Helena Chem. Co. v. Uribe , 2011 NMCA 60 ( 2011 )


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  •                                                I attest to the accuracy and
    integrity of this document
    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 15:23:30 2011.06.28
    Certiorari Granted, June 8, 2011, No. 32,985
    Certiorari Granted, June 8, 2011, No. 32,987
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2011-NMCA-060
    Filing Date: March 30, 2011
    Docket No. 29,567
    HELENA CHEMICAL COMPANY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    PAMELA URIBE, LINDA THOMAS,
    individually and as representative of
    THOMAS & WAN, L.L.P., and
    THOMAS & WAN, L.L.P.,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    ARTURO URIBE,
    Defendant.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
    Jerald A. Valentine, District Judge
    Jackson Walker L.L.P.
    Robert L. Soza, Jr.
    Elena P. Villaseñor
    San Antonio, TX
    Simons Firm, LLP
    Frank M. Bond
    Faith Kalman Reyes
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellant
    1
    Juarez Law Office
    Luis B. Juarez
    Las Vegas, NM
    Freedman, Boyd, Hollander, Goldberg,
    Ives & Duncan, P.A.
    Sara Berger
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee Pamela Uribe
    Law Office of Jack Brant, P.C.
    Jack Brant
    Albuquerque, NM
    Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A.
    Charles K. Purcell
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellees Linda Thomas and Thomas & Wan, L.L.P.
    OPINION
    SUTIN, Judge.
    {1}      This appeal tests the defense of absolute immunity against liability for alleged
    defamatory statements made to news reporters. The immunity asserted is based on absolute
    privilege. Throughout this opinion, we refer to the immunity and the privilege as “absolute
    privilege.” Before and after attorney Linda Thomas filed a toxic tort action in Santa Fe
    County against Helena Chemical Company (Helena) on behalf of Arturo and Pamela Uribe
    and other plaintiffs, Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe made statements to news reporters that
    Helena claims, in this separate action, were defamatory. The district court granted summary
    judgment in favor of Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe holding that they were immune from
    liability based on their defense of absolute privilege. The issues on appeal center on whether
    the court erred in granting that immunity as to (1) statements made at a community meeting
    attended by a news reporter ten months before a judicial proceeding was initiated, and (2)
    statements made the day after the proceeding was initiated to news reporters who were
    invited to hear the statements. We hold that the absolute privilege is unavailable under the
    circumstances in this case where the alleged defamatory statements were made to news
    reporters who had no relationship or interest in the judicial proceeding contemplated and
    filed.
    BACKGROUND
    2
    {2}     Helena is a crop protection company that started business in Mesquite, New Mexico
    in 1989. In October 2008, the Uribes, among other residents of Mesquite, filed an action
    against Helena (the October 2008 tort action) alleging personal injury and property damage
    from “exposure to hazardous dusts, fumes, and contaminants emanating from [Helena].”
    They averred, among other facts to support their claims, that the New Mexico Environment
    Department (NMED) had accused Helena of violating New Mexico environmental
    standards, had issued notices to Helena regarding violations of Helena’s air quality permit,
    had assessed a penalty against Helena, had confirmed contamination by Helena of
    underground water, and had fined Helena regarding an unreported spill.
    {3}     Before their October 2008 tort action, in December 2007, Mr. Uribe hosted a meeting
    to which the public at large was invited through public advertisements. Mr. Uribe also
    invited Heath Haussamen, a political news reporter, writer, editor, and publisher of a website
    blog called “Heath Haussamen on New Mexico Politics.” Mr. Haussamen attended the
    meeting solely in his “capacity as a news reporter/writer who covers New Mexico.”
    {4}      In addition, Mr. Uribe and Mesquite residents invited Ms. Thomas and Michelle
    Wan, Texas licensed attorneys, to attend the December 2007 meeting to discuss matters
    relating to and possible litigation against Helena, and Ms. Thomas spoke at the meeting.
    Residents were contemplating a lawsuit against Helena and were interested in hiring Ms.
    Thomas and Ms. Wan to represent them. Mr. Uribe and other residents were aware that Ms.
    Thomas and Ms. Wan had sued Helena in Texas. Mr. Uribe, who was president of the
    Mesquite Community Action Committee, and who had been involved for several years with
    the Helena air quality and contamination issues, opened the meeting and invited those in
    attendance to talk to the attorneys about how they felt as to their health and future in
    Mesquite. Ms. Thomas and Ms. Wan were later hired to represent the Uribes and other
    residents in the October 2008 tort action against Helena. On October 9, 2008, the day after
    that action was filed, a press conference was held by the attorneys outside of Helena’s
    facility to announce the filing of the action (the press conference).
