Appellant has been before us once before in
Bailey v. Tuck,
Appellees are accountants who were appointed by the trial court to prepare a special report of the accounts of the partners to be filed in Bailey v. Tuck, supra. After an adverse judgment in that cause, appellant filed the suit at bar alleging appеllees were negligent and prejudiced against him in the preparation of their report аnd in their testimony at trial. Appellant also asserts the jury’s answer of “none” to the special issue on appellant’s damages in the former case was a proximate result of ap-рellees’ negligence and bias. The trial court rendered summary judgment for ap-pellees.
Appellant appears before us pro se with a long and detailed compilation of the grievances he believes have been perpetrated against him by a number of people, including the courts, and, of course, the aрpellees here. We understand his indigna *786 tion but are compelled to conclude he has nоt stated a cause of action sufficient for this Court to grant him any relief.
We hold that the trial cоurt correctly granted summary judgment for ap-pellees because the evidence estаblishes that all of appellees’ acts or omissions of which appellant did or could сomplain were absolutely privileged communications uttered or published in the due course of a judicial proceeding.
An absolutely privileged communication is one which by reasоn of the occasion on which it is made no remedy can be had in a civil action.
Aransas Harbor Terminal Railway v. Taber,
This rule has been specifically applied to the testimony of the expert witness.
Clark v. Grigson,
The community has the same interest in obtaining this kind of testimony, when relevаnt, without the intimidating threat of a lawsuit against the expert witness. If the policy underlying the immunity is strong enough to apply in cases of deliberate perjury, it applies with even greater force to cases in which the adverse testimony is the result of an expert’s negligence in formulating his opinion. The same principle applies, whether the action is for defamation or for malpractice. Consequently, we hold that no civil liability exists on the part of an expert witness who forms an opinion and states that opinion in the course of his testimony in a judicial proceeding, even though he may have been negligent in the process. Id. at 265 (citations deleted).
In addition, the trial court’s judgment may also be affirmed for the reason that it rests upon two independent grounds, or defenses, to which no point of error was assigned by appellant. Appellees’ motion for summary judgment was based on three grounds: absolute immunity; collateral es-toppel; and, failure to state a cause оf action. Appellant has assigned error only to the defense of absolute immunity. The other twо grounds, collateral estoppel and failure to state a cause of action, each provides an independent basis for affirming the trial court’s summary judgment against appellant. Because appellant did not complain of either of these two independent grоunds, and because the district court did not specify the basis of its judgment, we may affirm the case on this point alone. Where a judgment may rest upon more than one ground, the party aggrieved by the judgmеnt must assign error to each ground or the judgment will be affirmed on the ground to which no complaint is madе. In such situations, it is said that the appellant has waived his right to complain of the ruling to which no error was assigned.
Johnson v. Coggeshall,
Apрellant presented his case before the trial court and this Court pro se. He repeatedly alluded to the fact that he is not a lawyer, with the implication this Court should make some allowancе therefor. This we cannot do. Having made the determi *787 nation to try and to appeal his case without counsel, appellant stands before us as any other litigant and his case must be determined by this Court as any other appeal.
The judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.
