OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment in favor of the Commission for Lawyer Discipline, Appellee, on its claim that William F. Olson, Appellant, 1 engaged in professional misconduct by violating Rules 1.08(a) and 1.08(b) of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. Tex.DisciplinaRY R.Peof. Conduct 1.08(a), (b) (1991), reprinted in Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. tit. 2, subtit. G app. (Vernon Supp.1994). After conducting a separate hearing to determine the appropriate disciplinary measures, the trial court entered judgment suspending Appellant’s law license for a period of five years. Appellant attacks the trial court’s judgment by three points of error. We vacate our prior order dated March 30,1994, set aside the judgment of the trial court, and dismiss this case as moot.
Prior to submission of this appeal, Appellant’s wife, Johanna T. Olson, filed with the Court a suggestion of death, a motion to substitute her as the appellant, and a motion to proceed with the appeal pursuant to Tex. R.App.P. 9(a). On March 30,1994, the Court granted those motions. At oral argument, the Court raised the question of whether Appellant’s death, subsequent to the rendition of final judgment in the trial court and perfection of appeal, rendered this appeal moot. The Court permitted both parties to file supplemental briefs in response to the question. Appellant filed a letter brief in which he contends that the appeal is not moot; alternatively, he contends that the underlying judgment must be vacated and the cause dismissed if we find the appeal moot. The Court received no response from the Commission on Lawyer Discipline.
Neither the Texas Constitution nor our State Legislature has vested this Court with the authority to render advisory opinions.
See
Tex. Const, art. II, § 1;
Camarena v. Texas Employment Comm’n,
We turn our attention first to the question of whether there is an actual controversy between the parties. The sole controversy in this case concerned whether Appellant had engaged in professional misconduct and, if he had, the appropriate disciplinary measures which should be taken against him. The sanction assessed for Appellant’s professional misconduct was both an active and probated suspension of his law license. Given this posture, it would be an exercise in futility to hear the merits of this appeal. If we reverse and remand the cause for a new trial, the Commission on Lawyer Discipline could not proceed with the disciplinary matter since Appellant’s license to practice law, which was personal to him, terminated upon his death. See 7 Tex. Jdh.Bd Attorney at Law § 11 (1980). For the same reason, the judgment, if affirmed, could no longer operate against Appellant. Consequently, our judgment cannot have a practical effect on an existing controversy.
Nevertheless, Appellant contends that we should not find this appeal moot for several reasons. Citing
County of El Paso v. Ortega,
Appellant initially relied upon Tex. R.App.P. 9(a) in arguing that the merits of this appeal should be heard. However, nothing on the face of Rule 9(a) dispenses with the requirement that there be an actual existing controversy between the litigants. That rule provides:
If any party to the record in a cause dies after rendition of judgment in the trial court, and before such cause has finally been disposed of on appeal, such cause shall not abate by such death, but the appeal may be perfected and the court of appeals or the Supreme Court, if it has granted or thereafter grants a writ therein, shall proceed to adjudicate such cause and render judgment therein as if all the parties thereto were living, and such judgment shall have the same force and effect as if rendered in the lifetime of all the parties thereto.
Tex.R.App.P. 9(a).
Further, Rule 9(a) and its predecessor, Rule 369a of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,
3
have been applied to permit the appeal where one of the parties to the appeal died after rendition of final judgment in the trial court, but only where the judgment affected the parties’ property rights, as opposed to
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purely personal rights.
See e.g., Gentry v. Credit Plan Corp. of Houston,
This brings us to Appellant’s second argument. He contends that the judgment of the trial court, because it awarded damages to the Commission on Lawyer Discipline, will affect the property rights of the parties. The portion of the judgment referred to reads as follows:
It is, accordingly, ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that the Respondent, William F. Olson, be and is hereby suspended from the practice of law in the State of Texas for the period of five (5) years, beginning January 1,1994, and ending December 31, 1998, the first year of which, beginning January 1,1994, and ending December 31, 1994, shall be active suspension and the remainder of such term, beginning January 1, 1995, and ending December 31, 1998, shall be fully probated provided that Respondent abides by the following terms and conditions:
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅝
6) Respondent shall reimburse the State Bar of Texas for the costs it incurred in prosecuting the above-entitled and numbered cause in the amount of Three Thousand Six Hundred and no/100 ($3,600.00) Dollars, which shall be due and payable in monthly installments of One Hundred and no/100 ($100.00) Dollars each beginning on January 1, 1995, and continuing regularly thereafter on the first day of each and every month in a like amount until fully paid. Such payments shall be made by cashier’s check or money order payable to the State Bar of Texas and delivered to the Office of the General Counsel of the State Bar of Texas, P.O. Box 12487, Austin, Texas 78711.
Except for this probationary condition, the judgment made no other provision with regard to reimbursement of these costs.
The trial court is responsible for assessing the appropriate sanction or sanctions to be imposed if an attorney is found to have committed professional misconduct. Tex.R.DisciplinaRY P. (1992) 3.10, reprinted in Tex.Gov’t Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. G app. A-l (Vernon Supp.1994). The term “sanction” includes the payment of reasonable attorneys’ fees and all direct expenses associat *525 ed "with the disciplinary proceeding as an additional, ancillary requirement. Tex.R. DISCIPLINARY P. 1.06(T)(8)(a) (1992). 5 Apparently, the probation condition in question was made pursuant to this rule.
Appellant cites no authority for his claim that this award may be enforced against his estate. Because the judgment does not require Olson to reimburse the State Bar for these costs except as a condition of a probationary period which will never be served, we find that this portion of the judgment did not survive Appellant’s death. Accordingly, it is not a claim which may be enforced against his estate. See Tex.Prob. Code Ann. § 3(c) (Vernon Supp.1995) (claims include liabilities of a decedent which survive). We find no merit in Appellant’s argument that the court’s judgment and this appeal will affect the property rights of the parties.
Having determined that there is no actual existing controversy between the litigants and that the judgment will not affect the property rights of the parties, we conclude that this appeal is moot. Consequently, we also find that the Court improvidently granted Appellant’s motion to proceed with the appeal and substitute parties pursuant to Rule 9(a), and we vacate our order of March 30,1994 granting those motions. As correctly observed by Appellant, we are required to set aside the judgment of the trial court and dismiss the underlying cause of action, not merely the appeal.
Speer v. Presbyterian Children’s Home and Service Agency,
KOEHLER, J., not participating.
Notes
. William F. Olson died after he perfected this appeal from the trial court’s judgment. This Court previously granted the motion of Appellant’s wife, Johanna T. Olson, to substitute her as the appellant and proceed with the appeal pursuant to Tex.R.App.P. 9(a). Upon reconsideration of that ruling, and for reasons stated in the body of this opinion, we have found the motion was improvidently granted and we have vacated it. Accordingly, this appeal is as originally styled. Throughout the remainder of this opinion, we will refer to William F. Olson as "Appellant”.
. Even though the Austin Court of Appeals recognized the “public interest exception” in
University Interscholastic League v. Buchanan,
848
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S.W.2d at 304, the Texas Supreme Court has not decided whether this is a viable exception to the mootness doctrine.
See Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Nueces County,
. The language of former Rule 369a is identical to that employed in Rule 9(a).
. In
Dunn v. Dunn,
. Similarly, under the former version of the State Bar Rules, professional misconduct was grounds for several sanctions, including, assessment of the costs of the disciplinary action including costs of court and attorneys’ fees. State Bar Rules, art. 10 § 8(7) (repealed).
