delivered the opinion of the Court.
Believing herself to be the non-marital child of John G. Kenedy, Jr., Ann M. Fernandez has initiated multiple proceedings in both district court and statutory probate court to set aside decades-old judgments and reopen the estates of Kenedy, his wife, and his sister, and to declare Fernandez an hem to those estates. The defendants filed motions for summary judgment in the district court arguing numerous grounds, including that because Fernandez’s heir-ship claim was barred by limitations, she could not establish an interest in the estates and could not pursue bills of review. The district court granted summary judgment against Fernandez in a broadly-worded order that did not specify the grounds. The principal issue on appeal is whether the district court had jurisdiction to render summary judgment when similar bill of review proceedings and applications *497 for determination of heirship were pending in the probate court. The court of appeals held that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and was required to abate its proceedings until the probate court first resolved questions of heirship. We disagree. Fernandez’s pleadings and her direct attack on a previous judgment vested the district court with subject matter jurisdiction. Moreover, the Texas Probate Code does not authorize a probate court to exercise jurisdiction over heirship claims when an estate has been closed for decades and the decedent did not die intestate. We therefore reverse those parts of the court of appeals’ judgment that relate to jurisdiction and abatement. Further, we hold that the discovery rule does not apply to inheritance or heirship claims by non-marital children, or bill of review claims to set aside probate judgments. Because Fernandez’s claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations, we render judgment reinstating the district court’s judgment. In light of today’s ruling, we conclude that none of Fernandez’s claims for heirship or inheritance rights to the Kenedy estate remain viable, so we affirm the portion of the court of appeals’ judgment that set aside the district court’s anti-suit injunction.
I. Facts and Procedural Background
John G. Kenedy, Jr., died in 1948. In his holоgraphic will, Kenedy left all his “property of every character and description both personal and mixed” to his wife, Elena Suess Kenedy. After Kenedy’s will was probated in the County Court of Ken-edy County, Humble Oil & Refining Company, which leased mineral interests that were part of Kenedy’s estate, brought a will construction suit in district court to resolve a potential ambiguity regarding whether Kenedy’s will disposed of all Ken-edy’s real property (the Humble Oil suit). On October 12,1949, 1 the district court found that all of Kenedy’s heirs were before it and held that the will did not leave an intestacy but instead passed his interest in any property to his wife. The judgment states that “as a matter of law” Kenedy was survived by no children and that “all persons who would have inherited any part of the Estate of John G. Kenedy, Jr., deceased, if he had died intestate as to all or any part of his estate, are parties to this suit and therefore all necessary and interested parties are included among the defendants herein.” Kenedy’s estate was distributed, taxed, and closed in 1952. 2
Sarita Kenedy East, Kenedy’s sister, died in 1961. East’s 1960 will and codicils, whiсh left the bulk of East’s estate to The John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation and contained a residual clause leaving any remaining property to the Foundation, were admitted to probate later in 1961. After extensive litigation (the
Trevino
will contest), the district court dismissed several contests to the 1960 will and codicils.
See Trevino v. Turcotte,
Apart from the contests to East’s will, a temporary administrator of her estate had also filed an action to set aside certain inter vivos mineral royalty assignments East had made to the Foundation (the Garcia suit). The district court abated this action in 1964, after the Foundation argued that it would own the property at issue under East’s will regardless of the status of the inter vivos transfers, if the Trevino will contest failed. After our opinion in Trevino, in September 1978 the district court dismissed the Garcia suit with prejudice.
