OPINION
Opinion by
This is a case of a marriage that wasn’t. Appellant Patsy Jean Johnson challenges: (1) the jurisdiction of the trial court to *175 grant appellee Wayne Ventling’s motion to vacate a decree of divorce between the parties; and (2) the trial court’s denial of Johnson’s motion tо enforce contractual alimony terms of the decree. To avert criminal prosecution for collecting, throughout her thirteen-year cohabitation with Ventling, federal widow’s benefits that stop if she marries, Johnson now stipulates that Ventling and she were never husband and wife. At the samе time, she argues she is entitled to the community property rights of a spouse. Having filed suit in 1995 to dissolve the parties’ common-law marriage, Ventling now seeks to avoid his contractual obligations to Johnson. We dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A.The Divorce Decree
On January 23, 1995, Ventling filed an original petition for divorce. Johnson answеred and counterclaimed. The parties agreed to a property division. The trial court signed a “Final Decree of Divorce” on April 18, 1995. Among the recitations in the decree were findings that: (1) the pleadings of the petitioner were “in due form and contain all the allegations, information, and prerequisites required by law”; and (2) the court had jurisdiction over the suit and the parties. The decree recited: “The parties have consented to the terms of this decree and stipulated that the provisions for division of assets and liabilities are contractual.” Under the heading “Divorce,” the decree recited: “IT IS ORDERED AND DECREED that the relationship between WAYNE VEN-TLING, Petitioner, and PATRICIA M. JOHNSON, Respondent, is dissolved.” 2 The decree ordered a division of the estate of the parties and contractual alimony to be paid to Johnson. Finally, the decree provided: ‘Without affеcting the finality of this Decree of Divorce, this Court expressly reserves the right to make orders necessary to clarify and enforce this decree.” No children were bom to or adopted by the couple, so the decree does not contain any child custody or support provisions.
B.The Statistical Report of Divorce
The record also contains a report of divorce required by The Bureau of Vital Statistics of the Texas Department of Health. The section in the form that requests information about the “husband” recited Ventling’s name and age. The section requesting information about the “wifе” recited Johnson’s name, maiden surname, residence, and age. The form showed “01-01-82” as the date of the parties’ “marriage.” Finally, it recited that a “divorce” was granted on April 13, 1995 in the 94th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.
C.The Enforcement Proceedings
In October 1995, Johnson filed a motion to enforce the terms of the pаrties’ agreement. Ventling responded with his own counterclaim for enforcement. No order appears in the record with respect to the 1995 enforcement motion. The parties’ briefs indicate they settled the dispute.
In September 1997, Johnson filed a second enforcement mоtion. Ventling answered with a general denial and a claim for attorney fees. In December 1997, Ventling amended his answer and raised the affirmative defenses of fraud, accident, mistake, collateral estoppel, and judicial estoppel. He sought rescission of the parties’ аgreement and moved to have the *176 decree vacated. He argued that Johnson defrauded him into agreeing to the property division and that he received incorrect legal advice about the necessity of obtaining a formal divorce from her. Johnson supplementеd her motion to enforce to allege collateral estoppel, judicial estoppel, and res judicata. The trial court denied Johnson’s motion without prejudice by written order signed January 9, 1998. It ordered the parties to mediate.
In August 1999, Johnson sought summary judgment “for enforcement of the Dеcree, a declaratory judgment that the Decree is enforceable as a final judgment and/or as a contract, and [for] a judgment that she is entitled to paymenUperformance. as a matter of law.” Ventling amended his answer, again seeking rescission of the decree and asserting that it was interlocutory and “the result of fraud, accident, mistake, and other improper motives” of Johnson. He also non-suited “his cause of action for dissolution of marriage raised by Original Petition for Divorce on January 23,1995.”
On September 9, 1999, the trial court denied Johnson the relief shе sought. The trial court found as follows:
[A]n original petition for divorce was filed by Wayne Ventling on or about January 23, 1995. No counterclaim for divorce was filed by Patricia Johnson, or other pleading giving rise to a cause of action to divide property owned by Wayne Ventling. The court further finds that Patricia has entered a judicial stipulation on the record that the parties were never married, which upon the notice of non-suit filed by Wayne Ventling rendered any issue raised by the pleadings of the parties moot.
The trial court then approved Ventling’s non-suit and dismissed the case. It also denied “[a]ll relief sought by either party.”
The litigation did not end there. 3 On October 5, 1999, Johnson asked the court to vacate its dismissal order. On October 7, 1999, the trial court vacated the dismissal, granted Ventling’s motion for non-suit, and denied Johnson’s motion for summary judgment.
On November 10, 1999, Ventling filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action. Johnson responded to Ventling’s motion to dismiss on January 6, 2000. She also supplemented her counterclaim for dissolution and division of property, asserting she had not abandoned or superceded her original counterclaim for a property division. Although she admitted thаt “[t]he parties were not, in fact, married” at the time of the decree, she asserted that the decree dissolved the couple’s thirteen-year “domestic partnership.” She reasserted her motion to enforce the contractual terms of the decree and sought a declaration of her rights under the decree. She supplemented her claims again in November 2000, raising “res judicata, merger and bar, collateral and equitable estoppel, fraudulent inducement, accord and satisfaction, and release.”
