Court Opinion

ID: 4910978
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-15 05:27:30.622764+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:28.821400
License: Public Domain

Affirm and Opinion Filed September 8, 2021

                                      In The
                            Court of Appeals
                     Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                              No. 05-20-00988-CV

 MARK LEE DICKSON AND RIGHT TO LIFE EAST TEXAS, Appellants
                          V.
 THE AFIYA CENTER AND TEXAS EQUAL ACCESS FUND, Appellees

               On Appeal from the 116th Judicial District Court
                            Dallas County, Texas
                    Trial Court Cause No. DC-20-08104

                        OPINION ON REHEARING
                Before Justices Osborne, Pedersen, III, and Nowell
                         Opinion by Justice Pedersen, III
      We deny appellants’ August 17, 2021 Motion for Rehearing. On our own

motion, we withdraw our August 4, 2021 memorandum opinion and vacate our

judgment of that date. We amend one sentence in our original opinion describing the

Waskom Ordinance to be certain that it complies faithfully with the record. In all

other respects our opinion remains the same. This is now the opinion of the Court.

      Appellants Mark Lee Dickson and Right to Life East Texas appeal the trial

court’s order denying their Second Amended Motion to Dismiss under the Texas

Citizens’ Participation Act (the Motion to Dismiss). The Motion to Dismiss sought

dismissal of all defamation and conspiracy claims brought by appellees, The Afiya
Center (TAC) and Texas Equal Access Fund (TEAF). Appellants raise five issues in

this Court, contending: appellees failed to produce clear and specific evidence that

appellants published a false statement of fact concerning appellees or that appellants

acted with actual malice in publishing the statements at issue; appellants established

affirmative defenses or constitutional protection of the statements at issue; and

appellees failed to produce clear and specific evidence of a conspiracy between

appellants or that Right to Life East Texas (RLET) can be held legally responsible

for statements published by Dickson. We affirm the trial court’s order.

                                    BACKGROUND

      Dickson acknowledges in his brief that he “has been encouraging cities

throughout Texas to enact ordinances that outlaw abortion within their city limits.”

Dickson likewise acknowledges his success in this endeavor, identifying seventeen

cities that had passed such ordinances at the time of his briefing. The roots of this

lawsuit lie in the first such ordinance, which was enacted by the City of Waskom.

                             The Waskom Ordinance

      The original Waskom Ordinance begins with a series of “Findings.” For our

purposes, the key finding states:

      WHEREAS, a surgical or chemical abortion is the purposeful and
      intentional ending of a human life, and is murder “with malice
      aforethought” since the baby in the womb has its own DNA, and at
      certain points in pregnancy has its own heartbeat and its own
      brainwaves . . .
The ordinance proceeds to a series of four “Declarations,” which assert:

                                         –2–
      1. We declare Waskom, Texas to be a Sanctuary City for the Unborn.

      2. Abortion at all times and at all stages of pregnancy is declared to be
      an act of murder with malice aforethought, subject only to the
      affirmative defenses described in Section C.3.

      3. Organizations that perform abortions and assist others in obtaining
      abortions are declared to be criminal organizations. These
      organizations include, but are not limited to:

             (a) Planned Parenthood and any of its affiliates;

             (b) Jane’s Due Process;

             (c) The Afiya Center;

             (d) The Lilith Fund for Reproductive Equality;
             (e) NARAL Pro-Choice Texas;
             (f) National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health;

             (g) Whole Woman’s Health and Whole Woman’s Health
             Alliance;
             (h) Texas Equal Access Fund.
      4. The Supreme Court’s rulings and opinions in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S.
      113 (1973), Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992),
      Stenberg v. Carhart, 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Whole Woman’s Health v.
      Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. 2292 (2016), and any other rulings or opinions
      from the Supreme Court that purport to establish or enforce a
      “constitutional right” to abort a pre-born child, are declared to be
      unconstitutional usurpations of judicial power, which violate both the
      Tenth Amendment and the Republican Form of Government Clause,
      and are declared to be null and void in the City of Waskom.

The ordinance goes on to declare abortion and aiding and abetting abortion to be

“unlawful acts.” In resolution of an earlier lawsuit, the ordinance was amended to

remove the list of “criminal organizations,” although the ordinance continued to

assert that it was an offense to aid and abet an abortion by engaging in conduct such

                                        –3–
as “[k]nowingly providing transportation to or from an abortion provider” or

“[p]roviding money with the knowledge that it will be used to pay for an abortion or

the costs associated with procuring an abortion.”

