the hearing on Baumann’s motions, but did not set her motion for continuance for hearing or otherwise submit the motion to the trial court for a ruling. The hearing, which Baumann and counsel for Lyon attended but Bahar and her attorney did not, proceeded as scheduled. At the hearing, the court granted Baumann’s motions and denied Bahar’s motion for continuance. The court later memorialized its grant of Baumann’s motions in two orders, but did not reduce to writing its oral denial of Bahar’s motion for continuance. Bahar initially sought mandamus relief from the court’s rulings, which this Court denied.
See In re Bahar,
No. 08-09-00359-CV,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
To prevail on a restricted appeal, the appealing party must establish that: (1) it filed notice of the restricted appeal within six months after the judgment was signed; (2) it was a party to the underlying lawsuit; (3) it did not participate in the hearing that resulted in the judgment complained of and did not timely file any post-judgment motions or requests for findings of fact and conclusions of law; and (4) error is apparent on the face of the record.
Alexander v. Lynda’s Boutique,
DISCUSSION
In five issues, Bahar asserts that (1) she “can prevail on [her] restricted appeal”; (2) the trial court abused its discretion in denying her motion for continuance; (3 & 4) the order compelling discovery is “void as a matter of law” or, alternatively, the trial court abused its discretion in granting Baumann’s motion to compel; and (5) the trial court abused its discretion in rendering the amended turnover order. In response, Lyon argues that this Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over Bahar’s appeal because there is no “final judgment” as that term is understood in the context of a post-judgment receivership proceeding. In the alternative, Lyon asserts that Bahar’s restricted appeal should fail because Bahar (1) “participated” in the proceeding resulting in the orders on appeal, and (2) failed to show error on the face of the record. Lyon also requests that we impose sanctions against Bahar’s counsel for filing a frivolous appeal.
Does this Court Have Jurisdiction over Bahar’s Appeal?
Generally, appellate courts have jurisdiction only over appeals from “final judgments” and certain appealable interlocutory orders.
Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp.,
(i) Turnover/Receivership Order
Although most writs and orders in aid of execution are not appealable, the supreme court has held that a turnover order is a final, appealable judgment.
Schultz v. Fifth Judicial Dish Court of Appeals,
Lyon concedes that we would have had jurisdiction over an appeal from the
initial
turnover order that was rendered in 2007 if Bahar had timely appealed that order.
See Valerie Thomas Bahar, M.D., P.A. v. Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc.,
No. 03-07-00469-CV,
Although styled as an “amended turnover order,” the 2009 order from which the present appeal is taken is really the “second amended” turnover order in the case. The original turnover order was rendered in 2007 and was not timely appealed to this Court, as noted above. The second order (the “first amended”) was rendered in May 2008 and was not appealed. 1 The 2008 amended turnover order *386 was, in turn, amended by the 2009 order at issue here. The 2009 order is virtually identical to the 2008 order. The only changes are the addition of several new provisions (1) expressly authorizing the receiver to bring contempt proceedings before the court, (2) ordering Bahar to produce records of her payments to her attorneys “since the first turnover order was granted,” (3) ordering Bahar to turn over all tax refunds to the receiver, (4) requiring Bahar to notify the receiver of any interests she has in any probate estates, and (5) awarding Baumann attorney’s fees “for obtaining this order.”
A post-judgment turnover order is a “procedural device by which judgment creditors may reach assets of a debt- or that are otherwise difficult to attach or levy on by ordinary legal process.”
Beaumont Bank, N.A. v. Butler,
requires the debtor to bring to the court all documents or property used to satisfy a judgment. The actual effect of the [turnover statute] is to require the burden of production of property which is subject to execution to be placed with the debtor instead of a creditor attempting to satisfy his judgment.
Id.
at 226. It is because a turnover order “acts as a mandatory injunction against the judgment debtor” that it is renewable on appeal.
Schultz,
Ordinarily, an amended final order supersedes any prior final order when the “order amounts to something more than marking through [an earlier date] and substituting another date on the final order.”
Old Republic Ins. Co. v. Scott,
Although the core of the amended-order rule articulated in
Old Republic
— that an amended order supersedes the order it amends — also applies to “final, appealable” orders rendered in aid of enforcing a judgment, the rule’s effect on our appellate jurisdiction in that context is not as clear cut. This is because the rule makes at least two key assumptions not present in appeals from orders rendered in aid of
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enforcement. First, it assumes that the trial court has a finite — and relatively short — amount of time during which to amend its final judgments, i.e., the plenary-power period.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 329b (detailing time period for expiration of court’s plenary power);
see also Malone v. Hampton,
In contrast, the court’s post-judgment power to enforce its judgment and to aid the judgment creditor in his efforts to collect on that judgment can last until the judgment is satisfied.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 308;
Matz v. Bennion,
Thus, we actually have the opposite set of assumptions operating here: the court can (1) exercise its inherent power to enforce its judgments for a indefinite period of time, and (2) render multiple judgments, on the same or different issues, over a period of months or even years. This means that, as is the case here, the trial court could amend an otherwise final, appealable order long after the deadline for appealing the first order has passed. In that circumstance, exercising jurisdiction over the portions of the amended order that could have been timely appealed, but were not, would render the appellate deadlines of rule 26.1 meaningless.
