OPINION ON REHEARING
We grant the rehearing motion of appel-lee, National Eligibility Express, Inc. (NEE), withdraw our opinion dated June 17, 1999, and substitute this opinion in its place. We modify the judgment to delete an award of attorney’s fees and post-judgment interest to NEE and affirm the judgment as so modified.
Background
Garcia appeals a summary judgment that he take nothing on his claims for breach of contract and conversion and awarding NEE its attorney’s fees.
Garcia alleged he worked for NEE for about seven months under an employment contract. He sued NEE for breach of contract and conversion, claiming unpaid *889 salary and commissions and unreimbursed expenses. About two and one-half years later, the trial judge granted a no-evidence summary judgment against both of Garcia’s claims and awarded NEE $3,500 in attorney’s fees. 1
Conversion
Garcia does not complain of the granting of summary judgment on his conversion claim. Therefore, that part of the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Walling v. Metcalfe,
Attorney’s Fees
In point of error three, Garcia contends there is no statutory basis for awarding NEE attorney’s fees. We agree..
NEE moved for 166a(c) summary judgment on its attorney’s fees: it was thus NEE’s burden to prove entitlement to those fees as a matter of law.
Mustang Tractor & Equip. Co. v. Cornett,
We sustain point of error three and modify the judgment to delete the award of attorney’s fees and related post-judgment interest to NEE.
Breach of Contract
In points of error one and two, Garcia contends the trial judge erred in granting summary judgment against his contract breach claim. We disagree.
NEE moved for no-evidence summary judgment on the ground that Garcia could show no evidence of damages; the burden then shifted to Garcia to produce more than a scintilla of evidence of his damages.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i);
Macias v. Fiesta Mart, Inc.,
In response, Garcia relied solely on his interrogatory answers:
Interrogatory No. 9
List separately and in detail each and every claim you assert against [NEE] by stating the dollar amount and the factual basis for each claim.
Answer No. 9
Claim Dollar mount Factual Basis
Commissions $3,500.00 (approx.) Accrued or incurred but unpaid.
Unpaid Salary $1,000.00 (approx.) Accrued or incurred but unpaid.
Travel and Employment $1,000.00 (approx.) Expenses Accrued or incurred but unpaid.
*890 In his answers, he also stated he had “various” commissions from April 1 to August 18, 1995, “various” travel expenses from July 31 to August 17, 1995, and unpaid salary from July 31 to August 17, 1995.
In its brief to this Court and in the district court, NEE complained only that this evidence was conclusory. It never argued that Garcia could not rely on his own interrogatory answers. In fact, NEE relied on Garcia’s answers. It attached his answers as its own summary judgment evidence, swore to their authenticity, and relied on them for summary judgment. Nonetheless, NEE now argues for the first time on rehearing that Garcia’s interrogatory answers cannot be used in his favor, citing
Yates v. Fisher,
In
Yates,
the court of appeals held that a nonmovant-plaintiffs interrogatory answer that was included in the movant-defen-dant’s summary judgment proof raised a fact issue.
Fisher v. Yates,
In ordinary circumstances, answers to interrogatories may only be used against the answering party. Tex.R. Civ. P. 168(2). But we believe that rule does not apply when the movant for summary judgment makes those answers a part of his own summary judgment evidence. In that situation, the movant, not the answering party, is the one “using” the answers, and he adopts those answers as a part of his own case. If the answers raise a fact issue and thereby defeat his motion, he is bound by the fact issue that his own motion raises.
Id. at 383-84.
In denying petition for writ of error for another reason, the Supreme Court disagreed with the court of appeals, stating:
The court of appeals acted contrary to Rule 168(2) and erroneously used [the plaintiffs] interrogatory answers in [the plaintiffs] favor by relying on them to defeat Yates’s motion for summary judgment.
Yates allows NEE to complain of Garcia’s reliance on his interrogatory answers now, on rehearing, for the first time, even though NEE put them into evidence. Such evidence, under Yates, is not merely inadmissible; it is incompetent. Therefore, we hold that Garcia presented no evidence of damages and that NEE was entitled to summary judgment.
We overrule points of error one and two.
We modify the judgment to delete the award of attorney’s fees and related post-judgment interest to NEE. We affirm the judgment as so modified.
Notes
. Garcia moved for its attorney’s fees under rule 166a(c). TexR. Civ. P. 166a(c).
.
See also Hanssen v. Our Redeemer Lutheran Church,
.See also Hanssen,
.See also Rodriguez v. Motor Express, Inc.,