Mrs. Kenedy passed away in 1984, leaving a will that bequeathed most оf her estate to The John G. Kenedy, Jr. Charitable Trust. 3 That will was probated in 1984, the estate was closed in late 1987, and Mrs. Kenedy’s interest in the real property at issue was distributed to the Trust. The La Parra Ranch, which was among Kenedy’s real property assets that passed to Mrs. Kenedy, was the primary trust asset. 4
Fernandez was born in 1925 to Maria Rowland, who was then unmarried and worked for the Kenedy family. 5 For years, Fernandez heard rumors and speculation that Kenedy was her father. Fernandez alleges that on Mother’s Day of 2000, shortly before her death, Rowland revealed Kenedy’s paternity when she told Fernandez’s son, Dr. Ray Fernandez, that he bore a resemblance to his grandfather, Kenedy. Fernandez then began engaging in litigation to assert her putative right to inherit from the estates of Kenedy, his wife, and East. 6
Fernandez filed multiple lawsuits contesting court orders and probate proceedings relating to those estates, and she seeks to reopen the estates and set aside distributions of real and personal property that were made decades ago in those probate proceedings. Fernandez, who did not receive notice of the suits pertaining the estates of Kenedy, his wife, and East, contends that she should have been a party to those suits, that the judgments in those cases are not binding and should be set aside, and that she is entitled to her intestate share. We discuss the relevant underlying proceedings and filings generally in chronological order.
In October 2001, Fernandez filed her initial suit, a bill of review in the County Court of Kenedy County seeking to set aside the order probating Kenedy’s will, to reopen Kenedy’s estate, and to be declared Kenedy’s heir. 7 In May 2002, she filed *499 another bill of review and application for declaration of heirship in Kenedy’s estate in the County Court of Kenedy County. She filed additional bill of review proceedings in the County Court of Kenedy County relating to Mrs. Kenedy’s estate and East’s estate, also seeking a declaration of heirship for these estates.
Fernandez filed three petitions for bill of review in the district court for Kenedy County and Nueces County, seeking to set aside the Humble Oil, Trevino, and Garcia judgments. The district court judgments in those bill of review cases are the subject of appeals currently before us. In May 2002, Fernandez filed the first of these bills of review in the 105th District Court of Nueces County relating to the Trevino will contest (Trevino bill of review). 8 This suit also sought an accounting and distribution of property including the mineral interests in the land once held by the Kenedys and East.
On June 28, 2002, Judge Guy Herman was appointed to be the statutory probate judge over the above-referenced County Court of Kenedy County matters. 9 On November 5, 2002, citing section 5B of the Texas Probate Code, Judge Herman transferred to himself and consolidated all of the four cases then pending in county court. 10 In the same orders, Judge Herman also purported to transfer to himself the cases then pending in district court, including the Trevino bill of review. 11
Then, in May 2003, Fernandez filed in district court the other two bills of review that are now the subject of pending appeals. Fernandez initiated the underlying proceedings in the 105th District Court of Kenedy County with a bill of review to set aside the 1949 judgment from the Humble Oil will contest suit, arguing that she should have been notified of and made a party to the decades-earlier Humble Oil proceeding (Humble Oil bill of review). 12 She also filed a bill of review in the 105th District Court of Nueces County, seeking to set aside the 1978 East dismissal order, claiming that, as East’s heir, she should have been notified of and made a party to the Garcia royalty suit (Garcia bill of review). 13
In August 2003, Fernandez moved to abate the three district court bill of review cases, and for Judge Herman to transfer the remaining district court cases to him
*500
self.
14
The Foundation and Trust filed pleas to the jurisdiction challenging the probate court’s jurisdiction to transfer the bill of review cases from the district court.
See In re The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found.,
On petition for writ of mandamus, the court of appeals held that because there was no estate pending in the probate court, Judge Herman lacked authority undеr section 5B of the Texas Probate Code to transfer the bill of review proceedings that were originally filed in district court. Id. at 146. The court of appeals directed Judge Herman to vacate his transfer orders relating to the three district court bills of review, id., but the record does not show that this has yet happened. 15
While that mandamus case was pending in the court of appeals, Fernandez sought to exhume Kenedy’s remains pursuant to section 711.004 of the Texas Health and Safety Code. On June 18, 2004, two days after the court of appeals issued its mandamus ruling, Judge Herman concluded that he had jurisdiction to consider the exhumation motion. He then granted the motion to exhume to allow DNA testing to determine if Kenedy is Fernandez’s biological father. After proceedings in the court of appeals and a hearing before Judge Herman, an exhumation date was set for July 10, 2004.
