Relator, State and County Mutual Fire Insurance Company, plaintiff in the underlying suit, sued its insured, Craig Knickerbocker, for a declaration of no coverage on an auto liability policy. After Knickerbocker failed to answer and a default judgment was taken, real party in interest Cherie Peck filed, on the last day of thе trial court’s plenary power, a motion to intervene and a motion for new trial. The court subsequently granted both motions. By this mandamus proceeding, Statе and County Mutual requests this Court to direct respondent, district judge Oliver Kelly, to withdraw his orders granting Peck’s motion to intervene and motion for new trial. We granted leavе to file State and County Mutual’s petition for writ of mandamus. Because we conclude that the orders granting the motions are void, we will conditionally grant the writ.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
State and County Mutual issued Knickerbocker a month-to-month auto liability policy (“the month-to-month policy”) for coverage
On April 10, 1992, Knickerbocker was involved in an auto accident while driving a car owned by his girlfriend and insurеd by State Farm Insurance Company. Peck’s husband, Steven, was killed in the accident. Peck subsequently brought a wrongful death suit against Knickerbocker, among others. State and County Mutual asserted that no coverage existed.
In November 1994, in response to Peck’s demand for the insurance proceeds under the month-to-month policy, State and County Mutual filed a separate declaratory judgment action against Knickerbocker seeking a declaration that оn April 10, 1992 no coverage existed under the month-to-month policy. State and County Mutual did not notify the parties in the Peck lawsuit of the filing of the declaratory judgment action. Service was obtained on Knickerbocker at the Gurney Unit, Texas Department of Corrections, in Anderson County. The attorney retained by Statе Farm to represent Knickerbocker in the Peck lawsuit notified Knickerbocker that his representation did not extend to State and County Mutual’s declarаtory judgment action and that Knickerbocker would have to retain other counsel for that suit. Knickerbocker never filed an answer, and a default judgment wаs rendered against him on January 25,1995.
On February 24, 1995, the last day of the trial court’s plenary power over State and County Mutual’s declaratory judgment suit, Peek moved to intervene. 1 She also filed on her behalf a motion for new trial asserting that she should have been joined because she is a necessary party by virtue of her claim to the insurance proceeds. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 39. Knickerbocker never filed a motion for new trial. On February 27, 1995, Judge Kelly, without holding a hearing, signed an order granting the intervention. Judge Kelly orally granted the motion for new trial at a hearing held on March 10, 1995, but did not sign a written order to that effect until May 1. State and County Mutual then brоught this original proceeding to compel Judge Kelly to vacate his orders granting the motion to intervene and the motion for new trial.
DISCUSSION
Mandamus is an extraordinary remedy that is available only in limited circumstances.
Canadian Helicopters Ltd. v. Wittig,
Relator has the burden of showing an abuse of discretion as well as the inadеquacy of a remedy by appeal.
Canadian Helicopters,
State and County Mutual asserts that both orders in the present case are void because they were granted after the trial court’s plenary power had expired. It also argues that granting the motion for intervention was an abuse of discretion. The judgment was signed on January 25,1995. Without a proper motion for new trial or to modify, correct, or reform the judgment, the trial court’s plenary power exрired on February 24,1995, and any orders entered after that date would be void. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 329b. Peck filed her motion to intervene and her motion for new trial on February 24, 1995. The orders granting those motions were not signed until after that date. Thus, the issue squarely before this Court is whether Peck’s motion for new trial extended the trial court’s plenаry power. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 329b(d).
As a general rule, one not a party to a suit may not move for a new trial.
Southern County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Powell,
A motion to intervene must generally be made before judgment is rendered.
Citizens State Bank v. Caney Inv.,
During the time it retains plenary power, a trial court may grant a new trial even on its own motion. Tex.R.Civ.P. 320. Thus, an interested person asserting that it was a necessary party to the suit arguably may file a “motion for new trial” in order to make the court aware that in thе interest of justice the original judgment should be set aside and a new trial granted to allow the proposed intervenor to protect his or her asserted rights. We conclude, however, that only a motion for new trial filed by a party of record automatically extends the trial court’s plenary power. See Tеx.R.Civ.P. 329b. A “motion for new trial” filed by a nonparty is simply an unofficial plea to the trial court to exercise its discretion allowed under Rule 320 to set aside the judgment during the court’s plenary power. Thus, Peck’s motion in the present ease was ineffective to extend the trial court’s plenary power. Becausе the order granting the motion for new trial and the order granting the motion for intervention were rendered and signed after the court’s plenary power had еxpired, they are void.
CONCLUSION
Because the orders granting Peck’s motions for intervention and for new trial are void, we conditionally grant the writ of mandamus requiring respondent to vacate those
Notes
. Peck filed what she styled a "motion fоr leave to file third party petition.” A third party petition is filed by a defending party in a pending suit seeking to join a person not then a party to the lawsuit. Tex.R.Civ.P. 38. An intеrvention, however, is an equitable motion filed by a non-party voluntarily seeking to become a party in a suit to protect his own rights.
Highlands Ins. Co. v. Lumbermen’s Mut. Cas. Co.,
