I respectfully dissent from denial of en banc reconsideration of the panel majority opinion on rehearing issued on September 10, 2010. I agree with the reasoning in Judge Wilson’s dissent from the September 10, 2010 panel majority opinion and would have joined his original opinion, issued December 22, 2009, which was withdrawn and vacated by the later opinion. I also join Justice Jennings’ dissent from denial of en banc reconsideration.
*670This summary judgment case has generated two diametrically opposed opinions and three dissents. The first opinion (the December 22, 2009 opinion) decided this declaratory judgment case seeking to clarify the rights of the interest under a water district drainage easement as a traditional motion for summary judgment under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(c). See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c). Originally, the panel held, as a matter of law, that there was only one reasonable construction of the express terms of the easement. Under that construction, the plain terms of the easement “grant[ed] to the District the authority to remove any obstruction upon its canal right of way that may interfere with the operation of the drainage canal now or in the future.” Brookshire Katy Drainage Dist. v. Lily Gardens, LLC, No. 01-07-00431-CV, 2009 WL 5064759 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 22, 2009) (opinion withdrawn on rehearing). The panel further held that, under its construction of the easement language, “Lily Gardens failed to establish that there are no genuine issues of material fact to be decided and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Id. It, therefore, remanded the case for further proceedings.
On rehearing, the panel majority withdrew and vacated the December 22, 2009 opinion and issued the September 10, 2010 opinion, now on motion for en banc reconsideration. The September 10, 2010 panel majority opinion cites Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway in concluding that when, as here, a motion for summary judgment is filed both as a traditional motion for summary judgment under Rule 166a(c) and as a “no evidence” motion under Rule 166a(i), i.e., as a hybrid motion, a court must first review the trial court’s summary judgment under the no-evidence standards of Rule 166a(i). Brookshire Katy Drainage Dist. v. Lily Gardens, LLC, 333 S.W.3d 301, 307 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, no pet. h.) (op. on rehearing) (citing Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway, 135 S.W.3d 598, 600 (Tex.2004)). In doing so, the panel majority determined that a pure question of law— the rights of the District under the terms of the easement — could be decided on a no-evidence basis. In my opinion, the panel majority erred in withdrawing its December 22, 2009 opinion and substituting the September 10, 2010 opinion.
Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(i), which the panel majority applied in its September 10, 2010 opinion, provides for a no-evidence motion for summary judgment only when, after adequate time for discovery, “there is no evidence of one or more essential elements of a claim or defense on which an adverse party would have the burden of proof at trial.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i). “The motion must state the elements as to which there no evidence,” and “[t]he court must grant the motion unless the respondent produces summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact.” Id. The Texas Supreme Court’s 1997 Comment to newly added subsection 166a(i) sets out “the construction and application of the rule,” stating,
Paragraph (i) authorizes a motion for summary judgment based on the assertion that, after adequate opportunity for discovery, there is no evidence to support one or more specified elements of an adverse party’s claim or defense.... [P]aragraph (i) does not apply to ordinary motions for summary judgment under paragraph (a) or (b), in which the movant must prove it is entitled to judgment by establishing each element of its own claim or defense as a matter of law or by negating an element of the respondent’s claim or defense as a matter of law.
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a emt.-1997.
Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(c), which the panel applied in its prior Decern-*671ber 22, 2009 opinion, provides for summary judgment when the summary judgment proof and pleadings under subsection (a) or (b) and (c) “show that, except as to the amount of damages, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the [legal] issues expressly set out in the motion or in an answer or any other response.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c). This summary judgment case was brought (1) to construct the language in the District’s drainage easement that granted it “a right of way and easement for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, operating, repairing and re-constructing a drainage canal, including drains, ditches, laterals and levees ...,” and (2) according the District “the right from time to time to ... abate other obstruction, upon said canal right of way, that may injure, endanger, or interfere with the construction, operation, maintenance and repair of said drainage canal.”
Lily Gardens argued, in its summary judgment motion and in its appellate brief, that “Texas courts construe easements, and the conditions placed upon them, in a manner that places as little burden as possible upon the servient estate”; that “[t]he easement agreement speaks in terms of allowing [the District] to abate an ‘obstruction’ that may interfere with operating the ditch”; and that, under criminal law regarding obstruction of a street, “the legislature expressly defined ‘obstruct’ as meaning ‘to render impassable or to render passage unreasonably inconvenient or hazardous’ ” and one court of appeals had construed “obstructions” under the Texas Tort Claims Act, section 101.022(b) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, as not including “a bump in the road ... since passage around the bump could be had on either side.” It then argued that “all the evidence establishes as a matter of law the lack of any such impediment.”
