OPINION
Sharon Eads was employed by American National Bank of Waco in 1981 and was discharged in 1989. During the intervening years, she was promoted with commensurate increases in salary and American Bank merged with American National Bank to form American Bank, N.A. After being discharged, she sued the bank and M.N. Bostick and William C. Landiss, officers and directors of the bank, alleging a single cause of action for tortious interference with her employment relationship with the bank, actual damages, and exemplary damages. The bank asserted that the relationship was at-will and that it was entitled to discharge her at any time with or without cause. Bostick and Landiss asserted that they are not liable individually because each acted within the course and scope of his employment, that they enjoy a privilege as officers of the bank acting within the course and scope of their employment, and that their actions were taken in good faith on behalf of the bank and were therefore *210 legally justified or excused. The defendants filed motions for summary judgment, attacking elements of Eads’ cause of action and asserting that their affirmative defenses were established as a matter of law. Eads responded, but the defendants objected that her summary judgment proof contained hearsay and conclusions and that her deposition excerpts were not properly authenticated. The court granted a summary judgment in favor of all defendants.
Eads complains in a single point of error that the court erred in granting summary judgment becáuse “legally cognizable fact issues of tortious interference with appellant’s employment contract were raised by the summary judgment proof.”
A defendant who moves for a summary judgment must show that no material issue of fact exists as to plaintiff's cause of action.
Griffin v. Rowden,
Eads’ brief does not contend that her employment was not at-will nor that the bank had no right to terminate her employment. The brief recognizes that a corporate employee is privileged to interfere with his employer’s contractual relationships with third parties as long as the interferer acts in good faith and believes that what he does is best for the corporation.
See Maxey v. Citizens National Bank of Lubbock,
An at-will employment agreement can be the subject of a claim of tortious interference.
Sterner v. Marathon Oil Co.,
The bank could not tortiously interfere with its own contract.
See Schoellkopf v. Pledger,
*211 Our only inquiry, then, is whether there is summary-judgment evidence that raises a fact issue about malice on the part of Bostick or Landiss.
The defendants objected to Eads’ summary-judgment evidence on the grounds that it contained hearsay and conclusions and that her deposition excerpts were not properly authenticated. However, no order sustaining their objections appears in the record. We agree with the Dallas Court of Appeals that an order sustaining an objection to summary-judgment evidence must be reduced to writing, signed, and entered of record.
Utilities Pipeline Co. v. American Petrofina Mktg.,
The decision in
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority
halted the practice whereby an appellate court found itself in the position of having to search through an appellate record to ascertain whether a genuine issue of material fact existed.
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority,
Eads’ summary-judgment evidence consists of her affidavit, the affidavits of three fellow employees, and excerpts from the depositions of Bostick and Landiss. Eads’ affidavit states that the banking relationship between the bank and her brother, Mike Simons, turned sour, that the bank put pressure on Eads and others to assume or move Simons’ business to another bank, that she did assume a portion of Simons’ debts, that she was told that her relationship with her brother was damaging her relationship with the bank, and that an overdraft that she approved — although not a “normal procedure” and “poor judgment” on her part — was used as a pretext for her dismissal. Ina Jekel, a fellow employee, stated that Lonnie Abrahams, then president of the bank, told her that Bostick told him that Eads should be encouraged to disassociate herself from her brother, that she “understood” that Eads’ failure to do so would place her employment in jeopardy, and that she related this information to Eads. Emmett Crawford, another employee, stated that Abrahams told him that Eads should discontinue her relationship with her brother. Abrahams stated that he talked to Bostick about Simons’ relationship with the bank, that Bostick did not speak unfavorably of Eads or instruct him to confront her about Simons, and that he told Jekel and Crawford about the conversations and suggested to Jekel that she talk to Eads. Bostick denied having anything to do with Eads’ dismissal or knowing about it before it happened; he stated *212 that her employment was terminated because of the overdraft incident. Landiss testified that he investigated the overdraft incident and, because Eads approved the overdraft without authority, she was discharged.
Although there are conflicts in the summary-judgment evidence presented by Eads, we do not find evidence that would create a fact issue about Bostick’s or Lan-diss’ lack of good faith or that either did not act with a belief that what he did was in the best interest of the corporation.
See Maxey,
We overrule the point of error and affirm the judgment.
Notes
. A rule allowing objections to be effective in the absence of a ruling would allow the objecting party to "lay behind the log," a practice soundly condemned in
Clear Creek. City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority,
