OPINION
Appellant, Home Savings of America, appeals a default judgment in favor of appel-lees, Harris County Water Control and Improvement District # 70, the State of Texas, Harris County, and the Crosby Independent School District. Appellants initiated this action to recover unpaid taxes. Appellants *218 seek writ of error review, contending the trial court erred by entering a default judgment because: (1) appellants answered plaintiffs original petition; and (2) appellees, the State, county, and school district, failed to serve appellant with process on their motion to intervene. We reverse and remand.
The Harris County Water Control and Improvement District # 70 filed this suit against appellants for unpaid ad valorem real property taxes. The remaining appellees subsequently intervened in the suit also to recover delinquent taxes. Appellant failed to timely answer. However, before judgment was rendered, a letter, which appeared to assert that the defendant had no interest in the land allegedly in tax default, was filed with the court. 1 The letter was addressed to the Harris County Water, Control and Improvement District, and contained the cause number from the trial court. The letter was sent by the “HSA Servicing Corporation.” The text of the letter reads:
Dear Gentlemen,
This is in response to your request of payment on the above referenced properties.
We used the information you provided to conduct a thorough research of our records. Based on our preliminary findings, HSA Servicing Corporation has no interest or lien on the above referenced parcel numbers. Therefore, we are returning the notification to you in order that you may take any further action necessary.
If you have any additional information that could help our Association to satisfy the tax delinquencies, please provide us with the information as soon as possible.
Should you have any further questions concerning the matter, please contact Ms. Sonja Taylor at [phone number].
Appellants contend that this letter constitutes an answer sufficient to avoid a default judgment.
To attack a judgment by writ of error, an appellant must meet the following requirements: (1) be a party to the suit; (2) file a petition within six months after the signing of the judgment; (3) the filing party must not have participated in the actual trial; and (4) there must be error “apparent from the face of the record.”
General Electric Co. v. Falcon Ridge Apartments, Joint Venture,
Texas appellate courts have been reluctant to uphold default judgments where some response is found in the record, even if the response is in the form of a letter.
See e.g. Smith v. Lippmann,
Although the letter in the instant case is certainly defective as an answer, it satisfies the minimum threshold necessary to prevent a default judgment.
See R.T.A International,
Appellees argue that the letter does not constitute an answer not only because of the form, but also, because it is an appearance by a corporation, and not the work of an attorney. This court has held that because Rule 7, of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, applies only to individuals, a corporate entity may only appear in court though an attorney.
Dell Development Corp. v. Best Industrial Uniform Supply Co., Inc.,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the ease remanded for trial.
Notes
. It is not clear from the record who filed the letter.