    {5}      Helena filed the present defamation action on December 8, 2008, alleging that
    statements made by Ms. Thomas at the December 2007 meeting and statements made by Ms.
    Thomas and Mrs. Uribe at the press conference were defamatory. Helena alleged that the
    following statement made by Ms. Thomas at the December 2007 meeting was
    defamatory: “[C]hildren are out here and they’re playing in the yard, they’re putting their
    hands in their mouth, so they’re really getting a dose that way. Kids are at a much greater
    risk.” Helena further alleged that Ms. Thomas defamed it when she reportedly said that
    Helena’s actions in Mesquite appeared to be “pretty egregious.” In addition, Helena claimed
    that at the press conference Ms. Thomas defamed Helena by stating that “[t]he underground
    water has been contaminated” and that Mrs. Uribe defamed Helena by stating that Helena
    caused “[u]pper respiratory problems, pneumonia and bad allergies, bloody noses[.]”
    3
    {6}     In a summary judgment proceeding filed by Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe to establish
    their defense of absolute privilege as to Helena’s defamation claims, Ms. Thomas and Mrs.
    Uribe necessarily assumed for the purposes of the motion for summary judgment that their
    statements were defamatory. The absolute privilege defense can be asserted only against
    statements admittedly defamatory. We emphasize that, on appeal, the same assumption
    holds for the purposes of our analyses and determinations. We reverse.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    {7}     “An absolute or unqualified privilege means absolute immunity from liability for
    defamation.” Neece v. Kantu, 
    84 N.M. 700
    , 705, 
    507 P.2d 447
    , 452 (Ct. App. 1973). “The
    question of the relationship between the alleged defamatory matter and the proposed or
    existing judicial proceeding is a question of law to be determined by the court.” Penny v.
    Sherman, 
    101 N.M. 517
    , 520, 
    684 P.2d 1182
    , 1185 (Ct. App. 1984). We review the
    absolute-privilege-entitlement issue de novo. See Gregory Rockhouse Ranch, L.L.C. v.
    Glenn’s Water Well Serv., Inc., 2008-NMCA-101, ¶¶ 16-19, 
    144 N.M. 690
    , 
    191 P.3d 548
    .
    The Issues at Hand
    {8}     Helena’s appellate points are that the defense of absolute privilege does not apply to
    the alleged defamatory statements because (1) Ms. Thomas’s December 2007 statements
    were made ten months before the October 2008 tort action was filed, a period “too far in
    advance of litigation, and/or . . . at a time when she did not have any clients, and thus could
    not seriously have considered any claims”; and (2) the December 2007 meeting and the press
    conference statements made by Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe were communicated to and
    received by news reporters who were wholly uninterested in and unrelated to the judicial
    proceeding.
    {9}    Helena emphasizes that whether absolute privilege can be applied in this case is an
    important matter of public policy. On the issue of public policy, Helena asks:
    Does the State of New Mexico want to encourage[:]
    1.      trials by press?
    2.      attorneys defaming third parties to the general public as a
    means of attracting potential clients?
    3.      defamation so remote in time from the filing of a
    lawsuit or at a time when litigation is only a bare
    possibility?
    4
    The Law of Absolute Privilege in New Mexico
    {10} This Court recognized early on that the standard for ascertaining the extent of the
    absolute privilege is whether the alleged defamatory matter is reasonably related to the
    subject of inquiry. Stryker v. Barbers Super Mkts., Inc., 
    81 N.M. 44
    , 45-46, 
    462 P.2d 629
    ,
    630-31 (Ct. App. 1969). Stryker described the public-policy reason for absolute privilege
    as follows:
    The absolute immunity of parties litigant rests upon the public policy
    which deems it desirable that all suitors, whether malicious and bold, or
    conscientious and timid, should have free access to the conscience of the
    State with whatever complaint they choose to make. This is necessary to a
    thorough and searching investigation of the truth. . . . Perfect freedom to say
    in their pleadings whatever the parties choose to bring to the consideration
    of the court or jury tends obviously to promote the intelligent administration
    of justice.
    
    Id. at 45, 462
    P.2d at 630 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    {11} Also early on, this Court adopted the Restatement of Torts § 586 (1938), relating to
    absolute privilege which stated:
    An attorney at law is absolutely privileged to publish false and
    defamatory matter of another in communications preliminary to a proposed
    judicial proceeding, . . . or during the course and as a part of a judicial
    proceeding in which he participates as counsel, if it has some relation thereto.