                             The Statements at Issue

      Following enactment of the Waskom Ordinance, and during the following

months, Dickson made a number of statements on television and on Facebook

related to the ordinance he drafted and supported. Along with the ordinance language

quoted above, which declared TAC and TEAF to be criminal organizations,

appellees referenced five such statements in their petitions—four Facebook posts on

Dickson’s and RLET’s pages and one statement to CNN—and submitted additional

Facebook posts during the Motion to Dismiss proceeding.

      By way of example, Dickson posted the following statement on Facebook on

June 11, 2019:

      Congratulations Waskom, Texas for becoming the first city in Texas to
      become a “Sanctuary City for the Unborn” by resolution and the first
      city in the Nation to become a “Sanctuary City for the Unborn” by
      ordinance. Although I did have my disagreements with the final
      version, the fact remains that abortion is now OUTLAWED in
      Waskom, Texas! … All organizations that perform abortions and assist
      others in obtaining abortions (including Planned Parenthood and any of
      its affiliates, Jane’s Due Process, The Afiya Center, The Lilith Fund for
      Reproductive Equality, NARAL Pro-Choice Texas, National Latina
      Institute for Reproductive Health, Whole Woman's Heath and
      Woman’s Health Alliance, Texas Equal Access Fund, and others like
      them) are now declared to be criminal organizations in Waskom, Texas.
      This is history in the making and a great victory for life!
He posted the following on November 26, 2019:

                                        –4–
        This is an ordinance that says murdering unborn children is outlawed,
        so it makes sense to name examples of organizations that are involved
        in murdering unborn children. That is what we are talking about here:
        The murder of unborn children.

And RLET posted this Dickson-authored statement on its Facebook page:
        [A]bortion is freedom in the same way that a wife killing her husband
        is freedom. Abortion is murder. . . . Abortion is illegal in Waskom,
        Texas.

        Appellees sued Dickson and RLET, asserting that the statements defamed

them by calling them criminal organizations and murderers.

                                 The Motion to Dismiss

        Appellants timely filed their Motion to Dismiss in response to appellees

defamation claim. In that motion, appellants invoked application of the Texas

Citizens’ Participation Act (the TCPA) on the bases of their right of free speech,

right to petition, and right of association.1 They charged that TAC and TEAF could

not establish by clear and specific evidence (a) that appellants had made a false

statement of fact, or (b) that appellants had acted with malice or negligence in

making the statements at issue, or (c) that appellees had suffered damages as a result

of the statements at issue. However, appellants argued further that—even if TAC

and TEAF could establish those elements of their claims by clear and specific

evidence—the trial court should still dismiss the claims because the statements were

true or substantially true or were constitutionally protected opinion or rhetorical

    1
      The appellees’ original petitions, later consolidated by agreement, were both filed on June 11, 2020.
Accordingly, this case is governed by the amended version of the TCPA that became effective September 1,
2019. Act of May 17, 2019, 86th Leg., R.S., ch. 378, § 11, 2019 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. 684, 687.
                                                   –5–
hyperbole, and appellants were thus entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Appellants sought recovery of their costs and attorney’s fees. In support of their

Motion to Dismiss, appellants submitted copies of what they identify as the Texas

abortion statutes; a copy of the amended Waskom Ordinance; and the Affidavit of

Mark Lee Dickson.

        TAC and TEAF filed their Joint Opposition to Defendants’ Second Amended

Motion to Dismiss Under The Texas Citizens Participation Act, attaching the

following evidence: a copy of the original version of the Waskom Ordinance; copies

of each of the published statements relied on in the petitions; the Affidavit of Marsha

Jones, co-founder and Executive Director of TAC; the Affidavit of Kamyon Conner,

Executive Director of TEAF; and the Declaration of Jennifer Rudenick Ecklund,

attorney for TAC and TEAF.

        Appellants filed a Reply Brief, which attached a supplemental affidavit from

Dickson.2 The trial court heard the Motion to Dismiss and denied it “on all grounds.”

This interlocutory appeal followed.

