OPINION ON REHEARING
Opinion By
Appellant Paula Brashear filed a motion for rehearing. We overrule the motion for rehearing. On our own motion, we withdraw our opinion issued February 10, 2009 and vacate our judgment of that date. The following is now the opinion of the Court.
Brashear sued several defendants for damages based on allegations that they neglected her mother, a nursing home resident. At that time, one of the defendants was a debtor in bankruptcy. The trial court later dismissed the case for want of prosecution. We conclude that the entire lawsuit was subject to the automatic stay imposed by § 362 of the bankruptcy code ab initio, and that the trial court never acquired jurisdiction over the case. We reverse and remand with instructions that the trial court dismiss the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Appellant Brashear filed this lawsuit in February 2001. She sued five defendants: *545 appellees Victoria Gardens of McKinney, L.L.C. and Lisa Mauer, plus RainTree Healthcare Corporation, Stephen J. Wolf, and Eddie Haggard. RainTree promptly filed a suggestion of bankruptcy and plea in abatement, along with attached documentation showing that it had filed its bankruptcy case under Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code 2 in February 2000. RainTree later filed an additional motion with the trial court seeking enforcement of the automatic bankruptcy stay imposed by § 362 of the bankruptcy code. See generally 11 U.S.C.A. § 362 (West 2004 & Supp. 2009). In July 2002, the trial court dismissed the case for want of prosecution. Brashear moved to reinstate, and she submitted an “Agreed Order to Stay Litigation” with her motion. The order was signed “Agreed as to Form” by counsel for all parties. The trial judge signed both the agreed stay order and a separate order reinstating and staying the case. In both orders, the judge stayed the case “pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362 until further order of this Court.”
In September 2004, the trial court sent a notice that the case would be dismissed for want of prosecution absent certain action from the parties, and the court dismissed the case for want of prosecution on October 27, 2004. The trial judge then signed an “Agreed Order of Dismissal with Prejudice as to Defendant RainTree Only” on January 20, 2005. The clerk’s record reflects no activity between these two dismissal orders.
Brashear filed a verified motion to reinstate the case on February 2, 2006. It appears that the motion was heard but never ruled upon by written order. The record contains uncontradicted evidence that RainTree’s bankruptcy closed on August 17, 2007. On September 15, 2007, Brashear filed by mail both a duplicate of her 2006 motion to reinstate and a notice of appeal from the October 2004 dismissal for want of prosecution. The trial court denied the motion to reinstate by order signed on November 20, 2007.
On appeal, Brashear complains of the October 27, 2004 dismissal order only as to defendants Victoria Gardens and Lisa Mauer.
II. Appellate Jurisdiction
A. Summary of the issue
The trial court’s dismissal oMer ó'f October 27, 2004 purported to dispose of all parties and claims. Accordingly, that order was, on its face, a final, appealable order, and Brashear’s September 15, 2007 notice of appeal appears to be untimely.
See generally
Tex.R.App. P. 26.1 (setting forth deadlines for appeal in civil cases). Because a timely notice of appeal is a jurisdictional prerequisite,
Raulston v. Progressive Ins. Co.,
Brashear argues that federal bankruptcy law, specifically 11 U.S.C. § 108(c), tolled her deadline to appeal until at least thirty days after August 17, 2007, when RainTree’s bankruptcy closed. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 108(c) (West 2004 & Supp. 2009). Thus, she contends, her September 15, 2007 notice of appeal was timely. Alternatively, she contends that the October 2004 dismissal order was void and that we have jurisdiction to determine that it is void. Appellees disagree with Brashear, *546 and Mauer has included a motion to dismiss this appeal in her appellate brief.
Appellate jurisdiction is never presumed. Unless the record affirmatively shows the propriety of appellate jurisdiction, we must dismiss.
Stegall v. Cameron,
B. Judgment finality
The first question we must answer is when the judgment in this case became final, triggering Brashear’s appellate deadlines. Ordinarily a judgment is final for appellate-deadline purposes when it disposes of all claims and all parties left in the lawsuit.
See Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp.,
Brashear mounts an argument that the October 27, 2004 dismissal order was interlocutory because it was rendered in violation of the automatic bankruptcy stay. Brashear contends that the automatic stay applied as to all of her claims against all defendants, but secondarily she argues that the stay applied at minimum to her claims against the bankrupt debtor, RainTree. Actions taken in violation of the automatic stay are void.
Cont’l Casing Corp. v. Samedan Oil Corp.,
We conclude that the October 27, 2004 dismissal order was a final judgment, and that the order started Brashear’s appellate timetable under our state rules of procedure. We next inquire whether federal bankruptcy law supersedes that state law on the facts of this case.
