OPINION ON REHEARING
Wе grant rehearing and withdraw our opinion and judgment of July 3, 2008, and issue the following in their stead. We dismiss Rapid Settlements’ motion for en banc rehearing as moot. Our disposition of the case remains unchanged.
Transamerica Occidental Life Insurance Company and Transamerica Annuity Service Corporation (collectively, Trans-america) bring a restricted appeal from the trial court’s final judgment confirming an arbitration award in favor of appellee Rapid Settlements. Transamerica contends that it never received notice of Rapid Settlements’ suit, nor consented to the judgment, and that the trial court further erred by entering the order to aid in the *388 enforcement of judgment because: (1) the arbitrator exceeded his authority in making the award; (2) the agreement between Rapid Settlements and appellee Raymond Echols 1 is invalid and unenforceable; (3) the trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Rapid Settlements’ claim; and (4) the judgmеnt contains various findings of fact and conclusions of law not supported by the record. We conclude that the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction over this dispute. We further conclude that, because Transamerica is a non-signatory to the agreement to arbitrate, it is unenforceable against it. We therefore reverse and render judgment that Rapid Settlements take nothing against Trans-america on its claim for enforcement.
Background
In 1988, Echols settled a personal injury action in exchange for the right to receive a $100,000.00 structured settlement payment in 2027. The Transamerica entities serve as annuity insurer and annuity obligor of this structured settlement agreement. In 2005, Echols and Rapid Settlements entered into a transfer agreement which provided that Rapid Settlements would pay Echols a lump sum of $5,000.00 in exchange for his right to the future payment under the structured settlement agreement. The transfer agreement dictates that all disputes arising under it be resolved by an arbitrаtor under Texas law. Rapid Settlements claims that Echols, who lives in Tennessee, attempted to cancel the transfer. Rapid Settlements instituted an arbitration proceeding in Texas against Echols, asserting breach of the transfer agreement. In July 2006, the arbitrator entered an agreed award in favor of Rapid Settlеments. The arbitrator’s award approves the transfer of the $100,000.00 structured settlement payment, and awards Rapid Settlements $375.00 in arbitration fees. Transamerica did not participate in the arbitration proceedings. The award nevertheless ordered Transamerica to change the designated payee under the annuity to an entity designated by Rapid Settlements, and to send formal acknowledgment of the transfer within seven days after Transameriea’s receipt of a judgment confirming the award.
Rapid Settlements then filed an “Original Petition for Confirmation of Arbitration Award” in Harris County Civil Court at Law Number 1. The petition names Echols as the sole defendant. Trans-america was neither named as a party nor served with notice of the suit. Following a hearing, 2 the trial court signed a final judgment confirming the arbitration award. The judgment orders
that [Echols] and [Transamerica] are hereby directed to deliver and make payable to [Rapid Settlements], its successors and/or assigns, as they become due, the following payments under the Annuity Contract No. 872191T003Z with Echols:
One (1) lump sum payment in the amount of $100,000 due and payable on December 17, 2027 ... as such become due.
The judgment further orders that, as payment for its arbitration fees, Rapid Settlements was to “hold back and retain $375” from the amount total Echols wаs otherwise due to receive under the transfer agreement. Within six months, Trans-america noticed its restricted appeal from this judgment.
Discussion
1. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
As a threshold matter, we address Transamerica’s contention that the
*389
amount in controversy exceeds the limits of the court’s jurisdiction and thus requires dismissal of the cause. Subject matter jurisdiction is essential for a court to have the authority to resolve a case.
