OPINION
This original proceeding involves the duration of the district court’s plenary power over a suit that was inadvertently dismissed for want of prosecution while the suit was abated in the district court. The suit had been abated to allow an administrative proceeding to take place to resolve certain issues that were predicates to the district court acquiring jurisdiction over all of the claims and issues in the suit. The suit was inadvertently dismissed in 2003 during the period of abatement and while the administrative proceeding was still pending. Over four years later, in 2007, the trial court vacated the inadvertent order of dismissal and reinstated the suit. Relators General Motors Corporation, Chevrolet Motor Division and Austin Chevrolet, Inc. d/b/a Munday Chevrolet/Geo 1 seek a writ of mandamus compelling the distriсt court to vacate, the 2007 order that vacated the district court’s 2003 *818 order of dismissal for want of prosecution, contending that the 2007 order attempting to vacate the previous dismissal is void because it was issued after the expiration of the district court’s plenary power. We conditionally grant the writ.
Factual and Procedural Background
Respondent Landmark, a Chevrolet vehicle dealership, filed the underlying suit against GM and Munday in 1998, alleging that they defrauded Landmark of its right to protest Munday’s 1993 dealership application, lobbied the legislature in bad faith, and discriminated against Landmark in the allocation of Chevrolet’s “most profitable” vehicles.
The underlying dispute relates back to a 1993 administrative proceeding before the Texas Department of Transportation’s Motor Vehicle Board.
2
See Austin Chevrolet, Inc. v. Motor Vehicle Bd.,
In 1997, Munday filed an application with the Board seeking to relocate his dealership from FM 1960 to a proposed sitе on IH-45, a distance of less than a mile. Landmark did not approve of this relocation. However, Landmark was not in a position to protest the relocation of Munday’s dealership because of an amendment to the Texas Motor Vehicle Commission Code (the “Code”), which provided that “the relocation of a dealership is not subject to protest by a franchised dealer ... if the proposed relocation is not farther than one mile from the site from which the dealership is being relocated.” See Act of May 22, 1997, 75th Leg., R.S., ch. 639, § 26, sec. 4.06(e)(1), 1997 Tex. Gen. Laws 2185, 2197, repealed by Act of May 22, 2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 1421, § 13, 2001 Tex. Gen. Laws 4570, 5020 (current version at Tex. Occ.Code Ann. § 2301.652(c)(1) (West 2004)).
Landmark filed this lawsuit seeking damages for breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealing, violation of the Deceptive Trade Praсtices Act, fraud and conspiracy against GM, and for fraud and conspiracy against Munday. In its suit, Landmark claimed that it had been misled by Defendants into dismissing the protest of Mun-day’s original application, that GM had lobbied the legislature to amend the Code in bad faith to Landmark’s detriment, and that GM unreasonably discriminated against Landmark in the allocation of certain vehicles after Munday opened its Chevrolet dealership in Houston. Landmark’s petition alleged specifically that its claims against GM (under the DTPA and for breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealing) were based on alleged violations of the Code. The fraud claim in the original petition is not based on a violation of the Code.
The district court entered an unopposed order of abatement of the suit in August 2001, referring two issues to the Board that the court and the parties concluded were fundamental to Landmark’s claims and were within the “primary jurisdiction” of the Board:
*819 (1) If Landmark had not withdrawn its protest of the license application at issue in William F. Munday d/b/a Bill Mun-day Chevrolet/Geo, Applicant v. Landmark Chevrolet Corp., Protestant and General Motors Corporation, Interve-nor, before the Texas Department of Transportation, Division of Motor Transportation; Docket No. 93-094, under § 4.06(c) of the Texas Motor Vehicle Commission Code (“Code”) would Landmark have obtained a final order denying the license application?
(2) Did GM violate Code § 5.02 by unreasonably discriminating between or among Landmark and Munday in the allocation of Suburbans and Tahoes, beginning with Munday’s initial allocation in 1994 and extending through January of 1997?