See In re Frost Nat’l Bank,
In January 2006, while the exhumation mandamus cases were pending in this Court, the Trust and Foundation moved for summary judgment in the Trevino and Humble Oil bill of review cases in district court. 18 The Foundation also moved for *501 summary judgment in the Garcia bill of review case in May 2006. The motions presented various grounds for summary judgment, including Fernandez’s lack of standing to pursue the bills of review and expiration of the applicable limitations period, both for an heirship determination and for the bill of review itself. Among other things, the Trust and Foundation argued that these bars precluded Fernandez from establishing a right to inherit from Kenedy or East, such that Fernandez could not establish a meritorious claim warranting a bill of review.
Meanwhile, the Foundation also filed an emergency application for temporary restraining order and a request for a permanent injunction in the Trevino and Garcia bills of review cases, and the Trust made similar filings in the Humble Oil bill of review case. The Trust and Foundation argued that Fernandez’s filings in probate court were a continuing attempt to circumvent the district court’s jurisdiction. The district court issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Fernandez from proceeding with a motion she had filed in probate court, which sought to reopen Kenedy’s estate аnd to have the bill of review proceedings transferred to the probate court and abated in the district court. Fernandez did not seek appellate court relief from that order.
The action in the district court proceeded. In March 2006, in the Humble Oil and Trevino bills of review, the district court denied Fernandez’s motion to abate and denied a motion to transfer. Finally, on March 27, 2006, the district court rendered summary judgment for the Trust and Foundation without specifying the grounds in the Trevino and Humble Oil bill of review cases.
On April 12, 2006, the district court issued permanent anti-suit injunctions in those two cases, enjoining Fernandez from taking actions inconsistent with the district court’s judgment in the probate court or any other court, including any attempt to reopen the' estates, establish a right to inherit from the estates, set aside the wills, or recover an interest in property distributed from the estates. The district court issued an order on April 25, 2006 that incorporated both the March 27 summary judgment and the April 12 injunctive relief. Fernandez appealed both the summary judgment and the anti-suit injunction in those two cases.
The district court also rendered summary judgment for thе Foundation in the Garcia bill of review case on June 22, 2006. 19 The same day, as it had in the other two cases, the district court issued a permanent anti-suit injunction in this case. Fernandez appealed only the anti-suit injunction in the Garcia bill of review case.
Turning to the
Humble Oil
bill of review, the instant case before us, the court of appeals reversed, concluding that the probate court had dominant jurisdiction over the question of Fernandez’s heirship and whether she had an interest in Kenedy’s estate.
On the
Trevino
bill of review, the court of appeals also reversed, again concluding that the probate court had dominant jurisdiction and remanding to the district court for abatement.
Fernandez v. The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found.,
On the
Garcia
bill of review, the court of appeals again reversed, this time concluding only that the district court acted improperly by entering an anti-suit injunction.
Fernandez v. The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Found.,
II. Summary Judgment
The Trust first argues that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction to render judgment that Fernandez take nothing in her bill of review suit, and that the court of appeals erroneously held that the district court must abate its bill of review proceedings to allow the probate court to determine heirship. “Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law.”
Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
A. Jurisdiction
1. Fernandez’s Pleadings
The Trust contends that Fernandez’s pleading of facts supportive of standing vested the district court with subject matter jurisdiction over the
Humble Oil
bill of review case. We agree. Inherent in a court’s jurisdiction is the authority to determine whether it can exercise subject matter jurisdiction over the case, including determining standing.
See Houston Mun. Employees Pension Sys. v. Ferrell,
It has long been the rule that a plaintiffs goоd faith allegations are used to
*503
determine the trial court’s jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Brannon v. Pac. Employers Ins. Co.,
The court of appeals believed that employing such a presumption amounts to conferring standing by estoppel.
