OPINION
Dewell Harper appeals from a summary judgment granted in favor of Dallas County. Harper claimed that the County injured him when it released a copy of an indictment charging him with theft after the records relating to that allegation had been expunged. See TexUode GRIm.PROC.Ann. art. 55.01 (Vernon Supp.1995). The County moved for a summary judgment on the basis of the statute of limitations and sovereign immunity. We will reverse and remand for a trial.
Running as the incumbent, Harper lost the Democratic Party’s 1992 primary election for sheriff of Bosque County. During the campaign William George, a supporter of Hollis Bogart, Harper’s primary opponent, distributed copies of an indictment charging Harper with theft in Dallas County by posting copies of it on a bulletin board at the Bosque County courthouse, by handing copies to people in front of the VFW building in Clifton, and by leaving copies on windshields of vehicles and at mailboxes in several towns in Bosque County. Additionally, George took out advertisements in the Bosque County News, the local newspaper, alleging, among other claims, that Harper had been indicted for theft in Dallas County.
After losing the election, Harper sued George, Bogart, Bosque County, and the newspaper and its owners. After Harper learned during George’s deposition that he had obtained a copy of the indictment from the Dallas County District Clerk’s office in mid-May 1991, Harper amended his pleadings on February 3, 1994, to add the County as a defendant. In the amended petition, Harper alleged that “[the County,] by and through its Clerk of the District Courts, certified, and wrongfully and [illegally] released, disseminated, published and circulated, or caused to be certified, and wrongfully and [illegally] released, disseminated, published and circulated, or caused to be certified, and wrongfully and [illegally] released, disseminated, published and circulated, and provided to defendant [George] a certified copy of an instrument alleging to be a Grand Jury In *12 dictment against the plaintiff in violation of Chapter 55 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.”
The County moved for a summary judgment, arguing that Harper’s claims were barred by the one-year statute of limitations governing defamation actions and that it was immune from suits for defamation. See Tex. CivPrac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.002 (Vernon 1986), § 101.057(2) (Vernon 1986). In his response, Harper claimed that the County’s immunity was waived under the Texas Tort Claims Act and by the expunction provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure. See Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.021; Tex.Code CrimPROcAnn. art. 55.04. In reply, the County asserted that the indictment was not “tangible personal property.” See Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.021(2).
After a hearing, the court granted the County a general take-nothing judgment. 1 In this court, Harper raises two points of error disputing both theories advanced by the County in the trial court— arguing, first, that the County’s sovereign immunity has been waived and, second, that he filed his suit against the County within one year of discovering the source of George’s copy of the indictment.
We review the court’s ruling under the well-established rules relating to summary judgments.
See
Tex.R.Civ.P. 166a(c);
McConnell v. Southside School Dish,
In point one, Harper argues that the County’s sovereign immunity has been waived by the Tort Claims Act.
See
Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 101.021, 101.025. Under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the County, as a governmental unit, would not be liable for the acts of its employees absent a constitutional or statutory waiver of the immunity.
University of Texas Med. Branch v. York,
The County argued in its motion for a summary judgment that it was immune from suits for defamation. If Harper’s claims against the County are based on an intentional tort, the court’s ruling is correct. 2 *13 In his first amended original petition, Harper alleged:
The actions of [the County] were careless, reckless, and heedless to the rights of plaintiff and plaintiffs privacy and have forced plaintiff to forego the protection and anonymity afforded by Chapter 55, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure!,] to citizens wrongfully accused....
Resolving any doubt about the sufficiency of the pleading in favor of Harper, the nonmov-ant, we conclude that Harper’s claim — that the County was “careless ... and heedless to [his] privacy” rights — adequately states a claim that the County was negligent.
See McDuff v. Chambers,
Harper’s negligence claim states a cause of action that may be actionable under the Tort Claims Act. The parties joined issue in the trial court over whether the indictment is tangible personal property. The County can be liable for “personal injury and death so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property if the governmental unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant according to Texas law.” See Tbx.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.021(2). Thus, we must determine if an “indictment” is “tangible personal property” within the meaning of this section of the Act. If it is, then the court erred in granting summary judgment on the sovereign-immunity theory presented in the County’s motion for a summary judgment.
“[Tjangible personal property refers to something that has a corporeal, concrete, and palpable existence.”
York,
In
York,
the court held that failure to record information and failure to rely on information which had been recorded in a patient’s medical records is not use or misuse of tangible personal property sufficient to waive governmental immunity.
Id.
Since
York,
this rule has been applied in a variety of situations to uphold claims of sovereign immunity.
4
Other
pre-York
decisions
*14
reached the same result, usually based on the “nonuse” of tangible personal property.
5
However, two
pre-York
cases explicitly rest on the information-is-not-tangible-property theory adopted by the
York
court.
See Jefferson County v. Sterk,
We believe, however, that the
York
characterization does not apply to an indictment and that the County’s reliance on
Sterk
and
Robinson
is equally misplaced. In
York
and each of the cases cited which follow it, the papers memorialized a fact or decision that existed independently of the paper. That is, the information existed independently outside of the paper it was recorded on — the point that the
York
court made when it held that “the fact that information is recorded in writing does not render the information tangible property.”
York,
The same cannot be said for an indictment. An indictment is “the written statement of a grand jury accusing a person therein named of some act or omission which, by law, is declared to be an offense.” Tex.Code Crim. ProcANN. art. 21.01 (Vernon 1989). Thus, a necessary component of an “indictment” is the writing. Until the indictment is issued, there is no accusation of an offense. The indictment cannot exist independent of the writing itself. It may only be amended by physical alteration to the instrument.
See Ward v. State,
For the same reasons, we reject the County’s reliance on
Sterk
and
Robinson.
As the Beaumont court recognized, the capias in
Sterk
was the written recording of the court’s order to bring Sterk before it.
Sterk,
Therefore, because Harper’s claims against the County sound in negligence and the indictment is tangible personal property, we conclude that the County failed to show that it was entitled to sovereign immunity. Thus, the court erred if it granted summary judgment on this theory. Point one is sustained.
In point two, Harper argues that the court could not grant the County a summary judgment on the theory that the statute of limitations had run. The County failed to conclusively establish that the one-year statute of limitations applies to Harper’s claims. If Harper is claiming an invasion-of-privacy tort, the two-year statute of limitations may apply.
See Stevenson v. Koutzarov,
Additionally, even if Harper’s claims are for defamation, the County faded to carry its burden of proof. The “discovery rule” applies to actions for defamation.
See Langston v. Eagle Pub. Co.,
Having sustained both of Harper’s points of error, we reverse the court’s judgment and remand this cause for trial.
Notes
. Although not raised by the parties, we note that this summary judgment is made final and appeal-able by the court’s inclusion of a "Mother Hubbard" clause stating that "all relief not expressly granted herein be denied.”
See Mafrige
v.
Ross,
. If Harper is suing as a private person, a defamation action would be determined under a neg
*13
ligence standard.
See Foster
v.
Laredo Newspapers, Inc.,
. We do not hold that Texas recognizes a cause of action for negligent invasion of privacy. We believe that the existence of this cause of action is an open question.
See Wheeler v. Yettie Kersting Memorial Hosp.,
.
See, e.g., Kassen v. Hatley,
.
See, e.g., Eakle v. Texas Dept. of Human Services,