On April 2, 2003, while the administrative proceeding before the Board was ongoing, the district court inadvertently sent notice to the parties of its intent to dismiss the abated district court suit for want of prosecution. The notice that the case was subject to dismissal for want of prosecution (“DWOP”) unless a motion to retain was filed was received by counsel for the Defendants. However, because of a failure of the DWOP system in the district clerk’s office to note a change of address, counsel for Landmark did not receive the notice. 3 Consequently, Landmark did not respond to the DWOP notice or file a motion to retain. Without a motion to retain or any response from the parties, the routine DWOP process continued, and the court dismissed the case for want of prosecution on May 13, 2003. Landmark, being unaware that the case had been dismissed, did not challenge the order of dismissal by filing a motion to reinstate the case, a motion for new trial, any mo *820 tion that would have extended the district court’s plenary power, an appeal, or a bill of review.
Meanwhile, the administrative proceeding before the Board continued. The Board issued a final order in December 2004. GM and Munday sought judicial review of the Board’s final order. This Court affirmed the Board’s order in June 2006.
See Austin Chevrolet,
Landmark filed a motion to lift the abatement of the district court suit on May 10, 2007, nearly four years after the district court dismissed the suit for want of prosecution. Some time after the filing of the motion to lift the abatement and before the hearing on the motion, Landmark discovered that the suit had been dismissed for want of prosecution in May 2003. At the hearing on the motion to lift the abatement, held on July 3, 2007, Landmark asserted that the 2003 order of dismissal was void because it was entered while the case was abated and while related issues over which the Board had exclusive jurisdiction were still pending before the Board. Agreeing with Landmark, on July 12, 2007, the district court lifted the abatement, found that its 2003 order of dismissal was “null and void,” and vacated it. The district court expressly found that the suit had been “inadvertently included on a list of cases dismissed for want of prosecution.”
Defendants seek a writ of mandamus to compel the district court to vacate its 2007 order vacating the 2003 order of dismissal. They contend that the 2003 order of dismissal was a final judgment and that the 2007 order is void because it was entered after the expiration of the district court’s plenary power. Landmark contends that the 2003 order of dismissal may be vacated by the district court as void at any time because the district court lacked jurisdiction to dismiss the case for want of prosecution at a time that the Board had exclusive jurisdiction over claims in the suit and the litigation before the Board involving those claims was not final.
Plenary Power of District Court
If a case is dismissed for want of prosecution, a party seeking reinstatement must file a verified motion to reinstate within thirty days after the date on which the order of dismissal was signed. Tex.R. Civ. P. 165a(3);
In re Montemayor,
The order of dismissal that was signed on May 13, 2003, is the starting point for determining when the district court’s plenary power over the dismissed lawsuit expired.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 306a(l);
In re Bennett,
Trial Court’s Jurisdiction to Enter Order of Dismissal
Landmark argues that it was unnecessary to attack the order of dismissal by bill of review because the 2003 order of dismissal is void for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction in the district court. According to Landmark, the district court had no jurisdictional power to dismiss the case for want of prosecution until the proceeding before the Board was final. Landmark argues that it would only be at that point that the district court acquired jurisdiction over all of the claims pending in the district court suit.
See Middleton v. Murff,
The Texas Supreme Court addressed the question of when and how void trial court orders may be attacked in
McEwen v. Harrison,
This Court addressed a similar issue in
Newsom v. Ballinger I.S.D.
and concluded that a judgment can become final for the purposes of appeal even if it is void.
The very purpose of limiting a trial court’s plenary power over a proceeding is to foreclose the possibility of a suit continuing indefinitely even thоugh a final judgment has been obtained.
Newsom,
This distinction between judgments within a court’s “jurisdictional power” and those not within a court’s “jurisdictional power” has been reaffirmed by the Texas Supreme Court on several occasions.