                                             THE TCPA

        The purpose of the TCPA is “to encourage and safeguard the constitutional

rights of persons to petition, speak freely, associate freely, and otherwise participate

    2
      The reply also attached affidavits from appellants’ counsel, Jonathan Mitchell, and a law professor,
Michael Stokes Paulsen. Those affidavits were stricken by the trial court in their entirety, and appellants
have not complained of their exclusion in this Court.
                                                   –6–
in government to the maximum extent permitted by law and, at the same time,

protect the rights of a person to file meritorious lawsuits for demonstrable injury.”

TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 27.002. The act itself instructs us to construe

its provisions liberally “to effectuate its purpose and intent fully.” Id. § 27.011(b).

Litigants invoke the protection of the TCPA through a motion to dismiss, id.

§ 27.003, and we review a trial court’s ruling on such a motion de novo, Vaughn-

Riley v. Patterson, No. 05-20-00236-CV, 2020 WL 7053651, at *2 (Tex. App.—

Dallas Dec. 2, 2020, no pet.) (mem. op.).

        The TCPA provides a three-step process for determining whether a case

should be dismissed. See generally Youngkin v. Hines, 546 S.W.3d 675, 679–80

(Tex. 2018). At the outset, the movant must demonstrate that the TCPA applies to

the legal action brought against it. CIV. PRAC. & REM. § 27.005(b). If the movant

meets that burden, then the party bringing the legal action must establish by clear

and specific evidence a prima facie case for each essential element of the claim in

question. Id. § 27.005(c). If the party bringing the action satisfies that

requirement, the action will still be dismissed if the movant “establishes an

affirmative defense or other grounds on which the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law.” Id. § 27.005(d).3

    3
       Prior to the 2019 amendments to the TCPA, the third step provided for dismissal “if the moving party
establishes by a preponderance of the evidence each essential element of a valid defense to the nonmovant’s
claim.”

                                                   –7–
                           Step 1: Applicability of the Act

      The TCPA applies to a legal action that is based on or is in response to the

movant’s exercise of the right of free speech, the right to petition, or the right of

association. Id. § 27.005(b)(1). In both the trial court and this Court, the parties agree

that TAC’s and TEAF’s claims for defamation and conspiracy to defame fall within

the TCPA’s concept of free speech. Accordingly, we need not address this first step

further. See Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Hall, 579 S.W.3d 370, 377 (Tex. 2019);

Caracio v. Doe, No. 05-19-00150-CV, 2020 WL 38827, at *5 (Tex. App.—Dallas

Jan. 3, 2020, no pet.) (mem. op.).

           Step 2: Clear and Specific Evidence of a Prima Facie Case
                 For the Essential Elements of the Legal Action

      Appellants contend that TAC and TEAF have failed to come forward with

clear and specific evidence of a prima facie case for the essential elements of their

claims for defamation and conspiracy to defame. In this second step, the statute

directs us to consider “the pleadings, evidence a court could consider under Rule

166a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and supporting and opposing affidavits stating

the facts on which the liability or defense is based.” CIV. PRAC. & REM. § 27.006.

We consider the pleadings and evidence in the light most favorable to the

nonmovant. Dyer v. Medoc Health Servs., LLC, 573 S.W.3d 418, 424 (Tex. App.—

Dallas 2019, pet. denied); see also Locke Lord LLP v. Retractable Techs., Inc., No.

05-20-00884-CV, 2021 WL 1540652, at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas Apr. 20, 2021, no

                                          –8–
pet. h.) (mem. op.). As the supreme court has stated, in a TCPA proceeding “we

assume [the] truth” of the nonmovant’s evidence. Rosenthal, 529 S.W.3d at 440 n.9.

                                   Appellees’ Defamation Claim

        The elements of the tort of defamation include “(1) the publication of a false

statement of fact to a third party, (2) that was defamatory concerning the plaintiff,

(3) with the requisite degree of fault, and (4) damages, in some cases.” In re Lipsky,

460 S.W.3d 579, 593 (Tex. 2015) (orig. proceeding) (citing WFAA–TV, Inc. v.

McLemore, 978 S.W.2d 568, 571 (Tex.1998)). In this Court, appellants have

challenged appellees’ proof on the elements of a false statement of fact and the

requisite degree of fault.4

        Generally, clear and specific evidence means that the plaintiff ‘must provide

enough detail to show the factual basis for its claim.’” D Magazine Partners, L.P.

v. Rosenthal, 529 S.W.3d 429, 434 (Tex. 2017) (quoting Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 591).

