OPINION
Mаria Sotelo sued attorney Gordon Stewart for legal malpractice related to Mr. Stewart’s representation of Ms. Sotelo and her former husband in a 1994 breach of contract action. 1 The trial court granted summary judgment in Mr. Stewart’s favor. Ms. Sotelo presents two issues for review. In Issue One, Ms. Sotelo argues Mr. Stewart failed to negate an essential element of her cause of action. In Issue *79 Two, Ms. Sotelo contends Mr. Stewart failed to establish the elements of his limitations defense as a matter of law. We will reverse and remand for trial.
In January 1991, Daniel Sotelo signed an earnest money contract to purchase real property at 216 S. Florence, in El Paso. 2 Maria Sotelo was not involved in the transaction and did not sign the contract. Following Daniel Sotelo’s default, the seller filed suit (cause number 91-2527) and obtained a judgment for $82,000 for breach of contract. The judgment was entered on December 5, 1994. Mr. Stewart was Daniel Sotelo’s attorney in the case from 1991 until March 9, 1994, when the trial court granted his motion to withdraw. Maria Sotelo’s name did not appear in the breach of contract case until Mr. Stewart added it to the style of his motion for a continuance in February 1994. 3
No further action was taken on the 1994 judgment until August 2001, when the plaintiff in cause number 91-2527 obtained a writ of execution against Maria Sotelo’s real property at 421 Canal, in El Paso. The property was sold by the sheriffs sale in April 2002. On July 15, 2002, Ms. Sotelo filed her original petition in this case alleging Mr. Stewart committed legal malpractice by making her a defendant in the breach of contract case despite the absence of any allegations against her.
Mr. Stewart filed his motion for summary judgment on November 28, 2005 on two grounds; a statute of limitations defense and lack of duty. In response, Ms. Sotelo argued a fact issue remained on Mr. Stewart’s statute of limitations defense under the discovery rule, and that the evidence of Mr. Stewart’s appearance as her аttorney, via his motion for continuance, raised a fact issue on the existence of an attorney-client relationship.
In her response, Ms. Sotelo incorporated all the documents on file in cause number 91-2527, and added two affidavits. In the first affidavit, Mayra Valadez, Ms. Sotеlo’s daughter, explained that during the time she lived with her parents at 4117 La Brigada in El Paso, she was authorized to sign for certified mail delivered to the home. Mayra delivered mail addressed to both Mr. and Mrs. Sotelo only to her father, Daniel. She never heard her parents discuss the cоntents of the letters.
In Ms. Sotelo’s own affidavit, she states that she was never served with process in the breach of contract lawsuit, and never authorized Mr. Stewart to enter an appearance as her attorney. She was never notified of any actions taken in the lawsuit including the addition of her name as a party, Mr. Stewart’s representation of her and her husband, and Mr. Stewart’s withdrawal from the case. According to her affidavit, Ms. Sotelo only became aware of the lawsuit and judgment in 2001, when her rental property on Canal was seized and sold. She filed this suit shortly thereafter.
The trial court granted summary judgment in Mr. Stewart’s favor on May 1, 2006. Ms. Sotelo challenges the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in two issues. In Issue One, Ms. Sotelo argues a *80 fact issue remains regarding the existence of an attorney-client relationship, and therefore, the triаl court did not properly grant summary judgment on Mr. Stewart’s “no duty” ground. In Issue Two, Ms. Sotelo asserts summary judgment was not properly granted based on Mr. Stewart’s limitations defense because a genuine issue of material fact remains pursuant to the discovery rule. Because fact issues remаin on both grounds, summary judgment was not properly granted.
Standard, of Review
We review summary judgments
de novo. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
Attorney-Client Relationship
In the first ground asserted in his motion for summary judgment, Mr. Stewart argued that he did not have an attorney-client relationship with Ms. So-telo, and therefore did not owe her a duty of care. Legal malpractice is a tort cause of aсtion based on negligence.
See Belt v. Oppenheimer, Blend, Harrison & Tate, Inc.,
While it is generally a relationship created by contract, an attorney-client relationship can be implied based on the conduct of the parties.
