Alеxander Chaudhry (“Chaudhry”), Ali Farahpour (“Farahpour”), and Petitioner, Stephen Norman (“Norman”), owned equal shares in the Maryland-registered limited liability company, Sussex Title (“Sussex”). 1 Respondents here, all lawyers, filed on behalf of their clients a proposed class action lawsuit against multiple defendants-companies, including Sussex, for their alleged participation in “the single largest mortgage scam in Maryland history____” 2 Respondents did not name Norman as a defendant in any version of their original or amended complaints in any court, although, in their second amended complaint in the federal court, Norman was mentioned by name in certain allegations. Norman claims that Respondents defamed him by republishing the pleadings (which contained allegedly defamatory statements) to the press and on the internet, and by making verbal comments to the press about the lawsuit. 3
For reasons to be explained, we hold that, on the circumstances of this case, an absolute privilege adheres to Respondents’ republication of the pleadings in the mortgage scam case, as well as to their public cоmments about that case. Thus, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals, which, by its reported opinion, affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Norman’s defamation action.
See Norman v. Borison,
*639 I.
A. The “Mortgage Rescue” Scam.
As attributed to Respondent Philip Robinson, the mortgage rescue scam asserted in the underlying litigation was described as involving real-estate professionals (principally the Metropolitan Money Store enterprise) that:
[T]arget[ed] homeowners who have thousands of dollars of equity in their homes, but who cannot keep up with their mortgage payments. These “professionals” promise[d] to rescue the homeowners from foreclosure by giving them a new mortgage with payments that they can afford. In reality, though, the scammers s[old] the property to a “straw buyer,” who then t[ook] out a new, larger mortgage — a mortgage with fees that equal[ed] or exceeded] the amount of equity in the property. The lenders, title companies, and others involved in the transactions then split the “fees” (that is, the stripped equity) amongst themselves. The homeowners, who could not afford their original mortgage payments, ha[d] no hope оf repaying the new, higher mortgage.
Without settlement companies like Sussex, who closed the transactions between lenders, sellers, and “straw buyers,” the scam could not have succeeded.
B. The Complaint in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County.
On 18 June 2007, Respondents filed a “class action suit on behalf of several hundred homeowners,”
4
in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, “alleging that the Metropolitan Money Store, along with several other companies and real estate professionals, engaged in mortgage fraud.”
Norman,
Norman posits, for purposes of his later defamation action, that Respondents provided to the press a copy of the complaint on the same day it was filed, but before it was filed. He infers this occurred because, on the filing day, a Baltimore Sun reporter telephoned Chaudhry and reаd verbatim to Chaudhry passages from the complaint. Norman highlights further that “[the Circuit Court for] Prince George’s County ... does not maintain an [online] case management system that would allow [the reporter] to monitor filings or obtain copies of filed documents [online].” Respondents do not contest this claim.
The day following filing of the proposed class action suit, 19 June 2007, The Baltimore Sun published an article about the scam lawsuit. In particular, the article explained that the complaint named at least six defendants, including Sussex. The article quoted Respondent Peter Holland as saying, without reference to any particular individual or company, “[w]e’re talking about bad people.” In the final paragraphs, the article, quoting from the complaint, reiterated that the defendants’ “sole motive was to enrich their extravagant lifestyles at the expense of hardworking Marylanders.... ”
Less than a month later, on 12 July 2007, The Washington Post published an article regarding the lawsuit. It mentioned, in passing, that apparently Sussex was not answering its phones at its offices. It quoted Respondent Philip Robinson as stating that the defendants’ “sole motive seemed to be to enrich their lavish lifestyles as opposed to saving the homes of the vulnerable homeowners from foreclosure.” 5
*641 C. The Initial Complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland (“federal district court”).
On 24 July 2007, Respondents dismissed voluntarily their action in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County and refiled their claim in federal district court. According to the federal complaint, by July 2007, “it became apparent that the fraud ... extended across three different jurisdictions [i.e., interstate]____” The initial federal complaint asserted the same allegations as the previous State action, and added Chaudhry — a part owner of Sussex — as a named defendant. Norman was not sued or named in the initial federal complaint in any capacity.