The “clear and specific evidence” standard does not impose a heightened evidentiary

burden or reject the use of circumstantial evidence when determining the

nonmovant’s prima-facie-case burden. Andrews County v. Sierra Club, 463 S.W.3d

867 (Tex. 2015). In a defamation case implicating the TCPA, “pleadings and

    4
        Appellants do not challenge appellees’ evidence as to whether the statements at issue were
defamatory, i.e., whether they tended “to injure [appellees’] reputation, to expose [them] to public hatred,
contempt, ridicule, or financial injury, or to impeach [their] integrity, honesty, or virtue.” Backes v. Misko,
486 S.W.3d 7, 24 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2015, pet. denied). Accusing someone of a crime is defamatory per
se under Texas common law. Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Tatum, 554 S.W.3d 614, 638 (Tex. 2018). Such
an accusation is “so obviously harmful that general damages, such as mental anguish and loss of reputation,
are presumed.” Id. (citing Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 596). Thus, appellants do not challenge evidence of the
element of damages either.
                                                     –9–
evidence that establishes the facts of when, where, and what was said, the

defamatory nature of the statements, and how they damaged the plaintiff should be

sufficient to resist a TCPA motion to dismiss.” Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 591. We do

not scrutinize individual statements; instead, we examine the larger context of the

purportedly defamatory conduct by the movant. See, e.g., Bentley v. Bunton, 94

S.W.3d 561, 581 (Tex. 2002) (considering series of statements during “Bunton’s

efforts over many months to prove Bentley corrupt”).

(1)       Evidence that Appellants’ Statements Were Statements of Fact

          Again, TAC and TEAF limit their defamation claim to assertions that they are

criminal organizations and that their conduct in assisting a woman terminating her

pregnancy literally amounts to murder.5 To determine whether such assertions were

statements of fact, we focus on the statements’ verifiability and the context in which

they were made. Id. at 583. An actionable statement must assert an objectively

verifiable fact, not merely an opinion. Campbell v. Clark, 471 S.W.3d 615, 625 (Tex.

App.—Dallas 2015, no pet.). However, “[m]erely expressing a defamatory statement

in the form of an ‘opinion’ does not shield it from tort liability because opinions

often imply facts.” Backes v. Misko, 486 S.W.3d 7, 24 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2015,

pet. denied); see also, e.g., Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 583 (“If a speaker says, ‘In my

      5
      In their letter to appellants seeking retraction, appellees stressed: “We are not asking you to change
your political views or cease advocating for them. All we ask is that you . . . retract[] any allegations that
these organizations or their agents have broken or are breaking any laws.” Throughout this lawsuit,
appellees have similarly limited their action to charges that they have committed crimes; they specifically
except from any complaint appellants’ opinions concerning abortion.
                                                   –10–
opinion John Jones is a liar,’ he implies a knowledge of facts which lead to the

conclusion that Jones told an untruth.”). Even if the speaker states the facts upon

which he bases his opinion, if those facts are either incorrect or incomplete, or if his

assessment of them is erroneous, the statement may still imply a false assertion

of fact. Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 583. Determining whether a statement is actionable

fact or non-actionable opinion is a question of law. Scripps NP Operating, LLC v.

Carter, 573 S.W.3d 781, 795 (Tex. 2019).

      We ask, then, whether the statements at issue—that TAC and TEAF are

criminal organizations and that they commit murder—are verifiable. Can we

determine as a matter of fact whether the conduct with which a party has been

charged is criminal or is murder? Stated differently, can we verify the status of the

law as to a particular offense at the time of a particular statement? We conclude that

we can, because our state’s criminal law is gathered and written in the Texas Penal

Code. And while it is true that a municipal ordinance may also identify conduct that

constitutes an offense, see TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 1.03(a), the Texas Constitution

provides that no such ordinance “shall contain any provision inconsistent with the

Constitution of the State, or of the general laws enacted by the Legislature of this

State.” TEX. CONST. art. XI, § 5; City of Richardson v. Responsible Dog Owners of

Tex., 794 S.W.2d 17, 19 (Tex. 1990).

      Appellees’ evidence included the statements alleged to be defamatory and

identified when they were made and how they were published; appellants do not

                                         –11–
dispute those fundamental facts. We conclude that the gist of these statements, i.e.,

that appellees are criminal organizations and that their conduct amounts to murder,

can be verified by reference to the Texas Penal Code. Indeed, among the objectives

of that code are “by definition and grading of offenses to give fair warning of what

is prohibited and of the consequences of violation,” and “to safeguard conduct that

is without guilt from condemnation as criminal.” PENAL § 1.02(2), (4).