C. Whether the bankruptcy code extended Brashear’s appellate deadline
1. Applicable law
The automatic stay imposed by § 362 of the bankruptcy code does not extend or toll any appellate deadlines by its own effect.
See, e.g., Bashaw v. State,
No. 03-05-00745-CV,
Section 108(e) of the bankruptcy code, however, affords an extension of state-court deadlines under some circumstances. That section provides, in pertinent part:
[I]f applicable nonbankruptcy law ... fixes a period for commencing or continuing a civil action in a court other than a bankruptcy court on a claim against the debtor ... and such period has not expired before the date of the filing of the [bankruptcy] petition, then such period does not expire until the later of—
(1) the end of such period, including any suspension of such period occurring on or after the commencement of the case; or
(2) 30 days after notice of the termination or expiration of the stay under section 362, 922, 1201, or 1301 of this title, as the case may be, with respect to such claim.
11 U.S.C.A. § 108(c). The purpose of § 108(c) is to protect a creditor from losing rights because an automatic bankruptcy stay blocks it from commencing suit against the debtor within the statute of limitations or from complying with some other deadline after suit has been commenced.
See Morton v. Nat’l Bank (In re Morton),
2. Application of the bankruptcy code to the facts
The question presented is whether § 108(c) applied in this case to extend Brashear’s appellate deadlines as to her claims against appellees. At the outset, we reject Victoria Gardens’ argument that Brashear lacks standing to mount an argument based on § 108(c). Victoria Gardens contends that the debtor is the only party who has standing to invoke the automatic stay.
See Lisanti v. Dixon,
Section 108(c) is challenging to apply in the instant case because the case involves a mix of debtor and nondebtor defendants. The statute applies to deadlines in “a civil action in a court other than a bankruptcy court on a claim against the debtor.” 11 U.S.C.A. § 108(c). It seems that Brashear’s lawsuit fits this description, as it is undisputed that RainTree was a debtor in bankruptcy when Brashear filed it. The more difficult question is whether § 108(c) extended Brashear’s notice-of-appeal deadline with respect to all the defendants in the case, or only with respect to Brashear’s claims against Rain-Tree.
There is little authority on point, but we have found two cases holding that § 108(c) did not extend a claimant’s deadlines with respect to a bankrupt debtor’s co-obligors.
*548
In one case decided by the Fifth Circuit, the plaintiff sued Texaco, Inc., which was in bankruptcy at the time, and two other nonbankrupt defendants including a Texaco subsidiary called TRMI.
Powers v. Texaco, Inc.,
No. 93-7322,
Section 108 of the Code must be read in conjunction with § 362. Section 108 tolls limitations for filing a claim against a debtor until 30 days after the expiration of the automatic stay under § 362. Both provisions relate to “the debtor.” ... Section 362 does not operate as an automatic stay against the codefendants of the debtor.... It would make no sense, therefore, to apply the tolling provision of § 108 to such codefendants.
Id. at *3. Accordingly, the court held that the limitations deadline for plaintiffs claims against the codefendants was not extended by § 108(c). Id.
The Houston Fourteenth Court of Appeals relied on logic much like the Fifth Circuit’s in
Houston Milk Producers Federal Credit Union v. Simmons,
No. A14-91-01051-CV,
Both
Powers
and
Houston Milk Producers
refused to extend § 108(c) to claims against nonbankrupt co-obligors after concluding that the claims against the co-obligors were not affected by the automatic stay. In the instant case, however, Brashear contends that RainTree’s automatic stay applied in favor of all of Rain-Tree’s nondebtor codefendants as well. If the automatic stay barred Brashear’s claims against Victoria Gardens and Mauer from going forward, this still would not bring them within the statutory definition of “debtor,” the word used in § 108(c).
See
11 U.S.C.A. § 101(13) (defining “debt- or” as a person or municipality concerning which a case under the bankruptcy code has been commenced). But the purpose of § 108(c) is to guarantee fairness to creditors who are blocked from prosecuting their claims because of the automatic stay.
See In re Morton,
Ordinarily, an automatic stay does not apply in favor of nondebtors like Victo
*549
ria Gardens and Mauer, even if they are codefendants, co-debtors, or co-tortfeasors with a bankrupt debtor.
