OPINION
This is an appeal from a forcible-detain-er action. Appellee, Related Arbor Court, LLC, owns a Section 8 low-income housing project in which the appellant, Diana Washington, was a tenant. Arbor Court filed the forcible-detainer action in justice court seeking Washington’s eviction for several alleged lease violations, including non-payment of rent. Both the justice *678 court and, on appeal, the county civil court at law, ordered Washington evicted from her apartment. On appeal to this court, Washington complains (1) there is no evidence Arbor Court mailed Washington a written lease-termination notice as required by federal regulation for termination of a federally-subsidized tenancy, and (2) there is no evidence to support an award of attorney’s fees to Arbor Court. We overrule Washington’s first issue but sustain her second issue, and modify the judgment accordingly.
I
Washington lived at Arbor Court for several years before Arbor Court terminated her lease on January 24, 2010. 1 On January 14, 2010, an Arbor Court employee hand-delivered to Washington’s apartment a lease-termination notice requiring her to vacate her apartment within ten days. The notice contained several grounds for Washington’s eviction, including non-payment of December 2009 and January 2010 rent; threats against Arbor Court management personnel; impersonation of Arbor Court management personnel; failure to pass an October 2009 unit inspection; and failure to maintain utility service to the apartment as of January 6, 2010. 2
When Washington did not vacate her apartment by January 24, Arbor Court delivered a notice to vacate on January 26, 2010, demanding she vacate the apartment within three days. When Washington remained in the apartment after the notice to vacate, Arbor Court sought and received an award of possession of the premises from a Harris County justice court, which led to her eviction.
II
In her first issue, Washington argues there is no evidence Arbor Court complied with the notice requirements for terminating a federally subsidized tenancy. Specifically, Washington contends Arbor Court did not mail her a copy of the lease-termination notice as required by federal regulation. Section 247.4 of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations outlines the requisites for an effective lease-termination notice to tenants of Section 8 housing, and provides the manner of service is accomplished by:
(1) Sending a letter by first class mail, properly stamped and addressed, to the tenant at his or her address at the project, with a proper return address, and (2) serving a copy of the notice on any adult person answering the door at the *679 leased dwelling unit, or if no adult responds, by placing the notice under or through the door, if possible, or else by affixing the notice to the door. Service shall not be deemed effective until both notices provided for herein have been accomplished.
24 C.F.R. § 247.4(b) (2009).
Tracy Jones, Arbor Court’s community manager, testified she asked Arbor Court’s counsel to prepare the notices necessary to terminate Washington’s lease. On January 14, Jones testified, counsel supplied a copy of the notice to be hand-delivered to Washington’s apartment. Jones testified the notice was delivered to Washington’s apartment the same day, and Raul Alquisi-ra, another Arbor Court employee, testified he delivered the termination notice to Washington’s door. Jones further testified she knew Washington received the notice because Washington came to the management office later that day to discuss the notice. Furthermore, Washington testified that “the papers were on my porch” and relayed her account of conversations she had with management personnel concerning the notice. Therefore, there is no dispute Washington received the lease-termination notice at her apartment and that she had actual notice of her lease termination.
It is not so clear that Washington received the same notice through the mail, as is also required by section 247.4(b). At trial, Washington denied receiving a lease-termination notice in the mail. Jones testified it was her understanding that Arbor Court’s counsel would mail the notice, but Jones admitted on cross-examination she did not have personal knowledge that counsel actually mailed the notice. A copy of the January 14 lease-termination notice that was admitted into evidence bears a certified mail “Senders Record” label with a certified article number as well as a notation that reads “Via Hand Delivery, CM RRR and U.S. First Class Mail.” The January 26 notice to vacate bears a similar label and notation. Washington concedes the notices list her correct address.
Nonetheless, Washington contends this evidence is insufficient to establish the notice was mailed. Washington argues Jones’s testimony is incompetent because she admitted having no personal knowledge that counsel actually sent the notice. Furthermore, notations and labels on the notices, Washington argues, show only that “someone at the law firm began preparing the paperwork needed to send the notice by certified mail.” Taken together, Washington maintains, this evidence offers no more than a scintilla of evidence the notice was ever actually mailed to Washington.
In its judgment, however, the trial court concluded that “[pjlaintiff made written demand upon the [defendant and all occupants of the Leased Premises to vacate same, which demand was received by the [defendant as required by law.” Findings of fact in a bench trial have the same force and dignity as a jury’s verdict upon questions and are reviewed for sufficiency of the evidence by the same standards.
Ortiz v. Jones,
When reviewing legal sufficiency we examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the challenged finding and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it.
See City of Keller v. Wilson,
Assuming without deciding the evidence is insufficient to establish Arbor Court mailed the lease-termination notice as required by federal regulation, we conclude Washington was not harmed by Arbor Court’s failure, if any, to mail her the notice. We follow our sister court in applying a harm analysis to claims of inadequate notice of termination of a federally subsidized residential lease.
See Nealy v. Southlawn Palms Apartments,
It is similarly clear in this case that Washington was not harmed even if she did not receive a lease-termination notice by mail. She conceded at trial that she received the hand-delivered notice at her apartment and that she discussed the notice with Arbor Court management the same day. There is no argument the mailed notice would have contained information the personally delivered notice did not. And Washington does not argue that failure to receive notice by mail impeded her defense before the justice court or the county court at law.