       We also look to the context in which the statements were made. Dickson

purports to pronounce the salutary effect of the Waskom Ordinance on the status of

the criminal law involving abortion in Texas; he describes it as “history in the

making.” He expresses confidence that “[i]n the coming weeks more cities in Texas

will be taking the same steps that the City of Waskom took to outlaw abortion in

their cities and become sanctuary cities for the unborn.” As he describes the effect

of this first ordinance, and the effect he anticipates passage of similar ordinances

throughout the state will have, he is purporting to inform the public of a change in

the criminal law. Dickson claims to have made significant efforts to determine the

status of the law, and—based on those efforts—he made statements declaring

appellees to be criminal organizations and murderers. We conclude he made those

declarations, and continues to make them, as statements of fact. See generally

Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 585 (“The clear import of Bunton’s statements on ‘Q&A’ was

that Bentley was corrupt as a matter of verifiable fact, as Bunton continued to assert

at trial.”).

                                        –12–
(2)   Evidence that Appellants’ Statements Were False.

      Appellees’ burden on this element was to produce clear and specific evidence

that appellants’ statements calling TAC and TEAF criminals and asserting that they

are committing murder when they provide assistance to a woman seeking to

terminate a pregnancy are false. The issue of falsity is generally a question of fact.

Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 587 (if evidence is disputed, falsity must be determined by

finder of fact). In this case, however—where the gist of the defamation issue turns

on the status of the criminal law concerning abortion—much of our analysis must

be guided by that law.

      We construe a series of allegedly defamatory statements as a whole, in light

of the surrounding circumstances, and based upon how a person of ordinary

intelligence would perceive them. See Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 594 (“While some of

the statements may, in isolation, not be actionable, . . . the gist of his statements were

that Range was responsible for contaminating his well water and the Railroad

Commission was unduly influenced to rule otherwise.”). We have concluded that a

statement concerning the status of the criminal law is verifiable by reference to the

penal code, whether directly or indirectly by comparing a local ordinance to that

code. Accordingly, to adjudge appellees’ evidence of falsity, we look first to the

penal code to discern whether the conduct alleged by appellants could reasonably be

declared criminal.

                                          –13–
      The penal code does not define the term “criminal” or its root word, “crime.”

As a general principle of statutory construction, when a term is not defined by statute

it bears its common, ordinary meaning, which we typically determine by looking to

dictionary definitions. Fort Worth Transp. Auth. v. Rodriguez, 547 S.W.3d 830, 838

(Tex. 2018). Merriam-Webster defines a “crime” as “an illegal act for which

someone can be punished by the government.” Crime, MERRIAM-WEBSTER.COM

DICTIONARY, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/crime (last visited July __,

2021). Appellees’ evidence includes a copy of the original Waskom Ordinance,

which ordinance provides:

      Neither the City of Waskom, nor any of its officers or employees, nor
      any district or county attorney, nor any executive or administrative
      officer or employee of any state or local governmental entity, shall take
      any steps to enforce this ordinance against a person or entity that
      commits an unlawful act described in Section C, unless and until the
      Supreme Court overrules Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), and
      Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992), and permits states
      and municipalities to once again enforce abortion prohibitions.

Thus, although the ordinance purports to outlaw abortion and any conduct that

assists in the procurement of an abortion, it states on its face that no arm of the

government can take any steps to enforce those prohibitions “unless and until” the

Supreme Court’s opinions securing a right to abortion are overruled. Thus, the

ordinance itself serves as evidence that assisting women in terminating a pregnancy

is not “an illegal act for which someone can be punished by the government,” i.e.,

that such assistance is not a crime.

                                        –14–
      The statements at issue, submitted by appellees as evidence below, repeatedly

declare that abortion is murder. The ordinance asserts: “Abortion at all times and at

all stages of pregnancy is declared to be an act of murder with malice aforethought.”

Appellees argue that the definition of murder in the Texas Penal Code establishes

that this is false. The code states that a person commits the offense of murder “if he:

(1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual.” PENAL

§ 19.02(b)(1). And the code defines the term “individual” to mean “a human being

who is alive, including an unborn child at every stage of gestation from fertilization

until birth.” Id. § 1.07(a)(26). However, appellees correctly point out that the code

makes a specific exception to the chapter on criminal homicide, stating:

      This chapter does not apply to the death of an unborn child if the
      conduct charged is:

      (1) conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child; [or]

      (2) a lawful medical procedure performed by a physician or other
      licensed health care provider with the requisite consent, if the death of
      the unborn child was the intended result of the procedure.

