To be fair, Texas courts can think they have a very long reach.
Several years ago, two Texans bought Liverpool Football Club. They bought it by sort of mortgaging the club: borrowing and putting those debts onto the club itself. However, they had made a big mistake and screwed the finances of LFC, ending up with the club's creditors forcing the owners to accept conditions that the board could sell the club to other owners without their permission. This eventually occurred - an interested buyer arrived and the board recommended sale, which the Texan owners resisted with much absurdity and hijnix (it was so entertaining I followed the livestream). It ended up at the British High Court. The High Court duly declared that everything was good and proper, the Texan owners had clearly legally signed away their rights to block a sale and the club could therefore be sold (at a deliciously huge loss to the Texans - I think well over $100 million).
At which point - gobsmackingly - they went to a Texan judge who declared an injunction blocking the sale despite it being completely outside Texan jurisdiction.
To say the British High Court judge was not amused would be an understatement. He informed the Texans and their legal team that they had 24h to remove that injunction otherwise every single one of them would be up for contempt of court. Unsurprisingly, very shortly after, the Texan judge removed his injunction.