Nonetheless, Washington urges that we strictly construe the notice requirements contained in 24 C.F.R. § 427.4(b) in light of the regulation’s provision that “[s]ervice shall not be deemed effective until both notices provided for herein have been accomplished.” Howev
*681
er, in light of the dearth of federal or state cases directly addressing 24 C.F.R. § 427.4(b), and the
Nealy
court’s conclusion that section 427.4(a) is susceptible to a harm analysis, we see no reason why section 427.4(b) is not susceptible to the same harm analysis. Our position is consistent with a wide range of Texas eases holding that statutory notice requirements may be satisfied by a method of service other than the prescribed statutory method when the recipient acknowledges receipt and therefore has the actual notice the statutory notice requirement is intended to guarantee.
See, e.g., Roccaforte v. Jefferson County,
Because Washington admits she had actual notice of her lease termination through delivery of a lease-termination notice directly to her apartment, we conclude she was not harmed by Arbor Court’s failure, if any, to mail her a copy of the notice via first-class mail. We overrule Washington’s first issue.
Ill
In her second issue, Washington argues the trial court improperly awarded Arbor Court attorney’s fees. Washington contends there is no evidence to support the attorney’s-fees award because the lease-termination notice and the notice to vacate both establish on their face that Arbor Court failed to satisfy the statutory prerequisites for recovery of attorney’s fees in forcible detainer actions. We agree. 4
Section 24.006 of the Property Code requires that a landlord may recover attorney’s fees in an eviction suit only if the lease provides for attorney’s fees or if the landlord delivers to the tenant a written demand to vacate stating “that if the tenant does not vacate the premises before
*682
the 11th day after the date of receipt of the notice and if the landlord files suit, the landlord may recover attorney’s fees.” Tex. Prop.Code § 24.006(a), (b);
French v. Moore,
Here, Arbor Court delivered two notices to Washington — the first a notice of lease termination delivered on January 14, 2010, that required her to vacate her apartment by January 24, 2010, and the second a notice to vacate delivered on January 26, 2010, that required her to vacate within three days. In the January 14 notice, Arbor Court does not specifically mention attorney’s fees; instead, it urges Washington to comply with its demands “to avoid the expense and aggravation which litigation entails.” The January 26 notice to vacate, however, specifically provides that Arbor Court may seek attorney’s fees in the event Washington fails to comply with the demand to vacate within three days.
Neither notice satisfies the requirements imposed by section 24.006 of the Property Code. Arbor Court argues the January 14 lease-termination notice satisfies section 24.006 because it urges Washington to “avoid the expense and aggravation which litigation entails,” which Arbor Court contends necessarily encompasses attorney’s fees. We disagree. Attorney’s fees are not available in many cases and not awarded in others; they certainly are not necessarily included in a general reference to “litigation.” Furthermore, a person cannot be expected to infer from a general threat of litigation that she would liable for attorney’s fees. Further still, litigation can be plenty aggravating even without attorney’s fees. Accordingly, the January 14 notice failed to advise Washington she may be liable for attorney’s fees if she failed to vacate by the termination date.
The January 26 notice, on the other hand, specifically refers to attorney’s fees, but its demand that Washington vacate in three days falls well short of the notice requirement imposed by section 24.006 of the Property Code, which authorizes attorney’s fees only after the tenant has been notified that she must vacate “before the 11th day after the date of receipt of the notice.”
Because there is no evidence Arbor Court fulfilled the requirements of section 24.006 of the Property Code, and because the two notices instead actually provide evidence showing Arbor Court failed to meet the statutory requirements, the trial court' abused its discretion by awarding Arbor Court $2,000 in attorney’s fees plus interest at five percent per annum from the date of judgment. We sustain Washington’s second issue.
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude Washington was not harmed by Arbor Court’s failure, if any, to mail her a copy of the lease-termination notice, and further conclude the trial court abused its discretion in awarding Arbor Court attorney’s fees. Accordingly, we modify the trial court’s judgment to delete the award of attorney’s fees and post-judgment interest. We affirm the remainder of the judgment.
Notes
. Washington argues this case is not moot because the lease's automatic-renewal provision gives her a basis for claiming a current right to possession after expiration of the original lease term. The automatic-renewal provision provides that the lease will automatically renew for "one 12[-]month term" unless Washington gives thirty days' notice of her intent to leave or Arbor Court terminates the lease under the limited grounds available under the lease. For support, she cites
Kennedy v. Andover Place Apartments,
. Although several of these grounds for termination of the lease were contested at trial before the county court at law, we forego further discussion of these allegations because the grounds for lease termination are not material to Washington’s issues on appeal.
. The court's reasoning in applying a harm analysis was based on the supreme court’s holding in
Dubai Petroleum Co. v. Kazi,
. Arbor Court argues Washington failed to preserve error for her second issue because she did not object at trial when Jones testified Arbor Court was seeking attorney's fees or when Arbor Court's counsel testified as to reasonable and necessary attorney's fees. However, Washington raised in full her argument that Arbor Court did not fulfill the statutory prerequisites for an award for attorney’s fees in her motion for new trial. Error was therefore preserved.