The next day, The Baltimore Sun published an article about the federal litigation relating to the mortgage rescue scam. It included Respondent Scott Borison’s statement that, “[a]s we kept investigating the case, it became clear that there were also federal charges to be asserted.... Metropolitan Money Store wаs out stealing the equity in people’s homes and on top of that, getting it tax free.” June Arney, Federal Court Gets Home-Equity Suit; Md. Case Grows into Class Action Seeking Recovery of Homes Swindled from Owners, Balt. Sun, 25 July 2007, at 3D. The article mentioned that Sussex was named as a defendant, and included a comment attributed to Chaudhry claiming that Sussex was a victim equally of Metropolitan Money Store’s scam.
D. The First Amended Complaint in the Federal District Court.
Respondents, on 21 January 2008, amended their initial filing, removing Sussex as a defendant, which had filed for bankruptcy protection. The first amended complaint also added Farahpour as a defendant, as well as Wilbur Ballesteros (“Ballesteros”), 6 a former employee of Sussex. (“This matter *642 involves the single largest mortgage scam in ... Mid-Atlantic history ... and involved the willful participation of so-called real estate professionals — including ... licensed settlement agents Sussex Title, LLC ... and its part owners and employees, Alexander Chaudhry, ... Ah Farahpour ... [and] Wilbur Ballesteros.... ”). The first amended complaint, however, did not name Norman as an involved third party or defendant.
In the vast majority of instances where the complaint refers to the “owners and employees of Sussex,” it included a qualifying descriptor. For example, the complaint states that “[t]o finance the foreclosure reversal transactions, the owners and/or employees of Sussex ... Chaudhry, Farahpour and Ballesteros arranged and settled federally related mortgage loans----” 7 In most other occasions, the first amended complaint refers to the Sussex-related participants as “Sussex, Chaudhry, Farahpour and Ballesteros....” 8
E. The Second Amended Complaint in the Federal District Court.
On 29 September 2008, a federal trial judge dismissed the first amended complaint, but gave Respondents leave to refile.
See Proctor v. Metro. Money Store Corp.,
Respondents filed a more specific, second amended complaint on 14 November 2008, alleging that “Mr. Ballesteros defrauded [homeowner clients], and that Mr. Chaudhry and Mr. Farahpour failed to supervise Mr. Ballesteros, thereby facilitating the fraud.” Respondents removed Ballesteros as a defendant, however, because, like Sussex, Ballesteros had sought the protective harbor of bankruptcy. Although this version of the complaint, again, did not name Norman as a defendant, it identified him by name in certain averments. In this regard, the second amended complaint alleged that:
• The payments to Ballesteros were items paid out of the share of monthly proceeds to Farahpour, Chaudhry, and Norman.
• Sussex is an entity owned and controlled by Fаrahpour, Chaudhry, and a third person, Steven Norman____Sussex changed its name from CapTitle and filed for bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of Maryland in late 2007. Based on the testimony of Norman in connection with the bankruptcy case, Sussex was operated for the financial benefit of the three owners since Ali Farahpour would review the company’s records and make an equal monthly distribution to each of the three based on the money *644 received by the company during the given month after payment of expenses and leave some amount of reserve for future expenses.
• Wilbur Ballesteros was paid a salary out of Chaudhry, Farahpour and Norman’s share of the revenues generated by the operation of Sussex as well as a bonus per settlement in which he was involved.
• Upon information and belief, the fees and other charges collected by Sussex in connection with this transaction were disbursed at the direction of Farahpour to Farahpour, Chaudhry and Norman.
• Farahpour participated through the use of his entity Money Tree Funding and by dividing up the funds received from these transactiоns to himself, Chaudhry, and Norman.[ 9 ]
F. Respondents’ Website.
Sometime in the Fall of 2007, after filing their initial complaint in the federal district court, Respondents created a website, http://www.metromoneystore.com, on which they eventually posted links to the three iterations of the federal complaint. Respondent Robinson claims that the website was intended to “give notice to the class about the lawsuit.” Indeed, the federal district judge “expressly permitted the use of the internet to communicate with class action litigants.”