French v. Moore,
Sections 25.0003 and 25.1032 of the Texas Government Code grant jurisdiction to statutory county courts and to the Harris County Civil Courts at Law.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code AnN. § 25.0003 (Vernon 2004 & Supp. 2007);
see also Cazarez,
Rapid Settlements’ original petition does not allege that the amount in controversy is within the jurisdictional limits of the court. In its request for relief, Rapid Settlements asked that the trial court “enter judgment confirming the arbitrator’s award as made by the arbitrator.” Rapid Settlements attached a copy of the arbitration award, and expressly incorporated it by reference. The arbitration award orders Echols and Transamerica “to deliver and make payable to [Rapid Settlements] ... [o]ne (1) lump sum payment in the amount of $100,000 due and payable on December 17, 2027 ... as such become due.” It also awards Rapid Settlements $375 in arbitration fees. 3
Although its pleadings sought enforcement of an arbitration award under which it was to receive $100,375, the award also requires Rapid Settlements to pay Echols the net amount of $4,625 for the assignment of the right to the future payments under the transfer agreement. Thus, the maximum amount Rapid Settlements sought to recover in its original pleadings *390 for enforcement of the arbitration award is $95,375, an amount within the jurisdictional limits of the trial court. We hold that the amount in controversy was within the jurisdictional limits of the court.
II. Transamerica’s Appellate Standing
A party may file a restricted appeal when, despitе its status as a party to the suit, it: (1) did not participate either in person or through counsel in the hearing that resulted in the judgment it complains of; and (2) did not timely file a postjudgment motion or request for findings of fact and conclusions of law, or notice its appeal within the time permitted under the regular appellate timetable.
Quaestor Inv., Inc. v. State, 997
S.W.2d 226, 227 (Tex.1999); Tex.R.App. P. 30. The party must file notice of its restricted appeal within six months after the trial court signs the judgment. Tex.R.App. P. 26.1(c). The party also must show error apparent from the face of the record.
Quaestor,
Transamerica is subject to service and, as insurer and obligor of the structured settlement with Echols, has an interest in avoiding exposure to competing claims to future payments.
See
Tex. Civ. Pkac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 141.002(7) (Vernon 2005) (defining annuity insurer and “any other party with continuing rights or obligations” as interested persons with respect to structured settlements); Tex.R. Civ. P. 39;
see, e.g., Johnson v. Structured Asset Seros., LLC,
III. Does the Arbitration Award Bind Transamerica?
In the underlying transaction in this case, Echols, a tort claimant who settled his claim by entering into a structured settlement, enterеd into an agreement to transfer his future-payment rights to Rapid Settlements, a factoring company, in exchange for a discounted lump sum paid in the present. Transamerica, which is responsible for insuring and distributing the future-income stream, contends it cannot be bound by the arbitrator’s decision because (1) it is not a party to the transfer agreement, and therefore not a party to its arbitration clause, and (2) its relationship with Echols does not support any theory under which Echols’ signing of the agreement would otherwise bind Transamerica. Rapid Settlements, on the other hand, asserts that Transamerica is “bound as a mere stakeholder” under a thеory of privity, and maintains that Transamerica does not have a “distinct and separate interest in the underlying dispute.” The trial court’s judgment adopts Rapid Settlements’ position, viewing the question of whether it had jurisdiction over Trans-america as “irrelevant because this proceeding is the equivalent of an ‘in rem’ or interрleader action and the Arbitrator has jurisdiction as in an interpleader over the monies due by [an] Annuity Owner and Annuity Issuer over which the only issue is to whom Annuity Owner and Annuity Issuer will pay same.”
“It goes without saying that a contract cannot bind a nonparty.”
EEOC v. Waffle House, Inc.,
A “gateway dispute” about whether the parties are bound by a given arbitration clause raises “a question of arbitrability for a Court to decide.”
Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
According to principles of contract and agency law, arbitration agreements may bind nonsignatories under any of six theories: (1) incorporation by reference; (2) assumption; (3) agency; (4) alter ego; (5) equitable estoppel, and (6) third party beneficiary.
See In re Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc.,
Texas and the forty-two other states that have enacted structured settlement protection acts did so to protect unwary tort claimants from potential abuse in their transactions with factoring companies.