Keeping in mind the filing deadlines of rule 26.1, we conclude that because the 2008 order was not appealed, an assertion of jurisdiction by this Court over the
entire
2009 order — which includes, verbatim, the 2008 order’s substantive provisions— would serve to improperly resurrect the unappealed, “finally final” portions of the 2008 order.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 26.1;
Wagner & Brown, Ltd.,
*388 (n) Master-in-Chancery Order
We lack appellate jurisdiction to review an order appointing a master in chancery, even when the master is appointed at the same time as a receiver and in the same order mandating turnover.
See Moyer,
(in) Discovery Order and Discovery Sanctions
Post-judgment orders regarding discovery disputes are not final, appealable judgments over which this Court has jurisdiction.
See Fisher v. P.M. Clinton Int’l Investigations,
A post-judgment imposition of monetary sanctions, however, is a final, appealable judgment “when the sanctions are reduced to a judgment and execution is authorized thereon.”
Arndt,
In addition to granting Baumann’s motion to compel discovery and imposing sanctions on Bahar, the court’s order also stated that “Joseph Willie, III, defense counsel, is ordered to personally appear for all future hearings, depositions and examinations.” Bahar complains that this order violates numerous rules and statutes. We cannot address this part of Ba-har’s complaint, however, because she lacks standing to assert it.
“[A] lack of standing deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction because standing is an element of such jurisdiction.”
Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
As in Niera, the sanction in question here was imposed only on the attorney, not on the litigant herself. Although the court’s order requires Willie to personally appear at future court proceedings, it does not constrain Bahar’s freedom to dismiss Willie or instruct him not to represent her at those proceedings. Also, the transcript from the sanctions hearing indicates that by ordering Willie to personally appear at *389 future proceedings, the court was sanctioning him — not Bahar — for what it viewed as Willie’s “obstreperousness.” The court’s oral ruling makes this plain.
And I will order Mr. Willie — Dr. Willie ... to appear personally since his motions for continuance have all said that his personal appearance is necessary to adequately assure the representation of Dr. Bahar and her P.A. I think he should certainly be here.
Because Bahar lacks standing to complain about the imposition of sanctions against Willie, we lack subject-matter jurisdiction over this portion of the discovery order. See id.
Did Bahar “Participate in the Hearing that Resulted in the Judgment Complained of”?
Lyon argues that Bahar’s restricted appeal fails because she participated in the hearing that resulted in the judgment by filing written responses to the motions at issue. It argues that, because the court did not need to have a “formal fact-finding hearing” and because Bahar “actually did file written responses to each motion,” Ba-har participated in the “key decision-making event.”
See Cox,
Although Bahar submitted written argument and evidence in response to the motions, we cannot say that she “participate[d] in the hearing that resulted in the judgment complained of.”
Alexander,
Is Error Apparent on the Face of the Record?
(i) Denial of Motion for Continuance
In Bahar’s second issue, she argues that the trial court erred in overruling her motion for continuance of the hearing on Baumann’s motions. Because the 2009 order was, at least in part, a “final, appealable” order, and because Bahar’s motion for continuance related to the hearing that resulted in that order, we have jurisdiction to review the trial court’s denial of Bahar’s motion. We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for continuance for an abuse of discretion.
See BMC Software Belg., N.V. v. Marchand,
Bahar requested a continuance of the April 29, 2009 hearing, asserting that her lawyer, Mr. Willie, was scheduled to be at a jury trial in a criminal ease in Houston beginning the same day. She argues that the local administrative rules that govern conflicting court settings required the court to grant her motion. Citing the regional rules of administration for the second administrative judicial region of Texas, Bahar contends that the judge lacked discretion to deny her continuance. The second region, however, does not include Travis County, where this matter is pending; thus, those rules did not bind the trial court. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 3(a) (allowing enactment of local and regional rules of procedure). The third region, of which Travis County is a part, has similar rules for handling attorney scheduling conflicts. Rule 7, entitled “Conflicting Engagements,” states:
B. When an attorney is assigned to two courts for the same date:
1. It is the duty of the attorney to call the affected judges’ attention to all conflicting settings as soon as they are known or reasonably may be anticipated.
2. When a conflicting setting problem is made known, the affected judges should confer and agree on which case has priority.
3. The following priorities are established to aid judges in determining which case has priority:
a. Criminal case
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b. Case given preference by statute
c. Earliest set case
d. Earliest filed case
e. Court in multi-judge counties should yield to single judge counties and courts of multi-county districts
4.In the event the affected judges cannot agree on which case has priority, the question shall be resolved by the regional presiding judge or judges. If two or more regions are affected and the regional presiding judges cannot agree, the question shall be resolved by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Texas, or by another Supreme Court Justice designated by the Chief Justice.
Tex.R. Jud. Admin. [3d Admin. Dist.] 7, available at http://www.courts.state.tx.us73 aj r/p df/3 aj r-r ules. pdf.