    Romero v. Prince, 
    85 N.M. 474
    , 476, 
    513 P.2d 717
    , 719 (Ct. App. 1973) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). Romero clarified that “[i]f the alleged defamatory statement
    is made to achieve the objects of the litigation, the absolute privilege applies even though
    the statement is made outside the courtroom and no function of the court or its officers is
    invoked.” 
    Id. at 477, 513
    P.2d at 720. And Romero articulated the standard that defamatory
    statements made during the course of, as a part of, and reasonably related to a judicial
    proceeding were absolutely privileged. 
    Id. {12} Section 586
    was continued in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 586 (1977),
    essentially unchanged from the 1938 version on which the Romero Court relied. 
    Penny, 101 N.M. at 519-20
    , 684 P.2d at 1184-85. Citing to comment (a) in the later Restatement, we
    stated in Penny that “[t]he absolute privilege is based upon a public policy of securing to
    attorneys as officers of the court the utmost freedom in their efforts to secure justice for their
    clients.” 
    Id. at 520, 684
    P.2d at 1185. In addition, this Court stated that “[a]ll doubt should
    be resolved in favor of recognizing the privilege.” 
    Id. 5 {13} The
    issue in Penny was whether the district court erroneously failed to recognize
    what one party interpreted Romero to require, namely, that publication to a person with a
    direct interest in the judicial proceeding was an essential element of the absolute-privilege
    defense. Penny, 101 N.M. at 
    520, 684 P.2d at 1185
    . Penny explained that publication to a
    person with a direct interest was not an independent element of the defense but, instead, was
    “one factor in the analysis of whether a publication ha[d the required] relation to a judicial
    proceeding” to permit the defense. 
    Id. {14} The Court
    in Penny offered a canvass of other cases, stating that “[s]everal courts
    have recognized absolute immunity for publication to an individual or organization without
    a direct interest in the relevant proceeding where the recipient nonetheless had some interest
    in the proceeding.” 
    Id. Yet, citing cases
    involving communications with a newspaper and
    with a company’s customers, this Court also “recognize[d] that courts have refused to apply
    the absolute privilege to communications made to recipients wholly unrelated to the
    proceeding.” 
    Id. at 521, 684
    P.2d at 1186.
    {15} This Court’s latest absolute-privilege case is Gregory Rockhouse Ranch in which the
    defendant counterclaimed alleging slander of title. 2008-NMCA-101, ¶ 17. The primary
    issue relating to absolute privilege was the temporal proximity of the alleged defamation to
    the initiation of judicial proceedings. 
    Id. ¶ 19. The
    slander claim was predicated on letters
    dated between September 1999 and June 2000 sent by the plaintiff to governmental entities
    several months before the initiation of judicial proceedings in December 2000. 
    Id. As to the
    timing of the letters in relation to initiation of judicial proceedings, the Court stated:
    [W]e find no authority to support extension of this privilege to
    communications made so far in advance of litigation. Nor do we find any
    indication that litigation was seriously contemplated at the time that the
    communications were made. We regard this as fatal to [the] claim of
    absolute privilege.
    
    Id. In support of
    this ruling, the Court noted Restatement (Second) of Torts § 587 cmt. e
    (1977) as “observing that, with respect to communications which are preliminary to a
    judicial proceeding, the absolute privilege applies only if a proceeding is contemplated in
    good faith and under serious consideration at the time the communication is made.” Gregory
    Rockhouse Ranch, 2008-NMCA-101, ¶ 19 (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 587 reads in full:
    A party to a private litigation or a private prosecutor or defendant in a
    criminal prosecution is absolutely privileged to publish defamatory matter
    concerning another in communications preliminary to a proposed judicial
    proceeding, or in the institution of or during the course and as a part of, a
    judicial proceeding in which he participates, if the matter has some relation
    to the proceeding.
    6
    {16} To summarize New Mexico defamation case law, the absolute-privilege defense is
    available when an alleged defamatory statement is made to achieve the objects of the
    litigation and is reasonably related to the subject matter of the judicial proceeding. As part
    of the absolute-privilege analysis, we consider the extent to which the recipient of the
    statement had an interest in the judicial proceeding. When the statement precedes initiation
    of the judicial proceeding, the privilege is available only if the proceeding in question is
    contemplated in good faith and under serious consideration at the time the statement is made.
    We add that cases such as this must be decided on a case-by-case basis with the outcome
    depending on the particular facts of the case. See Asay v. Hallmark Cards, Inc., 
    594 F.2d 692
    , 698 (8th Cir. 1979) (“A case-by-case evaluation must be made to determine whether
    the publication fits within the . . . privilege.”).