In re Sw. Bell Tel. Co.,
Hoover and Bamburg demonstrate that the determination of whether the automatic stay applies to claims against nondebt-ors involves factual considerations, so we look to the record to see whether the trial court made any determination of the issue. Brashear and appellees dispute whether the trial court found that the automatic stay applied in favor of Victoria Gardens, Mauer, and RainTree’s other codefen-dants. We agree with Brashear that the court did make such a finding. In its motion to enforce automatic bankruptcy stay, RainTree specifically asked the trial court to rule that the stay applied in favor of all defendants. RainTree argued that the stay applied in favor of all defendants because any judgment against its codefen-dants would have res-judicata effects against it, and because any findings against its codefendants would have collateral-estoppel effects against it. One of the court’s September 3, 2002 orders recites, “The Court further finds, as a result of the bankruptcy of Defendant RainTree ... that this action should be stayed pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362 until further order of this Court.” The other order similarly recites that the court “finds this action should be stayed pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362 until further order of this Court.” Notably, the court twice recited that it was staying the entire action “pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362” — not that it was staying the claims against RainTree under § 362 and the claims against the other defendants in the interest of judicial economy or some other reason. The most reasonable reading of the orders is that the trial court concluded that the automatic stay imposed by § 362 applied in favor of all of the defendants, including appellees.
Next, Brashear and appellees dispute whether we must accept the correctness of the trial court’s application of the automatic stay. Brashear asserts that we must accept the correctness of that ruling for several reasons, one of which is the fact that no party challenged that order when it was made. We agree. For appellees to be entitled to challenge the trial court’s order, “the record must show” that they objected to the trial court’s action and obtained a ruling on that objection. Tex. RApp. P. 33.1(a). The record in this case does not show any such objection. Appel-lees agreed “as to form” to one of the orders containing the automatic-stay language, and as far as our record reveals they were otherwise silent on the subject. We conclude that it would be unfair to allow appellees to challenge the trial court’s determination for the first time on appeal when Brashear may have relied on that determination in calculating her appellate deadlines. Appellees should have challenged the determination in the trial *550 court so as to put Brashear on notice that there was disagreement as to the true procedural posture of the case. Accordingly, we must accept the correctness of the trial court’s application of the automatic stay.
3. Effect of the January 2005 dismissal of Brashear’s claims against RainTree
Both appellees argue that any tolling or extending effect under the bankruptcy code ceased in January 2005 when the trial court signed an agreed order dismissing all claims against RainTree with prejudice. We disagree. We have held above that the extension provided in § 108(c) applies whenever an automatic stay blocks a claimant from continuing to prosecute a claim against a particular defendant. Appellees’ argument thus has merit only if the dismissal of RainTree somehow had the effect of lifting the automatic stay as to the remaining defendants in the case. Appellees have referred us to no authority in support of that proposition, and the only relevant authority we have found supports the contrary position. See
Lovall v. Chao,
No. 01-02-01019-CV,
D. Conclusion
We conclude that § 108(c) extended Brashear’s appellate deadline until thirty days after notice of the termination of RainTree’s bankruptcy proceeding with respect to her claims against the defendants who were protected by RainTree’s automatic bankruptcy stay. We further conclude that the trial court determined that the automatic stay protected all of the defendants in this case, and we must accept the correctness of this determination for purposes of determining our appellate jurisdiction. Accordingly, we conclude Brashear’s notice of appeal was timely as to all defendants pursuant to § 108(c) of the bankruptcy code, giving us jurisdiction to consider this appeal.
III. Subject-Matteu Jurisdiction
Appellees argue that if the automatic stay applied in favor of all of the defendants in this case, then the stay deprived the trial court of the subject-matter jurisdiction to take any action in this case other than to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. They further argue that we lack jurisdiction because the trial court lacked jurisdiction, and therefore we must dismiss. We must consider the question of subject-matter jurisdiction even though raised for the first time on appeal.
McMahon Contracting, L.P. v. City of Carrollton,
The automatic-stay provision of the bankruptcy code provides that the filing of a bankruptcy petition “operates as a stay, applicable to all entities, of ... the commencement” of a judicial action against the debtor for a claim that arose prepetition. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). The Texas Supreme Court has twice said that actions taken in violation of an automatic stay are void.
Howell v. Thompson,
Other courts of appeals have construed the rule of voidness to mean that the trial court acquires no jurisdiction over an action commenced in violation of the automatic stay.
See, e.g., York v. State,
Although not binding precedent, our decision in
Raney
is similar and instructive. In that case, Raney sued three defendants, all of which were apparently in bankruptcy at the time.
Like all courts, the trial court possessed jurisdiction to determine its own subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Houston Mun. Employees Pension Sys. v. Ferrell,
IV. Disposition
We reverse the trial court’s final judgment dismissing this case for want of prosecution and remand this cause to the trial court with instructions to dismiss it for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 1101-74 (West 2004 & Supp.2009).
