Unifund CCR Partners sued Kenneth Weaver to recover an unpaid credit card debt. Unifund attached to its citation requests for disclosure and admissions. Shortly after he was served, Weaver, acting pro se, filed a letter answer with his responses to the requests attached. Weaver’s response to each request for admission was identical: “DEFENSE: TEXAS CIVIL PRACTICE & REMEDIES {SECTION 16.004 {A} {3},” which is the four-year statute of limitations on debt collection actions. The face of the response shows a copy was sent to Unifund’s attorney, and Weaver’s signature appears underneath the text, “CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE.” But the record does not show that Weaver actually served Unifund with his responses. Tex.R. Civ. P. 198.2(a) (requiring that the responding party serve written response on the requesting party).
Unifund filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that the facts set out in its requests for admissions were automatically admitted when Weaver failed to timely serve his responses. Tex.R. Civ. P. 198.2(c) (considering request admitted if no timely response served). Along with its motion, Unifund filed an affidavit from its attorney supporting its claim that Weaver failed to serve it with a response to its requests for admissions. Weaver did not file a response to the summary judgment motion, and it was granted by the trial court. Weaver appealed, asserting in his brief that he had served his responses timely. The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment because Weaver’s responses to Unifund’s request for admissions were on file when the summary judgment motion was granted.
First, Weaver failed to raise a fact issue regarding his claim that he timely served his responses. Although Weaver’s certificate of service raised a presumption of service under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 21a, Unifund rebutted that presumption with the affidavit asserting that it was not timely served within the fifty days prescribed by Rule 198.2(a).
See Cliff v. Huggins,
The first time Weaver asserted that he properly served Unifund by filing his responses with the court was in a post-judgment filing. However, a party who fails to expressly present to the trial court any written response in opposition to a motion for summary judgment waives the right to raise any arguments or issues post-judgment.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c) (“Issues not expressly presented to the trial court by written motion, answer or other response shall not be considered on appeal as grounds for reversal.”);
see also McConnell v. Southside Indep. Sch. Dist.
*798
The second reason we reverse is that Weaver’s responses, even if they could be considered, are not proper objections to the requests. The court of appeals held that Weaver’s responses to the requests for admissions could, “indulging every reasonable inference in [his] favor,” be construed as objections.
