OPINION
Opinion by
This is a defamation case. Appellant Joe L. Alaniz (“Alaniz”) brings thirteen issues complaining of the trial court’s: (1) admission and exclusion of summary-judgment evidence; and (2) granting of summary judgment in favor of appellee Gaylord Hoyt (“Hoyt”). We reverse and remand.
I. JURISDICTION
Our initial inquiry is always whether we have jurisdiction over an appeal.
Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd.,
A. The Pleadings of the Parties
Alaniz, a certified public accountant, is the vice-president for business and finance and chief financial officer of Del Mar College in Corpus Christi, Texas. Alaniz supervises the financial accounting and book *336 keeping of Del Mar College. Among the funds entrusted to the business and finance office are custodial funds for memorials, scholarships, student organizations, and other designated purposes, including custodial funds for the Del Mar College Foundation. These custodial funds are referred to as “Agency accounts” for accounting purposes.
Hoyt is a mathematics professor at Del Mar College. In a second amended petition filed January 12, 2001, Alaniz alleged that Hoyt made oral and written statements about him that were false and defamatory per se. Specifically, Alaniz alleged that Hoyt made statements, with knowledge that they were false or with reckless disregard for their truth or falsity, that Alaniz: (1) “commingled” Del Mar College funds with Del Mar College Foundation funds; (2) falsified documents regarding the allocation of interest to Del Mar College checking accounts; (3) “skimmed” interest from Del Mar College investments; and (4) was the subject of a criminal investigation. Alaniz pleaded the following specific allegations:
1. “Commingling.” On September 7, 1997, Hoyt wrote a letter to Senator Carlos Truan that stated, “It is my belief that to make these loans someone at Del Mar College had to mix College money with Foundation money to make the accounts balance.” On September 20, 1997, Hoyt repeated the statement in a letter to Ralph Diaz, chair of the Audit Committee of the Del Mar College Board of Regents. On January 19, 1998, Hoyt again repeated the statement in a letter to the trustees of Del Mar College Foundation. On various occasions, Hoyt told members of the Del Mar College Board of Regents that Alaniz directed the mixing or “commingling” of funds of Del Mar College with funds of Del Mar College Foundation. Hoyt repeated the “commingling” statement at a July 6, 1998 Del Mar College faculty council meeting and in various conversations with employees, faculty, administrators, and regents of Del Mar College around that date.
2. Falsifying Documents. In April of 1998, in private conversations with the Del Mar College Board of Regents, and at an April 29, 1998 meeting of the Del Mar College Board of Regents, Hoyt stated that Alaniz had falsified documents regarding the allocation of checking account interest to Del Mar College accounts. Hoyt repeated the falsifying-documents statement at the same July 6, 1998 faculty council meeting and in various conversations with employees, faculty, administrators, and regents of Del Mar College around that date.
3. “Skimming.” On June 28, 1998, in a memorandum to Del Mar College President Terry Dicianna (“Dicianna”) that Hoyt distributed to the local press and to the Del Mar College Board of Regents, Hoyt stated that it had been confirmed that Alaniz was or had been “skimming interest” away from Del Mar College investments. Hoyt repeated the assertion at the same July 6, 1998 faculty council meeting and in various conversations with employees, faculty, administrators, and regents of Del Mar College around that date.
4. Criminal Investigation. Also at the July 6, 1998 faculty council meeting and in various conversations with employees, faculty, administrators, and regents of Del Mar College around that date, Hoyt “claimed or implied” that Alaniz was under criminal investigation.
In his first amended answer, Hoyt filed a general denial and asserted that: (1) Alaniz was a public official; (2) a quasi-judicial privilege applied to the statements; (3) a qualified privilege applied to his statements because he communicated them to persons with a common or business interest in the communications; (4) the *337 statements were true; (5) Hoyt did not make the statements with actual malice or with reckless disregard for the truth; and (6) Alaniz’s own physical condition or his own acts or omissions were the sole cause or, alternatively, a proximate cause of the occurrence in question and Alaniz’s alleged damages, entitling Hoyt to contribution from Alaniz. On January 18, 2001, Hoyt objected to and asked the court to strike Alaniz’s second amended petition as untimely and as asserting new causes of action and allegations of fact not previously identified in discovery. No order on Hoyt’s motion to strike the second amended petition appears in the record.