    The Pre-Action Statements in Relation to a Contemplated Proceeding
    {17} Ms. Thomas’s pre-action statements at the December 2007 meeting raise the
    question, under the test in Gregory Rockhouse Ranch, whether such statements are protected
    by absolute privilege. This depends on whether the proceeding is contemplated in good faith
    and is under serious consideration. The facts show that, in this regard, the statements fit
    within the privilege.
    {18} Residents of the Mesquite community were concerned with what they believed to be
    a historical, existing, and continuing environmental hazard to their community caused by
    Helena, and they sought out Ms. Thomas. She was an attorney who was knowledgeable on
    the environmental issues and who had engaged Helena and others in environmental litigation
    in Texas. Residents invited Ms. Thomas to attend the December 2007 meeting to discuss
    the environmental issues and the possibility of filing a judicial proceeding against Helena.
    Residents and Ms. Thomas were aware of the history of NMED actions against Helena. The
    facts support the conclusion that, at the time of the December 2007 meeting, the residents
    responsible for holding the meeting and Ms. Thomas in good faith contemplated and gave
    serious consideration to initiating a judicial proceeding, thereby falling within the test in
    Gregory Rockhouse Ranch. See 2008-NMCA-101, ¶ 19.
    {19} Furthermore, we see no facts indicating that the intervening time between the
    December 2007 meeting and the October 2008 initiation of the judicial proceeding
    diminished the residents’ contemplation and consideration of filing a judicial proceeding.
    Following the meeting, Ms. Thomas was retained and a complaint was ultimately filed. That
    months passed during the processes of retaining Ms. Thomas followed by her preparation
    and filing of the judicial proceeding was not, in this case, a basis on which to deny the
    absolute-privilege defense. Good faith contemplation and serious consideration reasonably
    ripened into further activity toward a judicial proceeding.
    Statements Made to Invited News Reporters
    7
    {20} Statements were made to news reporters both before and after the filing of the
    October 2008 tort action. It seems to be understood that the invitations to news reporters to
    attend the December 2007 meeting and the press conference were extended with the desire
    to inform the public through the news media about the residents’ environmental and health
    concerns and activities related to Helena, if not also to inform the public that a judicial
    proceeding was contemplated or initiated. It appears to be undisputed that the news
    reporters attended solely in their capacities as news reporters. The statements about which
    Helena complains were reported in the news media. We see no evidence in the record, and
    Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe point to none, showing that the news persons involved were
    otherwise in any way related to or in any way held an interest in the judicial proceeding.
    The Law Relating to Statements to the Press
    {21} A considerable number of cases consider as an element in an absolute-privilege
    analysis whether the recipient is in any way related to or has an interest in the proceeding.
    Although sometimes expressed in different ways, the rule in these cases is that statements
    communicated to news media recipients who are wholly unrelated to and have no interest
    in the judicial proceeding are not protected by absolute privilege.
    {22} We start with the mainstay case of Kennedy v. Cannon, 
    182 A.2d 54
    (Md. 1962),
    which is referred to in Penny, and the mainstay cases of Asay, 
    594 F.2d 692
    , and Green
    Acres Trust v. London, 
    688 P.2d 617
    (Ariz. 1984) (en banc). In Kennedy, a communication
    to a newspaper editor by an attorney who had interviewed a defendant charged with rape
    gave rise to the alleged defamation and a suit for defamation by the victim of the 
    rape. 182 A.2d at 55-56
    . The victim’s suit was based on an allegation that the attorney’s words
    charged her with the crime of adultery. 
    Id. Following the Restatement
    of Torts § 586 and
    various cases, the court in Kennedy held that the absolute privilege would not be extended
    to statements outside the purview of the judicial proceeding and “spoken before persons in
    no way connected with the 
    proceeding.” 182 A.2d at 58
    . The court held that the statements
    to the newspaper were not absolutely privileged, stating that all of the cases on which it
    relied “make it obvious that aside from any question of ethics, an attorney who wishes to
    litigate his case in the press will do so at his own risk.” 
    Id. {23} Following the
    Kennedy guideline, the court in Asay stated that “[i]n determining
    whether an occasion is absolutely privileged, the pivotal factor is frequently to whom the
    matter is published” and that “[p]ublication to the news media is not ordinarily sufficiently
    related to a judicial proceeding to constitute a privileged occasion.” 