D. The Final Judgment
The trial court heard evidence on the parties’ claims in March 2001. It signed a final judgment on July 25, 2001 that found as follows:
*177 This suit was initiated by Petitioner as a suit for dissolution of marriage by divorce and division of jointly owned property. Respondent answered and counterclaimed for a division of jointly owned property.
The parties entered into an agreement for the division of property. This Court rendered judgment on the agreement as reflected in the Final Decree of Divorce of April 13, 1995. The agreed Final Decree provided for a dissolution of the relationship and a division of the property. Respondent now seeks to enforce the terms of the parties’ agreement and the Final Decree, including the recovery of money and attorney fees. Petitioner now seeks to have both the Final Decree and the agreement vacated, to have his non-suit of the divorce suit aрproved, and to recover attorney fees.
The judgment denied “all relief requested” by Johnson. The court concluded “that the agreed judgment remains interlocutory and, pursuant to the Court’s continuing plenary power, the judgment is hereby vacated. Petitioner’s non-suit of his divorce actiоn is granted.” The court awarded Ventling $15,000 in attorney fees. This appeal ensued.
II. THE ISSUES ON APPEAL
Johnson contends that by 2001, the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction over the 1995 decree had long expired. The judgment signed July 25, 2001, she concludes, is void. Ventling counters that the decree only recited that the “relationship” bеtween the parties was dissolved and did not grant a divorce. Since the decree effected only a property division, not a divorce, he contends it was interlocutory. He asserts, therefore, that principles of finality have no bearing on the alimony provisions in the decrеe. Rather, he argues, principles of contract law govern enforceability of the agreement. Ventling adds that if the decree was in fact a final order, Johnson’s appeal must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction since Johnson did not timely appeal the order denying enforcemеnt of the decree signed on January 9, 1998. If, however, the decree was interlocutory, Ventling concludes, the 2001 judgment is adequately supported by the record.
III. DISPOSITION
A. Finality
1. Interlocutory Orders
There can be only one final judgment. Tex.R. Civ. P. 301;
Tex. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Guar. Ass’n v. De Los Santos,
2. Collateral Attacks
A collаteral attack is an attempt to avoid the binding force of a judgment in a separate proceeding brought for some other purpose.
Toles v. Toles,
When reviewing a collateral attack, we presume the validity of the judgment under attack.
Id.
Extrinsic evidence
*178
may not be usеd to establish a lack of jurisdiction when collaterally attacking a judgment.
Id.
A collateral attack fails if the judgment contains jurisdictional recitals, even if other parts of the record show a lack of jurisdiction.
Id.
“It is well established in Texas that a divorce judgment, unappealed, and rеgular on its face, is not subject to a collateral attack in a subsequent suit.”
Putegnat v. Putegnat,
3.Plenary Jurisdiction
A trial court retains plenary power to grant a new trial or to vacate, modify, correct, or reform a judgment within thirty days after the judgment is signed. Tex.R.Civ. P. 329b(d);
First Alief Bank v. White,
4.Continuing Jurisdiction
After expiration of its plenary jurisdiction, a trial court retains its inherent power to clarify or enforce a divorce decree.
See McGehee v. Epley,
B. Analysis
1. The 1995 Decree Was a Final Divorce Judgment
The decree dissolved the “relationship” between the parties and ordered an agreed division of their property. It is regular on its face. We find that the decree settled all legal issues and rights between the parties.
See De Los Santos,
2. Impermissible Collateral Attack
We find that the decree contained findings sufficient to establish the jurisdictional basis
for
a valid judgment.
See Reiss,
3.No Plenary Jurisdiction
Neither of the parties appealed the decree or filed any motion that extended the trial court’s plenary power. We hold that the trial court lost plenary power over the decree thirty days after signing it.
See Bass,
4.No Continuing Jurisdiction to Vacate the 1995 Decree
By vacating the decree, the trial court effectively changed the division of property. We hold that the trial court had no authority to enter an order altering or modifying the original disposition of property.
See Shanks,
Judicial action taken after a trial court’s jurisdiction has expired is a nullity.
State ex rel. Latty v. Owens,
C. Appellate Jurisdiction
Our jurisdiction extends no further than that of the court from which the appeal is taken.
Warner-Lambert Co. v. Mills,
IV. CONCLUSION
Both parties in this case have bеen “ ‘playing fast and loose’ with the courts to suit [their] own purposes.”
See Andrews v. Diamond, Rash, Leslie & Smith,
Notes
. We note that the only "relationship” alleged in the pleadings was a common-law marriage in Ventling’s original petition for divorce.
. The parties join the ranks of contentious family law litigants.
See, e.g., Toles v. Toles,
. Arguably, the triаl court did have jurisdiction to deny Johnson's enforcement motion.
See McGehee v. Epley,
. The El Paso court derived the quote "playing fast and loose” from a federal bankruptcy case.
Andrews v. Diamond, Rash, Leslie & Smith,
