OPINION
Appellants Robert C. Ryan, Jeffrey L. Dorrell, Steven Howell, JoAnn McCracken, Lonnie Buckner, Barbara Coffman Buck, Shannon Burns, Dan Hall, and Pat Riddle Womack appeal from the 190th District Court’s order granting appellee Charles A. Rosenthal’s motion to dismiss their declaratory judgment action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.
Background 1
The issue before us focuses on the circumstances under which a district court can exercise its civil jurisdiction by issuing a declaratory judgment addressing the enforceability of a criminal statute.
This appeal arises from proceedings in the 263rd District Court and the 190th District Court in Harris County. By local rule and statutory preference, the 263rd District Court hears only criminal cases. The 190th District Court hears only civil cases. 2
Appellants served as members of the 263rd District Court’s grand jury from August 6, 2007 to November 2, 2007 and are referred to collectively as the “Grand Jurors.” During that term, the Grand Jurors considered whether indictments *139 should be presented against any individual in connection with a June 28, 2007 fire that destroyed a house at 3507 High Falls Drive in unincorporated Harris County, Texas. The house was owned by David M. Medina and his wife Francisca Medina.
On November 2, 2007, the 263rd District Court signed an order extending the grand jury’s term to expire on February 1, 2008.
On January 17, 2008, the Grand Jurors presented indictments against David and Francisca Medina. The indictment presented against Francisca Medina stated that she unlawfully “start[ed] a fire by igniting a combustible fluid with the intent to destroy and damage a habitation located at 3507 High Falls Drive” on June 28, 2007 and “knew that the habitation was subject to a mortgage and security interest.” The indictment presented against David Medina stated that he presented “a letter concerning an arson fire occurring at 3507 [High] Falls Drive ... with knowledge of its falsity and with intent to affect the course and outcome of the investigation” of the June 28, 2007 fire. The indictments were dismissed on January 18, 2008 upon the State’s motion on grounds of insufficient evidence. 3
The presentment and dismissal of indictments against David Medina, a sitting justice on the Supreme Court of Texas, and his wife received widespread media coverage. Media reports on January 17, 2008 discussed the indictments; reported that Harris County District Attorney Charles A. Rosenthal intended to seek dismissal of the indictments; and reported that grand jurors Ryan and Dorrell had criticized Ro-senthal for his handling of the indictments.
David Medina’s attorney held a televised press conference on January 18, 2008 after the indictments were dismissed, during which he criticized the Grand Jurors for presenting the indictments. David Medina’s attorney also filed a petition for a show cause hearing in the 263rd District Court to determine whether grand jurors Ryan and Dorrell should be held in contempt for violating the statutory requirement of grand jury secrecy based upon their statements to the media in connection with the Medina indictments. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 20.02(a) (Vernon 2005) (“The proceedings of the grand jury shall be secret.”); id. art. 20.02(b) (“A grand juror ... who discloses anything transpiring before the grand jury ... in the course of the official duties of the grand jury ... shall be liable to a fine as for contempt of the court, not exceeding five hundred dollars, imprisonment not exceeding thirty days, or both such fine and imprisonment.”). The criticism by David Medina’s attorney directed at the Grand Jurors and the filing of the petition for a show cause hearing were reported in the media on January 19, 2008.
On January 22, 2008, the 263rd District Court held that the November 2, 2007 order extending the grand jury’s term contained a defect and was invalid. That same day, eight grand jurors held a televised press conference at which they addressed criticism that had been directed at them regarding the Medina indictments. The Grand Jurors allege that information required to be kept secret under article 22.02(a) was not disclosed in the course of this press conference.
On February 15, 2008, the Grand Jurors filed their original petition for a declaratory judgment against Rosenthal and the *140 State of Texas in the 190th District Court. They subsequently filed amended petitions culminating in Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Original Petition for Declaratory Judgment, in which they contended that they “have both the right and the privilege to disclose evidence showing that they were not a ‘runaway grand jury’ when they indicted Texas Supreme Court Justice David M. Medina for evidence tampering.” The Grand Jurors also asserted that they “should be free, if they wish, to defend themselves without fear of incarceration or other sanction for doing so.” They requested the following specific declarations.
