OPINION
Jоhn Thomas Lawrence, Sr. appeals from an adverse judgment in his bill of review action seeking to set aside portions of a divorce decree. The trial court granted respondent Irene Lawrence a summary judgment. We affirm.
John Lawrence and Irene Lawrence were divorced by а decree rendered on June 3, 1988, in the 71st District Court of Harrison County. Neither filed a motion for a new *446 trial, appealed, or filed for a writ of error. On February 24,1995, John Lawrence filed a bill of review seeking to overturn part of the 1988 decree dealing with the marital estate division. Irene Lawrence mоved for summary judgment on grounds that the pleadings failed to show that John Lawrence was entitled to relief by bill of review, and that the action was barred by limitations and laches. The court granted Irene Lawrence’s motion for summary judgment without specifying the grounds relied upon. 1
John Lawrence raises several points of error, which in general contend that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment.
Summary judgment is proper when the movant shows by uneontroverted or conclusive summary judgment evidence that no issue of material fact exists and that she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In deciding whether a disputed material fact issue precludes summary judgment, a reviewing court will take as true all evidence favorable to the nonmovant and will indulge all reasonable inferences and resolve all doubts in the nonmovant’s favor.
Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co.,
A reviewing court may not affirm a summary judgment on any ground not presented in a summary judgment motion.
Hall v. Harris County Water Control & Improvement Dist. No. 50,
A bill of review is an independent equitable action
2
that a party to а previous action brings seeking to set aside the prior judgment that is no longer appealable or subject to a new-trial motion.
Baker v. Goldsmith,
The plaintiff also must allege and prove that he exercised due diligence to avail himself of all adequate legal remedies against the former judgment and that when he filed the bill of review no such adequate legal remedy remained.
Biggs v. Biggs,
The plaintiff must as a pretrial matter present prima facie proof to support the meritorious defense.
Baker v. Goldsmith,
John Lawrence claims three defenses: (1) the trial court abused its discretion in dividing the marital estate; (2) Irene Lawrence committed fraud by concealing marital assets; and (3) the court improperly аwarded Irene Lawrence a life estate in John Lawrence’s separate property homestead.
As to the first two defenses, we find that John Lawrence did not produce competent summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of fact on those defenses.
As to the third defense, the trial court awarded ten acres in Harrison County to John Lawrence as his separate property and awarded Irene Lawrence a
$50,000.00
judgment against John Lawrence. The court, noting the land was John Lawrence’s separate property, granted Irene Lawrence the “exclusive use, benefit, enjoyment and right of occupancy of the 10 acre tract,” during her life. The court did this to restore Irene Lawrence “to her prior homestead, and as a result of Respondent’s wrongful acts which substantially contributed to the dissolution of the marriage.” John Lawrence contends that the trial court improperly awarded Irene Lawrence a life estate rather than a homestead interest, thereby divesting him of his fee interest in his separate property.
LeBlanc v. LeBlanc,
To be entitled to a bill of review, however, John Lawrence must also prove that he was prevented from proving his defense because of extrinsic, rather than intrinsic, fraud,
Alexander v. Hagedom,
Extrinsic fraud is a wrongful act of the opposing party that prevents the losing party from either knowing about his rights or defenses or from having a fair opportunity of presenting them at trial.
Alexander v. Hagedom, supra.
Extrinsic fraud is collateral to the matter tried and not something that was actually or potentially in issue at trial.
Law v. Law,
John Lawrence contends that Irene Lawrence acknowledged at trial that she had *448 some community funds in a bank account and that she had not included the funds and the account in her inventory, but that the trial court prevented him from proving those facts. These fаcts, at best, would constitute intrinsic fraud because they constitute something that the court heard and considered in rendering judgment. Thus, they will not support a bill of review. Even though John Lawrence apparently has a meritorious defense on the question of the life estate awarded Irene Lawrenсe, he has not shown that he was prevented by extrinsic fraud from making his defense.
A bill of review petitioner need not show extrinsic fraud on his opponent’s part if he can show that his reliance on a court officer who improperly executed his official duties led to the judgment. Transworld Fin. Servs. v. Briscoe, supra. A court officer in this context does not include the party’s attorney. Id. John Lawrence alleges that his misplaced reliance on his attorney led in part to his failure to pursue his appeal. This does not constitute official mistake.
Even if John Lawrence both presented his meritorious defense and proved extrinsic fraud or official mistake, he also must show he exercised due diligence to avail himself of all adequate legal remedies against the former judgment.
Biggs v. Biggs, supra.
He neither filed a motion for a new trial nor appealed the original judgment. If he had legal remedies available but ignored them, the equitable remedy of a bill of review will not later intervene.