Assuming without deciding that Bahar is correct that the trial court had no choice but to grant her continuance if she complied with the requirements of the foregoing rule, Bahar’s challenge fails because the record does not demonstrate her compliance. Specifically, the record does not show that Bahar’s attorney notified the Harris County criminal court of the conflicting settings. See id. R. 7(B)(1). Such notification is mandatory. See id. (“It is the duty of the attorney to call the affected judges’ attention to all conflicting settings .... ”). Because the record does not show that Bahar gave both judges the required notice, there is no error apparent on the face of the record. 3 Alexander, 134 *391 S.W.3d at 848. We overrule Bahar’s third issue.
(ii) The Tumover/Receiver Order
In her fifth issue, Bahar asserts numerous challenges to the court’s turnover order. Only her challenge to the court’s award of attorney’s fees, however, is directed at a provision of the 2009 order not also present in the 2008 order; therefore, that is the only challenge over which we have jurisdiction. Bahar argues that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees to Baumann for obtaining the amended turnover order because he provided no evidence as to the method of calculating the fee, nor its reasonableness or necessity.
‘We review a turnover order, an appointment of a receiver, and an award of fees to the receiver for an abuse of discretion.”
Moyer,
Determining a reasonable attorney’s fee is a question of fact and the fee award must be supported by competent evidence. A court does not have authority to adjudicate the reasonableness of attorney’s fees on judicial knowledge without the benefit of evidence.... When no evidence or insufficient evidence supports an award, the court abuses its discretion in making the award.
Id. at 53 (citations omitted).
A review of the appellate record here shows that the fee award is unsupported by any testimony, either oral or written, that would indicate how the fee was calculated or whether it was reasonable. This complete lack of supporting evidence constitutes error on the face of the record. Accordingly, we sustain this portion of Ba-har’s fifth issue.
(in) Discovery Sanctions
In her fourth issue, Bahar asserts that the court abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees to Lyon and Bau-mann without supporting evidence. The trial court sanctioned Bahar for discovery abuse, ordering her to pay Lyon $500 and Baumann $2,500 in attorney’s fees for their time spent preparing the motion to compel and attending the hearing. Like the turnover-order fee award, awarding attorney’s fees here was an abuse of discretion because the record contains no evidence indicating how the awards were calculated or whether they were reasonable or necessary. We sustain Bahar’s fourth issue.
Lyon’s Motion for Rule 45 Sanctions
Lyon requests that we impose sanctions against Bahar for filing a frivolous appeal.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 45. We conclude that sanctions are not appropriate.
See Easter v. Providence Lloyds Ins. Co.,
CONCLUSION
We dismiss Bahar’s complaints that the trial court abused its discretion in rendering the 2009 amended turnover order because it (1) “wholly jeopardizes [Bahar’s] business ... and [her] privacy and constitutional rights”; (2) failed to “take into consideration the superior federal tax lien”; (3) ordered turnover of Bahar’s assets from third parties; (4) ordered holders of GPS information about Bahar’s movements to turn over such information to Baumann; (5) allowed Baumann to open all of Bahar’s mail without a duty to timely return it to her; and (6) ordered utility companies and financial institutions to provide information about Bahar. We lack subject-matter jurisdiction to entertain those complaints because the complained-of portions of the 2009 amended turnover order were also contained in the unap-pealed 2008 turnover order. In addition, we dismiss her challenge to the trial court’s order complaining that the record lacks the “required evidence that Bahar attempted to hide assets.” We also dismiss Bahar’s challenges to the order appointing a master in chancery and the discovery order, except as it imposes monetary sanctions on Bahar.
We reverse the portions of the 2009 amended turnover order and the discovery order insofar as they require Bahar to pay Lyon’s and Baumann’s attorney’s fees and render judgment that Lyon and Baumann take nothing by their requests for attorney’s fees. We affirm the remainder of the 2009 amended turnover order.
Notes
. The May 2008 turnover/receivership order was not included in the record of the present appellate cause. A copy of that order was, however, included in the record of a related appeal from the same trial-court cause involving the same parties. See
Valerie Thomas Bahar, M.D., P.A. v. Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc.,
No. 03-07-00469-CV,
. Our holding is necessarily limited to cases in which, as here, the amended order was rendered after rule 26.1’s deadlines for appeal of the original order had passed. We do not address the circumstance where a post-judgment order is amended before the expiration of those deadlines.
. In addition, we note that there is evidence in the record that could support a conclusion that Bahar's lawyer deliberately set the criminal matter in Harris County to conflict with the previously scheduled hearing in Travis County as a way to delay that hearing. The *391 record suggests that Bahar’s lawyer requested the April 29 criminal setting in Harris County only after representing to Baumann that he was available for the Travis County hearing on that day. Baumann, who lives in Houston, actually attended the Harris County criminal proceeding in question, yet also attended the hearing in Austin later that day. At the hearing in Austin, he represented to the trial court that Bahar’s lawyer had appeared at the Harris County docket call for less than ten minutes in order to reset the relevant criminal matter for further proceedings. Baumann also noted that he had no trouble driving from Houston to Austin in time for the afternoon hearing in the Bahar case.