Completely absent in Lily Gardens no-evidence summary judgment motion was any reference to controlling statutes and precedent construing the terms of drainage easements or even to the language of the easement other than the word “obstruction.” Rather, Lily Gardens made the cursory argument that Texas law provides that a landowner cannot interfere with the reasonable use and enjoyment of an easement and that “Texas courts construe easements in a manner that accomplishes that purpose while placing as little burden as possible upon the servient estate.” And Lily Gardens contended that, under its construction of the law, it — the movant, not the nonmovant — had “presented ample evidence that the bridge covering was not an ‘obstruction’ and did not interfere with [the District’s] rights.” It followed this argument with six pages of jury argument, followed by a string citation to cases in which Texas courts had found that an easement owner was not allowed to remove an obstruction but only to take reasonably necessary measures for the use and enjoyment of its easement.
The panel originally concluded, in its December 22, 2009 opinion, that the District had “the right to abate any obstruction that may interfere with the drainage canal.” Brookshire Katy Drainage Dist., 2009 WL 5064759 (opinion withdrawn on rehearing). It held that Lily Gardens had failed to establish that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and it also held that “the District has raised a genuine issue of material fact as to the elements of encroachment upon its easement rights.” Id. The panel majority, in its September 10, 2010 opinion on rehearing, simply accepted Lily Gardens’ statement of the law and concluded that its task, in reviewing the summary judgment motion under Rule 166a(i), was to “determine whether the mere act of constructing the bridge cover*672ing, even if that covering does not extend into the canal or impede the flow of water the canal beneath it, violates the terms of the easement.” It then determined, without reference to the express terms of the drainage easement or to law construing the rights of the District as holder of the easement, that the District had to “prove that the Defendants engaged in activities that that interfered with the District’s reasonable use and enjoyment of the easement” and that the District had not produced evidence to show “that the covering either impedes the flow of water through the canal or that it might, in the future, impact the District’s ability to repair or maintain the canal.” Brookshire Katy Drainage Dist., 333 S.W.3d at 308-12 (op. on rehearing). It held that statements in the affidavit of the President of the District, Raymond Dollins, were merely claims “that the District’s legislative authority allows it to do certain things (Dol-lins’s interpretations of the law)” and, therefore, “were not competent summary judgment evidence.” Id. at 307-09.1 It concluded that the trial court could have properly granted Lily Gardens’ no-evidence summary judgment motion, and, therefore, declined to reach the traditional motion. Id. at 311-12.
In other words, the panel majority determined that the District had to prove that Lily Gardens’ past activities had interfered with its “reasonable use and enjoyment of the easement” under the movant’s construction of the terms of the easement and the movant’s evidence, whether the movant was right or wrong on the law. It ignored the plain language of the easement itself, the governing statutes and precedents, and the arguments and affidavit of the District as irrelevant, and it placed a burden on the District-to have produced evidence sufficient to raise a material fact issue as to the past or future interference of Lily Gardens’ covered bridge in the easement with the flow of water in the ditch, as Lily Gardens asked it to do, rather than placing the burden on Lily Gardens to prove its entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. Finding no evidence that the covered bridge then under construction had interfered with the “reasonable use and enjoyment” of the ditch as Lily Gardens construed it and no evidence of a future occasion in which it would do so, the panel majority affirmed summary judgment in favor of Lily Gardens.
Several factors contributed to this erroneous holding. First, Lily Gardens’ no-evidence motion for summary judgment was brought on a pure question of law. A petition for declaratory judgment, such as the one filed by the District in this case, seeks a declaration of rights, i.e., an interpretation of the terms of a statute or instrument as a matter of law. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 37.004 (Vernon 2008) (“A person interested under a deed, will, written contract, or other writings constituting a contract or whose rights, status, or other legal relations are affected a statute ... may have determined any question of construction or validity arising under the instrument, statute, ... [or] contract ... and obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal relations thereunder.”). In other words, the District sought *673a ruling on the law as to its rights under its easement, not on the evidence.