H The Grand Jurors “have the right and privilege to publicly disclose evidence and testimony considered by the Grand Jury before voting the indictments of David M. Medina in response to David M. Medina’s public attacks on [the Grand Jurors’] ... character....” As support for this declaration the Grand Jurors rely upon Houston Press Co. v. Smith,3 S.W.2d 900 , 907 (Tex.Civ.App.-Gal-veston 1928, writ dism’d w.o.j), a libel case brought by a former district attorney against a newspaper arising in part from reports concerning disputes between the former district attorney and grand jurors. 4
HI The Grand Jurors “are not subject to the penalties of Tex.Code CRIM. Proc. art. 20.02 for disclosing anything transpiring before the unlawfully constituted Grand Jury after November 2, 2007 .... ” (original emphasis).
■ The Grand jurors “are not subject to the penalties of Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 20.02 for disclosing evidence and testimony considered by the Grand Jury supporting the indictments of David and Francisca Medina before or after November 2, 2007, to another lawfully constituted Harris County grand jury meeting in secret and whose members are bound by the oath of secrecy .... ” (original emphasis).
The Grand Jurors do not seek to invalidate article 20.02 on constitutional grounds or to enjoin enforcement of the statute; they concede article 20.02 is constitutional and valid. The Grand Jurors do not contend that a statutory exception to grand jury secrecy applies in this case. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 20.02(c), (d), (e) (Vernon 2005).
Rosenthal filed a motion to dismiss the Grand Jurors’ declaratory judgment action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, contending that the 190th District Court lacks civil jurisdiction to construe a criminal statute and determine whether disclosure of evidence and testimony presented before the 263rd District Court’s grand jury violates article 20.02’s criminal contempt provisions.
The 190th District Court signed an order on April 30, 2008 granting Rosenthal’s motion to dismiss, and the Grand Jurors timely appealed. 5
Analysis
The Grand Jurors raise five issues on appeal challenging the 190th District Court’s April 30, 2008 order.
*141
In their first three issues, the Grand Jurors assail the 190th District Court’s determination that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to consider their declaratory judgment action. “Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law.”
Tex. Dep’t. of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
We begin by reviewing the settled law establishing that civil jurisdiction to address criminal statutes is narrowly circumscribed.
I. Civil Jurisdiction to Address Criminal Statutes is Limited
A. Civil Jurisdiction to Enjoin Enforcement is Narrow
“[A]s a rule, a party cannot seek to construe or enjoin enforcement of a criminal statute in a civil proceeding without a showing of irreparable injury to the party’s vested property rights.”
Tex. Educ. Agency v. Leeper,
These limits mean that a district court has civil jurisdiction to declare a criminal statute constitutionally invalid and to enjoin its enforcement only when (1) “there is evidence that the statute at issue is unconstitutionally applied by a rule, policy, or other noncriminal means subject to a civil court’s equity powers and irreparable injury to property or personal rights is threatened,” or (2) “the enforcement of an unconstitutional statute threatens irreparable injury to property rights.”
Morales,
The limits on civil jurisdiction to address criminal statutes are grounded on important public policy considerations.
“The underlying reason for this rule is that the meaning and validity of a penal statute or ordinance should ordinarily be determined by courts exercising criminal jurisdiction.”
Passel,
This longstanding policy favoring construction of criminal statutes in criminal proceedings rests in part on “a pragmatic justification” arising from the fact that Texas has two courts of last resort: The Supreme Court of Texas, which has final appellate jurisdiction in civil cases, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which has final appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases.
Morales,
Having competing trial courts construe criminal statutes in parallel civil and criminal proceedings would “ ‘create confusion ... and might result finally in precise contradiction of opinions between the [civil courts] and the Court of Criminal Appeals to which the Constitution has [entrusted supreme and exclusive jurisdiction in criminal matters.’ ”
Morales,
But pragmatism is not the only consideration, or the most important one. These limits protect “[t]he very balance of state governmental power imposed by the framers of the Texas Constitution ...” Id. at 949. This balance “depends on each branch, and particularly the judiciary, operating within its jurisdictional bounds.” Id. “The checks and balances inherent in our form of government depend upon the judiciary’s equanimity and particularly upon our self-restraint.” Id. “When a court lacks jurisdiction, its only legitimate choice is to dismiss.” Id.
*143 B. Civil Jurisdiction to Issue Declaratory Relief Also is Narrow
The limits on civil jurisdiction to address criminal statutes do not apply only in suits seeking injunctive relief.
“The considerations that lead courts of equity to deny injunctive relief against enforcement of the criminal laws apply with equal force to an action for a declaratory judgment construing a penal statute.”
