OPINION
This is an appeal from the entry of two summary judgments in an accounting malpractice case. The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Appellee, *744 KPMG Peat Marwick, dismissing all claims asserted by the limited partners of a partnership. A second summary judgment was entered dismissing all cross-claims asserted against the Appellee by the general partner of the limited partnership. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE
In 1980, 43 limited partner investors (the “Partners”) entered into an agreement of limited partnership (“Partnership Agreement”) named EPC 1980-1 (the “Partnership”). The Partnership Agreement, formed under the law of the State of Texas, named Estoril Producing Corporation as the managing partner and Rotan Mosle Energy as an additional general partner. The limited partnership certificate filed with the Texas Secretary of State defined the purposes of the Partnership to include “operations and productions of oil, gas and minerals and all things incident thereto.” Both the prospectus used to solicit limited partners and the Partnership Agreement identified the oil and gas operations to be conducted by the partnership to include “installing, ... processing, gathering, and/or transporting facilities to produce, process, gather and/or transport any oil or gas produced from any well on a Prospect....”
Estoril operated a substantial number of leases in the N.W. Tecumseh Field, located in the State of Oklahoma, where the Partnership was the largest working interest owner in the leases operated by Estoril, and as a result, had the most oil and gas to sell. Estoril initially gathered the Partnership’s gas and sold it to Public Utilities Service Company at approximately $1.28 per MMBTU. It later learned that Oklahoma Natural Gas Company (“ONG”) would buy gas at twice that amount, or more. Estoril contracted and agreed with Ed Moses and counter-defendant Bill Sumner to form a separate partnership (counter-defendant Pott County Partnership [“Pott”]) whose purpose was to (1) acquire the existing gas gathering system, (2) build a new system and/or add to the existing system and (3) use the system to gather gas that Pott would buy at one price from the Partnership, and others, and then sell to ONG for a profit. In furtherance of the Pott agreement, Estoril committed the Partnership’s gas to Pott and authorized Pott to commit the Partnership’s gas for sale to ONG. A contract was negotiated for the sale of the Partnership’s gas to ONG. 1 In essence, Estoril sold itself the Partnership gas and later resold it at a higher price to ONG, thereby realizing significant profits. 2
In addition to the above, Estoril entered into an agreement with co-defendant James Charles Hollimon and his company, Heritage Processing, Inc. and Magnum V Energy to enter into a joint venture for the construction and operation of a plant to process gas produced from the N.W. Tecumseh Field, including the Partnership gas. Estoril committed the Partnership’s gas for processing at the plant and in exchange, became a 10 percent owner of the Heritage plant and all associated gas processing contracts, including that with the Partnership. Under the terms of the Partnership Agreement, Estoril was required to engage independent certified public accountants to annually audit the financial statement of the Partnership and to report to the Partners the results of such audit. Estoril retained the services of Trott & Co. to perform the *745 audit for the year ending December 31, 1980. It engaged Peat Marwick to perform the audit for 1981, then it retained Trott & Co. and its successor company to perform the audits for the Partnership for the years 1982 through 1988.
The Partners assert that Estoril’s activities with the various other entities involved in the distribution of the Partnership’s oil and gas were related party transactions which should have been reported under principles and standards generally recognized by the accounting profession. 3
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Estoril Producing Corporation initiated the action below against the Partners seeking a declaratory judgment regarding its obligations to the Partners. The Partners filed a counterclaim against Estoril and twenty-two additional counter-defendants, including KPMG Peat Marwick, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, fraud, civil conspiracy and accounting malpractice and also seeking a declaratory judgment, an audit and an accounting. The Partners allege that Estoril and numerous other counter-defendants had secretly misappropriated economic opportunities of the Partnership in 1981, resulting in damages to the Partnership. The Partners allege that Peat Marwick’s performance in auditing the financial statements of the Partnership for 1981 constituted professional malpractice, negligence, negligence per se, negligent misrepresentation and gross negligence. No claims of fraud, conspiracy or knowing misconduct are raised against Peat Marwick.
Peat Marwick moved for and obtained summary judgment on the claims asserted by the Partners against it. Among the grounds specified in the motion for summary judgment was the defense of limitations; however, the trial court did not specify on what basis the motion for summary judgment was granted. After obtaining summary judgment on the Partners’ claims, Peat Marwick moved for summary judgment on the cross-claims filed against it by Estoril, arguing that the exoneration by summary judgment from the claims by the Partners automatically relieved Peat Marwick from any claims for breaches of duty to Estoril. It is from the granting of the above two motions for summary judgment that the instant appeal ensues. All other claims in the suit have been either settled and dismissed or severed from this action, making the summary judgments final and appealable.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
The standard of review on appeal is whether the successful movant at the trial level carried its burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that a judgment should be granted as a matter of law.
Lear Siegler, Inc. v. Perez,
In resolving the issue of whether the movant has carried this burden, all evidence favorable to the non-movant must be taken as true and all reasonable inferences, including any doubts, must be resolved in the non-movant’s favor.
Nixon,
The above standard of review is altered when the movant relies on an affirmative defense to avoid liability. Instead of merely demonstrating the lack of a fact issue as to one element of the non-movants claim, the movant must establish each element of his defense as a matter of law.