B. The Summary-Judgment Proceedings
1. Hoyt’s Grounds
On December 28, 2000, Hoyt filed both a no-evidence and a traditional motion for summary judgment. In the no-evidence portion of his motion, he asserted that Alaniz was a public figure and therefore bore the burden of proving that Hoyt made any statements with “actual malice.” Hoyt also focused on the “actual malice” element in his traditional motion for summary judgment. In support of his contention that he did not make the statements with actual malice, and to assert in particular the absence of any indication he made any statements with serious doubt as to their truthfulness, Hoyt included excerpts from his own deposition testimony. In addition, on January 4, 2001, Hoyt filed his own supporting affidavit regarding his state of mind with regard to the challenged statements. He argued that he did not intend any connotation of criminality or illegality in his use of the word “skimming.” Finally, Hoyt also moved for a partial summary judgment on the ground that statements he made in complaining about Alaniz to the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy were privileged.
2. Alaniz’s Response
In his response to Hoyt’s motion for summary judgment, which Alaniz filed January 12, 2001, Alaniz did not dispute Hoyt’s characterization of Alaniz’s status as a public official. Instead, Alaniz asserted: (1) the existence of a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Hoyt acted with malice; and (2) that Hoyt’s statements were defamatory per se as a matter of law. As summary-judgment evidence, Alaniz attached to his response affidavits, documents, and deposition excerpts. By separate motion also filed January 12, 2001, Alaniz asked the trial court to take judicial notice of a definition of the word “skim” from the Cambridge Dictionary of American English. 2
*338 3.Hoyt’s Reply
Hoyt filed a reply on January 19, 2001. He attached excerpts from Alaniz’s deposition testimony.
4.The Summary-Judgment Order
The “Order Granting Defendant Gaylord Hoyt’s Motion for Summary Judgment,” signed January 25, 2001, recited as follows:
On the 25th [sic] 3 day of January, 2001, came to be considered Defendant Gaylord Hoyt’s Motion for Summary Judgment. After reviewing the "Motion and Response thereto and hearing argument of counsel, it is the opinion of the Court that the Motion is well taken and should be in all things GRANTED.
It is, therefore, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Defendant Gaylord Hoyt’s Motion for Summary Judgment, is in all things GRANTED and that Plaintiff Joe L. Alaniz take nothing against Defendant Gaylord Hoyt, that all claims asserted by plaintiff are denied, and that all costs of court be taxed against plaintiff. All relief requested and not expressly granted is denied.
5.Finality
After examining the pleadings and summary-judgment record, we conclude that the “Order Granting Defendant Gaylord Hoyt’s Motion for Summary Judgment” signed January 25, 2001 disposes of all pending parties and claims.
See Guajardo
v.
Conwell,
We now address the issues on appeal. We first turn to the evidentiary complaints.
II. THE EVIDENTIARY ISSUES
In his second issue, Alaniz complains Hoyt’s affidavit was untimely and should not be considered part of the summary-judgment record. In issue twelve, Alaniz asserts that the trial court erred in sustaining Hoyt’s objection to the affidavit of Anne Stewart, a professor at Del Mar College and chair of the Del Mar College faculty council during the 1998-1999 term (the “Stewart affidavit”). In issue thirteen, Alaniz maintains that the trial court should have taken judicial notice of the dictionary definition of “skim” and the defamatory potential of the word “skimming.”
A. The Objections
By written objection filed January 11, 2001, Alaniz complained that the Hoyt affidavit filed January 4, 2001 was untimely in that Hoyt filed it less than twenty-one days before the summary-judgment hearing then set for January 19, 2001. Alaniz also objected to the January 19, 2001 hearing date, citing his lack of the requisite twenty-one days’ notice. The record does not reflect that Hoyt sought leave of court to file the affidavit to which Alaniz objected.
On January 18, 2001, Hoyt filed a written objection to Alaniz’s summary-judgment evidence. Specifically, Hoyt objected to the Stewart affidavit, arguing it should be struck because Alaniz had not *339 identified Stewart’s testimony in discovery responses. Hoyt also objected that a letter dated February 28, 1998 from Hoyt to John Moore at the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy (the “Moore letter”) was privileged and should be struck. Further, Hoyt objected to Alaniz’s request that the trial court take judicial notice of the definition of “skim.”