    Asay, 594 F.2d at 697
    ;
    see Converters Equip. Corp. v. Condes Corp., 
    258 N.W.2d 712
    , 717 (Wis. 1977) (holding
    that “for the absolute privilege to attach[,] the statement at issue must have been published
    on an occasion or in a context [which] is an integral part of the judicial or quasi-judicial
    proceeding involved”). The court in Asay held that Iowa law did “not grant an absolute
    privilege for the dissemination of a complaint to news 
    services.” 594 F.2d at 699
    .
    8
    {24} Following the Asay guideline, in Green Acres Trust, the court held that the absolute
    privilege was unavailable to an attorney where a newspaper reporter at a press conference
    “had no relation to the proposed class action[,] . . . played no role in the actual litigation[,]
    . . . [and] lacked a sufficient connection to the proposed proceedings[.]” Green Acres 
    Trust, 688 P.2d at 622-23
    . The court further stated that “[t]he press conference simply did not
    enhance the judicial 
    function[.]” 688 P.2d at 623
    . Green Acres Trust held that, in analyzing
    whether an alleged defamatory statement is related to a judicial proceeding, “both content
    and manner of extra-judicial communications must bear some relation to the proceeding.”
    
    Id. at 622 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). In reaching this determination, the court
    agreed with the analysis in Asay that “the application of the absolute[-]privilege defense was
    dependent upon an analysis of the occasion for the communication and the substance of the
    communication.” Green Acres 
    Trust, 688 P.2d at 622
    . The court in Green Acres Trust also
    agreed with the Asay court’s views “that the recipient of the extra-judicial communication
    [must] have some relationship to the proposed or pending judicial proceeding for the
    occasion to be privileged[.]” Green Acres 
    Trust, 688 P.2d at 622
    . A strong majority of cases
    agree with the Kennedy, Asay, and Green Acres Trust analyses, rules, or results.1
    1
    See Jones v. Clinton, 
    974 F. Supp. 712
    , 731 (E.D. Ark. 1997); Seidl v. Greentree Mortg.
    Co., 
    30 F. Supp. 2d 1292
    , 1313-14 (D. Colo. 1998); Davidson v. Cao, 
    211 F. Supp. 2d 264
    ,
    275 (D. Mass. 2002); Webster v. Byrd, 
    494 So. 2d 31
    , 35 (Ala. 1986); Rothman v. Jackson,
    
    57 Cal. Rptr. 2d 284
    , 292, 294 (Ct. App. 1996); Bradley v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co.,
    
    106 Cal. Rptr. 718
    , 723 (Ct. App. 1973), overruled on other grounds by Silberg v. Anderson,
    
    786 P.2d 365
    (Cal. 1990) (in bank); Kennedy v. Zimmermann, 
    601 N.W.2d 61
    , 66 (Iowa
    1999); Williams v. Kenney, 
    877 A.2d 277
    , 290-91 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2005);
    Cappello v. Scott, 
    644 A.2d 102
    , 102-03 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1994); Andrews v. Elliot,
    
    426 S.E.2d 430
    , 432-33 (N.C. Ct. App. 1993); Brown v. Gatti, 
    99 P.3d 299
    , 305 (Or. Ct.
    App. 2004), aff’d in part and rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    145 P.3d 130
    (Or. 2006);
    Bochetto v. Gibson, 
    860 A.2d 67
    , 73 (Pa. 2004); Barto v. Felix, 
    378 A.2d 927
    , 930 (Pa.
    Super. Ct. 1977); Pratt v. Nelson, 
    2007 UT 41
    , ¶¶ 46-48, 
    164 P.3d 366
    ; see also Prosser &
    Keeton on The Law of Torts § 114, at 820 (5th ed. 1984) (stating that “[i]t is clear . . . that
    statements given to the newspapers concerning the case are no part of a judicial proceeding,
    and are not absolutely privileged”); 1 Goeffrey C. Hazard, Jr. & W. William Hodes, The law
    of Lawyering § 4.15, at 4-73 (3d ed. 2001) (citing Kennedy and Seidl and stating that
    “[s]tatements made at press conferences . . . are generally not considered sufficiently related
    to the litigation itself to qualify for the privilege”); Douglas R. Richmond, The Lawyers’
    Litigation Privilege, 31 Am. J. Trial Advoc. 281, 324 (2007) (stating that “the great weight
    of authority indicates that lawyers’ statements to the press are not related to judicial
    proceedings and therefore are not absolutely privileged”); Grace M. Giesel, Defamation
    Liability for Attorney Speech: A Policy-Based and Civility-Oriented Reconsideration of the
    Absolute Privilege for Attorneys, 10 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 431, 469 (1994) (stating that
    “[f]ortunately, courts and commentators agree that letters and other communications to the
    media do not benefit from an absolute privilege”).