Munoz v. Gulf Oil Company,
B. Summary Judgment against the Partners
1. The Summary Judgment
The Partners alleged that Peat Mar-wick’s failure to disclose Estoril’s “related-party transactions” in connection with its audit of the Partnership’s 1981 financial statements constituted professional malpractice, negligence, negligence per se and gross negligence, and rendered its opinion a negligent misrepresentation. Peat Mar-wick moved for summary judgment on the following four grounds: (1) Peat Marwick’s conduct did not proximately cause any damage to the Partners; (2) the Partner’s claims against Peat Marwick were barred by the two-year statute of limitations; (3) a violation of professional accounting standards cannot constitute negligence per se; and (4) Peat Marwick owed no fiduciary duty to the Partners which could give rise to a claim for breach of fiduciary duty. Because the trial judge failed to articulate his reasons for granting a summary judgment, this Court must determine whether any of the grounds urged in Peat Mar-wick’s motion will support disposition by summary judgment.
2. Statute of Limitations and the Discovery Rule
The parties do not dispute that the two-year statute of limitations applies to suits for accounting negligence and malpractice.
Eagle Properties, Ltd. v. Scharbauer,
As the Texas Supreme Court has stated,
Limitations statutes afford plaintiffs what the legislature deems a reasonable *747 time to present their claims and protect defendants and the courts from having to deal with cases in which the search for truth may be seriously impaired by the loss of evidence, whether by death or disappearance of witnesses, fading memories, disappearance of documents, or otherwise. The purpose of a statute of limitations is to establish a point of repose and to terminate stale claims. [Citations omitted].
Murray v. San Jacinto Agency, Inc.,
To date, the Texas Supreme Court has not applied the discovery rule to accounting malpractice claims. In
Eagle Properties, Ltd. v. Scharbauer,
We therefore remand this cause to the court of appeals to determine which, if any, of Branum’s claims other than fraud against TCB, First Republic, and Peat Marwick are barred by the relevant statutes of limitations, and whether fact questions existed, sufficient to withstand summary judgment, regarding the date Branum knew or should have known of the actionable conduct, where necessary for determination of the statute of limitations questions. [Emphasis added].
Eagle Properties, Ltd.,
In a recent case, the Eastland Court of Appeals held that the discovery rule applies to suits for accounting malpractice.
Woodbine Electric Service, Inc. v. McReynolds,
The California Supreme Court’s opinion in
Bily v. Arthur Young & Company,
Because this suit does not revolve around the typical accountant/client relationship, this Court chooses not to blindly follow the Eastland Court’s decision that the discovery rule applies to suits for accounting malpractice. The broad term “accounting malpractice” includes a variety of services which may not be treated identically for purposes of the discovery rule. The auditor/non-client relationship may justify a different result. Accordingly, we must determine whether justice demands that the discovery rule be applied to claims of non-client third parties against auditors. This decision will be controlled by a determination of whether such claims are “inherently undiscoverable.”
Johnson v. Abbey,
Peat Marwick presented unrebutted summary judgment evidence demonstrating that Estoril made no efforts to conceal its related-party transactions from the Partners. Those transactions were in fact discovered by one limited partner, McWhirter, who is not a party to this suit. It would be illogical to hold that the Partners’ claims were “inherently undiscoverable” in the face of evidence that one limited partner did discover all the relevant details and that Estoril made no effort to conceal them. The Partners have presented no reason, and we see none, to hold that an auditee’s financial dealings or errors in financial statements are inherently undiscov-erable. Therefore, we find that justice does not require the imposition of the discovery rule when an auditor is sued for negligence by third parties who rely upon the audited financial statements.
The policy considerations behind the statute of limitations also lean in favor of protecting the auditor in a situation like the one at bar. An auditor is entitled to a point of repose beyond which claims for negligence in the performance of an audit will be stale. Otherwise, the auditor may find himself in the position feared by Justice Cardozo in an early case of auditor negligence: “[A] thoughtless slip or blunder, the failure to detect a theft or forgery beneath the cover of deceptive entries, may expose accountants to a liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class.”
Ultramares Corporation v. Touche,
We emphasize the limited nature of this holding. We do not hold that the discovery rule never applies in suits for accounting malpractice. We hold only that the rule does not toll limitations in a suit filed against an auditor by a non-client who charges negligence in the performance of an audit. Since we find that the discovery rule does not apply, the Partners’ 1989 suit for accounting malpractice, allegedly committed in 1982, was barred by the statute of limitations. Peat Marwick’s summary judgment against the Partners is affirmed, on the basis that the Partners’ suit was not filed within the time provided by the statute of limitations.
C. Summary Judgment against Estoril
1.The Summary Judgment
The trial court first granted Peat Mar-wick’s summary judgment against the Partners. Peat Marwick then moved for summary judgment against Estoril on these grounds:
1. The summary judgment of February 5, 1992, dismissing all claims against Peat Marwick alleged by the limited partners of EPC 1980-1 Ltd. also extinguishes all claims for contribution and/or indemnity against Peat Marwick alleged by the Cross-Claimants.