The court held a summary-judgment hearing January 23, 2001. Alaniz reasserted his objection to the untimeliness of Hoyt’s affidavit. Hoyt reasserted his objections to Stewart’s affidavit and the Moore letter.
B. The Trial Court’s Rulings
On January 25, 2001, the judge signed an order sustaining Hoyt’s objection to inclusion of the Stewart affidavit and the Moore letter in the summary-judgment record. That same date, the judge signed an order sustaining Hoyt’s objection to Alaniz’s request for judicial notice of the meaning of the word “skim.” No order with regard to Alaniz’s objection to the untimeliness of Hoyt’s summary-judgment affidavit appears in the record.
C. The Evidentiary Arguments
1. The Untimeliness of Hoyt’s Summary-Judgment Evidence
In issue two, Alaniz asserts that the untimeliness of Hoyt’s summary-judgment affidavit filed on January 4, 1991 bars its consideration on appeal. In his appeal brief, Hoyt concedes that his affidavit was untimely. He argues that the record does not reflect that the trial court considered the late-filed affidavit. He points out that the substance of the affidavit is repeated in timely filed deposition excerpts.
We agree with Alaniz that when a mov-ant, without leave of court, files summary-judgment evidence less than twenty-one days before a summary-judgment hearing, a presumption attaches that the trial court did not consider the late-filed evidence.
Vasquez v. Carmel Shopping Ctr. Co., 777
S.W.2d 532, 535 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1989, writ denied). Accordingly, we hold that Hoyt’s summary-judgment affidavit filed January 4, 2001 is not part of the summary-judgment record.
See Tex. Air-finance Corp. v. Lesikar, 777
S.W.2d 559, 561-62 (Tex.App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 1989, no writ) (citing
INA of Tex. v. Bryant,
Also in his second issue, Alaniz asserts that excerpts from Alaniz’s deposition filed by Hoyt four days before the summary-judgment hearing were untimely. Alaniz is correct that a non-movant may submit evidence in support of its response to a summary-judgment motion only up to seven days before the hearing.
Knapp v. Eppright,
2. The Striking of the Stewart Affidavit
Alaniz attached the Stewart affidavit to his response to Hoyt’s motion for summary judgment. Hoyt moved to strike the Stewart affidavit on the ground that “it sets forth factual allegations that have not previously been identified in Plaintiffs responses to Interrogatories (and more specifically, Plaintiffs response to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 6) or responses to Requests for Disclosure.” We note that Hoyt did not attach the referenced discovery responses to his objection, nor does the record otherwise reflect that the referenced discovery responses were filed, either by Hoyt or by Alaniz. Also, the record does not reflect that Alaniz sought to establish good cause for any failure to timely amend his discovery responses to identify Stewart’s knowledge of relevant facts.
The trial court agreed with Hoyt and struck the Stewart affidavit. On appeal, Alaniz argues that supplementation of discovery responses is not a prerequisite to a party’s use in a summary-judgment proceeding of affidavits of previously undisclosed witnesses, citing
Gandara v. Novasad,
We agree with both Alaniz and Hoyt. The rules regarding discovery supplementation do not apply to the comprehensive framework of summary-judgment proceedings.
Johnson v. Fuselier,
We have reviewed the summary-judgment record. We conclude that Stewart’s affidavit contains the only evidence in the record of the substance of conversations among Stewart, Hoyt, and third parties that took place on July 13, 1998 and August 12, 1998. As discussed in more detail below, our determination of whether Alaniz met his burden of producing evidence in response to Hoyt’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment turns on the contents of those two conversations. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court’s striking of the Stewart affidavit was harmful.
