OPINION
This is a property tax appraisal dispute. Bilinsco, Inc., and Linda Boyd (collectively, “Bilinsco”) sued the Harris County Appraisal District (“the district”) and the Harris County Appraisal Review Board (“the board”) to challenge the board’s valuation of Bilinsco’s property for 2008. Bil-insco served citation on the board, but did not serve the district until eleven months after filing its petition for review. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the district and the board based on Bilinsco’s failure to diligently serve the district, a necessary party to the suit. On appeal, Bilinsco contends that (1) a fact issue exists whether it had a reasonable excuse for failing to timely serve the district; and (2) the applicable limitations period should be equitably tolled. We hold that the trial court properly granted summary judgment and therefore affirm.
Background
Bilinsco challenged the district’s 2008 valuation of its property before the board. After the board upheld the district’s valuation, Bilinsco mailed copies of its notice of appeal and anticipated petition to the district and the board. Bilinsco filed suit against the district and the board within forty-five days of receiving notice of the board’s order. 1 At the time of filing, Bilin-sco requested that the clerk issue citation and arranged to serve both defendants; however, only the board was served with citation. The board answered, responded to Bilinsco’s requests for disclosure, and served its own requests for disclosure, interrogatories, and requests for production.
Ten months after Bilinsco filed suit, the district and the board filed a plea to the jurisdiction, contending that the trial court never acquired jurisdiction over the petition because Bilinsco never served the district, a necessary party to the appeal. The trial court denied this plea nearly a month later, and Bilinsco requested that the clerk issue and serve citation on the district. The district answered and noted that it had not been timely served. Both defendants then moved for traditional summary judgment, contending that because Bilin-sco did not diligently serve the district, the trial court did not acquire jurisdiction over the case.
*651 In response, Bilinseo contended that it had raised a valid excuse for its failure to timely serve the district: these parties had often been involved in litigation over valuation assessments, and in each case, the same attorneys represented both the district and the board and would file an answer on behalf of both defendants. In this case, Bilinseo assumed that, when the board answered, it answered on behalf of the district as well, and thus the district had generally appeared and waived service. As summary judgment evidence, William Boyd, co-owner of the property, president of Bilinseo, and attorney of record, described the usual procedure between the parties in valuation disputes. Boyd also averred that, in the board’s response to Bilinsco’s request for disclosure, the style of the case referred to both the district and the board as “Defendant.” The board identified no potential parties to the case, and the board’s attorney signed the disclosures as “Attorney for Defendant.” Bilinseo contended that, through this conduct, the district and the board misled it into believing that the district had been served and had appeared in the case. The trial court granted summary judgment.
Discussion
Standard of Review
We review de novo the trial court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment.
Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding,
Jurisdiction
On appeal, the district first contends that Bilinsco’s failure to diligently serve it with process “precluded the trial court’s jurisdiction” over the proceeding. We agree with the San Antonio and Austin Courts of Appeals that failure to serve the appraisal district within the statutory time period for filing a petition for review is not a jurisdictional bar to the appeal.
See Brooks v. Burnet Cent. Appraisal Dist.,
Reasonable Excuse for Untimely Service
Bilinseo first contends that the trial court erred in granting summary
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judgment because it presented a reasonable excuse for its failure to timely serve the district — -the conduct of the district and the board’s attorneys misled Bilinsco into believing that the district had appeared in the case and waived service. For a district court to have jurisdiction over an appeal of an appraisal review board’s order determining protest, the plaintiff must file a petition for review against the county appraisal district within forty-five days of receiving notice of the order.
See
Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 42.21(a) (Vernon 2008);
see also id.
§ 42.21(b) (“Any other petition for review under this chapter must be brought against the appraisal district.”). A timely filed suit does not interrupt the applicable statute of limitations unless the plaintiff “exercises due diligence in the issuance and service of citation.”
Proulx,
Once the defendant affirmatively pleads limitations and demonstrates that it was not served until after limitations expired, the summary judgment burden shifts to the plaintiff to explain the delay. Id. at 216. The plaintiff must present evidence demonstrating the efforts made to serve the defendant and explaining “every lapse in effort or period of delay.” Id. In determining diligence, the court assesses whether the plaintiff (1) acted as an ordinarily prudent person would act under the same or similar circumstances, and (2) was diligent up until service upon the defendant. Id.
The clerk of the court has the duty, upon request by the plaintiff, to issue and deliver the citation as directed. Tex.R. Civ. P. 99(a). A party “may ordinarily rely on the clerk to perform his duty within a reasonable time.”
Boyattia v. Hinojosa,
Bilinsco argues, however, that confusion about whether the district already had appeared excuses any delay. Our case is similar to one that the Fort Worth Court of Appeals resolved, in which the plaintiff sued two county entities, Tarrant County and the Tarrant County Sheriffs Department, represented by the same district attorney, but served only the sheriffs department.