Tex. Liquor Control Bd.,
This further limitation dovetails with the precept that the statutory authorization for declaratory judgments does not by itself confer jurisdiction.
See generally
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 37.001
et seq.
(Vernon 2008). “Just as an injunction is a remedial writ that depends in the first instance on the existence of the issuing court’s equity jurisdiction, we have held that the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act ... is merely a procedural device for deciding cases already within a court’s jurisdiction.”
Morales,
“For the same reasons that equity courts are precluded from enjoining the enforcement of penal statutes, neither this court, nor the courts below, have jurisdiction to render a declaratory judgment regarding the constitutionality of [a criminal statute].”
Id.
“A civil court simply has no jurisdiction to render naked declarations of ‘rights, status or other legal relationships arising under a penal statute.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Malone v. City of Houston,
We now measure the Grand Jurors’ requested declaratory relief against these longstanding limits on civil jurisdiction and the undisputed jurisdictional facts.
II. The Grand Jurors’ Requested Relief Exceeds the Limits of a District Court’s Civil Jurisdiction
In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the 190th District Court made the following determinations (among others).
H The Grand Jurors were members of the 263rd District Court’s grand jury.
H The Grand Jurors took an oath to “keep secret” those matters occurring in the grand jury room unless they were “required to disclose the same in the course of a judicial proceeding in which the truth or falsity of evidence given in the grand jury room, in a criminal case, shall be under investigation.” See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 19.34 (Vernon 2005).
■ Article 20.02(a) provides that “[t]he proceedings of the grand jury shall be secret.” See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 20.02(a).
H Article 20.02’s constitutionality is not challenged. The parties agree that this provision is constitutional.
■ The Grand Jurors did not allege that immediate irreparable harm to per *144 sons or vested property rights is likely to occur absent issuance of a declaratory judgment recognizing an exception to or exemption from the effects of the criminal statute governing the secrecy of grand jury proceedings.
Appellants do not challenge the determinations listed above. In light of these unchallenged determinations, the Grand Jurors’ claims do not fall within the 190th District Court’s limited civil jurisdiction to address a criminal statute.
See Morales,
First, the Grand Jurors argue that subject matter jurisdiction exists because they requested only declaratory relief; they neither invoked the 190th District Court’s equity power nor sought to enjoin article 20.02’s enforcement.
The Grand Jurors’ first argument fails because the limits on a district court’s civil jurisdiction to address a criminal statute apply regardless of whether the requested relief is framed as an injunction or a declaratory judgment.
Morales,
Second, the Grand Jurors argue that subject matter jurisdiction exists because they refrained from challenging article 20.02’s constitutionality.
The second argument cuts against the Grand Jurors because the absence of a constitutional challenge to the targeted penal statute forecloses civil jurisdiction.
See Morales,
The Grand Jurors seek to bolster their second argument by pointing to
City of Argyle v. Pierce,
We decline the Grand Jurors’ invitation to follow
City of Argyle.
As a threshold matter, we look to this court’s own precedent for guidance on this issue; that precedent confirms the propriety of dismissing the Grand Jurors’ suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See Warren,
More fundamentally,
City of Argyle
is incompatible with
Morales
and its progeny. Contrary to
City of
Argyle’s reasoning, the absence of a constitutional challenge contracts rather than expands a district court’s civil jurisdiction to construe a criminal statute.
See Morales,
The approach advocated by the Grand Jurors also is incompatible with the pragmatic justifications for the limits in Texas on civil jurisdiction to address criminal statutes. The mere “prospect” of having courts exercise civil jurisdiction to construe criminal statutes was deemed to be a “danger” in
Morales. Morales,
The Grand Jurors sought a declaration in the 190th District as to their potential criminal liability under article 20.02 while a petition for a show cause hearing was pending simultaneously in the 263rd District Court. The petition asserted that grand jurors Ryan and Dorrell violated article 20.02 “by making numerous illegal statements to members of the media and the public” regarding matters before the grand jury. A judgment from the 190th District Court containing the declarations requested by the Grand Jurors would create a direct conflict if the 263rd District Court were to find that the Grand Jurors violated article 20.02 and hold them in contempt. An appeal from a declaratory judgment signed by the 190th District Court would proceed in this court, and potentially in the Texas Supreme Court. Jurisdiction to review a contempt order entered by a district court in connection with criminal proceedings rests with the Court of Criminal Appeals by writ of habe-as corpus.