Norman,
G. Norman, et al., Strike Back.
On June 18, 2008, Norman, Sussex, Chaudhry, and *645 Farahpour filed á complaint for defamation[ 10 ] in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. In November 2008, the defamation complaint came to the attention of the federal court during a hearing on Chaudhry and Farahpour’s Rule 11 motion against [Respondents] concerning the class action litigation. The court stated: “I find that the litigation brought by Messrs. Chaudhry and Farahpour in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County is patently intended to interfere with the jurisdiction of this court and to chill attorneys before this court and I simply will not tolerate it.” Thereafter, Chaudhry and Farahpour dismissed their defamation claims in the circuit court.
On January 5, 2009, Norman filed a second amended complaint in the circuit court. The complaint consisted of fourteen counts for defamation, negligence, civil conspiracy, and injurious falsehood. The complaint alleged that [Respondents] defamed Norman by circulating copies of the state and federal complaints to a newspaper reporter, the internet, and by speaking to a reporter. The complaint also singled out certain statements by individual [Respondents]. [Respondents] moved to dismiss the complaint.
On February 19, 2009, the court held a hearing on [Respondents’] motion to dismiss and took the matter under advisement. On February 20, 2009, the court issued an order dismissing Norman’s complaint with prejudice. The order first noted that “[o]verall, there is no allegation in any of the counts of any ‘falsity,’ a required element of defáma *646 tion.” The order then dismissed the following counts based on absolute privilege:
1) Count I (Publishing the statе complaint to the Baltimore Sun);
2) Count III (Publishing the state complaint to the Washington Post);
3) Count V (Publishing the federal complaint to the Baltimore Sun);
4) Count VII (Publishing the federal complaint on the internet);
5) Count VIII (Publishing the first amended complaint on the internet);
6) Count IX (Publishing the second amended complaint on the internet);
7) Count X ([Respondent] Borison’s reply to Chaudhry’s Rule 11 Motion); and
8) Count XI ([Respondent] Borison’s opposition to notice of sale claims by the estate).
With regard to the above eight counts, the order stated that “Maryland law makes no distinction between internet press and written press____Additionally [Norman] has no standing because he is not a named party to the aforementioned suit.”
The court dismissed the following counts because Norman “has no standing to allege the [ ] causes of action:”
1) Count II ([Respondent] Holland’s 6/19/07 defamation to the Sun);
2) Count TV ([Respondent] Robinson’s 7/12/07 defamation to the Post); and
3) Count VI ([Respondent] Borison’s 7/25/07 defamation to the Sun).
The court dismissed Count XII (negligence) for failure to state a cause of action under Maryland law. Count XIII (injurious falsehood) and Count XIV (civil conspiracy) were dismissed as duplicitous.
*647 Normаn appeals from the [judgment], but does not challenge dismissal of Counts IV, XII, XIII or XIV.
Norman,
H. The Court of Special Appeals’s “Take.”
In a reported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals addressed initially the issue of standing.
See Norman,
The intermediate appellate court organized the allegedly defamatory statements into two categories — those that named Norman directly and those that may have “referred to him by virtue of his position with Sussex.”
Norman,
Assuming, for the sake of argument, that Norman had standing, the Court of Special Appeals concluded that the “allegedly defamatory statements are [nonetheless] protected by absolute privilege.”
Norman,
Regarding Respondents’ verbal comments to the press, the Court of Special Appeals analyzed
Kennedy v. Cannon,
*649
The intermеdiate appellate court observed that Respondents “did not make any comments to the newspaper that were both slanderous
per se
and directly identified Norman.”
Norman,
The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court. We granted Norman’s petition for writ of certiorari,
Norman v. Borison,
(1) [T]he lower court improperly rule[d] that [Norman], as owner of a small, unique business, lacked standing to sue for defamation when the defamatory statements personally referred to [Norman]?[ 13 ]
*650 (2) [T]he lower court err[ed] in concluding that the absolute litigation privilege extends to the republication of incomplete judicial pleadings to the press and on the internet?