2. Direct Attack on 1949 Judgment
Because Fernandez’s claims are a direct attack on the 1949
Humble Oil
judgment, brought by bill of review, the district court had authority to determine Fernandez’s standing to proceed, including whether she can establish heirship. A bill of review is brought as a direct attack on a judgment that is no longer appealable or subject to a motion for new trial.
King Ranch, Inc. v. Chapman,
3. Probate Code
The court of appeals believed that “[t]he real jurisdictional problem plaguing the summary judgment is that it was rendered by a district court that did not have control over the heirship issues that are central to Fernandez’s petition.”
To further complicate matters, the district courts exercise some probate jurisdiction. The Probate Code provides that “[t]he district сourt shall have original control and jurisdiction over executors, administrators, guardians and wards under such regulations as may be prescribed by law.” Tex. Prob.Code § 5(a) (Supp.1992). In those counties where there is no statutory court exercising probate jurisdiction, most probate matters must be filed in the constitutional county court, id. § 5(b); however, the county judge may transfer contested matters to the district court, which may then hear them “as if originally filed in district court.” Id. In this situation the county court retains jurisdiction over the uncontested portions of the case. Id. The county judge may also request the assignment of a statutory probate judge to hear contested matters. Id.
Palmer,
In counties such as Kenedy with no statutory probate court, county court at law, or other statutory court exercising probate jurisdiction, “all applications, petitions, and motions regarding probate and administrations shall be filed and heard in the county court,” except that in contested probate matters, the contested portion can be assigned to a statutory probate court judge
*506
or transferred to district court. Tex. Prob. Code § 5(b).
22
“All courts exercising original probate jurisdiction shall have the power to hear all matters incident to an estate.”
Id.
§ 5(f). “ ‘[Ijncident to an estate’ ... includefs] the probate of wills, the issuance of letters testamentary and of administration, and the determination of heirship, and also include[s], but [is] not limited to, all claims by or against an estate, ... all actions to construe wills, ... and generally all matters relating to the settlement, partition, and distribution of estates of deceased persons.”
Id.
§ 5A(a). But we have said that a “court empowered with probate jurisdiction may only exercise its probate jurisdiction over matters incident to an estate when a probate proceeding related to such matters is already pending in that court.”
Bailey v. Cherokee County Appraisal Dist.,
Moreover, section 48 of the Probate Code provides that a proceeding to declare heirship may be filed in the probate court only when a person died intestate as to some or all of his or her property, when a will has been probated or estate administered but real or personal property was omitted, or when there has not been a final disposition. Tex. Prob.Code § 48(a) (per
*507
mitting suit for declaration of heirship “[w]hen a person dies intestate” and “there shall have been no administration in this State upon his estate” or when a will has been probated or an estate administered but property was “omitted from such will or from such administration”);
see id.
§ 3(o) (defining “heirs” as “those persons ... who are entitled under the statutes of descent and distribution to the estate of a deсedent who dies intestate”). That is not the case here. Because Kenedy left a will that disposed of all his property, as determined by the district court'in the
Humble Oil
suit, and because his estate was fully administered and closed, the Probate Code does not authorize the probate court to determine heirship.
23
See Cogley v. Welch,
B. Abatement
The Trust challеnges the court of appeals’ holding that the later-filed case — the
Humble Oil
bill of review in the district court — must be abated to allow resolution of the earlier filed applications for declaration of heirship in the probate
*508
court.
25
C. Merits
Although the court of appeals did not review the merits of the summary judgment, the Trust asks us to affirm that judgment, noting that the judgment does not involve and could not be affected by resolution of Fernandez’s heirship claim. To avoid unnecessary delay, we may consider issues of law rather than remanding them to the court of appeals.
Placencio v. Allied Indus. Int’l, Inc.,
1. Limitations
When limitations plainly bars a putative heir from proving her heirshiр, a court is not required to waste time and resources on a paternity determination before disposing of her claims.