See
*823
Mapco, Inc. v. Forrest,
We hold that the district court, albeit following standing DWOP procedures in a case that should not have been dismissed for want of prosecution and would not have been dismissed if proper notice had been sent, was within its jurisdictional power to enter the 2003 order of dismissal. As noted previously, the district court abated the case to give the Motor Vehicle Board the opportunity to decide certain issues. In its order of abatement, the district court made a finding that the Board had “primary jurisdiction” over the issues referred to it. This finding has not been challenged — although Landmark argues that, in fact, the Board had exclusive jurisdiction over these issues. Regardless of whether one views the Motor Vehicle Board’s jurisdiction over the claims referred by the district to the Board as “primary jurisdiction” or “exclusive jurisdiction,” the district court had the jurisdictional power to dismiss both those claims and the claims pending in the district court that were not referrеd to the Board. If the Board’s jurisdiction was primary jurisdiction as found by the district court, the district court had concurrent jurisdictional power with the Board with respect to those claims.
See Cash Am. Int'l Inc. v. Bennett,
Since it had jurisdictional power to enter the 2003 order of dismissal, when the district court lost plenary power over this suit under the rules of civil procedure, it lost the power to alter its order of dismissal as a part of that lawsuit. When plenary power expired, the unappealed order of dismissal was final regardless of whether it was void, voidable, or valid. Such an order may be subject to direct attack by appeal, attack by a timely bill of review, or possibly collateral attack. 7 However, it is not subject to simply being re-examined, modified, or vacated by the trial court if the trial court were to be convinced — at some later date beyond its plenary power — that the order was, in fact, either void or voidable. Such orders and judgments are final for the purposes of the lawsuit in which they are entered, and may not be corrected, modified, or vacated by the trial court bеyond applicable deadlines for direct attack by appeal or bill of review. Consequently, we hold that the May *824 2003 order of dismissal was within the trial court’s jurisdictional power and is subject to the requirements of rule 329b.
The Abatement
Landmark also argues that any action taken by the district court while the lawsuit was abated and the administrative proceeding ongoing was a legal nullity. This argument is a corollaiy to, but distinct from, Landmark’s contention that the 2003 order of dismissal is void because the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the suit. This argument is based on the proposition that once a court enters an order of abatement, the court is limited in the actions it may take until the court un-abates or re-instates the case. A key aspect of this argument is the contention that certain actions by the court during an abatement — including dismissal for want of prosecution — are not only potentially error, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise reversible by direct attack, but are legal nullities in the sense that they are void much like an action by a court without jurisdiction to act. Landmark bases this argument on three court of appeals decisions involving trial court activities during periods of abatement in which the courts of appeals declared the actions in question to be “legal nullities” or void.
See Amrhein v. La Madeleine, Inc.,
Defendants respond that the district court had jurisdictional power to dismiss the lawsuit and that the cases on which Landmark relies do not apply. We agree. In
Lumbermens,
the Corpus Christi Court of Appeals concluded that a workers’ compensation carrier was under no obligation to respond to certain discovery requests because it had been served while the suit was abated for the appeal of the underlying compensation case.
Unlike
Lumbermens, Kimball
did not involve a party’s abrogation of an abatement order.
Kimball
addressed the trial court’s noncompliance with the Residential Construction Liability Act (RCLA) by refusing to grant a statutorily required abatement.
The inference in
Kimball
— stating that any action by the court during an abatement is a nullity — is then quoted in
Am-rhein,
in which the Dallas Court of Appeals reversed a trial court’s summary judgment on deemed admissions because the admissions were served and the judgment entered while the case was abated for bankruptcy proceedings.
Amrhein,
None of these cases addresses the situation presented here. None of them involves a final order that is challenged after the expiration of the trial court’s plenary power. None of the appellate courts in
Amrhein, Kimball,
or
Lumbermens
concluded that the trial courts lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. Moreover, neither
Amrhein, Kimball,
nor
Lumbermens
pertains to the hybrid claims resolution process for claims brought under the Code or concern an entity like the Board, which is powerless to award damages for any Code-based violations.