Sutton v. Estate of McCormick,
According tо Ms. Sotelo’s summary judgment affidavit, she never spoke to or hired Mr. Stewart and never authorized him to take any legal actions on her behalf. Such evidence is contrary to the formation of an attorney-client relationship, and therefore, as Mr. Stewart argues, weighs against the duty element.
See Sutton,
Legal Malpractice Statute of Limitations
In Issue Two, Ms. Sotelo contends that summary judgment was not properly granted on Mr. Stewart’s statute of limitations defense because, under the discovery rule, the date her cause of action accrued remains a fact issue. A defendant is entitled to summary judgment on the affirmative defense of limitations by conclusively proving all the elements of the defense as a matter of law.
Pustejovsky v. Rapid-American Corp.,
If the defendant establishes that the statute of limitations bars the action, it becomes the plaintiffs burden to produce summary judgment proof raising a fact issue in avoidance of the defense.
Rubio,
The two-year statute of limitations provided in Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003(a) governs legal malpractice claims.
See
Tex.Civ. PRAC.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003(a)(Vernon
*82
Supp.2007);
Apex Towing Co. v. Tolin,
Ms. Sotelo’s injury, if any, occurred sometime in 1994.
5
Ms. Sotelo did not file this lawsuit until late 2001, well beyond the two-year statute of limitations.
See
Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003(a);
Apex Towing Co.,
As a general proposition, we agree that reasonable diligence includes reviewing mail that includes one’s name as an addresseе.
See e.g.
Tex.R.Civ.P. 21a (proper
*83
service of all plea, pleading, motion, or other request includes delivery by certified mail to the party’s last known address);
Mathis v. Lockwood,
Wffien viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movant, Ms. Sotelo’s affidavit is evidence that she did not discover the lawsuit or judgment in cause number 91-2527 until 2001. Similarly, Ms. Sotelo’s daughter’s affidavit, is evidence that Ms. Sotelo could not have become aware of the lawsuit in 1994. Therefore, despite the evidencе that Mr. Stewart sent documents to the household, addressed to Ms. Sotelo in 1994, Mr. Stewart has not established the accrual date of Ms. Sotelo’s cause of action as a matter of law. 6 Issue Two is sustained.
Having sustained both of Appellant’s issues, we reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.
GOMEZ, Judge (Sitting by Assignment).
Notes
. Appellant's former husband, Daniel Sotelo, will be referred to as "Daniel Sotelo” or "Mr. Sotelo.”
. Maria and Daniel Sotelo were married from December 28, 1971 until October 20, 2000. During the marriage, the couple acquired several pieces of real property, including their marital home at 4117 La Brigada and rental property at 421 Canal. The final divorce decree awarded both properties solely to Maria Sotelo.
. Subsequent documents filed by both parties in cause number 91-2527 included Ms. So-telo’s name in the style of the case. The 1994 judgment states, in part, that the breach of contract plaintiffs "hereby have and recover from Defendants Daniel I. Sotelo and Maria Sotelo the sum of $82,000 and all costs of court expended or incurred in this case.”
.
It is also worth noting that absent evidence to the сontrary, Texas law presumes that an attorney who enters an appearance on another's behalf has authority
to do so. See Kelly v. Murphy,
. There is some disagreement whether Ms. Sotelo's injury, if any, occurred at the time Mr. Stewart added Ms. Sotelo's name to the style of the case in his motion, or at the time the trial court actually entered judgment in cause number 91-2527 several months later. However, we see no need to determine the actual date of the injury. Even if we were to assume that Ms. Sotelo's injury did not occur until December 1994 with the entry of judgment against her, as opрosed to the February 1994 act she alleges was legal negligence, the statute of limitations ran long before she filed her claim. Regardless of which date was the date of injury, unless she succeeded in raising a fact issue on the discovery rule, her claim is time barred. Therefore, we will limit our analysis to the summaiy judgment evidence related to the discovery rule, and leave the discussion of whether the injury happened at the date of the alleged legal negligence, or the date of the adverse judgment, for another day.
. In light of our decision, there is no need to address the remainder of Ms. Sotelo's arguments regarding the limitations defense.