II. Absolute Privilege
The crux of this case is the doctrine of absolute privilege. Accordingly, we shall describe our understanding of its contours before applying the law to the present, assumed factual circumstances. There are at least three situations implicating an absolute privilege in the context of this case.
A. Statements Made in a Judicial Proceeding.
Although an understated principle in our caselaw, the application of an absolute privilege differs depending on whether the putative tortfeasor is a -witness/ party/ judge, or an attorney of record in the case. For witnesses, parties, and judges, we employ the “English” rule, which provides that the putative tortfeasor enjoys absolute immunity from civil liability, even if the statement is wholly unrelated to the underlying proceeding.
See Keys,
For attorneys whose appearances are entered in a case, however, we follow the majority American rule and require that the defamatory statement have some rational relation to the matter at bar before unfurling the umbrella of absolute privilege.
See Korb,
In any case, the putative tortfeasor is protected “even if his [or her] purpose or motive was malicious, he [or she] knew that the statement was false, or his [or her] conduct was otherwise unreasonable.”
Id.
We give the privilege a “broad and comprehensive” interpretation, so as to “foster the
*652
‘free and unfettered administration of justice.’ ”
Keys,
B. Statements Made in a Quasi-Judicial Proceeding.
Likewise, a decision-maker/adjudicator, witness, or party in a qmisi-judicial proceeding who makes a defamatory statement
in the proceeding
is shielded by the privilege, if the proceeding satisfies the two part test of
Gersh v. Ambrose,
We held that the absolute privilege applies only to certain types of administrative proceedings. In sorting out which types of proceedings merit this protection, we probe: “(1) the nature of the public function of the proceeding and (2) the adequacy of procedural safeguards which will minimize the occurrence of defamatory statements.”
Gersh,
C. Statements Made Extrinsic to a Judicial or Quasi-Judicial Proceeding.
Some forty-nine years ago, we considered an out-of-court statement in
Kennedy,
where an attorney — fearing a possible lynch mob targeting his client — reached out to the press to defend his client from the perceived wrath of the mob.
See Kennedy,
These extrinsic statements occur commonly in three categories: (1) statements made with the direct purpose or effect of producing a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding,
e.g.,
a police brutality complaint, (2) statements “prepared for
possible
use in connection with a pending judicial proceeding,”
Adams,
*654
We extend the absolute privilege to these three categories of statements for the traditional reason — to encourage the free divulgence of information in pursuit of justice. More specifically, we apply the privilege because “[t]he evaluation and investigation of facts and opinions for the purpose of determining what, if anything, is to be raised or used in pending litigation is as integral a part of the search for truth ... as is the presentation of such facts and opinions during the course of the trial....”
Adams,
1. Statements Producing a Proceeding.
As to the first category, we consider whether the proceeding,
which results from the statement,
serves an important public interest and possess adequate procedural safeguards. As examples, in
Miner v. Novotny,
2. Prefatory Statements.
The second category involves statements prepared for possible use in a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding, “regardless of whether the [statement] has been filed.”
Adams,
Concluding that an absolute privilege protected the statements by the psychiatrist, the
Adams
Court reasoned that his statements were “published in a document which [wa]s prepared for possible use in connection with a pending judicial proceeding....”
Adams,
*656 3. Statements Made During the Course of a Pending or Ongoing Proceeding.
Many statements are not designed to be filed in a court action, but rather are simple communications by or between individuals connected to some pending or ongoing proceeding — hence, a third category. A canvass of relevant caselaw reveals that, for the most part, Maryland courts attempt to preserve the distinction of what must be established for the privilege to apply — regarding “relevance” — between witness, et al., and attorneys of record.
a. Witnesses, Parties, and Judges.
In
Odyniec v. Schneider,
In
Sodergren v. Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.,
The foregoing analyses teach us to apply an absolute privilege to out-of-court statements, made by witnesses, parties, or judges, when (1) the contemplated or ongoing *658 proceeding fulfills Gersh, 16 and (2) the context of the statement demonstrates that it was made “during the course of’ the proceeding (ie., while the putative tortfeasor was participating in the proceeding). We assess the context of the statement by asking, among other things: what was the overall or general reason for the instrument or letter (but not the motive of the challenged statement itself, see English rule) 17 ; what was the defendant doing when he or she made the statement; and to whom did he or she make the statеment.