Symetra Life Ins. Co. v. Rapid Settlements, Ltd.,
No. H-05-03167,
These statutes typically require the factoring company fully to disclose the effect of the proposed transfer and requirе a state-court judge affirmatively to approve the transfer after a hearing as in the best interests of the settling tort claimant. The purpose of the statutes is to protect the claimant/payee from overreaching by factoring companies and to ensure that the decision to give up future-paymеnt streams in exchange for a present discounted lump-sum payment is informed and voluntary.-
Id.; see also In re Rapid Settlements, Ltd.,
The structured settlement protection acts detail the procedure courts must follow for adjudicating an application for authorization of a transfer of structured settlement payment rights.
See, e.g.,
Tenn. Code § 47-18-2604; Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 141.006. The party seeking authorization must serve written disclosures on all interested parties before the hearing to consider whether the proposed transfer is in the best interests of the proposed transferor and meets the other statutory requirements for approval.
See, e.g.,
Tenn.Code § 47-18-2604; Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 141.006. The definition of “interested pаrty” in these statutes typically includes annuity insurers, obligors, and issuers, and requires that they receive notice of a judicial application for authorization of a transfer of structured settlement payment rights.
See
Tenn.Code §§ 47-18-2602(6), 47-18-2604; Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 141.002(7), 141.006. The state statutes thus expressly recognize that annuity insurers and obligors like Transamerica are “interestеd parties,” and thereby acknowledge that annuity insurers and obligors like Transamerica are not merely stakeholders, but rather have a unique interest in ensuring compliance with the statutory restrictions on the transfer of structured settlement rights. The arbitration award and the trial court’s judgment confirming that award fail to protect that interest, and potentially expose Transamerica both to conflicting payment demands and the consequences of violating the state structured settlement protection acts if it transfers the annuity payments without the court approval these statutes require.
See Symetra,
Rapid Settlements forwards no other basis to bind Trаnsamerica, a nonsignatory, to the arbitration clause in the transfer agreement. It does, however, contend that state law is irrelevant in the context of a confirmation of an FAA-governed arbitration clause, such as the one at issue here. Rapid Settlements points to the United States Supreme Court’s recent decisions in
Preston v. Fewer,
— U.S.-,
Ti'ansamerica’s role in the structured settlement transaction — one informed by state law — does not render it a party to the transfer agreement’s arbitration clause or otherwise bind it as a nonsignatory.
*393 Accordingly, we hold thаt the arbitration clause in the transfer agreement between Echols and Rapid Settlements does not bind Transamerica, and that neither the arbitration award nor the trial court’s judgment confirming that award is enforceable against it. 7
Conclusion
We hold that the trial court erred in entering judgment confirming the arbitration award against Transamеrica in the absence of Transamerica’s agreement to arbitrate. We therefore reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment that orders Transamerica to perform or refrain from performing any act, and render judgment that Rapid Settlements take nothing against Transamerica on its claim for enfоrcement.
All pending motions are dismissed as moot.
Notes
. Echols has not filed an appellee's brief or otherwise participated in this appeal.
. Neither party requested a reporter’s record of the hearing, so none exists.
. The transfer agreement provides that “[t]he Assignment Price shall be reduced by any legal/attorneys’ fees set forth in the Disclosure Statement .... ”
. The trial court signed its judgment on August II, 2006. Transamerica had until Monday, February 12, 2007, to notice its restricted appeal. See Tex.R.App. P. 4.1(a). It filed its notice on that date.
. Because Echols is a resident of Tennessee, the Tennessee Structured Settlement Protection Act governs the transfer of Echols' right to payment under his structured settlement. See Tenn.Code §§ 47-18-2601 through 47-18-2607. The Texas Structured Settlement Protection Act affords substantially the same protections. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 141.001 through 141.007 (Vernon 2005).
. The statutory language analyzed in
Hall Street Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc.,
- U.S. -,
. We express no opinion concerning the propriety of the award or the trial court’s eonfir-mation of it as applies to Rapid Settlements and Echols.
