OPINION
When one law firm, seeking a contract to provide legal services to a city, makes allegedly defamatory statements to the city council about the performance of a competing law firm, are the statements absolutely privileged under the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity? We answer “yes,” and we affirm the trial court’s summary judgment.
Background
Appеllants Ellis, Fielder, and Parmer are members of Appellant Perdue, Brack-ett, Flores, Utt & Burns, a joint venture (“Joint Venture”). The Joint Venture and Appellee Linebarger, Goggan, Blair & Sampson, LLP (“Linebarger”) are competing law firms that collect delinquent ad valorem property taxes for taxing entities across Texas. Appellee Bryan Eppstein & Co. is a political consulting firm hired by Linebarger.
In 2002, the Joint Venture entered into a three-year contract with the City of Fort Worth (“the City”) to collect delinquent ad valorem property taxes. The contract provided the City with the option to exercise two one-year extensions. In October 2004, the Joint Venture contacted City staff about exercising the extension option. Internal City reports indicate that City staff were pleased with the Joint Venture’s performance and rate of collection during the contract’s three-year primary term. The City manager informed the mayor and City council in writing that he intended to exercise the extension option.
The extension option was set on the council’s executive sessiоn agenda for November 30, 2004. According to the Joint Venture, after the meeting, City staff told representatives of the Joint Venture that the City was going to exercise the option in the Joint Venture’s favor.
The extension option was again set on the council’s executive session agenda for December 7, 2004; the record does not explain why thе option was set on the agenda a second time. The session was closed to the public. That day, apparently before or during the meeting, Eppstein delivered a memo to City staff on behalf of Linebarger that criticized the Joint Venture’s performance, accused the Joint Venture of providing false information to the counсil, and claimed that the Joint Venture *451 had cost the city over $700,000 in uncollected tax revenue. The memo is the genesis of the Joint Venture’s claims against Linebarger and Eppstein.
Rather than exercise the one-year renewal option, the City council voted “to continue the contract month by month until an audit of the contract could bе completed.” The auditor presented his report on March 24, 2005, and criticized the Joint Venture for its handling of certain bankruptcy cases.
After receiving the auditor’s report, the City requested new proposals for the tax collection contract. Both the Joint Venture and Linebarger submitted proposals, and both parties made рresentations to the City council at an open meeting in May 2005. The Joint Venture alleges that Li-nebarger made additional defamatory statements at the open meeting. The City ultimately awarded the contract to Line-barger.
The Joint Venture sued Linebarger and Eppstein for defamation, tortious interference, business disparagement, аnd conspiracy, alleging that statements Linebarger and Eppstein made in the December 2004 memo and during the May 2005 council meeting were false and defamatory and had caused the council to not exercise its extension option in the Joint Venture’s favor. Linebarger and Eppstein moved for summary judgment on, among other grounds, the affirmativе defense that the alleged defamatory statements were absolutely privileged under the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Linebarger and Eppstein, and the Joint Venture filed this appeal.
Discussion
The key question in this ease is whether Linebarger’s allegedly defamatory statements in the December 2004 memo and before the City council in May 2005 are absolutely privileged under the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity. An absolutely privileged communication is one for which, due to the occasion upon which it was made, no civil remedy exists, even though the communication is false and was made or published with express malice.
5-State Helicopters, Inc. v. Cox,
The public policy behind the application of the absolute privilege to judicial proceedings is that the administration of justice requires full disclosure from witnesses, unhampered by fear of retaliatory suits for defamation.
James,
Two requirements must be met in order for the absolute privilege to apply: (1) the governmentаl entity must have the power and authority to investigate and decide the issue — that is, quasi-judicial power — -and (2) the communication must bear some relationship to a pending or proposed quasi-judicial proceeding.
Clark v. Jenkins,
But “[a]ll communications to public officials are not absolutely privileged.”
Hurlbut v. Gulf Atl. Life Ins. Co.,
A governmental entity’s power to decide a controversy presented by an allegedly defamatory statement is a key factor in determining whether the defamatory statement relates to the exercise of quasi-judicial power. The defamatory statements in
Hurlbut
and
Clark
did not relate to the exercise of quasi-judicial power because the persons to whоm the declarants made the defamatory statements — the assistant attorney general- in
Hurlbut
and the congressman in
Clark
— -did not have the power to decide the controversies presented by the statements.
See Hurlbut,
749
*453
S.W.2d at 767;
Clark,
Whether an alleged defamatory statement is related to a proposed or existing judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding, and is therefore absolutely privileged, is a question of law.
Reagan,
1. Does the City council possess quasi-judicial power?
The first question is whether the City council possesses quasi-judiсial power, in other words, whether the council has the authority to hear and decide the matters coming before it or to redress the grievances of which it takes cognizance.