If these factors are present, protection of the communication serves the ultimate purpose of the privilege — to loosen the otherwise secure floodgates of information required for the successful resolution of a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding. The proceeding, however, must be “actually contemplated in good faith and under serious consideration.... The bare possibility that [a] proceeding might be instituted is not to be used as a cloak to provide immunity for defamation when the possibility is not seriously considered.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 588 cmt. e. (2006);
see also Kennedy,
b. Attorneys of Record.
With respect to attorneys of record in a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding, Maryland caselaw adds the requirement of relevance of the statement to the proceeding before an absolute privilege may apply. In
Woodruff v. Trepel,
These cases indicate that Maryland courts extend an absolute privilege to an attorney of record, so long as (1) the contemplated or ongoing proceeding meets the Gersh test, (2) the context of the statement evinces that the statement was made “during the course” of the proceeding, and (3) the statement has some rational, articulable relevance or responsiveness to the proceeding. 19 If so, then extension of the privilege would serve the ultimate goal of information exchange and discovery of the truth. 20
*661 III.
A. Respondents’ Publication of the Complaints to the Press.
Norman avers that Respondents provided the press with a copy of the complaint before it was filed in state court and, thus made it public “before its time.”
21
Accepting this factual averment in Respondents’ favor, as did the Court of Special Appeals, we may say fairly that a complaint is a public document and “[t]he law does not distinguish where, or in what manner, a public document is viewed.”
Norman,
In the assumptive latter scenariо, the complaint appears to be a statement instigating an investigation and/or proceeding. If so, because the complaint was not communicated to an
*662
authorized or germane investigating body, its delivery had neither the necessary investigatory design nor possible effect in order to qualify for refuge in the first category
(i.e.,
statements producing a proceeding), as delineated
swpra.
Considered under the second category, the complaint can be viewed as a statement prepared for a pending proceeding. Most complaints are meant to be filed in a court. Militating against this characterization, however, is the fact that Respondents delivered the draft complaint to the Fourth Estate, which, its self-image notwithstanding, is uninvolved in the “evaluation and investigation of facts and opinion” in this context or the “generation] of such documents----”
Adams,
Considered in its best light, however, the complaint is simply a third-party communication, made extrinsic to an imminent proceeding. As discussed supra, we evaluate whether the underlying proceeding satisfies the prongs of Gersh, which it does manifestly. Importantly, we analyze also whether the context of the challengеd statements supports the conclusion that they were made during the course of the proceeding. Respondents, at worst, published their allegedly defamatory statements in a draft version of their ultimate pleading, which they handed-over to the press on the same day the pleading was filed. By republishing or reporting on those erstwhile pleadings, the press could be seen as a tool assisting in the notification to potential class members of the contemplated proceedings. Thus, we conclude that Respondents issued these statements during the course of the putative class action. 23
*663 Finally, as Respondents were the attorneys of record, we also inquire as to whether the statements themselves (not necessarily the instrument or conversation in which they were made) had some relevance to the matter presented to the trial *664 court. We conclude that the Respondents’ challenged statements in the State complaint were related sufficiently to the subject of inquiry — the mortgage rescue scam.
B. Respondents’ Republication of the Federal Complaints on the Internet.
By the time Respondents published the initial federal complaint on the internet in the Fall of 2007, they had filed it, thereby making it a public document. Once a document is made public, Maryland law does not limit who, where, or the extent to which one may view that document. Thus, publication of the by-now public federal complaint does not bar application of the absolute privilege. There is, too, the additional fact that republication of the complaints served the previously noted and judicially-cognizable purpose — the notification of potential class members of ongoing litigation, in which they may have a stake. Moreover, we conclude that the complaints were not redacted so extensively as to render them fundamentally distinct from the public documents that were filed with the federal district court. It appears Respondents omitted mostly exhibits, rather than substantive averments, from their internet republication.
