OPINION
Appellants, Daystar Residential, Inc. (Daystar) and Shiloh Treatment Center (Shiloh), appeal the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of appellee, Mark Collmer. Daystar and Shiloh present three issues for this appeal: (1) whether the doctrine of absolute privilege in regard to judicial immunity applies to disparaging statements made by Collmer and published in newspapers before his filing of a lawsuit against Daystar over the Latasha Bush death; (2) whether the doctrine of absolute privilege in regard to judicial immunity applies to disparaging statements made by Collmer and published in newspapers as to Shiloh, when Shiloh was not a party to the Latasha Bush litigation; and (3) whether the trial court erred by refusing appellants’ discovery request before ruling upon Collmer’s amended motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Daystar and Shiloh share a parent company, Behavior Training Research, Inc. On February 27, 2002, Latasha Bush, a mentally disturbed 15-year-old girl, died at Daystar Residential Treatment Center. Her death was ruled a homicide by the Harris County medical examiner. Stephanie Duffield, a resident of Shiloh had died in 2001. Her death was originally determined to be an accident, but that determination was reconsidered after Bush’s death.
Bush’s mother hired Mark Collmer to represent her in legal actions relating to her daughter’s death. Collmer was interviewed by the Houston Chronicle and the Brazosport newspaper, The Facts, for articles about the investigation of the deaths at the Behavior Training Research facilities. The article in the Houston Chronicle included the following paragraphs:
Mark Collmer, an attorney hired by [Bush’s] mother, said he will file a lawsuit alleging gross negligence this week in Brazoria County.
Collmer said the autopsy revealed hemorrhaging in the girl’s eyes, which he said “usually comes from strangulation,” as well as bruises around her neck and on her back, which he said apparently were inflicted during the basket hold restraint.
“It means you were killed because you were held down” he said of the autopsy. “It’s hard to breathe with three people sitting on you.”
The article in The Facts included the following paragraphs:
Mark Collmer, an attorney representing Bush’s mother, said the new autopsy finding bolsters a civil lawsuit he plans to file in the near future.
“If it’s ruled they have killed someone before and they did not take steps to address the circumstances under which *27 that person was killed, that just shows that they’re not addressing the problem,” Collmer said.
These were the only parts of the articles referring to or attributable to Collmer.
On September 27, 2002, Collmer filed suit against Daystar and Behavior Training Research, seeking damages for Bush’s death. On November 8, Daystar and Shiloh initiated a business disparagement suit against Collmer based on his statements to the newspapers. Collmer answered their suit with a general denial on December 11. Daystar and Shiloh initiated the discovery process in their suit against Collmer by filing requests for disclosure on December 18 and a request for production of documents on December 26. Collmer objected to this discovery, based on work product privilege and lawyer client privilege. Daystar and Shiloh then filed a motion to compel discovery on February 10, 2003. On February 13, Collmer filed suit against Shiloh and Daystar, seeking damages for the death of Duffield. On February 24, Collmer amended his original answer in the business disparagement suit, claiming immunity and absolute privilege. Collmer also filed a motion for summary judgment and a response to plaintiffs motion to compel on this date, both asserting that he was immune from suit because his statements were absolutely privileged. The trial court granted Collmer’s motion for summary judgment.
DISCUSSION
In reviewing a summary judgment, we must indulge every reasonable inference in favor of the nonmovant and resolve any doubts in its favor.
Randall’s Food Mkts., Inc. v. Johnson,
I. Absolute Privilege: Newspaper Remarks
Appellants, in their first issue presented for review, contend that summary judgment should not have been granted for Collmer based on the doctrine of absolute privilege of judicial immunity because his comments were made prior to the filing of the lawsuit against Shiloh and Daystar and were published in newspapers.
Communications made in the due course of a judicial proceeding will not serve as the basis of a civil action for libel or slander, regardless of the negligence or malice with which they are made.
James v. Brown,
The judicial-proceeding privilege has been applied to letters written by lawyers to potential defendants prior to suit.
Watson,
Appellants assert that the concept of absolute privilege because of judicial immunity in Texas has never been extended to statements made in newspapers at some point before a judicial proceeding is actually filed. They are correct. However, as this court stated in
Watson,
the privilege extends to statements made in contemplation of and preliminary to suit.
Watson,
Collmer’s statements bore some relationship to proposed litigation and could further his representation of his client. He was remarking on circumstances which were similar to those of his client and *29 referenced them to the case that he planned to file in the near future. Considering the entire communication in its context, we hold that these statements fall within the absolute privilege of judicial immunity. We overrule appellants’ first issue.
II. Absolute Privilege: Statements Referencing Shiloh
In the second issue presented for review, appellants argue that the doctrine of absolute privilege because of judicial immunity should not apply to Collmer’s statements regarding appellant Shiloh, because Shiloh is a non-party to the Latasha Bush lawsuit. 1
Collmer made his comments in the newspapers as the attorney for Bush’s mother. His comments were quoted in articles about a potential investigation into the 1993 death of a 16-year-old patient at a different Behavior Training Research facility. Although the articles name Shiloh as a facility in which an accidental death occurred in 2000, Collmer did not name Shiloh in his comments to the newspapers; he stated only that the new autopsy findings in the 1993 death might bolster the civil lawsuit he planned to file in the near future.
Our resolution of issue one leads us to conclude that if these statements did, somehow, remark upon Shiloh, they are also protected under the doctrine of judicial immunity because they bear some relationship to the proposed Bush litigation.
Watson,
We overrule appellant’s second issue.
III. Discovery
In appellants’ third issue presented for review, they assert that the trial court erred by refusing appellant’s request for discovery before ruling upon appellee’s amended motion for summary judgment. Appellants argue that the trial court should have compelled and allowed discovery before granting summary judgment so that facts necessary to test components of judicial immunity, such as whether Collmer was contemplating a suit against Shiloh and the context of the newspaper articles could be revealed.
Whether an alleged defamatory communication is related to a proposed or existing judicial proceeding is a question of law.
Thomas,
The statements at issue in this case were made by Collmer and published in newspapers. The newspaper articles were included in the record and available to the trial court. In this case, unlike
Helfand,
there is no dispute regarding the publication of the articles or the facts surrounding the statements. It is uncontested that Collmer was retained to represent Bush’s mother. It is clear from the articles that Collmer was discussing a proposed judicial proceeding and that his comments were in furtherance of that representation. Thus, the evidence was sufficient to establish the
Helfand
components, and there was no need for further discovery.
See Clawson v. Wharton County,
We overrule appellants’ third issue.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Appellants cite
Knox v. Taylor
for the proposition that the judicial privilege is not applicable to comments made about parties who are not involved in the subsequent litigation that was the subject of the statements.
Knox v. Taylor,
