OPINION
Appellant Jeanne Barnes Bryant (“Bryant”), as Liquidator of Anchorage Fire & Casualty Insurance Company (“Anchorage”), appeals a judgment entered for appel-lee Shields, Britton & Fraser (“Shields”) on Shields’s suit on a sworn account. In two points of error, Bryant complains the trial court erred by: (1) entering a default judgment against Anchorage because Shields presented no evidence or insufficient evidence of service of citation on Anchorage or Bryant; and (2) overruling Bryant’s motion to dismiss or stay the lawsuit in deference to earlier pending insurance receivership proceedings in Tennessee. Because we conclude the trial court erred in refusing to give the Tennessee receivership court’s liquidation order full faith and credit, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case to the trial court with orders to dismiss the lawsuit.
BACKGROUND
On March 9, 1993, the Chancery Court of the State of Tennessee (the “Tennessee receivership court”) entered an order granting petition for conservatorship (the “conserva-torship order”) for Anchorage, a corporation organized under the laws of Antigua. 2 The court entered the conservatorship order pursuant to the Tennessee Insurers Rehabilitation and Liquidation Act (the “Tennessee Act”), which provides for the rehabilitation and liquidation of insurers who have done business in Tennessee and insurers who have insureds resident in Tennessee. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-9-102(l)-(3) (1994). 3 The conservatorship order directed the Tennessee Insurance Commissioner, as conservator, to take possession of Anchorage’s assets and to administer them under the court’s supervision. The order also enjoined all persons from interfering with the conservatorship and from instituting or prosecuting actions against Anchorage.
*839 Shields filed this lawsuit against Anchorage a day later on March 10, 1993. James Shields and the law firm of Shields, Britton & Fraser had represented an insured of Global Capital Assurance (“Global”) in defense of a claim made against the insured. Global is also known as Anchorage. Shields represented Anchorage’s insured from August 1992 until the parties resolved the case on March 4, 1993. Based on Anchorage’s alleged failure to pay attorney’s fees for the legal services it had provided to Anchorage’s insured, Shields brought this suit on a sworn account and other causes of action, including Texas Insurance Code article 21.21-2 and common-law fraud claims. Shields sought damages in excess of $30,000, punitive damages, prejudgment and postjudgment interest, and attorney’s fees.
Shields asserted in its petition that Anchorage had its principal office in Houston, Texas, was doing business in Dallas County, Texas, and could be served with citation by serving its registered agent, Darwin Seidel. On March 19, 1993, Shields had citation served on Darwin Seidel. Bryant denies that Seidel was Anchorage’s registered agent for service of process.
On May 7, 1993, the trial court held a hearing. Shields advised the trial court that Anchorage had not answered Shields’s petition. James Shields testified that the indebtedness on the sworn account was just and true and the amount owed was $30,170.52. He further testified that Shields had incurred $4,000 in attorney’s fees for substantial discussions, correspondence, research, and briefing with the Tennessee conservator regarding the merits of its claim. The trial court then granted a default judgment that awarded Shields $30,170.52, $4,000 in attorney’s fees, and prejudgment and post-judgment interest. The default judgment, however, was interlocutory only.
About a week later on May 13, 1993, the Tennessee receivership court entered an order of liquidation and permanent injunction (the “liquidation order”) pursuant to the Tennessee Act. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 56-9-305 (1994). That order terminated efforts to rehabilitate Anchorage and authorized the liquidation of Anchorage’s business. The liquidation order directed that the Tennessee Insurance Commissioner act as Anchorage’s liquidator through Biyant, a Special Deputy Commissioner, and continued to vest her with possession and title to all Anchorage’s assets, wherever located. The order also directed that all claims against Anchorage be brought using procedures established by Bryant. The liquidation order made permanent the temporary injunction, which was contained in the March 9, 1993 conservator-ship order and enjoined all persons from interfering with the liquidation proceedings and from prosecuting actions against Anchorage.
On May 27, 1994, the trial court sent a notice calling the case to trial on July 5,1994. On June 23, 1994, Bryant filed a motion requesting the trial court to dismiss or stay the suit on the grounds that the trial court should afford full faith and credit to the Tennessee receivership court’s injunction against suits that interfered with the Anchorage liquidation proceedings.
On July 5, 1994, the trial court, before proceeding with the trial on Shields’s remaining claims, heard Bryant’s motion to dismiss. The trial court admitted into evidence certified copies of the conservatorship and liquidation orders and heard argument that it should dismiss or stay the lawsuit because the orders, including the injunction against the prosecution of claims against Anchorage, should be given full faith and credit. Bryant also argued that Shields had not served her with process, as the Texas Insurance Code, required. The trial court denied Bryant’s motion to dismiss. Bryant then orally moved to dismiss the case for insufficiency and want of service of process. The trial court declined ruling on that motion and instructed Shields to present whatever testimony it wanted to make the interlocutory default judgment final. At the end of the hearing, Shields moved to nonsuit its punitive damages claim. The trial court granted the non-suit and indicated that it would make the *840 interlocutory judgment a final judgment of default. On October 12, 1994, the trial court signed the final judgment.