C. Respondents’ Verbal Statements to the Press.
Respondents provided the press not only a copy of their State complaint, but also with verbal “sound bites” to be included presumably in any forthcoming news articles. As mentioned supra, Norman waived his defamаtion claim against Respondent Robinson, but preserved it with respect to Respondents Holland and Borison. Respondent Holland was quoted purportedly in a 19 June 2007 Baltimore Sun article as saying, “[w]e’re talking about bad people____ A mortgage foreclosure rescue scam is worse than predatory lending. They find out how much equity is in the house, and they come at you like vultures.” June Arney, Class Action Alleges Home Equity Theft; Foreclosure-Rescue Firms Object of Suit, Balt. Sun, 19 June 2007, at IE. Respondent Borison was quoted purportedly in a 25 June 2007 Baltimore Sun article as stating, *665 “[a]s we kept investigating the case, it became clear that there were also federal charges to be asserted---- Metropolitan Money Store was out stealing the equity in people’s homes and on top of that, getting it tax free.” Federal Court Gets Home-Equity Suit, at 3D.
We conclude that an absolute privilege protects Respondents Holland’s and Borison’s statements. The contemplated proceeding in the courts meet the
Gersh
test. After reviewing the news articles in their entirety, it appears Respondents made the statements while promoting public awareness оf their proposed class action claim and, thus, while participating in the course of the proceeding. The two news articles (published the day after filing the initial State complaint and the initial federal complaint, respectively) provided readers (i.e., possible class members) with details about how the mortgage rescue scam worked, when it took place, who was involved potentially, and who was targeted likely. We are not prepared to say that plaintiffs are prohibited from promoting preemptively their class action suit, before they have been certified as such, or that they must avoid verbal communications to the press in doing so — provided framing the suit as a “class action” status is not shown to have been a subterfuge for funneling defamatory statements to the press. Such public promotion, under the latter proviso, is not part of the proper prosecution of most tort claims. Indeed, but for the fact that the mortgage rescue scam suit was striving to become a class action, our conclusion might have been different. The
Kennedy
adage retains vitality — lawyеrs who try their cases in the media do so at some peril.
See Kennedy,
Because Respondents were attorneys of record in the case, we must determine also whether their statements were relevant or had some relation to the underlying proceeding. Respondent Holland’s suggestion that “[w]e’re talking about bad people” comes close to being irrelevant due to its breadth and generality. His other remark, however, makes reference to the mortgage rescue scam that was the subject of the suit, *666 and, in these particular circumstances, we are unable to ascertain or state with confidence on this record what prompted his comment, let alone what prefaced or followed it.
We hold that an absolute privilege applies to Respondents’ challenged statements. As a result of our holding, we need not reach the question of whether Respondents’ statements in their pleadings and press sound bites injured Norman sufficiently to sustain his defamation claim.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Notes
. Norman was Sussex’s attorney also. He claims further that he was "known ... as Sussex’s managerial contact responsible for all operations____” Indeed, "on or about July 13, 2007, [The Washington] Post ombudsman contacted Norman to speak on behalf of Sussex.”
Norman v. Borison, 192
Md.App. 405, 415,
. Respondents include Scott Borison, Janet Legg, and their law firm, the Legg Law Firm; Philip Robinson and his organization, Civil Justice, Inc., of which he is the executive director; and the Holland Law Firm, P.C., along with two of its attorneys, Peter Holland and Benjamin Carney. Mr. Carney was no longer employed by the firm at the time Norman filed this action.
.Norman is asserting, as an individual, the defamation action that is the instigation for the present litigation.
. In his brief, Norman acknowledges that the 18 June 2007 complaint proposed a "class action suit," although Respondents had not yet achieved class certification.
. “[The Washington Post] article was republished in full in the Maryland Daily Record newspaper on July 13, 2007. Again, the article did not specifically mention Norman."
Norman,
. In a parallel federal criminal proceeding, Ballesteros pled guilty to fraud for his part in the mortgage rescue scam. See United States v. Jackson, Crim. No. 8:08-Cr-00288-RWT (D. Md. Med 11 June 2008).