See Little v. Smith,
When an heirship claim is brought after an administration of the decedent’s estate or a conveyance of the decedent’s property to a third party, courts have applied the four-year residual limitations period of Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 16.051.
See, e.g., Cantu v. Sapenter,
2. Discovery Rule
“Texas courts have refused to apply the discovery rule to claims arising out of probate proceedings in most instances....”
Little,
In many cases, however, adoptees may be unable to timely assert inheritance rights, even with the exercise of the utmost diligence. Not all adoptees may know that they are adopted within the applicable limitations period. Even if they know that they are adopted, they may not know where they were born or, more to the point, where the adoption proceedings occurred, so that they may attempt to obtain access to their birth records. Conducting a meaningful search for your identity is difficult if you do not know where to begin that search. And assuming an adoptee found the correct court to petition, that court could well refuse to open adoption records if the only basis for doing so was to allow *510 the adoptee to see if any inheritance claims existed.
Id.
at 418. A non-marital child who grows up not knowing the identity of her father could be said to face similar difficulties. But the Court in
Little
balanced those concеrns against a “strong public interest in according finality to probate proceedings,” declining to apply the discovery rule.
Id.
at 421 (analyzing legislative policy governing adoption). Although the
Little
context of the legislative scheme governing adoption is distinguishable from the instant case, the Court’s reasoning in
Little
applies with equal force to belated inheritance claims brought by non-marital children.
See Turner v. Nesby,
Fernandez argues that application of the discovery rule is constitutionally required and that the United States Supreme Court already weighed the relevant policies and found the policy in favor discovery rule application to allow non-marital children to assert their inheritance rights to be the stronger interest.
See Reed v. Campbell,
The state interest in the orderly disposition of decedents’ estates ... justifies the enforcement of generally applicable limitations on the time and the manner in which claims may be asserted. After an estate has been finally distributed, the interest in finality may provide an additional, valid justification for barring the belated assertion of claims, even though they may be meritorious and even though mistakes of law or fact may have occurred during the probate process.
Id.
at 855-56,
Because the discovery rule does not apply in this case, and because Fernandez concedes that absent application of the discovery rule her claims are time-barred, we need not consider when Fernandez discovered or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered the truth of her paternity.
29
Instead, because the four-year residual limitations period expired long before Fernandez filed her bills of review, we reinstate the district court’s summary judgment.
30
See Ladehoff
*512
v. Ladehoff,
III. Anti-suit Injunction
The court of appeals held that because its summary judgment was improper and its proceedings should have been abated, the district court could not enter an anti-suit injunction.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons expressed above, we reverse the portions of the court of appeals’ judgment that relate to jurisdiction and abatement. We hold that the discovery rule does not apply to heirship and inheritance claims brought by non-marital children, or to bill of review claims to set aside probate judgments. We therefore render judgment reinstating the district court’s summary judgment. We affirm the portion of the court of appeals’ judgment that relates to the anti-suit injunction.
Notes
. The specific dates and sequence of events are generally not significant to the outcome of this case. We include them for purposes of organizing the complicated relevant procedural events, and to refer to certain specific orders entered by the various trial courts.
. In 1949, the probate court “ordered that the proceedings in [Kenedy’s] Estate, in so far as the administration of this estate is concerned, be, and they are hereby closed, save and except as to such proceedings as are required in determining and fixing the Inheritance Tax, if any, due upon said Estate.” Although the court signed an order fixing inheritance tax in 1952, it does not appear from thе record that the court subsequently issued any other orders relating to Kenedy’s estate.
. We refer to the petitioners in this case collectively as the Trust.
. Kenedy owned approximately 200,000 acres of the La Parra Ranch at his death, and his sister, Sarita Kenedy East, owned the other half.
. Rowland married Desiderio Peña during Fernandez’s childhood, and later married Tom Goates when Fernandez was in her twenties.
. In 2002, the County Court at Law No. 5 of Nueces County appointed Dr. Fernandez to serve as guardian of his mother’s estate. It appears that he is now prosecuting the litigation on Fernandez’s behalf.