See Subaru,
Landmark’s argument that any action by the district court during abatement is a nullity runs counter to a number of cases holding that a variety of actions by trial courts during periods of abatement are permissible, including: (1) joinder of parties,
see De Checa v. Diagnostic Ctr. Hosp.,
Order of Dismissal Not Nullity Per Se
Although we agree with the results in
Kimball
(failing to enter an abatement required by the RCLA was an abuse of discretion) and
Amrhein
(entering a summary judgment based on deemed admissions that were served during a bankruptcy stay was error), we disagree with Landmark’s interpretation of these cases to mean that
any
action by the trial court during an abatement is a nullity per se. While a case is abated, certain action by the parties — such as propounding discovery requests or setting hearings — may be ineffective. It is also possible that certain action by the trial court during the period of an abatement might constitute error or an abuse of discretion that is subject to review or reversal. However, abatement does not nullify every subsequent action by the parties or the court.
See De Checa,
The trial court was prevented from adjudicating Landmark’s damage claims, not because the case was abated, but because of the Board’s right to make initial findings with respect to Code-based allegations. The Texas Supreme Court has recognized a hybrid claims-resolution process for Code-based violations that gives the Board the exclusive right to decide issues or claims that implicate the Code but reserves to the trial court any adjudication of damages based on the violations found by the Board.
Subaru,,
Moreover, until Landmark exhausted its administrative remedies, the district court lacked the ability to adjudicate any of Landmark’s claims, even though one of them — the fraud claim — was pleaded only as a common-law tort. Although common-law torts are not within the Board’s exclusive jurisdiction, resolution of the two issues referred to the Board may have determined an essential element of the fraud claim: whether Landmark sustained an injury as a result of the Defendants’ alleged representations.
See Johnson v. Brewer & Pritchard, P.C.,
When a party has some claims that are required to be presented to an administrative agency along with additional claims that the agency has no authority to adjudicate, and when the determination of those additional claims depends partly on the resolution of an issue that the agency does have authority to adjudicate, the district court lacks jurisdiction to consider such additional claims until administrative remedies have been exhausted for the claims that the agency has authority to adjudicate.
In re Texas Mut. Ins. Co.,
However, the fact that the district court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate Landmark’s claims until action had been taken by the Board does not compel the conclusion that the district court’s order of dismissal is void. As the supreme court explained in
Suban,
when the trial court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction because an agency has exclusive jurisdiction over certain claims, the trial court should dismiss those claims without prejudice.
Subaru,
Landmark’s argument, that because the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to adjudicate Landmark’s Code-based claims, the district court order of dismissal is void, runs counter to the established rule that a court has the power to determine its own jurisdiction and to tаke the appropriate action of dismissing claims over which it does not have jurisdiction.
See Royal Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Ragsdale,
Trial Court’s Power to Dismiss
We are unpersuaded by Landmark’s argument that the district court had the power to dismiss Landmark’s claims for lack of jurisdiction, but lacked power to dismiss them for want of prosecution. Every court has power, in the absence of statutory prohibition, to dismiss a suit for want of prosecution.
Bevil v. Johnson,
The district court’s power to enter the order of dismissal in this case does not conflict with
Subaru
because dismissal is one of the limited actions that the court may take when a claimant’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies deprives the court of subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Subaru,
The dismissal, entered before the Board had completed its fact finding, is analogous to the dismissal of a suit for want of prosecution by a state district court while liability issues are pending in federal court. In
Freeport Operators, Inc. v. Home Insurance Co.,
Freeport Operators challenged the dismissal of its declaratory judgment action, which sought a determination of Home Insurance’s liability under its policy for damages related to a marine collision.