    9
    {25} In their answer briefs, Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe rely on two Texas Court of
    Appeals cases to justify the absolute-privilege defense, namely, Dallas Independent School
    District v. Finlan, 
    27 S.W.3d 220
    (Tex. Ct. App. 2000), and Hill v. Herald-Post Publishing
    Co., 
    877 S.W.2d 774
    (Tex. Ct. App. 1994), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    891 S.W.2d 638
    (Tex. 1994). See Daystar Residential, Inc. v. Collmer, 
    176 S.W.3d 24
    , 28 (Tex.
    Ct. App. 2004) (following Hill and Finlan and stating that “[j]ust as the mere delivery of
    pleadings in pending litigation to the news media does not amount to publication outside of
    the judicial proceedings that would result in a waiver of the absolute privilege, a press
    release advising the media that a lawsuit has been filed, including a basic description of the
    allegations, does not amount to publication outside of the judicial proceedings resulting in
    a waiver of the absolute privilege”). These cases, along with a Nebraska decision, represent
    a minority view on the issue. See Prokop v. Cannon, 
    583 N.W.2d 51
    , 58-59 (Neb. Ct. App.
    1998) (stating that the absolute privilege “is confined to statements made by an attorney
    while performing his function as such” and that the privilege was “available only when the
    defamatory matter has some reference to the subject matter of the proposed or pending
    litigation, although it need not be strictly relevant to any issue involved in it[,]” but
    nonetheless finding “that the statements made to the news media were well within the
    privilege” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    {26} In Finlan, attorneys for the school district issued a written press release announcing
    that the school district had, that day, filed a suit against certain former district board of
    trustees members (the members) for fraud, civil conspiracy, and 
    racketeering. 27 S.W.3d at 239
    . The release stated that the time had come to expose the public to what the members
    were truly trying to accomplish in suits the members had initiated against the school district.
    
    Id. The release went
    on to state that the members were seeking a $1,650,000 settlement from
    the district and were “only out for their own personal gain seeking to create a financial
    windfall for themselves by harassing the [school district] with the filing of frivolous lawsuits
    and seeking the private bank records of the members[.]” 
    Id. (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The members counterclaimed against the school district for defamation, but the
    trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the school district based on its absolute
    privilege defense. 
    Id. at 237-38. The
    court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s summary
    judgment, determining that the school district’s petition and the press release statements
    “which relate[d] [to] the allegations in [the] petition [were] absolutely privileged[.]” 
    Id. at 239. In
    addition, the court determined that the statements “relate[d] to pending litigation and
    settlement efforts.” 
    Id. Mindful that it
    “must resolve all doubt in favor of the relevance of
    the lawyer’s statement[,]” the court went on to say “we must extend the privilege to any
    statement that bears some relation to a judicial proceeding.” 
    Id. The court in
    Finlan relied
    substantially on Hill and on Russell v. Clark, 
    620 S.W.2d 865
    (Tex. Ct. App. 1981). In Hill
    an attorney sued another attorney who made statements to a reporter and who delivered
    court-filed documents to the 
    reporter. 877 S.W.2d at 777
    . The court distinguished Green
    Acres by pointing out that Hill “involve[d] the mere delivery of documents previously filed
    in . . . criminal proceedings and available to the 
    public.” 877 S.W.2d at 783
    . The court also
    held that the attorney’s statement to the reporter “in response to an inquiry about [the
    attorney’s] motions . . . bore a substantial relationship to the criminal proceedings and was
    10
    made in furtherance of his representation[,]” in that the attorney was “merely affirming the
    allegations in his motion and brief and his belief that he could prove them,” and indicating
    that this response was one that “many if not most attorneys would make if queried by the
    news media about the allegations in a petition or an indictment.” 
    Id. at 783-84. Russell
    involved an attorney’s letter to the plaintiffs’ investors “seeking evidence for use in pending
    
    litigation.” 620 S.W.2d at 866
    . The court was convinced that privilege applied because the
    content of the letter bore a relationship to the judicial proceeding. 
    Id. at 870. Russell
    did not
    involve communications to news reporters.