. We describe this as a bill of review, since in substance this is what it was, although Fernandez did not style it as such, instead calling it an ''application to set aside order probating will with application for declaration and determination of heirship.” Fernandez's later *499 filings in these probate cases were expressly referred to as bills of review.
. On appeal here as 08-0528, The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found. v. Fernandez.
. The appointment order stated that Judge Herman would hold all rights, powers, and privileges held by the regular judge оf the court and the attendant jurisdiction of a statutory probate court. See Tex. Gov't Code § 25.0022.
. The cases were consolidated into cause no. 395, in which Fernandez then sought a determination of heirship and her share of an interest in intestate property.
. Along with the Trevino bill of review, Fernandez had filed a “petition with application for temporary restraining order,” in Fernandez v. Exxon Mobil Corp., No. 02-2331-C (97th Dist. Ct., Nueces County), alleging that Humble Oil & Refining Company had become known as Exxon/Mobil. That particular suit is not before us on appeal.
. This bill of review proceeding gave rise to the instant appeal. Originally, the Humble Oil suit had been cause no. 35 in the 28th District Court of Kenedy County. According to the Trust, the 105th District Court became the successor to the 28th District Court of Kenedy County on or about September 1, 1985.
. On appeal here as 08-0529, The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found, v. Fernandez.
. Fernandez first moved to abate the Humble Oil and Garcia bills of review in May 2003 so that Judge Herman could transfer the cases to himself. With regard to the Trevino bill of review, Judge Herman had already purported to transfer the case to himself. Later, in August 2003, Fernandez also moved to abate the Trevino bill of review, asserting that, "to the extent [the district court] retains the case,” the court should stop its рroceedings to let Judge Herman proceed.
. No original proceeding was filed in this Court concerning whether Judge. Herman abused his discretion by ordering a transfer from district court, as the court of appeals found.
.In re The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem'L Found., 04-0607; In re Frost Nat’l Bank, 04-0608.
. On February 25, 2008, we abated those exhumation mandamus cases pending resolution of the underlying appeal and two related appeals.
See
. The Foundation sought summary judgment in the Trevino proceeding, and the Trust sought summary judgment in the Humble Oil proceeding.
. The district court never ruled on Fernandez's motion to abate in the Garcia bill of review, or seemed to acknowledge Fernandez’s attempts to transfer the case to Judge Herman. Its final summary judgment order stated categorically that all relief requested by Fernandez is denied.
. Fernandez also argues that the district court could not assume standing or rule on standing because that issue is currently pending with this Court in the mandamus cases regarding exhumation of Kenedy's body. See In re The John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found., 04-0607; In re Frost NatT Bank, 04-0608. She essentially suggests that this Court has exclusive jurisdiction ovеr the standing (and heirship) issue because it is under consideration in the mandamus cases. But that position is inconsistent with her insistence that the probate court has exclusive jurisdiction, and it overstates the question before the Court in the exhumation cases. There, we must determine whether the probate court had authority to order the exhumation of Kenedy’s body for DNA testing to determine the issue of Kenedy's paternity. Although the paternity issue may be related to Fernandez’s standing to pursue bills of review to reopen the estates, we were not asked in the mandamus cases to decide the issue of Fernandez’s standing in the district court.
. In its opinion in the instant case, the court of appeals explained the apparent conflict between its earlier mandamus ruling on Judge Herman’s transfer order and the underlying holding that “the probate court holds exclusive jurisdiction over the heirship and probate matters at the center of Fernandez’s petition for an equitable bill of review.”