FULL FAITH AND CREDIT
Article IV, section 1 of the United States Constitution requires that each state give full faith and credit to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. U.S. Const, art. IV, § 1;
see Barber v. Barber,
The United States Supreme Court has afforded full faith and credit to injunctions against suits that may interfere with the receivership process.
Id.
at 691,
In
Bard v. Charles R. Myers Insurance Agency,
The liquidator filed an action in Texas against one of the insurer’s agents, seeking monies allegedly owed to the insurer’s estate for insurance policy premiums. The agent answered the suit and filed a counterclaim alleging the insurer’s management conspired with the agent’s competitor to prevent the agent from placing certain insurance risks with the insurer. The agent also filed a claim in Vermont, as required by the liquidation order. Because the Vermont court’s order enjoining suits interfering with the Vermont liquidation process was a final, ap-pealable order in Vermont, the Texas Supreme Court afforded the Vermont court’s order full faith and credit and ordered the agent’s counterclaim dismissed without prejudice to his rights in Vermont. Id. at 797.
THE LIQUIDATION ORDER
Bryant argues in her second point of error that the trial court erred in failing to *841 afford the Tennessee receivership court’s liquidation order full faith and credit and in overruling her motion to dismiss. She contends that the liquidation order satisfies all full faith and credit requirements and that to deny full faith and credit to the order will frustrate the orderly liquidation and distribution of Anchorage’s assets through the Tennessee receivership proceedings. Shields responds by reurging the argument it made in the trial court that Bryant faded to meet the procedural prerequisites for a Texas court to afford the liquidation order full faith and credit. Shields also now challenges the finality and enforceability of the liquidation order.
Procedural Prerequisites
Shields argues that Texas law requires evidence of compliance with the procedural requirements of the Uniform Enforcement of Judgments Act (“UEJA”) before full faith and credit can be given to a foreign judgment. Shields concedes that, on June 28, 1993, it received notice that Bryant had “domesticated” the liquidation order, pursuant to the UEJA ⅛ the 234th District Court of Harris County, Texas on June 21, 1993. Bryant, however, chose not to rely on the domesticated order during the trial court’s hearing on its motion to dismiss and did not offer it into evidence.
Because Bryant failed to offer evidence at the hearing that she domesticated the liquidation order using UEJA procedures, Shields contends the trial court properly denied Bryant’s motion to dismiss.
See
Tex.Civ.Prac.
&
Rem.Code Ann. §§ 35.001-.008 (Vernon 1986). We disagree. Texas law provides more than one method to present an order or judgment from another state to a Texas court for enforcement under the full faith and credit provision of the United States Constitution.
See Walnut Equip. Leasing Co. v. Wu,
At the hearing on her motion to dismiss, Bryant, apparently relying on the Texas Rules of Civil Evidence, offered a certified copy of the Tennessee receivership court’s liquidation order. Shields did not object to the admission of that copy, and the trial court admitted it. Shields does not complain that the liquidation order was not properly authenticated or that the trial court should not have admitted it. We, therefore, conclude that once admitted, the liquidation order, whether authenticated or not, was properly before the trial court for full faith and credit consideration.
See Farley,
Standard of Review
Having decided the liquidation order was properly before the trial court, we now turn to the issue raised in Bryant’s second point of error — whether the trial court erred in failing to give the liquidation order full faith and credit and in overruling her motion to dismiss. Whether the trial court erred in failing to afford the liquidation order full faith and credit presents a question of law that we review de novo.
See Rumpf v. Rurnpf,
*842 Finality
Full faith and credit is not required when a decree is interlocutory or subject to modification under the law of the rendering state.
Barber,
In the liquidation order, the Tennessee receivership court retained jurisdiction to effect the just and equitable discharge of the liquidation process. This continuing jurisdiction is necessary to enable the Tennessee receivership court to oversee the liquidation of the estate, as is its statutory duty.
See
Tenn.Code Ann. § 56-9-104(b) (1994). The fact that some parts of the order may be subject to modification does not affect the finality of other parts of the same order.
Bard,
The liquidation order contains no language indicating the permanent injunction against bringing or prosecuting suits is subject to modification.
See Bard,
Enforceability
Notice
Relying on
Bard,
Shields also contends the liquidation order is not enforceable because the Tennessee receivership court never gave it notice and the opportunity to comment on either the conservatorship or liquidation orders before the orders were entered.
See Bard,
Furthermore, Shields cites no provision of the Tennessee Act requiring a claimant be given notice before liquidation orders are entered. See id. at 795 (validity of judgment determined by laws of state where it was rendered). Rather, the Tennessee Act provides that notice and a reasonable time to respond to the petition requesting entry of a liquidation order must be given to the insurer. Tenn.Code. Ann. § 56-9-402(b) (1994). The Tennessee Act requires that notice of the liquidation order itself be provided to potential claimants who are required to file claims with the liquidator. See id. § 56-9-311(a), (b). The liquidation order mandated that Bryant notify all known creditors of the claims process within twelve months of its entry.
