dissenting.
The court should affirm the take-nothing judgment on appellant Lawrence E. Sturm’s usury counterclaim. Because the court instead reverses that portion of the judgment and remands the usury counterclaim for a new trial, I respectfully dissent.
Sturm’s usury counterclaim against ap-pellee Guenther Muens was an independent claim for affirmative relief. It was never the subject of a motion for summary judgment. Although Muens filed a motion for partial summary judgment on his promissory note claim in January 2003, and Sturm responded to this traditional motion by asserting a usury defense, Muens did not move for summary judgment on any of Sturm’s claims for affirmative relief. Muens did not mention usury or any Sturm’s counterclaims in his motion for summary judgment. The trial court’s September 2003 order granting summary judgment on the note claim did not grant summary judgment in favor of Muens on Sturm’s usury counterclaim or on any other claim for affirmative relief. The trial court, without stating its reasons, simply granted partial summary judgment in favor of Muens on his claim,1 leaving all other claims and counterclaims for trial. In fact, after granting judgment on the note claim, the trial court stated that this was the only relief that it granted.
The majority concludes that, if a motion for summary judgment deals with a defense involving the same allegations and evidence as a counterclaim in the case, then an order granting the motion impliedly adjudicates the counterclaim, even though the motion and the order do not address the counterclaim. This is not Texas law.2
Because Muens’s motion for partial summary judgment and the order granting it dealt only with Muens’s note claim, the other claims asserted by and between the parties remained to be adjudicated. Thus, when the parties went to trial in April 2004, Sturm’s usury counterclaim was a live claim.
At the jury trial, Muens’s fraud claim was the only issue submitted to the jury. Sturm did not request a jury issue on his usury counterclaim, nor did he object to this omission from the jury charge. Several months after the jury trial, in August 2004, the trial court signed a final judg*768ment which stated, among other things, “[t]the court denied Defendant Lawrence Edward Sturm, Sr.’s counter-claim for usury and ordered that Sturm take nothing.”
Sturm does not complain on appeal that the trial court erred in rendering this take-nothing judgment on his usury counterclaim following the jury trial. Nor does Sturm complain on appeal that the trial court failed to submit his usury counterclaim to the jury or that the trial court improperly disposed of it after the jury trial; rather, Sturm bases his appellate complaint on the false premise that the trial court disposed of his usury counterclaim by summary judgment before trial. The majority also bases its analysis on the erroneous statement that the summary judgment disposed • of Sturm’s counterclaim.3 That simply did not happen. Because Sturm failed to preserve error as to the trial court’s true disposition of his usury counterclaim4 and failed to assign error to that ruling in this court,5 that portion of the judgment should be affirmed.
. The court’s order stated in its entirety:
On this day came to heard [sic] Plaintiff Guenther Muens’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment against Defendant Lawrence Edward Sturm, Sr. The Court, having considered the pleadings and evidence presented, is of the opinion that no genuine issue of material fact exists and as a matter of law the motion should be GRANTED as follows, [sic]
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Guen-ther Muens have judgment against Lawrence Edward Sturm, Sr. as follows, [sic]
[awarding damages on the promissory note, attorney’s fees, and interest]
All relief not specifically granted is denied.
. See Lehmann, 39 S.W.3d 191, 205 (stating that ”[a]n order that adjudicates only the plaintiff’s claims against the defendant does not adjudicate a counterclaim, cross-claim, or third party claim, nor does an order adjudicating claims like the latter dispose of the plaintiff's claims”); Gilchrist v. Bandera Elec. Coop., 966 S.W.2d 716, 717-19 (Tex.App.— San Antonio 1998, no pet.) (holding that trial court erred in granting summary judgment as to counterclaims not addressed in motion for summary judgment and remanding these claims to the trial court even though these claims were intertwined with the plaintiff’s breach of contract claim, as to which the appellate court affirmed the trial court’s judgment in plaintiff’s favor).
. See ante at p. 2 n. 1.
. The failure to raise a complaint at trial to a jury charge or to the judgment waives review of that complaint on appeal. See Tex. R. Apr P. 33.1; Tex. R. Civ. P. 274 (“Upon appeal all independent grounds of recovery or of defense not conclusively established under the evidence and no element of which is submitted [in the jury charge] or requested are waived.”); Bass v. Walker, 99 S.W.3d 877, 889 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2003, pet. denied) (holding appellants failed to preserve error because they did not present to the trial court their complaint regarding the trial court's judgment).
.See Tex. R. App. P. 38 1(e); Texas Nat’l Bank v. Karnes, 717 S.W.2d 901, 903 (Tex.1986) (holding that "the court of appeals may not reverse a trial court's judgment in the absence of properly assigned error”).