SUBSTITUTE OPINION ON REHEARING
We withdraw our opinion issued August 30, 2007, and substitute the following opinion.
Appellants appeal the trial court’s order denying their special appearance. Because we determine that appellee has not met its burden of alleging facts showing that appellants’ contacts with Texas are substantially connected to the operative facts of the underlying litigation, we reverse and render judgment dismissing this case for lack of personal jurisdiction.
I. BACKGROUND
After appellee X-Ray X-Press Corporation (“X-Ray”), a Texas corporation, was sued in Indiana by C & G Technologies, Inc. (“C & G”), it hired appellant Gilliland & Caudill, L.L.P. (“Gilliland”), an Indiana law firm, to defend its interests. Appellant Robert P. Markette, Jr., an attorney with Gilliland who is licensed to practice law in Indiana, sent X-Ray a letter in Texas via facsimile stating that he “will be handling the litigation currently pending in Washington County, Indiana.” Markette *466 also enclosed a copy of Gilliland’s standard legal services contract, which X-Ray signed in Texas and returned to Markette. Immediately before the line for X-Ray’s signature, the contract states: “I have read and understand the foregoing and wish to retain [Gilliland] to represent [X-Ray] in litigation currently pending in Washington County[,] Indiana.”
Markette filed a motion to dismiss the Indiana suit for lack of personal jurisdiction, which the Indiana court denied. Markette then wrote X-Ray a letter, which he emailed to X-Ray in Texas, providing legal advice as to three options for proceeding. This case centers around the first option:
The first option is to take no further action. If [X-Ray] does not file an answer in this matter, [C & G] will move for default judgment. Assuming [X-Ray] ignores the motion, the Court will grant judgment in favor of [C & G] for the amount it demanded in its complaint. At that time, [C & G] will institute enforcement proceedings in order to collect the judgment. [X-Ray] could, at that time, relitigate the issue of jurisdiction. Because [C & G] would likely need to use the Texas court system to enforce the judgment, [X-Ray] could attack the jurisdiction in a Texas court, which would be more likely to agree that Indiana did not have jurisdiction over a Texas company. However, if the Texas court’s [sic] agreed with the Indiana court, [X-Ray] would be saddled with a default judgment that it would have to satisfy.
(emphasis added). X-Ray followed this first option and allowed C & G to obtain a default judgment against it in the Indiana suit. Thereafter, C & G filed a suit in Texas to enforce the judgment, and X-Ray was ultimately required to satisfy that judgment.
X-Ray sued Markette and Gilliland for legal malpractice and many related claims, including fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract. Markette and Gilliland filed special appearances. The trial court initially granted their special appearances, but thereafter, the court granted X-Ray’s motion for new trial and reversed its ruling. Markette and Gilliland then filed this interlocutory appeal. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 51.014(a)(7) (Vernon Supp.2006) (allowing interlocutory appeal from denial of special appearance).
II. ANALYSIS
Whether a trial court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant is a question of law.
BMC Software Belgium, N.V. v. Marchand,
The Texas long-arm statute governs Texas courts’ exercise of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant.
See
TEX. CIV. PRAC.
&
REM. CODE ANN. §§ 17.041-045 (Vernon 1997 & Supp.2006);
Schott Glas,
A defendant’s contacts can give rise to either general or specific jurisdiction. General jurisdiction is based on continuous and systematic contacts with the forum.
Moki Mac,
In Moki Mac, the supreme court analyzed the relatedness requirement of specific jurisdiction. The court noted that neither it nor the United States Supreme Court had given much guidance as to how closely related a cause of action must be to the defendant’s forum activities to support personal jurisdiction. See id. at 579, 584. After discussing and rejecting three other approaches, the court determined that “for a nonresident defendant’s forum contacts to support an exercise of specific jurisdiction, there must be a substantial connection between those contacts and the operative facts of the litigation.” See id. at 579-584. Thus, the court held in Moki Mac that the Texas contacts of a Utah-based expedition company were not sufficiently related to the cause of action because the operative facts of the litigation principally concerned the negligence of guides in Arizona, even though the plaintiff parents may have relied on the company’s safety representations made in the promotional materials it sent to Texas in deciding to send their son on a fatal rafting trip in Arizona. See id. at 572, 584-585.
The
Moki Mac
court analogized the facts of its case to our previous decision in
Brocail v. Anderson,
We find
Moki Mac
and
Bro-cail
controlling in this case. X-Ray’s primary jurisdictional allegation is that Mark-ette provided incorrect legal advice about Texas law upon which it relied to its detriment.
2
Markette exercised his legal judgment and formed his legal opinions in Indiana, which he then communicated to X-Ray in Texas. The operative facts of the underlying litigation will focus primarily on Markette’s legal advice, not the communication of that advice to Texas, and thus specific jurisdiction does not arise in this case.
See Moki Mac,
X-Ray argues that Markette’s act of giving legal advice on Texas law directed to a Texas client is sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction.
3
Despite appellants’ assertion that it did not provide legal advice on Texas law because it cited no cases or statutes and was merely discussing possibilities, we conclude that advising X-Ray that it
“could
attack the jurisdiction in a Texas court, which would be
more likely to agree
that Indiana did not have jurisdiction over a Texas company” constituted legal advice about Texas law. (emphasis added). However, that is still insufficient
*469
to establish personal jurisdiction. Mark-ette’s legal judgment, which will be the focus of the underlying litigation, was exercised in Indiana, just as the doctor in
Brocail
exercised his medical judgment in Michigan. Moreover, the supreme court has rejected the notion of focusing on where a defendant directed a tort or where the effects of tortious conduct will be felt in determining specific jurisdiction.
4
See Michiana,
Because we conclude that X-Ray has not met its burden of pleading facts sufficient to give rise to specific jurisdiction because Markette’s and Gilliland’s Texas conduct is not substantially connected to the operative facts of the litigation, we need not reach Markette’s and Gilliland’s second issue, in which they argue that exercise of personal jurisdiction does not comport with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment dismissing this case for lack of personal jurisdiction.
Notes
. X-Ray makes several arguments as to how appellants have not met their burden of negating all bases of jurisdiction. We need not consider these arguments because we con-elude that the basic jurisdictional facts alleged by X-Ray, which are not disputed, do not establish jurisdiction, and thus X-Ray has not met its initial burden.
. X-Ray also points to additional contacts showing that (a) it entered an attorney/client relationship with Markette by signing a contract that he sent to Texas, (b) Markette communicated with X-Ray about this representation and his advice to X-Ray via telephone, facsimile, and mail, and (c) it charged fees to X-Ray for these services. However, neither the mere existence of an attorney/client relationship between a resident client and an out of state attorney nor the routine correspondence and interactions attendant to that relationship are sufficient to confer personal jurisdiction.
See Geo-Chevron Ortiz Ranch v. Woodworth,
No. 04-06-00412-CV,
. X-Ray also asserts that the exercise of specific jurisdiction is proper because Markette’s act of giving legal advice on Texas law to Texas residents without local counsel constitutes the unauthorized practice of law. See TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 81.101(a) (Vernon 2005) (defining the practice of law as including "the giving of advice”). However, X-Ray cites no authority providing that an out of state attorney giving legal advice to a resident client about the forum’s law constitutes the practice of law in that forum or that such activity is sufficient to confer specific jurisdiction. In the absence of such authority, we decline to so hold.
. The
Michiana
court specifically disapproved of this court’s opinion in
Memorial Hospital System v. Fisher Insurance Agency, Inc.,