See Ebasco Constructors,
3. The Striking of the Moore Letter
Also in issue twelve, Alaniz asserts that the trial court erred in striking the Moore letter on the basis of judicial privilege. Alaniz does not dispute that an absolute privilege originally attached to the Moore letter. However, Alaniz argues that: (1) the Moore letter is admissible summary-judgment evidence of Hoyt’s actual malice in repeating his statements about Alaniz after receiving an auditor’s report absolving Alaniz of malfeasance; and (2) Hoyt re-expressed the same statements he made in the Moore letter “outside the penumbra *341 of judicial privilege” when he repeated the statements at the Del Mar College faculty council meeting on July 6, 1998. Hoyt responds that: (1) the statements made by him to Moore were absolutely privileged; and (2) Alaniz waived his complaint by not “identifying the exclusion of this evidence as one of his issues for appeal pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure, 38.1.” We address first Hoyt’s waiver argument.
a.Waiver
Hoyt correctly points out that Alaniz did not identify in an issue on appeal Alaniz’s objection to the trial court’s striking of the Moore letter. Nonetheless, Alaniz raises the complaint in his argument under issue twelve. The supreme court instructs that we must consider a party’s arguments supporting each issue on appeal, not just the wording of the issue itself.
Anderson v. Gilbert,
b.Standard of Review
The admission or exclusion of summary-judgment evidence rests in the sound discretion of the trial court.
Alejandro v. Bell,
c.Analysis
(1) The Law of Judicial Privilege
A privilege to communicate may be either absolute or qualified.
Gallegos v. Escalon,
(2) The Contents of the Moore Letter
In his second amended petition, Alaniz did not allege against Hoyt any liability for defamation based on the contents of the Moore letter. Nor does Alaniz claim that Hoyt published the letter itself to third parties.
See Rose,
The chief financial officer of Del Mar College is Jose L. Alaniz. He holds himself out to be a Certified Public Accountant. He has been employed by Del Mar College since July 1977 and has served as the chief financial officer and the chief fiscal officer since February 1, 1992. His title is vice president of business and finance. Mr. Alaniz is also responsible for funds of the related but separate Del Mar College Foundation.
The complaint is that Mr. Alaniz is charged with the responsibility to maintain proper and adequate internal controls, but he fails to maintain internal controls. Under Mr. Alaniz’s direction there seems to be a commingling of funds of the College and the separate Foundation. In addition, a “President’s Fund” is part of the Foundation, and disbursements from this Fund are allegedly improper. The College apparently has also improperly accounted for and retained funds of the Foundation arising from unclaimed scholarships awarded by the Foundation. A listing of improprieties in accounting are beyond the scope of this letter.
To explain the suspected unethical acts of Mr. Joe Alaniz, I enclose two audit reports of Del Mar College and other related documents, which need no explanation. The president of Del Mar College, Terry L. Dicianna, explained to the Board of Regents that the errors were caused because the reconciliations were performed by “clerks and secretaries” who were “inadequately trained.” Incidentally, Del Mar College includes a department of accounting. There has been totally lacking any acceptance of accountability by President Dicianna and/or Mr. Alaniz. 4
Thus, Hoyt made privileged statements in the Moore letter that Alaniz: (1) failed to maintain internal controls; (2) “commingled” Del Mar College funds with Del Mar College Foundation funds; (3) allegedly made improper disbursements from the “President’s Fund”; (4) improperly accounted for and retained unclaimed Del Mar College Foundation scholarship funds; and (5) engaged in suspected unethical acts. Of these five statements, only Hoyt’s repetition to others of the statement that Alaniz “commingled” funds serves as a specific basis for an allegation of defamation in Alaniz’s second amended petition.
(3) Application of the Law of Judicial Privilege to the Moore Letter
The summary-judgment record shows that Dicianna testified Hoyt repeated in Dicianna’s presence and in the presence of third parties the statement that Alaniz had “commingled” funds. Further, in Alaniz’s *343 summary-judgment affidavit, Alaniz testified:
I was present during a meeting of Del Mar College faculty and administrators in July 1998, at which Dr. Gaylord Hoyt made false and defamatory accusations that ... I had improperly mixed or commingled funds of Del Mar College with funds of the Del Mar College Foundation.
On the other hand, Hoyt presented no controverting evidence he did not repeat, outside the protection of the Moore letter, the statement that Alaniz had “commingled” funds. 5 The De Mankowski court held:
The privilege accorded a litigant which exempts him from liability for damages caused by false charges made in his pleadings, or in the court in the course of a judicial proceeding, cannot be enlarged into a license to go out in the community and make false and slanderous charges against his court adversary and escape liability for damages caused by such charges on the ground that he had made similar charges in his court pleadings.
De Mankowski,
Further, disclosure of “any significant part” of a document subject to an evidentiary privilege waives the privilege as to the document and results in an implied waiver of the privilege as to any additional material that was not disclosed.