Commission of Contracts v. Arriba, Ltd., 882
S.W.2d 576, 581 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1994, no writ). This applies if the failure results from the negligence or mistake of a party’s counsel.
Brownson v. Reynolds,
John Lawrence could have pursued his complaints through an appeal or writ of error. He contends that he did not do so because he could not afford a $10,000.00 su-persedeas bond and because he had hired another lawyer after the original trial who kept the files for five years before telling him he could not help him. John Lawrence’s failure to prosecute an appeal lies with his own negligеnce or mistake or with his attorney’s negligence or mistake. Furthermore, lack of money is not a sufficient excuse for failure to appeal.
See Trigg v. Trigg,
Irene Lawrence’s summary judgment proof establishes as a matter of law that no genuine issue of fact exists as to at least one essential element of John Lawrence’s cause of action. She has shown that John Lawrence has not proved extrinsic fraud and that he failed to pursue legal remedies when they were available.
Irene Lawrence also raised the affirmative defense of limitations in her summary judgment motion. John Lawrence argues in his answer to her summary judgment motion that the running of the statute of limitations should be tolled because of the discovery rule and the actions of his former attorney.
Absent a showing of extrinsic fraud,
Law v. Law,
As for the tolling of the statute due to fraud, a cause of action generally accrues when facts come into existence that authorize a claimant to seek a judicial remedy.
Robinson v. Weaver,
Irene Lawrence had the burden of proof on her affirmative defense of limitations. Her summary judgment proof consists of a certified copy of the bill of review, filed February 24, 1995, and a certified copy of the final divorce decree, filed June 31, 1988. These documents establish that the bill of review was filed after the four-year *449 limitation had run. John Lawrence argues, however, that the statute was tolled by the discovery rule and by his attorney’s actions.
Summary judgment evidence includes affidavits, some pleadings, depositions, interrogatоries and requests for admissions, other discovery responses, stipulations, authenticated or certified public records, other documents, and judicially noticed evidence. Tex. R.Civ.P. 166a(c). The evidence must be presented in a manner in which it would be admissible at trial. Tex.R.Civ.P. 166a(f).
John Lawrence’s unverified documents and his references to the record of the prior divorce trial, which are part of the appellate record but presumably were not part of the trial court’s record at the time of the summary judgment hearing, are not competent summary judgment evidence. John Lawrеnce has failed to carry his burden of proving that limitations was tolled.
Even if the pleadings and assertions are accepted as true, John Lawrence complains primarily that the trial testimony revealed that Irene Lawrence concealed marital assets and that the trial court prevented John Lawrence from developing the testimony. If he discovered, or should have discovered, the concealment at the trial, the statute began running then and was not tolled.
As concerns the actions of his attorney, John Lawrence cites no authority that the fraudulent actiоn of a party’s attorney will toll the statute against a third party. Generally, the actions of a party’s attorney will be attributed to the party. See Transworld Fin. Sews. v. Briscoe, supra.
John Lawrence also alleges that the trial court’s actions in requiring a $10,000.00 supersedeas bond violated the state’s open courts doctrine. Tex. Const, аrt. I, § 13. This court cannot consider the issue because John Lawrence did not present it in his answer to Irene Lawrence’s summary judgment motion.
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Auth.,
Moreover, apart from references in his appellate brief and in his bill of review that the trial court required a $10,000.00 superse-deas bond, the appellate record contains no evidence the trial court required the bond. John Lawrence has failed to meet his burden of presenting an appellate record sufficient to show the error requiring reversal. Tex.R.App.P. 50(d).
Irene Lawrence argues that lach-es bars John Lawrence’s bill of rеview. The equitable affirmative defense of laches requires proof of: (1) an unreasonable delay by a party having legal or equitable rights in asserting such rights and (2) a good faith change of position by another to his detriment because of the delay.
City of Fort Worth v. Johnson,
Irene Lawrence argues that John Lawrence’s pleadings show he waited a year and a half after his second attorney returned his file to seek his bill of review. This constitutes the unreasonable delay, she says. She also argues that she changed her position to her detriment by filing a declaratory judgment suit seeking to impress a judgment lien on property John Lawrence transferred to his son, John Thomas Lawrence, Jr. She does not specify how this change in position harms her. Her actions do not arisе from John Lawrence’s failure to file a bill of review. She might have needed to seek a declaratory judgment even if he had timely filed his bill of review or never filed a bill of review.
Although Irene Lawrence failed to prove her affirmative defense of laches, she did establish her affirmative defense of limitations and that John Lawrence failed to show he was entitled to relief by bill of review.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Irene Lawrence is appellee in another suit pending before this court,
John Thomas Lawrence, Jr. v. Irene Lawrence,
. A bill of review is a separate suit and should be given a new docket number,
Lehtonen v. Clarke,
