Sierra Club and Downwinders at Risk (“plaintiffs”) appeal from a judgment that dismisses for want of subject-matter jurisdiction their shit for judicial review of a final order issued by the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission (the “Commission”) in a contested case.1 We *685will reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the trial court.
THE CONTROVERSY
TXI Operations, L.P. (TXI) applied to the Commission for a permit authorizing the burning of solid waste in TXI’s cement kilns at Midlothian, which TXI had done previously without the necessity of a permit. The plaintiffs, the Commission’s Public Interest Counsel, and seven individuals were parties of record in the contested case that followed the filing of TXI’s application. After a hearing, the Commission issued its final order granting the permit.
The plaintiffs filed in the present cause an original petition imputing numerous errors of law to the Commission’s decision, naming the Commission as the sole defendant. The Commission was served with citation and appeared in the cause by filing an original answer containing a general denial only. While the other parties of record evidently received copies of the plaintiffs’ petition, they were not served with citation requiring them to appear and answer in the cause.2
The trial court construed the plaintiffs’ petition as alleging a single cause of action that was purely statutory, authorized and governed by section 361.321 of the Texas Health and Safety Code and another statute discussed below.3 And because these statutes required service of citation on the other parties, with a copy of the plaintiffs’ petition attached thereto, the court concluded the plaintiffs had failed to comply with statutory provisions that were integral parts of their statutory cause of action. Under the doctrine requiring strict compliance with such provisions — a doctrine laid down in Mingus v. Wadley, 115 Tex. 551, 285 S.W. 1084 (1926) — the trial court dismissed the cause for want of subject-matter jurisdiction.4 See Mingus, 285 S.W. at 1087. The plaintiffs appeal from the judgment of dismissal.
*686THE STATUTES
Some 84 days after the plaintiffs filed their petition, the Commission filed a plea to the jurisdiction that the trial court sustained. The plea orchestrated two applicable statutes as grounds for the Commission’s contention that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because the other parties had not received service of citation.
The first statute is section 361.321 of the Texas Health and Safety Code, which the court held was the sole statute under which plaintiffs alleged they were authorized to bring a cause of action for judicial review of the Commission’s final order granting the permit requested by TXI. Subsection (a) of the statute provides “[a] person affected by a decision ... of the commission may appeal the action by filing a petition in a district court of Travis County.” Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 361.321(a) (West Supp.2000). Subsection (c) of the statute provides that in such •actions, save for an exception not material here, “the petition must be filed not later than the 30th day after the date of the ... decision” and “[sjervice of citation must be accomplished not later than the 30th day after the date on which the petition is filed.” Id. § 361.321(c) (emphasis added). It is undisputed that citation was not served on the other parties of record before the 30th day after the plaintiffs filed their petition. The Commission, the sole defendant named in the plaintiffs’ petition, was served with citation within the time required.
The second statute governing the plaintiffs’ statutory cause of action is Section 2001.176 of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.176 (West Supp.2000). Subsection (b)(2) of the statute requires that “a copy of the petition must be served on the state agency and each party of record in the proceedings before the agency.” Id. § 2001.176(b)(2) (emphasis added). In E.R.S. v. McKillip, we held that section 2001.176(b)(2) meant, for reasons set forth in our opinion, that each party of record in the agency proceedings must be served with a copy of the petition attached to a citation issued and served in a manner authorized by Rules 99 through 107 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. See Employees’ Retirement Sys. v. McKillip, 956 S.W.2d 795, 797-98 (Tex.App.—Austin 1997, no writ). We held, moreover, that the provisions set out in Rules 21 and 21a, authorizing the service of “notice” on other parties (as was evidently done in the present cause), were insufficient to satisfy section 2001.176(b)(2). Id. We held finally in McKillip that compliance with section 2001.176(b)(2) was essential to the reviewing court’s subject-matter jurisdiction under the Mingus doctrine, requiring strict compliance with the statute and an affirmative showing of that jurisdictional fact in order to allege a cause of action within the trial court’s special statutory jurisdiction.
DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS
As we 'did in McKillip, the trial court relied in the present cause on the Mingus doctrine in holding the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. After the trial court judgment in the present cause, however, the supreme court overruled Mingus “to the extent that it characterized the plaintiffs failure to establish a statutory prerequisite as jurisdictional.” Dubai Petroleum Co. v. Kazi, 12 S.W.3d 71, 76 (Tex.2000). By necessary implication, the Dubai decision also overruled McKillip in its entirety. We are now required to consider Dubai’s application to the grounds upon which the trial court dismissed the plaintiffs’ cause of action in the present cause, assuming their petition averred only a purely statutory cause of action under section 361.321 of the Texas Health and Safety Code as the Commission contends and as the trial court concluded.
