OPINION
The Dallas County Appraisal District (the District) appeals from the trial court’s grant of mandamus ordering it to “accept and process” the property tax exemption applications filed by appellee Funds Recovery, Inc. d/b/a Asset Resolution Corporation (A.R.C.) under the Property Tax Code (the Code). 1 Because we conclude that the trial court lacked jurisdiction, we dismiss. 2
*467 After reviewing public property tax records to find homeowners with unclaimed homestead exemptions, AR.C. contacts these homeowners to secure an authorization and appointment to act as the homeowners’ agent to obtain their legally entitled refunds. AR.C. is compensated for its service. The District is a political subdivision of the State of Texas that processes tax exemption applications through its chief appraiser.
In October 1991, A.R.C. filed with the District a large number of applications for individual residential homestead exemptions for the 1990 and 1991 tax years. Each application contained the required Appointment of Agent form promulgated by the state comptroller’s office under authority of the Code. 3 Through its president, AR.C. had signed the Appointment of Agent forms appointing itself as tax agent for each homeowner. Each application also contained a form signed by the homeowner (“Homeowner Authorization”) containing the following:
I hereby authorize and appoint AR.C. to act as my agent in accordance with V.T.CA. Tax Code Section 1.111, to do anything legally reasonably necessary to apply for and obtain the funds to which they believe I am entitled, to use my name, to receipt for me and endorse on my behalf checks, drafts or instruments, negotiable or otherwise.
On October 29,1991, the District returned all the applications to AR.C. with a letter from Junell Pogue, Manager of Exemptions for the District. The letter stated that AR.C.’s Homeowner Authorizations did not authorize AR.C. to appoint tax agents. The letter explained that “the Appointment of Agent form[s] must be signed by one of the following: the property owner; a person the owner has specifically authorized to name tax agents; or by a corporate officer (if the owner is a corporation).” 4 The letter requested AR.C. to resubmit the exemption applications with appropriate signatures. The letter noted that those “applications that were submitted are not valid and new applications will need to be filed with this office.”
A.R.C. petitioned the district court for a writ of mandamus and other relief. 5 AR.C. alleged that “[d]espite written and oral demands made by [AR.C.] upon [the District], it has persisted in its refusal to accept applications for refund from [AR.C.] and refuses to process applications for refund filed by [A.R.C.].” Neither AR.C.’s petition nor its summary-judgment evidence reflected any appeal of the District’s action to the Appraisal Review Board, the protest board established by the Code. See TexTax Code Ann. §§ 6.41, 41.41 (Vernon 1992). AR.C. prayed, in part, that the District “immediately receive and process” the 1990 and 1991 applications, pay AR.C. and its clients monetary damages, and indemnify A.R.C. for its attorney’s fees.
Both parties moved for summary judgment on the mandamus claim. A.R.C. based its motion on the grounds that it “complied with all of the provisions, conditions and requirements of the Texas Property Tax Code in acting as tax agent for its clients, and therefore, there is no issue as to any material fact to preclude summary judgment.” AR.C. contends, essentially, that, as a matter of law, the authority delegated to it by the Homeowner Authorizations is broad enough to encompass the naming of tax agents.
The District based its motion for summary judgment in the mandamus action on an absence of a clear legal duty to perform nondis-cretionary acts. It argues that because the forms submitted did not specifically grant authority to name tax agents, the District exercised its discretion to determine the sufficiency of the forms. The District moved for summary judgment on AR.C.’s remaining claims based on the doctrine of sovereign immunity. After a hearing, the trial court (i) granted AR.C. summary judgment for mandamus relief, (ii) denied the District summary judgment on the mandamus action, and *468 (iii) granted the District summary judgment on A.R.C.’s remaining claims.
Jurisdiction over Appeal
During oral argument, A.R.C. re-urged its presubmission motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. A.R.C.’s motion challenged our jurisdiction over this appeal on the grounds that the District (i) failed to file a cost bond, (ii) filed a defective notice of appeal, and (iii) asserted an indefinite point of error. A motions panel of this Court denied A.R.C.’s motion without opinion. We conclude that A.R.C.’s jurisdictional arguments are meritless.