A no-evidence motion for summary judgment is expressly restricted, by the language of Rule 166a(i) itself and the 1997 Comment, to the judicial determination of whether evidence exists to support a specific element of a claim or defense on which the non-movant has the burden of proof at trial. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i) & cmt.-1997. Nevertheless, a body of law has developed that disagrees with the 1997 Comment’s statement of the requirements of no-evidence summary judgment practice, creating a split among the courts of appeals — one in which the panel majority’s September 10, 2010 opinion now takes its place. The conflict stems from Harrill v. A.J. ⅛ Wrecker Svc., Inc., in which the Dallas Court of Appeals held that granting a no-evidence motion based on a purely legal issue is error. 27 S.W.3d 191, 194 (Tex.App.-Dallas 2000, pet. dism’d). Other courts of appeals have agreed. See also In re Estate of Allen, 301 S.W.3d 923, 929 (Tex.App.-Tyler 2010, pet. denied) (“[C]on-struction of an unambiguous will or codicil is a question of law. And purely legal issues can never be the subject of a no-evidence motion for summary judgment. Because construction of the thirteen writings was a question of law, Dollie’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment was improper. Consequently the trial court did not err in denying Dollie’s motion for summary judgment.”) (citations omitted); Franks v. Roades, 310 S.W.3d 615, 621-22 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 2010, no pet.) (treating no-evidence motion as traditional motion for summary judgment in which claims for gross negligence, fraud, conversion, conspiracy, and deceptive trade practices were all brought on non-movant’s assertion that movant had improperly sought guardianship and stating, “Whether Roades had such a duty is a question of law, which is inappropriate for a no-evidence summary judgment”); Judge David Hittner & Lynne Liberato, Summary Judgments in Texas, 47 S. Tex. L.R., 409, 415 (Spring 2006). But see Means v. ABCABCO, Inc., 315 S.W.3d 209, 211 (Tex.App.-Austin 2010, no pet.) (declining to follow Harrill “[i]n the absence of an articulated reason or further support” and “instead reviewing] the legal issue on appeal to determine if it was properly presented to the trial court and is susceptible to review under no-evidence summary judgment standards”); Cone v. Fagadau Energy Corp., 68 S.W.3d 147, 156 n. 4 (Tex.App.-Eastland 2001, pet. denied) (expressly disagreeing with “Harrill’s per se reversal and remand of a no-evidence motion for summary judgment that may involve a purely legal issue,” and declaring that “the court must determine the law which is applicable to the case with respect to any no-evidence motion for summary judgment in order to determine if the summary judgment evidence raises a genuine issue of material fact.”); see also, e.g., Chrismon v. Brown, 246 S.W.3d 102 (Tex.App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, no pet.) (holding, in majority opinion, that issue of existence of legal duty could properly be decided on no-evidence basis, and citing cases; dissent would hold that no-evidence summary judgment was sought as to duty based on legal standard that conflicted with established legal doctrine and that movant had admitted legal duty).
The problem with granting a no-evidence summary judgment on a purely legal issue is, as the court in the Cone case acknowledged, that, even if a motion for summary judgment is presented as a no-evidence motion, the law must be construed before it can be determined what the elements of the applicable law are as to which the non-movant must produce proof. See Cone, 68 S.W.3d at 156 n. 4. The problem is compounded by the panel ma*674jority’s interpretation of Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway as absolutely requiring that it first consider the no-evidence grounds supporting a motion for summary judgment when the motion is filed both as a traditional motion for summary judgment under Rule 166a(c) and as a “no evidence” motion under Rule 166a(i).
In Ford Motor Co., the plaintiffs filed negligence and strict liability claims against the defendant, who subsequently moved for summary judgment under both Rule 166a(i) and alternatively under Rule 166a(c). 135 S.W.3d at 600. The supreme court first reviewed the trial court’s summary judgment under the no-evidence standards of Rule 166a(i), reasoning that “[i]f the plaintiffs fail to produce more than a scintilla of evidence under that burden, then there is no need to analyze whether [the defendant’s] proof satisfied the Rule 166a(c) burden.” Id. Subsequently, other courts have relied on Ford Motor Co. to hold that a court must first review summary judgments on no-evidence grounds when a party files a hybrid motion. See, e.g., Doherty v. Old Place, Inc., 316 S.W.3d 840, 843 (Tex.App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.) (“When the motion for summary judgment presents both no-evidence and traditional grounds, appellate courts generally review the no-evidence grounds first.”); Klentzman v. Brady, 312 S.W.3d 886, 897 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, no pet.) (“When a party seeks both a traditional and a no-evidence summary judgment, we first review the trial court’s decision regarding summary judgment under the no-evidence standards of Rule 166a(i)[.]”); Kalyanaram v. Univ. of Tex. Sys., 230 S.W.3d 921, 925 (Tex.App.-Dallas 2007, pet. denied) (“When the motion for summary judgment presented both no-evidence and traditional grounds, we first review the propriety of the summary judgment under the no-evidence standards of Rule 166a(i).”).
In my view, the lack of clarity over whether no-evidence motions on purely legal issues are proper, combined with the perception that Ford requires that the no-evidence portion of a hybrid motion for summary judgment must be decided before the traditional portion, is an invitation to err. Current no-evidence summary judgment law invites courts faced with a hybrid motion for summary judgment to decide, for example, whether the non-mov-ant has presented evidence of his compliance with the terms of a contract before deciding whether the putative contract is valid or what its terms actually require, see In re Estate of Allen, 301 S.W.3d at 929, or to decide whether the non-movant has presented evidence of his compliance with a duty before determining whether he has a duty, see Roades, 310 S.W.3d at 621-22, or — as here — to decide whether the non-movant has presented evidence that an “obstruction” has occurred in a drainage ditch due to the movant’s construction of a covered bridge in the easement without first deciding whether, under the terms of the easement, precedent, and the rules governing the construction of the terms of easements, the movant had the legal right to construct a covered bridge in the easement. The summary judgment is then upheld if it is deemed proper on the ground initially addressed — the no-evidence ground — without 'addressing whether the law on which the judgment was entered was sound or actually applied to the case, and without answering the ultimate question in the case: what does the law require or permit? A request for a ruling on a question of the law is necessarily not a claim on which the petitioner has an evidentiary burden of proof, which is by definition a duty of affirmatively proving a fact or facts in dispute.