Id. § 19.06. Thus, the Texas Legislature has created a specific exception to the

definition of murder for an abortion performed lawfully.

      Section 19.06 became the law in Texas after our statutes outlawing abortion

were declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade,

410 U.S. 113 (1973). Shortly after Roe was decided, the Texas Attorney General

was asked to explain the status of Texas law concerning abortion and, after

addressing Roe and its effect, he stated: “Therefore, there presently are no effective
                                        –15–
statutes of the State of Texas against abortion, per se.” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. H-

369, 3 (1974). When appellants made their statements decades later, Roe v. Wade

and its progeny continued to be binding law in Texas. See, e.g., Ex parte Twedell,

158 Tex. 214, 228 (1958) (Texas Supreme Court is “duty bound to follow

the Supreme Court of the United States” when construing U.S. Constitution); see

also Ex parte Evans, 537 S.W.3d 109, 111 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (“The ultimate

authority on federal constitutional law is the U.S. Supreme Court.”).6

         If further clarification of the status of Texas criminal law regarding abortion

were necessary, it was recently supplied by the Presiding Judge of the Texas Court

of Criminal Appeals, who stated in unambiguous terms: “A mother choosing to abort

her unborn child is not a crime under Texas law.” State v. Hunter, No. PD-0861-20,

2021 WL 2449991, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. June 16, 2021) (concurring in denial of

review). The defendant in Hunter was charged, inter alia, with solicitation to commit

capital murder based on text messages sent to his girlfriend requesting that she obtain

    6
        The Waskom Ordinance recites:
         Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), is a lawless and illegitimate act of judicial usurpation,
         which violates the Tenth Amendment by trampling the reserved powers of the States, and
         denies the people of each State a Republican Form of Government by imposing abortion
         policy through judicial decree[.]

Appellants cite no legal authority for the proposition that a city may, by adopting an ordinance,
declare a United States Supreme Court opinion “lawless and illegitimate” and thereby ignore its
pronouncements.

                                                   –16–
an abortion. State v. Hunter, 606 S.W.3d 836, 837 (Tex. App.—Austin 2020, pet.

refused). The trial court granted a defense motion to quash and dismiss the

solicitation count of the indictment, and the court of appeals affirmed that order. Id.

Presiding Judge Keller explained her reason for denying the State’s petition for

review, writing:

      My reason to refuse review is simple: The State's indictment does not
      charge a crime under the laws of the State of Texas, the Court of
      Appeals’s resolution was correct, and the correct resolution is so
      obvious that we need not grant review. A mother choosing to abort her
      unborn child is not a crime under Texas law, so the defendant cannot
      be guilty of the offense of solicitation for soliciting such a crime.
Hunter, 2021 WL 2449991, at *1 (emphasis added). And as to the specific question

of the charge of murder, she stated, “[T]he entire homicide chapter of the Penal

Code, including the provision proscribing the offense of murder, ‘does not apply’ to

the mother ending the unborn child’s life.” Id.

      The Motion to Dismiss contends that the Waskom Ordinance negates section

19.06 of the penal code by declaring abortion to be unlawful within that city.

However, neither the Waskom Ordinance, nor any other edict by local government,

may conflict with this legislative exception. TEX. CONST. art. XI, § 5. And regardless

of appellants’ stated belief that Roe was incorrectly decided, our attorney general in

1974, and our highest criminal court today, have acknowledged that abortion is not

a crime under Texas law.

      Our task in this opinion, however, is not to rule on the viability of the Waskom

Ordinance. In this preliminary proceeding under the TCPA we must limit our ruling
                                       –17–
to whether the parties carried their respective burdens under that statute. We

conclude that appellees have offered clear and specific evidence—and a cogent legal

argument—making a prima facie case that they have not committed a crime

generally, or murder specifically, while engaging in any conduct condemned by

appellants. Accordingly appellees have carried their step-two burden as to the

element of falsity.

      We overrule appellants’ first issue.