First, an appraisal district is exempt from filing an appeal bond.
Dallas County Appraisal Dist. v. Institute for Aerobics Research,
Second, A.R.C. asserts that the District’s notice of appeal was defective in identifying the appealed-from judgment. We overrule this argument as moot because the defect has been cured by an amended notice of appeal. See Tex.R.App.P. 46(f); 83.
Finally, A.R.C. asserts this Court lacks jurisdiction because the District’s “point of error is too indefinite”
7
and “failfed] to comply with the briefing requirements.”
See
Tex.R.App.P. 74. This Court has jurisdiction over any appeal where the appellant files an instrument that was filed in a bona fide attempt to invoke appellate court jurisdiction.
Grand Prairie Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Southern Parts Imports, Inc.,
Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction over an appeal and subject matter jurisdiction, however, are two different concepts. Subject matter jurisdiction is fundamental error and may be raised for the first time on appeal.
Grounds v. Tolar Indep. Sch. Dist.,
*469
Our standard for reviewing subject matter jurisdiction requires the pleader to allege facts that affirmatively demonstrate the trial court’s jurisdiction to hear the cause.
Texas Ass’n of Business,
A.R.C.’s main contention in this suit is that it should not be required to resubmit its applications. A.R.C.’s argument is based on the premise that its agent authorization forms are sufficient as a matter of law to grant it the authority to name itself as tax agent for the homeowners. The District disagreed with A.R.C.’s interpretation of its agent authorization forms, concluding that those authorizations were not “specific” enough as required by the comptroller’s form.
There is no dispute about the comptroller’s authority to require specificity of a tax agent’s authority.
See
TexTax Code Ann. § 1.111(h). At oral argument, A.R.C. stated that the only issue before us is a question of law. “Specificity,” however, is an issue where reasonable minds can differ. We cannot conclude, therefore, that “specificity” is a pure question of law; thus, the doctrine of exhaustion of remedies is applicable.
Cf. Grounds,
Choosing to ignore any administrative remedies it had, A.R.C. challenged the District’s decision through this mandamus action. We now turn to consider whether the Code provides A.R.C. an administrative remedy.
The Code requires the chief appraiser to “accept and approve or deny” applications for residence homestead exemptions. TexTax Code Ann. § 11.431(a) (Vernon 1992). The Code then explains in detail the duties of the chief appraiser’s office regarding the exemption applications:
(a) The chief appraiser shall determine separately each applicant’s right to an exemption. After considering the application and all relevant information, the chief appraiser shall, as the law and facts warrant:
(1) approve the application and allow the exemption;
(2) modify the exemption applied for and allow the exemption as modified;
(3) disapprove the application and request additional information from the applicant in support of the claim; or
(4) deny the application.
(b) If the chief appraiser requests additional information from an applicant, the applicant must furnish it within 30 days after the date of the request or the application is denied.
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(d) If the chief appraiser modifies or denies an exemption, he shall deliver a written notice of the modification or denial to the applicant within five days after the date he makes the determination. He shall include with the notice a brief explanation of the procedures for protesting his action.
TexTax Code Ann. § 11.45 (Vernon 1992). A.R.C. admits that the chief appraiser is given broad discretion in determining the applicant’s right to an exemption, “provided it exercises its discretion ‘as the law and facts warrant.’ ” See id. § 11.45(a). Relying on subsection (a), A.R.C. asserts that the chief appraiser has “refused” to “receive and determine” its applications. 8
Section 11.45(a) of the Code expressly grants the chief appraiser four options in evaluating exemption applications. One of those options is to disapprove the application and request additional information. TexTax Code Ann. § 11.45(a)(3) (Vernon 1992). The District’s rejection letter stated that the applications as submitted were invalid and requested their resubmission with additional information. The letter explained the deficiency in the applications and how it could be corrected. In our opinion, section 11.45(a)(3) of the Code authorized the District’s action on A.R.C.’s applications.