See Clark,
(1) the power to exercise judgment and discretion;
(2) the power to hear and determine or to ascertain facts and decide;
(3) the power to make binding orders and judgments;
(4) the power to affect the personal or property rights of private persons;
(5) the power to examine witnesses, to compel the attendance of witnesses, and to hear the litigation of issues on a hearing; and
(6) the power to enforce decisions or impose penalties.
Fiske v. City of Dallas,
The City code explicitly confers two of those powers on the City council- — the power to hear and ascertain facts and the power to subpoena and examine witnesses. Fort Worth, Tex. Ordinances no. 1748, § 1 (1933) (captioned, “Council and Committee Authority to Investigate Department and Subpoena Witnesses”). Germane to this aрpeal, the Texas Tax Code confers on a taxing unit like the City the power to “determine who represents the unit to en
*454
force the collection of delinquent taxes.” Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 6.80(b) (Vernon 2008).
1
The power to “determine who represents the unit” implicates at least two more of the powers enumerated above: the powеr to exercise judgment and discretion and the power to make binding orders.
Id.
Local government code section 54.001 confers yet another power on the council, the power to enforce and impose penalties: “The governing body of a municipality may enforce each rule, ordinance, or police regulаtion of the municipality and may punish a violation of a rule, ordinance, or police regulation.” Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 54.001(a) (Vernon 2008). Finally, though not directly relevant to the issues in this case, the council has the power to affect the personal or property rights of private persons.
See, e.g., id.
§ 251.001(a) (Vernon 2005) (providing that municipality may exercise right of eminent domain by condemning private property for public use);
see also City of Carrollton v. Singer,
2. Did the alleged defamatory statements relate to an existing or proposed quasi-judicial proceeding?
The second question is whether Linebar-ger’s and Eppstein’s alleged defamatory statements related to an existing or proposed quasi-judicial proceeding.
See Clark,
The council’s deliberations implicated several of the quasi-judicial powers enumerated above.
See Fiske,
Of these рowers, the most significant is the council’s power to decide the controversy related to the alleged defamatory statements. The controversy related to the alleged defamatory statements was the Joint Venture’s performance under the contract and whether the counsel should extend the contract. The counсil’s power to decide the controversy makes this case like
Reagan
and
5-State Helicopters, Inc.
— where the governmental entity with the power to decide and resolve a controversy was deemed to have exercised quasi-judicial power- — and unlike
Hurlbwt
and
Clark
— where the governmental entity did not have the power to decide the controversy.
Compare Reagan,
The Joint Venture argues that when analyzing whether the City council exercised quasi-judicial power, there is a difference between the council’s determining to award or extend a contract and the coun
*455
cil’s enacting or interpreting an ordinance. The latter, argues the Joint Venture, is the exercise of quasi-judicial power, but the former is not. We disagree. While awarding contracts and enacting ordinances may implicate different powers or the same powers to different extents, both activities potentially fall within the six enumerated powers that determine whether a body’s proceedings are quasi-judicial.
See Fiske,
Because the City council exercised quasi-judicial power in its deliberations on whether to extend the Joint Venture’s contract, we hold that the proceeding in question was quasi-judicial.
The final question is whether the allegedly defamatory communications bear some relationship to the pending or proposed quasi-judicial proceeding.
See Clark,
Conclusion
Having concluded that Linebarger’s allegedly defamatory statements to the council related to a proceeding in which the council exercised its quasi-judicial power, we hold that the statements are absolutely privileged, regardless of the their truth, falsity, or malicious nature. See id. Because the Joint Venture’s claims for defamation, tortious interference, business disparagement, and conspiracy to commit these torts are for defamation-type damages based on the allegedly defamatory statements, the absolute privilege bars all of their claims. We therefore hold that the trial сourt did not err by granting a traditional summary judgment in favor of Linebarger and Eppstein on the Joint Venture’s claims. We overrule the Joint Venture’s first issue.
Having overruled the Joint Venture’s first issue, we do not reach its second, third, and fourth issues, in which it argues that the trial court erred by granting Line-barger’s and Eppstein’s no-evidence motions for summary judgment, by denying the production of documents to the Joint Venture, and by placing the burden on the Joint Venture to prove the falsity of Line- *456 barger’s allegedly defamatory statements. 2 We therefore affirm the trial court’s summary judgment.
Notes
. "The governing body of a taxing unit other than a county may determine who represents the unit to enforce the collection of delinquent taxes.” Id.
. Nor do we reach the Joint Venture’s argument on its first issue that the trial court misapplied the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine, which Linebarger and Eppstein argue provides an independent basis for immunity.
See
is.
R.R. President’s Conf. v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc.,