. What is widely referred to — and cited — as the Texas Probate Code is technically still located in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes, having never been codified according to the Legislature's 1963 mandate to the Texas Legislative Council. See Tex. Gov’t Code § 323.007 (calling for "a permanent statutory revision program for the systematic and continuous study of the statutes of this state and for the formal revision of the statutes on a topical or code basis”). It wаs, however, revised in 2009, in preparation for codification. See Act of June 3, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 1351, 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4273-82. Much of it will be redesignated and codified in the newly-adopted Texas Estates Code, which will not become operative until 2014. See id. § 15, 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4282. Some former probate provisions will not be codified, however. For example, the 81st Legislature repealed parts of section 5 of the Probate Code, effective in 2009. See id. § 12(h), 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4279. The jurisdictional provisions of section 5 were effectively replaced by new jurisdictional provisions, located in sections 4A-4H. See id. § 12(b), 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4275-78. Because these revisions do not affect our analysis in the instant case, we will continue to cite and refer to the relevant previous sections of the Probate Code in this opinion. See id. § 12(i), 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4279 ("An action filed or proceeding commenced before the effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the date the action was filed or the proceeding was commenced, and the former law is continued in effect for that purposе.”).
. Fernandez also relies on section 42(b) of the Probate Code, relating to the rights of non-marital children to inherit from their fathers, which states in part:
A person claiming to be a biological child of the decedent, who is not otherwise presumed to be a child of the decedent, or claiming inheritance through a biological child of the decedent, who is not otherwise presumed to be a child of the decedent, may petition the probate court for a determination of right of inheritance.
Tex. Prob.Code § 42(b). But section 42 was enacted in 1955, years after Kenedy died, and only the statutes in effect at the time of death govern disposition of the estate. See
Dickson v. Simpson,
. Fernandez does not seem to dispute that if the district court were to decide her heirship claim, it could do so on the issue on the basis of limitations, without having to determine paternity at the outset. We address the district court’s summary judgment below. Additionally, we acknowledge that if it were possible for Fernandez to successfully set aside the 1949 Humble Oil judgment and have Kene-dy’s will construed to effectuate some intestacy, the probate court might then have jurisdiction under section 48 of the Probate Code.
. The Trust also contends that Fernandez failed to preserve any argument regarding abatement in her briefing to the court of appeals. Although Fernandez did not specifically identify abatement as one of the issues presented, she complained about the district court's refusal to abate in her anti-suit injunction discussion. Even assuming Fernandez preserved the abatement argument, we conclude that the grounds for abatement were not met.
. We note that even if the probate court were required to determine heirship before subject matter jurisdiction attached in the district court, abatement may not be the proper remedy.
See State
v.
Morales,
.The Trust contends that Fernandez did not adequately challenge all potential summary judgment grounds and, consequently, we must affirm the summary judgment.
See Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier,
. We have also never applied the discovery rule in the context of еquitable bills of review. Fernandez argues that the discovery rule applies to save bill of review claims that would otherwise be time-barred, citing cases in which courts of appeals have applied the discovery rule in cases of extrinsic fraud.
See, e.g., Vandehaar v. ALC Financial Corp., 25
S.W.3d 406, 409 & n. 2 (Tex.App.-Beaumont 2000, pet. denied);
Defee v. Defee,
. The Trust asserts that even if Fernandez could invoke the discovery rule, summary judgment was proper because the evidence shows that Fernandez was on inquiry notice of her alleged claim of paternity before Kene-dy’s death and decades before filing her bills of review. Fernandez testified that, based on comments made by her cousins, she suspected Kenedy might be her father as early as age 14 or 15. Fernandez also said that she suspected Kenedy was her father because he brought her dolls for Christmas, and fruit.
Fernandez further stated that as a young adult, sometime around her еarly twenties, she heard her stepfather say several times to her mother that he was “supporting somebody else’s fun,” and that he was going to get child support from Kenedy for Fernandez. But Fernandez did not bring the bills of review for more than 50 years, until she was 76. Fernandez says it has been well established that she was not aware of her status as a non-marital child until 2000, when her mother confirmed that Kenedy was her father. We need not resolve this dispute, as we conclude that the discovery rule does not apply in this context as a matter of law.
.We note that a bill of review is generally available to a party who exercised due diligence in pursuing all adequate legal remedies against a former judgment and did not ignore available legal remedies.
Wembley Inv. Co. v. Herrera,