See Terrell State Hosp. of the Tex. Dept. of Mental Health and Mental Retardation v. Ashworth,
We have reviewed the summary-judgment record. We conclude that the record contains, other than in the Moore letter (as discussed in detail below), evidence that Hoyt, after receipt of an audi *344 tor’s report absolving Alaniz of malfeasance, repeated to third parties the statement that Alaniz had “commingled” funds. We hold that the trial court’s striking of the Moore letter was harmless. See id. We overrule Alaniz’s twelfth issue as it relates to the Moore letter.
III. SUMMARY-JUDGMENT STANDARDS OF REVIEW
The function of summary judgment is to eliminate patently unmeritorious claims and defenses, not to deprive litigants of the right to a jury trial.
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Auth.,
The trial court did not specify the ground or grounds on which it granted Hoyt’s motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, we will uphold the summary judgment if any of the grounds raised by Hoyt in his summary-judgment motions has merit.
Bradley v. State ex rel. White,
A. No-Evidence Summary-Judgment Standards
A no-evidence motion for summary judgment asserts that there is no evidence of one or more essential elements of a claim on which the adverse party will bear the burden of proof at trial. Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i);
Belalcazar,
B. Traditional Summary-Judgment Standards
We review de novo a trial court’s grant or denial of a traditional motion for summary judgment.
Ortega,
We turn now to the heart of the parties’ dispute.
IV. ANALYSIS
A. The Law of Defamation
Texas law recognizes two types of defamation: libel and slander.
Fields v. Keith,
1. Are the Words Defamatory?
To be defamatory, words must be false.
Padilla v. Carrier Air Conditioning,
Words may be defamatory per se if they are so obviously harmful to the person aggrieved that no proof of their injurious effect is necessary to make them actionable.
Shearson Lehman Hutton,
*346
Inc. v. Tucker,
Whether words can be interpreted as defamatory is a question of law for the court.
LaChance,
2. What Is the Private or Public Status of the Plaintiff?
The degree and burden of proof applied in a defamation case hinges on the status of the plaintiff as either a private individual or a public figure.
LaChance,
Alaniz, in the context of this summary-judgment proceeding, did not dispute he is a public figure. Accordingly, our analysis assumes that Alaniz will bear the burden of proving at trial that Hoyt acted with actual malice.
See Casso,
B. The Law of Actual Malice
Defamatory words are communicated with actual malice when the defendant knows the words are false or recklessly disregards whether the words are false or not.
Randall’s Food Mkts.,
1. The Burden of Proof for Actual Malice
To show actual malice in the defamation context, the plaintiff must produce “clear and convincing evidence that the defendant acted with a knowledge of falsity or with a ‘high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity.’ ”
Connaughton,
Although actual malice focuses on the defendant’s subjective state of mind, a plaintiff can prove it through objective evidence about the circumstances surrounding the alleged defamatory words.
Turner v. KTRK Television, Inc.,
In the summary-judgment context, rule 166a permits the granting of summary judgment on the basis of uncon-troverted testimonial evidence of an interested witness if that evidence “is clear, positive and direct, otherwise credible and free from contradictions and inconsistencies, and could have been readily controverted.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c). The supreme court has held that the phrase “could have been readily controverted” does not simply mean that the movant’s summary-judgment proof in a defamation case could have been easily and conveniently rebutted.
Casso,
2. The Standard of Review for Actual Malice
On Review of a Summary Judgment
The clear-and-convincing standard of proof does not apply to review of summary-judgment proceedings in a defamation case.
Huckabee v. Time Warner Entm’t Co., L.P.,
3. Application of the Law to the Summary-Judgment Evidence
In both his no-evidence and traditional motions for summary judgment, Hoyt focused on the “actual malice” element on which we assume, for purposes of this summary-judgment record, that Alan-iz will bear the burden of proof at trial. In the no-evidence portion of his motion, Hoyt specifically identified that Alaniz had no evidence that Hoyt either made the statements with a “high degree of awareness of probable falsity” or that Hoyt had “actual subjective doubt about the trustfulness [sic] of the statements.” In reviewing the summary judgment, we determine if Alaniz produced in response to Hoyt’s no-evidence motion more than a scintilla of evidence that Hoyt acted with actual malice, that is, if the evidence in the summary-judgment record “rises to a level that would enable reasonable and fair-minded people to differ in their conclusions.”