*470 A.R.C. was obligated to provide the requested additional information within thirty days; otherwise, the application would be “denied” by operation of law. See Tex.Tax Code ANN. § 11.45(b) (Vernon 1992). A.R.C. provided no summary judgment evidence that it submitted the additional information to the District, arguing instead that it was unnecessary to submit the requested additional information. We conclude that the summary judgment evidence shows, under the Code’s express provisions, that A.R.C.’s applications were denied by operation of law thirty days after the date of the rejection letter. Accordingly, the District has already “received and determined” appellee’s applications.
The Code authorizes the District’s appraisal review board to hear and determine protests by property owners about decisions of the District. Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 41.41 (Vernon 1992);
see Dallas County Appraisal Dist. v. Lal,
Section 41.41 of the Code provides eight specific determinations by the District that may be protested by a property owner or agent to an Appraisal Review Board. See Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 41.41 (Vernon 1992). One of the enumerated protests is “denial to the property owner in whole or in part of a partial exemption.” Id. § 41.41(4). Subsection (9) authorizes a protest of “any other action of the chief appraiser [or] appraisal district ... that applies to and adversely affects the property owner.” Id. § 41.41(9). We conclude that subsections (4) and (9) of section 41.41 of the Code provide administrative remedies for the denial of A.R.C.’s exemption applications. 9
Under the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine, failure to comply with the administrative review procedures of the Code to their fullest extent precludes judicial review.
Webb County Appraisal Dist.,
We can find no evidence in the appellate record to support an inference that AR.C. attempted any review under the Code.
10
Because A.R.C. did not exhaust its administrative remedies, it is preeluded from challenging the denial of the exemptions in a judicial proceeding.
See Webb County Appraisal Dist.,
A writ of mandamus is an extraordinary writ. However, “[a]n original proceeding for writ of mandamus
initiated in the trial court
is a civil action subject to trial and appeal on substantive law issues and the rules of procedure
as any other civil suit.” Anderson v. City of Seven Points,
We hold that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to issue the writ of mandamus in this case due to A.R.C.’s failure to exhaust its administrative remedies. Where the trial court does not have jurisdiction to render a judgment, the proper practice is for the reviewing court to set the judgment aside and dismiss the cause.
See Fulton v. Finch,
Notes
. Tex.Tax Code Ann. §§ 1.01-43.04 (Vernon 1992 & Supp.1994).
. At trial, the Director of Revenue and Taxation for the City of Dallas and the Tax Assessor-Collector of Dallas County were also defendants; however, neither pursued an appeal of the trial court’s order. The District and A.R.C., therefore, are the only parties to this appeal.
. See Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 1.111(h) (Vernon 1992).
. All emphasis supplied by author unless otherwise noted.
. A common-law mandamus action has three requisites: a legal duty to perform a nondiscre-tionary act, a demand for performance, and a refusal.
Stoner v. Massey,
. Assuming,
arguendo,
that A.R.C.'s argument is correct, we could not dismiss for lack of jurisdiction without first providing the District an opportunity to file a cost bond.
Grand Prairie Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Southern Parts Imports, Inc.,
. The District’s sole point of error is:
The District Court erred in granting the [A.R.C.’s] Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment and in failing to grant [the District's] Motion for Summary Judgment in its entirety.
. Assuming, without deciding, that section 11.45(d) applies to the denial of an application, the rejection letter did not comply with section 11.45(d) of the Code; however, A.R.C. made no complaint of this deficiency at trial or on appeal.
. Assuming, arguendo, that we are incorrect that A.R.C.’s applications were “denied" by operation of law under section 11.45(b), subsection (9) of section 41.41 of the Code provides A.R.C. an administrative remedy for the District's refusal to "receive and process” its applications.
. Our supreme court has noted the potential prejudice from the inability of a party to amend its pleadings if an appellate court
sua sponte
dismisses for lack of jurisdiction.
See Texas Ass’n of Business,