The supreme court’s reasoning in Ford Motor Co. simply ’does not apply in the *675instant ease because at least one of the issues addressed in Lily Gardens’ motions for summary judgment did not raise any evidentiary questions, but asked the trial court to resolve a question of law. By following Ford Motor Co. in first reviewing the no-evidence grounds for summary judgment, the panel majority’s September 10, 2010 opinion failed to resolve the legal dispute — namely, whether the terms of the easement granted the District the right to abate any “obstruction, upon said canal, right of way, that may injure, endanger, or interfere with the construction, operation, maintenance and repair of said drainage canal” and, if so, whether Lily Garden’s bridge covering could count as such an encroachment. This was the ruling sought by the District’s declaratory judgment action and by Lily Gardens’ traditional motion for summary judgment, which the panel opinion on rehearing did not reach.
To be entitled to summary judgment on that traditional motion, Lily Gardens had the burden of proving that its bridge covering could never, as a matter of law, “injure, endanger, or interfere with the construction, operation, maintenance, and repair of said drainage canal.” If Lily Gardens met this burden, the District would then have only the burden of raising a material fact issue that such a structure could interfere with its rights. In the original December 22, 2009 opinion, Judge Wilson held that Lily Gardens did not carry its burden of proving as a matter of law that the bridge could never interfere with the District’s rights and that the District had raised a material fact issue as to encroachment, and he remanded the case. The September 10, 2010 panel majority opinion on rehearing, without construing the terms of the easement, but, instead, merely assuming that Lily Gardens’ interpretation of the disputed legal issue was correct and that a covered bridge over the canal was not an obstruction as a matter of law, shifted the burden of proof to the District to have presented evidence that the bridge was, in fact, an obstruction that interfered with the District’s rights under the “correct” interpretation of the law, even though the issue of what those rights actually were had not been considered on its merits and determined by the court.
In my view, the panel, in its original December 22, 2009 opinion, correctly addressed the summary judgment granted by the trial court as a traditional summary judgment, rather than as a no-evidence summary judgment. And, construing the law de novo in accordance with the traditional summary judgment standard of review, the panel correctly reversed the judgment of the trial court on the legal grounds articulated in Justice Wilson’s December 10, 2009 opinion and correctly remanded the case for further proceedings.
By contrast, because the September 10, 2010 majority opinion on rehearing, addressed the issues presented solely under a no-evidence standard of review, rather than the traditional standard of review, it reached a judgment that, in my view, is insupportable under the correct construction of the applicable law and the facts of the case. I, therefore, agree with, and would have joined, the original panel opinion issued on December 22, 2009. I also agree with Justices Wilson’s and Jennings’s dissents on rehearing and join both.
I believe this case satisfies the standards both for en banc review and for supreme court review of (1) the proper construction and application of Rule 166a(i), governing no-evidence motions for summary judgment, and (2) the proper construction of the terms of the drainage ditch easement at issue in this case. See Tex.R.App. P. 41.2(c) (stating that en banc consideration “should not be ordered unless necessary to secure or maintain uniformity of the court’s decisions or unless extraordinary circumstances require en banc consider*676ation”); Tex.R.App. P. 56.1(a) (setting out as grounds for review in supreme court “(1) whether the justices of the court of appeals disagree on an important point of law; (2) whether there is a conflict between the courts of appeals on an important point of law; (3) whether the case involves the construction or validity of a statute; ... (5) whether the court of appeals appears to have committed an error of law of such importance to the state’s jurisprudence that it should be corrected; and (6) whether the court of appeals has decided an important question of state law that should be, but has not been, resolved by the Supreme Court”). I write, therefore, to ask the Supreme Court to decide the issue of whether a no-evidence motion for summary judgment can properly be brought on a pure question of law and to clarify the applicability of its reasoning in Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from denial of en banc reconsideration.
A majority of the justices of the Court voted to overrule the motion for en banc reconsideration.
. In a proper no-evidence inquiry this should have ended the matter, since the court's ruling is supposed to turn on the non-movant’s lack of evidence to support an element of its claim or defense on which it has the burden of proof, not on the movant’s evidence, and the panel determined it had to prove a right to prevent obstructions and could not prove it by this evidence, its only evidence of its legal rights other than the undisputed easement itself. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i) & cmt.-1997.