To understand the holding in Dubai, we should first note the particulars of Mingus which Dubai overruled. In Mingus, the plaintiffs were the beneficiaries of a *687decedent whose death was covered by workers’ compensation insurance. The workers’ compensation insurer faded to pay an award ordered by the Industrial Accident Board, and the plaintiffs brought against the insurer a purely statutory cause of action for enforcement of the award. The relevant statutory provisions specified the following elements of such a cause of action: (1) the Industrial Accident Board had made an award in the plaintiffs’ favor; (2) the award was against the defendant named in the plaintiffs’ suit; (3) the award had not been set aside by the timely filing of a suit seeking such relief; and (4) the injury occurred either in the county where the plaintiffs sued in the enforcement action or in a county where one of them resided. Because these essential elements were not alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition, the court held the petition was fatally defective for a want of subject-matter jurisdiction apparent on the face of the pleading — the right to be enforced and the remedy authorized being in derogation of the common law, the statutory provisions were mandatory and exclusive and must be alleged to bring the cause within the trial court’s statutory jurisdiction. See Mingus, 285 S.W. at 1089-90.
In Dubai, the supreme court expressly overruled the part of Mingus which held the plaintiffs were required to plead the statutory elements in order to show affirmatively that subject-matter jurisdiction existed in the trial court. That is, at least, our understanding of Dubai and its reference to “statutory prerequisites.” The primary reason given for overruling the longstanding doctrine of Mingus was that classifying such “statutory prerequisites” as issues of subject-matter jurisdiction resulted in making judgments rendered in particular cases perpetually “vulnerable to delayed [collateral] attack for a variety of irregularities that” ought to be precluded by res judicata, because in many instances the irregularities result simply from the parties making “a good-faith mistake in interpreting the law.” Such “irregularities” or “statutory prerequisites” will not, henceforth, go to the question of subject-matter jurisdiction, the court stated, but simply “to the right of the plaintiff to relief.” Dubai Petroleum Co., 12 S.W.3d at 76. We are left then to decide what the terms “irregularities” and “statutory prerequisites” mean in context, and whether they encompass the service-of-citation defect at issue in the present appeal.
In Dubai itself, the statutory prerequisite in question was the statutory requirement implicit in a statute that gave citizens of foreign countries the right to maintain a wrongful-death action in Texas courts provided the decedent’s country of citizenship afforded “equal treaty rights” to United States citizens. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 71.031(a)(4) (West Supp. 2000). The supreme court held the plaintiffs’ burden to demonstrate the existence of such a treaty was not a jurisdictional prerequisite but rather a condition upon which their right to relief depended. See Dubai Petroleum Co., 12 S.W.3d at 76-77.
As the court indicated in Dubai, the collective term “statutory prerequisites” encompasses “a variety of irregularities” that are not jurisdictional. See id. at 76. Given this variety and the generality of the terms involved, we believe one may say with some confidence that they do not include matters that are traditionally and undoubtedly elements of subject-matter jurisdiction.
A court’s subject-matter jurisdiction traditionally consists of a power, conferred by constitutional or statutory provision, to decide the kind of cause alleged in the plaintiffs petition and to award an authorized form of relief. See 21 C.J.S. Courts § 19 at 24 (1990); 20 Am.Jur.2d Courts § 58 at 375, § 70 at 384 (1995). A constitutional delegation of general power to the district courts is found, for example, in article V, section 8, of the Texas Constitution; and a statutory grant of power to such courts is found in section 24.008 of the Texas Government Code, assigning to *688the district courts a general power to “hear and determine any cause that is cognizable by courts of law or equity and [to] grant any relief that could be granted by either courts of law or equity.” Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 24.008 (West 1988).
Apart from such general grants of adjudicative power, a statute may grant the district courts, or one or more of them, a special statutory jurisdiction to hear, determine, and award relief in particular kinds of cases that are themselves authorized by statute. And in Section 2001.174 of the APA, the district courts of Travis County are empowered to decide causes and award specified forms of relief in suits for judicial review of administrative-agency actions in contested cases, when such cases are brought before those courts by a cause of action authorized by another statute. See id. § 2001.174. Section 2001.088 of the APA empowers the same courts to render declaratory judgments determining the validity or applicability of agency rules. See id. § 2001.038.