. According to Norman, "[t]he [first amended] complaint contained allegations that ‘anyone at Sussex’ could have discovered the scheme, including ‘the respective principals’ and the ‘owners and employees of Sussex.’ ” After scouring the first amended complaint, we can find no use of the phrase "anyone at Sussex.” The five appearances of the phrase "respective principals” appears, in context, to refer to the principal-agency relationship between the title insurance companies and Sussex, among others.
. Respondent Robinson claims that “Mr. Norman has not identified a single instance where [any version of the complaint] attribute[s] any fraudulent activities to him personally either by name or by position.” Because we anchor our holding in the waters of absolute privilege, we need not identify any traditional defamatory remarks (nor, for that matter, opine on the compatibility of a small business exception to Maryland’s standing principles applicable to defamation claims).
. Whether naming Norman was a necessary or appropriate response to the federal district court's invocation of
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
. Under Maryland law, a plaintiff assеrting a defamation claim must plead and prove, in order to succeed, four elements:
(1) that the defendant made a defamatory statement to a third person, (2) that the statement was false, (3) that the defendant was legally at fault in making the statement, and (4) that the plaintiff thereby suffered harm. A defamatory statement is one which tends to expose a person to public scorn, hatred, contempt or ridicule, thereby discouraging others in the community from having a good opinion of, or associating with, that person.
Offen v. Brenner,
. On 21 May 2010, Chaudhry and Farahpour entered into a settlement agreement with Respondents’ clients, in which Chaudhry and Farahpour agreed to pay $40,000 into a common fund, among other things, seemingly without admitting liability. See Notice of Settlement, Case 8:07-cv-01957-RWT, By Order of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland (filed May 21, 2010).
. These cases included
Kennedy v. Cannon, 229
Md. 92,
. We granted certiorari in this case primarily to reach and decide the important question of privilege. Accordingly, we shall assume, for the purposes of this opinion and without deciding the first question presented, that Norman had standing to assert his defamation claim. In bypassing the first question, however, we should not be understood to subscribe necessarily to the Court of Special Appeals’s reasoning with regard to its disposition of the standing issue.
. Our basis for the distinction was:
The great importance to the administration of justice that witnesses should testify with minds absolutely free from the apprehension of being annoyed by civil actions for any thing they may say as witnesses, has already been pointed out. They are commonly untrained in legal learning, and often timid and uneducated. They are brought into court by the mandate of the law, and compelled to testify, usually for the benefit of others. On the other hand lawyers practice their profession voluntarily and for their own emolument. By their professional training they are taught, and it is their business to know, what is pertinent or relevant to the trial of a case. They are educated and intelligent men, and their position is a most honorable and important one. Their legitimate privileges are very great, and it seems to me, with great deference to the differing opinions of others, not unreasonable that they should be held civilly responsible to parties injured by an abuse оf them. Nor does there seem to be the same strong ground of public policy for protection in their case. At all events it was perfectly competent for this court, having the questions before them for the first time in these cases, to follow and adopt the current of the American decisions in regard to the privilege of the advocate, and to follow and adopt the rule of the English courts as regards the privilege of the witness. This is what has been done and it does not seem to me that the privilege of the two are so tied together either by reason or authority as to make these decisions inconsistent and irreconcilable.
Hunckel v. Voneiff,
. Although somewhat awkwardly, this Court invoked
Gersh
to evaluate statements not precipitating a "proceeding” per se. In
Smith v. Danielczyk,
.
See Sodergren v. Johns Hopkins Univ. Applied Physics Lab.,
. Pursuant to the English rule, a witness, party, or judges does not need to demonstrate the relevance of a challenged out-of-court statement to the contemplated or underlying proceeding. He or she must show, however, that the alleged defamatory statement was made in a context — e.g., settlement negotiations or a letter memorializing a conversation regarding visitation rights — connected sufficiently to a proceeding, so that a court may conclude that statement was made "during the course of the proceeding.” To say a letter or email was sent, or a conversation was had "during the course of a proceeding” is to say the letter, email, or conversation had some general "relevance,” relationship, or connection to that proceeding. The specific alleged defamatory statement containеd therein, however, need not have a similar relevance.