Ortega,
a. Hoyt’s No-Evidence Motion for Summary Judgment
Alaniz generally complains in his first issue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for Hoyt. In issue eight, Alaniz asserts that the summary-judgment record contains more than a scintilla of evidence that Hoyt knew or suspected that his statements about Alan-iz, taken as a whole, could present a false and defamatory impression. In issue nine, Alaniz maintains that the summary-judgment record contains more than a scintilla of evidence that Hoyt knew or suspected that his statements that Alaniz had been “skimming” interest could present a false and defamatory impression. Similarly, in issue ten, Alaniz asserts that the summary-judgment record contains more than a scintilla of evidence that Hoyt knew or suspected that his statements that Alaniz had “commingled” funds of Del Mar College with funds of Del Mar College Foundation could present a false and defamatory impression.
In response to Hoyt’s no-evidence motion, Alaniz filed excerpts from the deposition of Lisa Anderson, a CPA employed by the accounting firm of KPMG Peat Mar-wick, who prepared an internal control audit report, dated February 4, 1998, of *349 Del Mar College Agency accounts. Anderson testified she prepared an audit report that informed the Del Mar College Board of Regents, among other findings, that KPMG’s audit did not disclose any evidence of criminal conduct such as theft or misappropriation, nor did the audit reveal that funds of Del Mar Foundation were commingled with funds of Del Mar College. Minutes of a meeting held March 2, 1998 of the Audit Committee of the Del Mar College Board of Regents, also submitted by Alaniz in response to Hoyt’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment, confirmed both the substance of KPMG’s findings as disclosed in the audit report and that the audit report was presented to the Audit Committee on that date. Alan-iz’s summary-judgment affidavit established both that Hoyt was present at the March 2, 1998 Audit Committee meeting when the KPMG audit report was presented and that Hoyt received a copy.
Alaniz also submitted as summary-judgment evidence a memorandum dated June 28,1998 from Hoyt to Dicianna that stated in part:
Now that is it [sic] confirmed that Mr. Jose Alaniz has been “skimming” interest earnings on the checking account away from agency accounts, please provide me, according to the Texas Open Records Act, all journal entries and/or general ledger pages showing disbursements, transfer, and/or withdrawals....
Further, Alaniz’s summary-judgment evidence established that Hoyt published the Dicianna memo to members of the Del Mar College Board of Regents and to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times newspaper.
Moreover, Alaniz’s summary-judgment affidavit established that during a Del Mar College faculty and administrators meeting in July of 1998, Hoyt stated that Alaniz had been “skimming” interest from Del Mar College Agency accounts and had improperly “commingled” funds of Del Mar College with funds of Del Mar College Foundation. Also, Dicianna testified in his deposition that Hoyt continued to repeat, after completion of the KPMG audit, statements about Alaniz “skimming” and “commingling” funds.
Finally, Stewart testified in her affidavit that during a meeting between Stewart, Hoyt, and Richard Armenta (another Del Mar College colleague) on July 13, 1998, Hoyt repeated his statement that Alaniz was “skimming.” Stewart testified that after Armenta explained the meaning of skimming and cautioned Hoyt that the term connoted stealing or theft, Hoyt reiterated that Alaniz was “skimming.” Stewart also testified in her affidavit that Hoyt repeated his statements in a meeting on August 12, 1998, between Stewart, Hoyt, Armenta, Dicianna, and another academic colleague, after Stewart again had warned Hoyt that the words Hoyt used in connection with Alaniz’s performance of his financial duties for Del Mar College suggested a crime had been committed and were legally actionable.
A defamation plaintiff can prove a defendant’s subjective malicious state of mind through objective evidence about the circumstances surrounding the alleged defamatory words as well as by circumstantial evidence.
Turner,
b. Hoyt’s Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment
In issue three, Alaniz asserts that a fact issue exists with regard to whether Hoyt knew or suspected that his statements about Alaniz could be interpreted in a manner that would be defamatory and that the defamatory impression presented by Hoyt’s statements was false or misleading. Hoyt responds that his summary-judgment evidence, even excluding his untimely affidavit in which he denied acting with actual malice, conclusively showed that he believed in the truth of his assertions. We assume, without deciding, that Hoyt testified to a subjective belief in the truth of his statements in the deposition excerpts timely submitted in support of his traditional motion for summary judgment. Nonetheless, we have held that Alaniz presented more than a scintilla of evidence that Hoyt acted with actual malice. Similarly, we find that Alaniz met his burden of controverting any evidence of Hoyt’s subjective belief in the truth of Hoyt’s assertions.