No court possesses unrestricted jurisdiction. A court’s jurisdiction may, for example, be limited geographically. We have noted recently that jurisdiction to order a particular form of relief may be restricted to a specified time period. See Texas Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n v. Wilson, 22 S.W.3d 612 (Tex.App.—Austin 2000, no pet. h.). The power to award relief is an essential component of subject-matter jurisdiction, and it may be restricted by a statute limiting the kinds of relief that may be rendered in certain kinds of cases. See Morrow v. Corbin, 122 Tex. 553, 62 S.W.2d 641, 645 (1933); Orr v. International Bank of Comm., 649 S.W.2d 769, 770 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1983, no writ). One finds distinctions of these kinds even in the APA itself.
Section 2001.174 of the APA empowers the reviewing court to examine the agency record for error in eases of substantial-evidence review; but if prejudicial error is found, the statute only empowers the court to reverse or remand the case to the agency. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.174(2). This is a direct restriction on the special statutory jurisdiction delegated to the court in the APA — the court is not free generally to render the kind of relief it believes the agency should have awarded based on the agency record. And the court’s statutory power in such cases extends only to actions against an agency’s “final decision in a contested case” — a direct restriction on the kind of cause the court may decide. See id. § 2001.171. Section 2001.175(b), on the other hand, is distinctly different in requiring that the record of agency proceedings be filed with the clerk of the court. See id. § 2001.175(b). This is obviously a “statutory prerequisite” to judicial review under the substantial-evidence rule, but it neither defines, enlarges, nor restricts the class of causes the court may decide or the relief the court may award. It is not, therefore, a requirement going to the reviewing court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.
Section 361.321(c) of the Texas Health and Safety Code and section 2001.176(b)(2) of the APA, insofar as they require service of citation on a party of record in the contested case, do not define, enlarge, or restrict the class of causes the court may decide or the relief that may be awarded. Thus a failure to comply with their requirements is not, we believe, a defect that goes to the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction under Dubai.5 We hold accordingly and conclude the trial court erred in dismissing the plaintiffs’ cause of action.
We therefore reverse the judgment of dismissal and remand the cause to the trial court. Our reversal on the ground indicated makes it unnecessary to consider the plaintiffs’ other appellate contentions.
. The Sierra Club and Downwinders at Risk initiated the suit by a joint petition. Therein they identified the Sierra Club as a "nonprofit, membership corporation with members throughout the United States and approximately 35,000 members in Texas, including many members who reside within the airshed [sic] impacted by the emissions per*685mitted by [the Commission] in this cause.” The petition describes Downwinders at Risk as "a non-profit corporation with members who reside within the airshed [sic] which is impacted by the” Commission’s issuance of the disputed permit to an applicant identified as TXI Operations, L.P.
A cause of action for judicial review of the Commission’s final order is authorized by Section 361.321 of the Texas Health and Safety Code and governed by Sections 2001.171-.178 of the Texas Government Code, a part of the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA”). See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 361.321 (West Supp.2000); Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.171-.178 (West Supp.2000).
The cause was dismissed for want of jurisdiction before the agency record was filed with the clerk of the trial court. We take our description of the controversy from the clerk’s record, chiefly from the plaintiffs’ petition, the allegations of which we assume to be true for purposes of testing jurisdiction.
.The other parties of record in the contested case, who were not served with citation, are TXI, the Commission’s Public Interest Counsel, Donald Rivers, Jeanne Rivers, Don Holley, Rachel Seay, Billy R. Holley, Christina McPike, and Thelma McLennan. We shall refer to them in the text hereafter as "the other parties.” Although they were not served with citation, copies of the plaintiffs’ petition were delivered to their attorneys or representatives according to allegations in the plaintiffs' petition.
. The plaintiffs contend on appeal, as they did in the trial court, that their cause of action for judicial review was authorized by other statutes; and, that their petition averred a common-law cause of action and a claim based on a denial of constitutional rights coming within the trial court’s inherent jurisdiction rather than jurisdiction conferred solely by statute. We need not decide or discuss these matters because we believe the trial court possessed subject-matter jurisdiction even assuming section 361.321 of the Texas Health and Safety Code governed the cause of action.
. The doctrine of Mingus holds that when a plaintiff asserts a purely statutory cause of action in derogation of the common law, to recover a statutory remedy, subject-matter jurisdiction is not presumed in the reviewing court and the record must show affirmatively as a jurisdictional fact that the plaintiff complied strictly with the statutorily prescribed method for transferring the controversy from the administrative department of government to the district court. See Mingus, 285 S.W. at 1087.
. The question of in personam jurisdiction over the other parties is not before us.