    {27} The Texas cases do not specifically include as part of their absolute privilege analysis
    the Asay second factor, namely, whether the recipient of the alleged defamatory
    communication had any interest in or was related in any way to the judicial proceeding. We
    disagree with Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe to the extent they contend that Finlan necessarily
    stands for the proposition that the occasion of the defamatory communication or the
    relationship or interest of the recipient to the judicial proceeding is not relevant or part of the
    absolute-privilege analysis. The extent to which the cases might be interpreted to allow the
    defense on the sole ground that the content of the statement relates to a judicial proceeding,
    we reject any such standard as inadequate. Further, Hill determined that the response to the
    reporter was only a reiteration of what was in the court-filed 
    documents. 877 S.W.2d at 783
    .
    And Russell did not involve news reporters. For these reasons, Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe
    can find no comfort or support in the Texas cases and minority view.
    {28} In oral argument before this Court, Ms. Thomas placed considerable weight on
    Simpson Strong-Tie Co. v. Stewart, Estes & Donnell, 
    232 S.W.3d 18
    (Tenn. 2007), as well
    as on other cases, that had not until the argument been cited or argued by Ms. Thomas, in
    arguing that the absolute privilege protects an attorney’s pre-proceeding statements even
    when the targets or recipients are not known to be persons who have some interest in the
    prospective proceeding. These cases do not help Ms. Thomas. Simpson Strong-Tie involved
    a newspaper advertisement and a website announcement each trolling for unknown persons
    in “an apparent effort to solicit business.” 
    Id. at 20-21. The
    other cases involved targeted
    solicitations to persons who obviously would have some interest in the contemplated legal
    proceeding.2 Although the court in Simpson Strong-Tie held that the attorneys were
    protected by the absolute privilege, even though they did not target persons they knew in
    advance had some interest in the contemplated proceeding, the court was “not unsympathetic
    with the plaintiff’s position” that “untargeted communications by an attorney should fall
    outside the permissible scope of the privilege to safeguard against abuse.” 
    Id. at 26. The
    2
    The other cases relied on by Ms. Thomas in oral argument are Rubin v. Green, 
    847 P.2d 1044
    (Cal. 1993) (in bank); Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran v. Hemispherx Biopharma,
    Inc., 
    774 A.2d 332
    (D.C. 2001), overruled on other grounds by McNair Builders, Inc. v.
    Taylor, 
    3 A.3d 1132
    (D.C. 2010); Kittler v. Eckberg, Lammers, Briggs, Wolff & Vierling,
    
    535 N.W.2d 653
    (Minn. Ct. App. 1995); Samson Inv. Co. v. Chevaillier, 
    1999 OK 19
    , 
    988 P.2d 327
    .
    11
    court went out of its way to indicate there are limitations on the privilege, stating “that
    unnecessary defamatory publications to recipients unconnected with the proposed
    proceeding would not be privileged” and that the court was “mindful of the need for caution
    in according an absolute privilege for what may be defamatory publications made
    preliminary to litigation, we emphasize that attorneys do not have an unfettered license to
    defame their adversaries.” 
    Id. And the court
    quoted language from its 120-year-old case of
    Shodden v. McElwee, 
    5 S.W. 602
    , 605 (Tenn. 1887), which stated in part:
    [W]e must not lose sight of the fact that it concerns the peace of society; that
    the good name and repute of the citizen shall not be exposed to the malice of
    individuals, who, under the supposed protection of an absolute privilege, . .
    . volunteer defamatory matter in utterances not pertinent. To hold such
    persons responsible in damages cannot fairly be said to hamper the
    administration of justice.
    {29} Also in oral argument, Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe asked this Court to decide, as a
    matter of law based on the record before us, that the statements attributed to them were not
    defamatory. They asserted that if we were to examine the statements and the surrounding
    circumstances, under the law of defamation, we would determine that the statements were
    not defamatory as a matter of law. We refuse this request to address the merits of the
    defamation claims, and we render no opinion regarding the merits of the defamation claims.
    As we indicated earlier in this opinion, whether the statements on which Helena’s claims
    were based constituted defamation was not at issue on summary judgment. Ms. Thomas and
    Mrs. Uribe sought summary judgment under the assumption that their statements were, in
    fact, defamatory. It may well be that Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe could have fared well in
    terms of expense and success in the initial stages of the district court proceeding had they
    first sought summary judgment on the question whether the statements were defamatory.
    But the issue was not presented to the district court. Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe chose,
    instead, to first seek dismissal at the outset based on their defense of absolute privilege.
    Whether the statements were defamatory as a matter of law could perhaps have been decided
    first by the district court. Ms. Thomas’s and Mrs. Uribe’s choices remind us somewhat of
    Judge Pickard’s sage insight in Gracia v. Bittner, 
    120 N.M. 191
    , 192, 
    900 P.2d 351
    , 352 (Ct.