See Casso,
Further, objectively construing Hoyt’s words as a whole in light of both the conclusions reached by the KPMG audit report and Hoyt’s repetition of the words after having received the audit report and after having been cautioned by his academic colleagues about the injurious connotation of his words, we find that the words “skimming” and “commingling” are of ambiguous or doubtful import in the context in which Hoyt used the words.
See LaChance,
V. CONCLUSION
We sustain Alaniz’s second issue as it relates to the untimeliness of Hoyt’s summary-judgment affidavit. We overrule Alaniz’s second issue as it relates to the trial court’s consideration of the deposition excerpts attached to Hoyt’s reply to Alan-iz’s response to Hoyt’s motions for summary judgment. We sustain Alaniz’s twelfth issue as it relates to the trial court’s striking of the Stewart affidavit and overrule it as it relates to the Moore letter. We sustain Alaniz’s eighth, ninth, and tenth issues that the trial court’s grant of Hoyt’s summary judgment on no-evidence grounds was error. We sustain Alaniz’s third issue that the trial court’s grant of Hoyt’s summary judgment on traditional grounds was error. Accordingly, we also sustain Alaniz’s first issue asserting generally that the trial court erred in entering summary judgment for Hoyt.
See
*351
Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. John Zink Co.,
Notes
. Within the motion for judicial notice, Alaniz moved for partial summary judgment on the ground that Hoyt’s statements regarding "skimming" were defamatory per se. Hoyt objected to Alaniz’s attempt to assert his own motion for summary judgment less than twenty-one days before the hearing scheduled on Hoyt’s motion. The record does not reflect an order from the court in that regard. Alan-iz does not raise an issue on appeal complaining of the trial court’s denial of his cross-motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, we review only the trial court’s order granting Hoyt’s motion for summary judgment. Similarly, Hoyt did not object to the trial court's consideration, as part of Alaniz’s response (filed the same day) to Hoyt’s motion for summary judgment, of the summary-judgment evidence attached by Alaniz to his motion for judicial notice. No written order excluded the materials from the summary-judgment record. Further, the materials attached to Alaniz’s motion for judicial notice were filed more than seven days before the summary-judgment hearing.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c). Therefore, we consider all of the materials filed by Alaniz on January 12, 2001, including the materials attached to his motion for judicial notice, as part of the summary-judgment record.
See Util. Pipeline Co. v. Am. Petrofina Mktg.,
. The court reporter’s record reflects that the summary-judgment hearing took place January 23, 2001.
. The exhibit filed by Alaniz contains only the first page of the February 28, 1998 letter from Hoyt to John Moore at the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy. The exhibit also does not include the referenced enclosures.
. Nor did Hoyt present controverting evidence that: (1) he did not make any of the statements attributed to him by Alaniz in Alaniz’s second amended petition; or (2) he did not repeat the statements after he received in March of 1998 an audit report absolving Alaniz of malfeasance.
. In particular, we do not reach Alaniz’s thirteenth issue in which he challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to take judicial notice of a definition of the word "skim.” Hoyt argues that the definition of a word is not a proper subject for judicial notice. We note that a trial court’s decision in taking judicial notice is subject to review under an abuse-of-discretion standard.
See Houston Chronicle Publ’g Co. v. Hardy, 678
S.W.2d 495, 508 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1984, no writ). Courts may take judicial notice of "adjudicative facts.” TexR. Evid. 201. Rule 201 further instructs that "a judicially noticed fact must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Tex.R. Evid. 201(b). Further, we note that "adjudicative facts” are defined in the context of administrative proceedings as: "Factual matters concerning the parties ... as contrasted with legislative facts which are general and usually do not touch individual questions of particular parties to a proceeding.” Black's Law Dictionary, p. 39 (5th ed.). For the proposition that a court may take judicial notice of the definition of a word, Alaniz cites
Allied Gen. Agency, Inc. v. Moody,