See Ex parte Thompson,
In further support of their second argument, the Grand Jurors contend that the limits on civil jurisdiction should not apply to them because the absence of a constitutional challenge to article 20.02 means they cannot “continue [their] activities until arrested and then procure [their] release by showing that the law is void” as contemplated in
Morales,
Third, the Grand Jurors argue that they “sought no construction of any criminal statute from the court below” because they seek recognition of a “civil privilege” to disclose grand jury evidence rather than an interpretation of an existing statutory exception to grand jury secrecy under article 20.02.
We reject the Grand Jurors’ third argument. Regardless of how the claimed “privilege” is characterized, the requested declarations expressly seek to insulate the Grand Jurors from criminal liability under article 20.02. In Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Original Petition for Declaratory Judgment, the Grand Jurors assert that they “seek a declaration that they have a privilege to fairly respond to the defamatory attacks upon their character by revealing the overwhelming evidence considered by the Grand Jury....” The Grand Jurors contend they “should be able to do so without being prosecuted, sanctioned, fined, or jailed for violating Tex.Code Crim. PROC. art. 20.02.” The Grand Jurors also request declarations that they “are not subject to the penalties of Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 20.02 for disclosing anything transpiring before the unlawfully constituted Grand Jury” after November 2, 2007 or for disclosing evidence “to another lawfully constituted Harris County grand jury meeting in secret and whose members are bound by the oath of secrecy.”
These are requests to construe article 20.02 so that it is not enforceable against the Grand Jurors in certain circumstances. If the Grand Jurors were to succeed in obtaining these declarations from the 190th District Court, they would thereby obtain an impermissible declaration of their “ ‘rights’ ” and “ ‘status’ ” as persons who could not be prosecuted “‘under a penal statute’ ” in contravention of
Morales. See Morales,
We overrule the Grand Jurors’ first three issues challenging the 190th District Court’s order granting Rosenthal’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. 10
Conclusion
We affirm the 190th District Court’s order granting the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Notes
. The factual recitations in this opinion are based primarily upon the allegations in the Grand Jurors' third amended petition, which was the live pleading on file when the 190th District Court signed its order dismissing the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See Tex. Natural Res. & Conservation Comm’n v. White,
. Appellate opinions sometimes refer in shorthand fashion to the ability of "civil courts" to address enforceability of criminal statutes. The Texas Constitution provides that district courts have jurisdiction over both civil and criminal cases. Tex. Const. art. V, § 8;
State v. Landry,
. We take judicial notice that another grand jury presented an indictment against Francisca Medina on April 30, 2008 in connection with the June 28, 2007 fire, and that the second indictment was dismissed on August 27, 2009.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 201(b);
Langdale v. Villamil,
. We express no opinion about whether
Houston Press Company,
which addressed a privilege to make statements as a defense to liability for monetary damages in a libel suit, is germane to determining whether secret grand jury proceedings can be disclosed without suffering criminal penalties under article 20.02.
See Houston Press Co.,
. The Grand Jurors filed a notice of nonsuit of their claims against the State of Texas on March 10, 2008. The trial court signed an order granting the nonsuit on March 18, 2008.
. The Grand Jurors cite
City of San Antonio v. Rankin,
. We are not persuaded by the Grand Jurors’ invocation of
Euresti v. Valdez,
.
See also Guthrie,
-S.W.3d at---(District court lacked civil jurisdiction to render declaratory judgment that fire code “does not prohibit the transportation of consumer fireworks from one legal location outside the city limits of the City of Houston to another, even if the highway or roadway includes in whole or in part a purported [Limited Purpose Annexation].’’);
Trantham,
. We also note that
City of Argyle’s,
holding appears to be in tension with an earlier decision by the same court in
Trantham,
and with a memorandum opinion from the same court cited in
Trantham. See Trantham,
. Given our disposition of the first three issues, we do not reach the Grand Jurors' fourth issue addressing justiciability. In their fifth and final issue, the Grand Jurors contend that Rosenthal’s jurisdictional challenge should have been framed as a plea in abatement based on concurrent jurisdiction. We reject the Grand Jurors’ contention and their fifth issue because the jurisdictional issue here is not grounded on the existence of concurrent jurisdiction belonging to both the 263rd District Court and the 190th District Court. The issue here is a lack of civil jurisdiction that would allow the 190th District Court to issue a declaratory judgment in the absence of allegations (1) challenging article 20.02’s constitutionality, and (2) asserting irreparable harm.
See Morales,