Affirming the dismissal of the suit, the court stated that a determination of Home Insurance’s liability under its policy for damages on an unlitigated, contingent claim was not a justiciable question because the cases involving liability from the marine collision had not been finally decided in federal court.
Id.
at 568 (citing
Ruth v. Imperial Ins. Co.,
It is clear that where there is no mature issue for litigation the trial court lacks jurisdiction. It logically follows that a dismissal for want of prosecution by the trial court of a suit, over which it lacks jurisdiction, cannot operate as a bar to that suit in another court, where and when jurisdiction properly exists.
Id. at 568. Here, similarly, Landmark asserts that the district court dismissed a suit with claims that the court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate while the Board proceedings were pending. However, it does not follow that the district court lacked power to dismiss the case for want of prosecution merely because it could not yet adjudicate the Code-based damages claims. Nor did the order of dismissal bar Landmark from proceeding when the jurisdictional impediment was removed.
Applying the foregoing authorities to the allegations in Landmark’s petition, we conclude that the district court had the power to dismiss Landmark’s suit for want of prosеcution, irrespective of whether the dismissal order was inadvertent or erroneous.
*829 Presumption of Validity of Order of Dismissal
A properly executed order of dismissal is a judgment.
Stewart v. USA Custom Paint & Body Shop, Inc.,
In this case, the recitations in the May 13, 2003 order of dismissal do not affirmatively show that the district court lacked jurisdiction to enter the dismissal. Thus, the presumption in favor of the district court’s jurisdiction prevails.
See Foreness,
Court’s Order Vacating Dismissal Order Is Void
Because the 2003 order of dismissal of Landmark’s claims was not void, it was not subject to being vacated by the district court after expiration of the court’s plenary power.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 329b(f);
Universal Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Ferguson,
If it be conceded that this [inadvertent dismissal] were true, nevertheless the situation presented a typical case for bill of review, which is designed to furnish relief against judgments entered as a result of fraud, accident or mistake. The most that can be said in favor of defendant in error is that a judgment had been entered against him by mistake. A bill of review was undoubtedly the proper remedy, as the question of whether or not such judgment was the result of a mistake should have been determined by proof, after notice, and should not rest solely upon the recital contained in a subsequent order of the court.
Id. Here, as in Love, thе district court’s finding concerning the reason for the issuance of the notice of dismissal was not based on any evidence presented to the court, and the order attempting to vacate the prior dismissal was entered after the court lost plenary power to do so.
The 2007 order was entered after the expiration of the district court’s plena
*830
ry power and purports to vacate a final order entered over four years earlier: “It is therefore ORDERED that the Order of Dismissal of May 13, 2003, insofar as it dismisses this case for want of prosecution is VACATED.”
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 165a(3), 329b(f). Mandamus relief is proper when a trial court issues an order after the expiration of its plenary power.
In re Brookshire Grocery Co.,
Conclusion
We conditionally grant relators’ petition for writ of mandamus and direct the district court to vacate its July 12, 2007 “Order Vacating Order of Dismissal.” The writ will issue only if the district court does not comply with this opinion. See Tex.R.App. P. 52.8.
Notes
. Because we address relators in the context of the district court proceedings, we refer to them collectively as “Defendants.”
. The Motor Vehicle Board was abolished in 2005. See Act of May 30, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 281, § 7.01, sec. 2301.002(2), (10), 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 778, 839.
. This exception is inapplicable here because Landmark learned of the 2003 dismissal order more than ninety days after it was signed.
. Landmark was not in a position to make such filings because it was unaware of the dismissal.
. The likely reason for deciding not to file a bill of rfeview is the unfortunate fact that Landmark did not discover the erroneous order of dismissal until just over four years had passed from the date the order was entered.
. A collateral attack is an attempt to avoid the binding force of a judgment in a proceeding not instituted for the purpose of correcting, modifying, or vacating the judgment, but in order to obtain some specific relief against which the judgment currently stands as a bar.
Browning v. Prostok,