See Tarrant County v. Vandigriff,
Here, Bilinsco did not follow up on service upon the district until after the trial court denied the board’s plea to the jurisdiction in July 2009, almost eleven months after Bilinsco filed its petition. Bilinsco ultimately bore the obligation to ensure that citation is delivered to all defendants.
See Vandigriff,
Bilinsco explains that it, the board, and the district have previously been involved in valuation disputes, and each time it appeals a board order, it forwards the notice of appeal and a copy of the petition to both defendants. The same law firm represents both the board and the district and the firm “always file[s] Answers for both Defendants, in every case.” Bilin-sco’s attorney further averred that:
In this case, I requested on behalf of Plaintiffs, Request for Disclosures to both Defendants. I received a Response assuming that it was [a] Response for both Defendants. Harris County Appraisal Review Board and Harris County Appraisal District are identified as ‘Defendant.’ The title to the document was ‘Defendant’s Responses.’ The Responses were signed by Olson & Olson as attorneys for ‘Defendant.’
The district points to the board’s answer and responses to Bilinsco’s disclosure requests, which indicate that only the board had appeared, and argues reliance on these documents is not reasonable, particularly since the response was on behalf of a single “defendant”: the style of the board’s response to Bilinsco’s Request for Disclosure states “Defendant,” instead of “Defendants.” The board began its response by stating:
Pursuant to Rule 194.2 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Defendant provides the following information in response to Plaintiffs Request for Disclosure:
(a) the correct names of the parties to the lawsuit;
RESPONSE: The style in PlaintifPs petition lists the Plaintiff as Bilinsco, Inc., and Linda Boyd. The correct name of the Defendant is Harris County Appraisal Review Board.
Furthermore, the board entitled its answer “Defendant’s Original Answer” and stated “Now Comes the Harris County Appraisal Review Board, Defendant in the above-numbered and entitled cause.” The board’s attorneys signed the answer as “Attorneys for Defendant” and also requested Rule 194 disclosures from Bilinsco in a separate document, signing that document as “Attorneys for Defendant Harris County Appraisal Review Board.”
Bilinsco sued on August 25, 2008 and served the board in late September. The board answered on October 22, but it did not respond to Bilinsco’s Request for Disclosure until April 9, 2009. Even if the board’s disclosure response could reasonably lead Bilinsco to believe that opposing counsel was responding on behalf of both defendants, and thus both defendants had appeared, Bilinsco did not receive these responses until more than five months after only the board answered and more than seven months after Bilinsco filed suit. Bilinsco offers no fact issue as to whether a reasonable excuse exists for its failure to serve the district during the seven months prior to receiving the board’s discovery responses. We therefore hold that the
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summary judgment record establishes Bil-insco’s lack of diligence in procuring service and the trial court correctly granted summary judgment.
See Boyattia,
Equitable Tolling
Finally, Bilinsco contends that the limitations period should be equitably tolled. Equitable tolling applies “where a claimant actively pursued his judicial remedies but filed a defective pleading during the statutory period, or where a complainant was induced or tricked by his adversary’s misconduct into allowing filing deadlines to pass.”
Bailey v. Gardner,
In distinguishing
Vandigriff
from
Walls,
the Fort Worth Court of Appeals observed that: (1) Vandigriff did not sue the wrong defendant, but instead sued and requested citation on both the sheriffs office and the county; (2) the district attorney signed all discovery documents from the sheriffs office as “Attorney for Defendant TCSD” and made no mention of Tarrant County; and (3) the sheriffs office “indirectly notified” Vandigriff that it failed to properly serve Tarrant County in its original answer and response to Vandigriffs requests for disclosure, in which it alleged a defect of parties.
Vandigriff,
We follow
Vandigriff,
because the court’s reasoning applies here with equal force: Bilinsco did not sue the wrong defendant, but instead sued and requested sendee of citation on both the district and the board within section 42.21(a)’s forty-five-day window. Although only the district is a necessary party to petitions to review an order determining protest, the plaintiff may also sue the board “in addition to any other required party, if appropriate.” Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 42.21(b). Thus, Bilinsco sued two proper defendants within limitations, but only one of those defendants, the board, was timely served. Similar to
Vandigriff,
all Of the documents filed by the board in this case indicated that the board was the party filing the documents, and the documents did not indicate that they were filed on behalf of the district.
See Vandigriff,
Conclusion
We hold that the summary judgment record establishes Bilinsco’s lack of diligence in serving the district. Further, because Bilinsco sued two proper defendants within the limitations period, we hold that equitable tolling does not apply. We *655 therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. In 2009, the Texas Legislature amended section 42.21(a) of the Tax Code, which governs the time period for appealing an adverse Board order to the district court, to extend the time to file a petition for review from forty-five to sixty days. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 42.21(a) (Vernon Supp. 2009); Act of June 19, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 905, § 1, 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 2435, 2435. Because this appeal to the district court was pending before the Legislature amended section 42.21(a), we apply the previous version of the statute.
