OPINION
In this case, the court addresses whether the affirmative defense of judicial immunity extends to members of an appraisal review board. Appellant Charles Bruce Sledd, the plaintiff below, appeals the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of ap-pellees/defendants Lynzie Garrett, Norma Landry and James Mahon, all of whom were sued for actions taken as members of the Appraisal Review Board for the Harris County Appraisal District. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Sledd is a property tax consultant who represents propеrty owners protesting valuations of the Harris County Appraisal District (the “District”). He is compensated on a contingency-fee basis determined by the amount of reduction, if any, he obtains in his clients’ appraised property values. Sledd represented Three Birds Property Company d/b/a John Eagle Acu-ra (the “Property Owner”) at a formal protest heаring before a three-member panel of the Harris County Appraisal Review Board (the “Board”), comprised of Garrett, Landry, and Mahon (collectively, the “Panel Members”). Slеdd protested the District’s appraisal of the Property Owner’s property. Sledd also alleged errors in the District’s valuation report and claimed the District provided insufficiеnt documentation of its valuation. Sledd requested the Board to set the Property Owner’s property value at $394,990, rather than the Board’s appraised value of $2,307,190. The Panel Members did not make the drastic reduction Sledd requested, but they recommended a reduction in the appraised value of his client’s property to $1,950,000. The Board then accepted this valuation. Sledd and the Property Owner did not appeal the Board’s valuation of the property.
Sledd filed this claim, pro se, in district court against the Panel Members individuаlly, seeking to hold them personally liable for their valuation of the Property Owner’s property. Sledd claims the Panel Members were negligent because they ignored Texas Tаx Code section 41.43, which requires the District to establish value by a preponderance of the evidence. Sledd claims this alleged negligence by the Panel Members causеd him damage due to his reduced contingency fee. The trial court granted the Panel Members’ motion for summary judgment, and Sledd appeals.
*594 II. Standard of Review
The trial court did not specify the grounds upon which it granted summary judgment; therefore, the judgment will be affirmed if any ground raised in the motion for summary judgment is proper.
See Carr v. Brasher,
III. Analysis and Discussion
In their motion for summary judgment, the Panel Members asserted the affirmative defense of judicial immunity. Although the Panel Members are not judges, the doctrine of judiciаl immunity has been applied to quasi-judicial officials in certain circumstances. When applied, the doctrine operates as an absolute bar to liability for acts falling within its scope.
See Bradt v. West,
Judicial immunity applies to quasi-judicial officials who, irrespective of their title, perform functions essentially similar to those of judges, in a setting similar to that of a court.
See Butz v. Economou,
(1) the need to assure the officials may perform their functions without harassment or intimidation;
(2) the presence of safeguards that reduce the need for private damagеs actions as a means of controlling unconstitutional conduct;
(3) insulation from political influence;
(4) the importance of precedent;
(5) the adversarial nature of the process; and
(6) the resolution of error by appeal.
*595
See Butz,
The Texas Tax Code establishes appraisal review boards for each appraisal district as а forum for property owners to protest appraisal-district valuations. See Texas Tax Code §§ 6.41, 41.45. Board decisions may be appealed by the property owner to a state district court. Id. §§ 42.01, 42.21. In large appraisal districts such as the Harris County Appraisal District, more than three members comprise the appraisal review board; the entire Bоard does not sit at each protest hearing. See id. § 6.41(b). A panel of three members of the Board conducts the hearings and recommends a valuation to the entire Board, which then makes the final decision. See id. § 41.45(d).
Panel members hearing a protest have duties similar to judges. The Texas Tax Code uses judicial terminology to describe the panel members’ function. Fоr example, an appraisal review board may “sit” in panels to “conduct protest hearings.” Id. Panel members have the power to subpoena witnesses and documents. See id. § 41.61(a). Like a litigant in a court proceeding, the property owner may offer sworn testimony, evidence, or argument at the hearing before the panel. Id. §§ 41.45(b), 41.67(a). As in judicial prоceedings, adequate notice of the hearing is required as well as the opportunity to present argument or evidence to support the property owner’s protest. See id. §§ 41.44, 41.45(b).
Panel members must be able to rule on the valuation issues that come before them free from harassment or intimidation by property owners or their representatives. Pаnel decisions can have a significant effect on a property owner’s taxes, and the financial repercussions of such decisions could motivate disappоinted property owners or their agents to seek recovery of civil damages from members of the Board. A protest hearing before panel members is an adversariаl process, and the property owner’s ability to appeal to the district court supports the second, third, and sixth
Butz
factors. It is undisputed that the Panel Members were acting as a panel for the Board, and that their function at the protest hearing was to adjudicate the valuation protest. Sledd sued the Panel Members for their allegedly actiоnable conduct as Panel Members regarding the formal protest hearing. Applying the
Butz
factors to the undisputed summary-judgment evidence, we conclude that the Panel Members рerform quasi-judicial functions and that judicial immunity bars Sledd’s claims against the Panel Members in this case.
See Butz,
Slеdd argues the Panel Members are not entitled to judicial immunity because they do not make a final decision but only submit their recommendation to the Board for final determination. This аrgument lacks merit. As members of the Board, the Panel Members acted within their authority and performed their functions in deciding the appropriate valuation. In smaller appraisal districts, the entire appraisal review board hears and decides all protests, and there is no recommendation before a final determination is made. Becаuse the appraisal district in Harris County is larger, three board members cannot hear all of the protests. The resulting recommendation procedure should not precludе judicial immunity from attaching to functions performed by panel members in larger counties when it would *596 otherwise attach to panels comprised of the entire board in smaller сounties.
IV. Conclusion
The Panel Members perform quasi-judicial functions that are protected by judicial immunity. Therefore, the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of the Panel Mеmbers. Because we find the Panel Members conclusively established the affirmative defense of judicial immunity, we need not address the other grounds for summary judgment. Accordingly, we overrule Sledd’s issues, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