. The attorney sent his client a copy of the letter, and the client, in turn, sent a copy of it to her child’s school principal. Consistent with our analysis of non-attorney putative tortfeasors,
supra
Part II.C.3.a, the Court of Special Appeals held that absolute privilege did not apply to the client’s republication because the “school’s knowledge [of the letter’s contents] ... did not have any actual or potential effect upon the custody proceeding____”
Woodruff,
. To be clear, whether a statement is relevant to a matter implicated in a contemplated or ongoing proceeding is "not the evidentiary relevance test.”
Woodruff,
”[R]elevant” and "pertinent" are not the best words that сould be used. These words have in a measure a technical meaning, and we all know the difficulty in determining in some cases what is relevant or pertinent.... We prefer the words “having reference ” or “made with reference ” or the language ... “having relation to the cause or subject matter." And if counsel in the trial of a cause maliciously slanders a party, or witness or any other person in regard to a matter that has no reference or relation to, or connection with, the case before the Court, he is and ought to be answerable in an action by the party injured.
Maulsby v. Reifsnider,
. We cast no light here on the law of conditional or qualified privilege. We observe only that a conditional privilege is somewhat similar to the third category — statеments made during the course of a pending or ongoing proceeding. Whether a conditional or absolute privilege exists depends, at least in part, on the identities of the communicating party and recipient.
See McDermott v. Hughley,
. Norman alleges similarly that Respondents provided a copy of their initial federal complaint to the press before it was filed. Our analysis, regarding Respondents’ publication of the State complaint tо the press, is applicable equally to Respondents’ publication of the initial federal complaint to the press.
. In reviewing the grant of a motion to dismiss, we must “presume[ ] the truth of all well-pleaded facts in the [cjomplaint, along with any reasonable inferences derived therefrom in a light most favorable to plaintiffs.”
Pittway Corp. v. Collins,
. To explain further why Respondents' republication of the State-filed complaint to the press may be viewed as participation in the prosecution of their tort claims, we must give a nod to the niceties of class action law. In the initial State complaint, Respondents sought certification as a class. See Maryland Rule 2-231(c) (“[T]he court shall determine by order as soon as practicable after commencement of the action whether it is to be maintained as a class action.”). When and how plaintiffs provide notice of a class action is left largely to the *663 discretion of the trial court, pursuant to Md. Rule 2-231(e), which provides that ‘‘[i]n a class action maintained under subsection (b)(3),” a common strain of class action suit, “notice shall be given to mеmbers of the class in the manner the court directs.” The trial court may require plaintiffs to provide notice at the very first stage in the class action lawsuit. See Md. Rule 2-231(f) ("[T]he court may enter [an] appropriate order[ ] ... requiring that notice be given ... to some or all of the members of any step in the action ....”) (emphasis added); see also J.A. Lynch, Jr. & R.W. Bourne, Modern Maryland Civil Procedure § 4.9(d)(3) (2nd ed. 2004) ("[T]he court may, under Rule 2-231(f), require that the class representative provide to some or all of the class members of any step in the action.... ”).
Moreover, nothing in Rule 2-231 indicates that what the trial court decides — with respect to the provision of notice — should be taken as a ceiling, i.e., the maximum effort plaintiffs must exert to notify potential class members. To the contrary, the Rule leaves open the possibility that plaintiffs may act preemptively in identifying and notifying others of their possible claims. In other words, while the Rule may not require "notice to class members at the commencement of the suit," Modern Maryland Civil Procedure § 4.9(c)(2)(a), nor does it prevent notice from being provided at that time.
Md. Rule 2-231 is derived from Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. As such, our interpretation of the former may be guided, at least in part, by the history and development of the latter. Federal courts have interpreted their rule as encouraging early notification.
See Anne Arundel County v. Cambridge Commons,
Respondents’ publication of their State complaint may be seen legitimately as helping notify potential class members, a step in the administration of justice; thus, their publication was connected sufficiently to the contemplated proceeding to be made "during the course” of that proceeding.