    App. 1995): “Every litigated case is tried at least three times: there is the trial the attorneys
    intended to conduct; there is the trial the attorneys actually conducted; and there is the trial
    that, after the verdict, the attorneys wished they had conducted.”
    The Court Erred in Applying Absolute Privilege
    {30} The alleged defamatory statements of Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe are not entitled
    to absolute-privilege protection. The statements were heard by news reporters who had been
    invited to hear the statements but who had no relationship to or interest in the judicial
    12
    proceeding.3 To grant Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe an absolute privilege in this case would
    be tantamount to unqualifiedly allowing defamatory statements by attorneys and parties to
    news reporters for dissemination to the general public as long as they could show that the
    content of the statements related to the subject matter of the judicial proceeding. In this case,
    the reasons for allowing absolute-privilege protection are significantly outweighed by the
    reasons militating against it. As the strong majority of cases portray under various
    rationales, more than a relationship of content to judicial proceeding had to exist.
    {31} In this case, the defamatory statements to invited news media for dissemination to
    the general public did not serve the purpose of the judicial proceeding, enhance its function,
    or legitimately achieve its objects. The statements did not assist attorneys in investigating
    claims or in fully presenting claims in court, which are the traditional reasons for applying
    absolute privilege. A not insignificant effect could have been to taint prospective jurors.
    Even given that the persons making the statements had in mind publication and
    dissemination for an educational purpose, the news media dissemination of the statements
    was not a necessary step in the investigation or presentation of claims and defenses. In
    weighing the value of reputation against the value of access to the court, in this case, the
    value of reputation far outweighed that of court access, because the publication of
    defamation by intended use of the news media was unnecessary and excessive. The courts
    have a duty to control the judicial process in such instances to limit the extent to which
    attorneys and parties are able, with impunity, to defame.
    {32} There exists enhanced risk of damage to reputation from employing the press for
    publication and dissemination of a defamatory statement. That enhanced risk exceeds the
    risk of damage that may occur when a news reporter might learn of the proceeding and
    develop sufficient interest to obtain from the clerk of the court a copy of a document filed
    in the court proceeding or sit in a court hearing. The judicial function will not be impaired
    by placing a limitation on application of the absolute-privilege defense in this case.
    {33} We hold that the absolute-privilege defense was erroneously allowed in the present
    case where the alleged defamatory statements were made to news reporters who had no
    relationship to or interest in the judicial proceeding. Thus, we hold that the district court
    3
    At oral argument, Ms. Thomas’s counsel stated that there was no evidence presented to
    the district court indicating that Ms. Thomas knew that the news reporter was invited to or
    present at the December 2007 meeting. This point was not raised in Ms. Thomas’s answer
    brief, and her lawyers did not there or in oral argument indicate where Ms. Thomas raised
    this in the district court as a possible point to support her absolute-privilege defense. In oral
    argument, her counsel did not argue the contention as a basis on which we should uphold
    absolute privilege. We have not considered the contention.
    13
    erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Ms. Thomas and Mrs. Uribe on the ground
    of absolute privilege.
    {34} We understand that a perceived need for application of absolute privilege in
    statements to the press stems from the concern that lawsuits with very thin or spurious
    grounds for asserting defamation claims will be filed for the purpose of intimidating parties
    and their attorneys who are simultaneously pursuing a lawsuit against the party asserting the
    defamation claims. Such lawsuits can be challenged in the district court on the merits, just
    as Ms. Thomas asked this Court to act on the merits of Helena’s claims in the present action.
    Furthermore, qualified privilege and immunity, if the elements are provable, can adequately
    protect those making the alleged defamatory statements. See Paul T. Hayden, Reconsidering
    the Litigator’s Absolute Privilege to Defame, 54 Ohio St. L.J. 985, 987 (1993) (advocating
    substitution of a qualified privilege for the absolute privilege for litigators). In addition, our
    decision today is a limiting factor in regard to retaliatory lawsuits brought to intimidate,
    since we are addressing only statements made by attorneys or parties to news reporters who
    have no interest in or connection with the judicial proceeding and who are invited to receive
    the statements for the purpose of dissemination to the public.
    CONCLUSION
    {35} We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Ms. Thomas
    and Mrs. Uribe based on absolute privilege, and remand for further proceedings.
    {36}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    Topic Index for Helena Chem. Co. v. Uribe, Docket No. 29,567
    AE                              APPEAL AND ERROR
    AE-SR                           Standard of Review
    CP                              CIVIL PROCEDURE
    CP-SJ                           Summary Judgment
    14
    TR      TORTS
    TR-DF   Defamation
    TR-IM   Immunity
    15