2. There is no genuine issue of material fact, and Peat Marwick is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
The trial court granted Peat Marwick’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to “all claims asserted against KPMG Peat Mar-wick” by Estoril.
2. Points of Error
Estoril first argues that the trial court erred in dismissing its contribution and indemnity claims against Peat Marwick. In Estoril’s second point of error, it claims to have asserted direct liability claims against Peat Marwick which should not have been dismissed along with its claims for contribution and indemnity. We address these points in reverse sequence.
3. Independent Claims
In its second point of error, Es-toril claims that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Peat Marwick because Estoril’s claims against Peat Marwick were not limited to contribution and indemnity, but included direct liability claims as well. In its First Amended Cross Claim, Estoril alleged its cause of action against Peat Marwick in this manner:
If, however, Estoril is found liable to counter-plaintiffs or intervenors, then Estoril is entitled to indemnity, contribution, or direct recovery from the Cross-claim Defendants.
3. Peat, Trott, and Coopers performed professional accounting services in connection with the preparation and audit of financial statements for EPC 1980-1. Estoril, as managing general partner of EPC 1980-1, relied upon the skill and knowledge of Peat, Trott, and Coopers to aid in the preparation of the financial statements and to audit them.
4. Coopers, Trott, and Peat Marwick had a duty to Estoril to assure that the financial statements complied with gen *750 erally accepted accounting principles and the requirements of the EPC 1980-1 partnership agreement. Estoril believes that the financial statements accurately reflect the operating results and financial position of EPC 1980-1 in each year and that they properly disclose all matters that are required to be disclosed under the partnership.... Thus, if the counter-plaintiffs or intervenors are correct in their allegations, Estoril is entitled to indemnity, contribution, or independent direct recovery from Peat, Trott, Coopers, or one or more of them for sums, if any, required to be paid to counter-plaintiffs or intervenors.
Pleadings should give fair and adequate notice of the facts on which the pleader relies in order that the adverse party may properly prepare a defense.
George A. Fuller Company v. Carpet Services, Inc.,
4. Contribution Claim
The record reflects that subsequent to the entry of summary judgment against Estoril, Estoril settled the Partners’ claims against it. It is well-settled Texas law that a settling tortfeasor is not entitled to contribution from non-settling tortfeasors. See
International Proteins Corporation v. Ralston-Purina Company,
In
Threeway Constructors, Inc. v. Aten,
When there has ceased to be a controversy between the litigating parties, the decision of an appellate court would be a mere academic exercise. When events occur after a judgment which renders the issue before the appellate court moot, the court may not decide the appeal. See
General Land Office of the State of Texas v. OXY U.S.A., Inc.,
We affirm the judgment of the trial court in favor of Peat Marwick against the Partners, and dismiss Estoril’s claim for contribution against Peat Marwick.
Notes
. The record shows that in May 1981, Moses and Sumner incorporated counter-defendant Bethel Gas Company to serve as Estoril's partner in Pott. Subsequently, Bethel, as an undisclosed agent for Pott, entered into a gas purchase contract with ONG for the sale of the Partnership’s gas.
. After the creation of Pott for the purchase, gathering and sale of gas, Estoril devised a similar arrangement for the sale of the partnership's oil. Estoril entered into an agreement with Bethel for the construction and operation of a crude oil gathering system. In 1981, the principals in Bethel incorporated co-defendant Dray-co Pipeline, Inc. which in turn entered into a partnership agreement for the formation of counter-defendant Shawnee Pipeline Co. Esto-ril sold the partnership oil to an oil purchaser, who immediately resold it at the wellhead to Shawnee. Shawnee then transported the oil over the gathering system to the initial purchaser’s pipeline, where the initial purchaser repurchased the oil from Shawnee at a higher price.
. The applicable standards include Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. These standards require disclosures in reporting entities’ financial statements of "material related party transactions.”
. The cause of action accrued when the Partners could seek a judicial remedy. This occurred when the Partners were damaged by Peat Mar-wick’s alleged negligence. Since Estoril began to profit from the self-dealing transactions in 1982, that was the year in which the Partners’ cause of action accrued.
Atkins v. Crosland,
. That case also contains an excellent discussion of the various theories of liability applied to auditors sued by third parties.
Bily,
. It is for this reason that Peat Marwick's claim that it had no fiduciary relationship with the Partners will not support its summary judgment. An auditor’s liability for negligence is not premised upon such a relationship, but upon the reliance of third parties upon his work. See
Blue Bell v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.,
.The dilemma was resolved in that case by a decision that the auditor would not be liable absent some privity of relationship between the
*749
plaintiff and the auditor.
Ultramares Corporation
v.
Touche, 255
N.Y. 170,
. We also note that the trial court's granting of the summary judgment, if error, was harmless error, since by virtue of its settlement with the Partners, Estoril could not recover contribution from Peat Marwick. If this Court were not to dismiss the cause as moot, we would be required to affirm the trial court’s judgment under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 81(b)(1), which provides that error is not reversible unless it was reasonably calculated to cause and probably did cause rendition of an improper judgment.