Finally, by Shields’s own admission, it received notice that Bryant filed the liquidation order in the Harris County, Texas district court immediately after its entry in Termes- *843 see. 4 The notice Shields received also recited the name and address of Bryant, the appointed liquidator in Tennessee, as well as the name and address of her attorney in Texas. 5 Despite having received this notice, the record does not reflect that Shields filed any claim with Bryant or that it challenged the liquidation order for lack of notice or any other reason. Shields conceded during oral argument that it never contested any matter relevant to the liquidation order in the Tennessee receivership court.
Even though it received notice of the order well over a year before the July 5, 1994 hearing and never contested the enforceability of that order, Shields nevertheless argued the trial court should not give the liquidation order full faith and credit. A party cannot escape the requirements of full faith and credit by asserting its own failure to raise matters clearly within the earlier proceeding.
Maxfield v. Terry,
Terms of the Permanent Injunction
Shields also argues the liquidation order’s permanent injunction did not enjoin foreign proceedings. We disagree. The liquidation order makes permanent the temporary injunction contained in the conservator-ship order entered March 9, 1993, pursuant to section 56-9-105 of the Tennessee Act. See Tenn.Code ÁNN. § 56-9-105 (1994) (granting receiver broad injunctive powers to facilitate liquidation process and authorizing application for injunctive relief outside Tennessee). The March 9, 1993 conservatorship order provided that “all persons, firms, corporations and associations ... are prohibited and enjoined ... from interference with the conservator or the Conservatorship [and] from the institution or further prosecution of any actions or proceedings.” The conserva-torship order authorized the conservator to apply outside Tennessee for relief against interference. The conservatorship order also mandated that the conservator consider all litigation pending outside Tennessee and petition the courts having jurisdiction over that litigation for stays whenever necessary to protect Anchorage’s estate. The liquidation order, therefore, expressly enjoined the prosecution of foreign proceedings against Anchorage, including this Texas proceeding.
Timing
Finally, Shields contends that the trial court correctly refused to dismiss the case, because the Tennessee receivership court entered the liquidation order after the trial court granted the interlocutory default judgment. A judgment is interlocutory when it determines less than all issues as to all parties and leaves something further to be determined and adjudicated by the trial court in disposing of the parties and their rights.
Perkins v. Springstun,
The trial court had notice of this final, enforceable injunction against the further prosecution of claims against Anchorage at that time — when the judgment was still interlocutory and before it entered the final judgment. The trial court, therefore, should have vacated the interlocutory default judgment and dismissed Shields’s lawsuit.
See Underwriters,
Because the trial court should have afforded full faith and credit to the liquidation order, including the permanent injunction, we conclude the trial court erred in overruling Bryant’s motion to dismiss and in making the interlocutory default judgment a final judgment. We sustain Bryant’s second point of error.
SERVICE OF PROCESS
Bryant’s first point of error challenges the entry of the interloeutoiy default judgment by contending that substituted service pursuant to article 1.36 of the Texas Insurance Code controlled service of process in this case and that Shields did not properly plead or prove substituted service under that statute. The interlocutory default judgment Bryant challenges in this point of error was merged into the final judgment.
See Radelow-Gittens Real Property Management v. Pamex Foods,
We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the ease to the trial court with orders to dismiss Shields’s lawsuit without prejudice to its rights in Tennessee.
Notes
. The conservatorship order sets forth the grounds for placing Anchorage into conservator-ship under Tennessee law. In December 1991, Anchorage contracted with United Physicians Risk Retention Group (“UPI”) to reinsure some of UPI’s medical malpractice risks. UPI paid ' Anchorage 1991 and 1992 premiums in excess of $5.95 million for excess of loss reinsurance and $250,000 defense cost coverage of $50,000 per insured. On March 17, 1992, UPI sued Anchorage in federal court for money damages and injunctive relief. UPI and Anchorage entered into an agreed judgment on April 3, 1992, requiring Anchorage to establish and fund a trust account in the amount of $5.5 million. Anchorage failed to establish and fund the trust account. The Tennessee receivership court placed UPI in liquidation on July 16, 1992. UPI filed a motion to adjudicate Anchorage for contempt. On March 3, 1993, the federal court enjoined Anchorage from withdrawing, transferring, disbursing, selling, or in any way disturbing ah monies and securities owned by Anchorage at that time. To protect the policyholders of UPI and the public, the Tennessee receivership court placed Anchorage in conservatorship pursuant to Tennessee law.
.All provisions were made effective by Acts 1991 and govern the Tennessee receivership court's orders.
. We note that the record reflects Shields’s attorneys and paralegals actually discussed the con-servatorship order with the Tennessee conservator and that Shields accumulated over $4,000 in attorney’s fees related to the conservatorship order before the trial court entered the interlocu-toiy default judgment. The judgment includes an award of those fees.
. The liquidation order itself required Biyant to defend claims against Anchorage filed in the Tennessee receivership court.