(3) Evidence that Appellants Acted With the Requisite Mental State

      In their second issue, appellants argue that TAC and TEAF failed to produce

clear and specific evidence sufficient to provide a prima facie case that appellants

made the statements at issue with actual malice. If the person allegedly defamed is

a private individual, he must establish the defamatory statements were made

negligently; a public figure or official must prove actual malice. Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d

at 593. “‘Actual malice’ in this context means that the statement was made with

knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard for its truth.” Id.

      Appellants contend that appellees are “limited-purpose public figures,” and

thus, that appellees must establish appellants made their statements with actual

malice as opposed to negligence. We apply a three-part test to determine whether a

party qualifies as a limited-purpose public figure:

      (1) the controversy at issue must be public both in the sense that people
      are discussing it and people other than the immediate participants in the
      controversy are likely to feel the impact of its resolution;

                                         –18–
      (2) the plaintiff must have more than a trivial or tangential role in the
      controversy; and
      (3) the alleged defamation must be germane to the plaintiff's
      participation in the controversy.

Neely v. Wilson, 418 S.W.3d 52, 70 (Tex. 2013). Whether a party is a limited-

purpose public figure is a question of law for the court. Id. The “controversy at issue”

in this case concerns the Waskom Ordinance and its ability to outlaw abortion within

the city of Waskom. While we cannot adjudge how large a group of people are

“discussing it,” appellees’ evidence includes Facebook posts, which are followed by

many comments from the public. Moreover, appellees’ evidence indicates that they

have been contacted by a number of people who have heard about—and been

confused by—the ordinance and appellants’ statements concerning its effect. We

also agree with appellants that people other than these parties are likely to feel the

impact of its resolution, given that the Waskom Ordinance applies to all the city’s

residents and that Dickson’s efforts have motivated a number of other cities to adopt

similar ordinances. Thus the evidence satisfies the first factor of the Neely test.

      However, the second and third factors of the test address the role of TAC and

TEAF in this controversy. The evidence establishes that TAC and TEAF are solely

targets of the ordinance, otherwise playing no role in creating the subject

controversy. The Supreme Court has explained that “those charged with defamation

cannot, by their own conduct, create their own defense by making the claimant

a public figure.” Hutchinson v. Proxmire, 443 U.S. 111, 135 (1979). “[T]he

                                         –19–
allegedly defamatory statement cannot be what brought the plaintiff into

the public sphere.” Neely, 418 S.W.3d at 71. In this case, it was precisely the

allegedly defamatory statements—beginning with the ordinance’s declaration that

TAC and TEAF were criminal organizations—that brought appellees into any public

controversy involving the Waskom Ordinance. As the Connor and Jones affidavits

state:

         It was not until Defendants began shopping around a draft ordinance in
         the summer of 2019 that [appellees] even realized that the Defendants
         and others were alleging [their] mission and operations were in
         violation of criminal law. Until that time, neither [appellees] nor [their]
         agents made any public statements or engaged in any debate about the
         question of whether [appellees were] currently violating any criminal
         law.

We conclude that these appellees were drawn involuntarily into the controversy

spawned by the Waskom Ordinance and that they are not limited purpose public

figures. See Neely, 418 S.W.3d at 71 (“[N]either the United States Supreme Court

nor this Court has found circumstances in which a person involuntarily became a

limited-purpose public figure.”).

         Accordingly, to meet their step-two burden on the element of appellants’

mental state, appellees need only have offered clear and specific evidence of a prima

facie case that appellants made the statements at issue negligently. To carry that

burden, TAC and TEAF had to show that appellants knew or should have known

that their statements calling appellees criminal organizations and murderers were

                                           –20–
false. See id. at 72. They could make this showing of appellants’ state of mind

through circumstantial evidence. Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 591.

        Dickson’s affidavits assert his belief that abortion remains a crime in Texas.

He asserts that he consulted a lawyer, carefully researched “case law and legal

scholarship,” and concluded that (a) the Waskom Ordinance successfully rendered

abortion unlawful, and thus a criminal offense in that city, and (b) because the Texas

Legislature never repealed the abortion statutes declared unconstitutional by the

Supreme Court in Roe, “the law of Texas continues to define abortion as a criminal

offense.”7

        We begin the inquiry—as we did the inquiry into falsity—with the Waskom

Ordinance itself. And we look again to the ordinance’s directive that the government

may not enforce its provisions “unless and until the Supreme Court overrules Roe v.

Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992),

and permits states and municipalities to once again enforce abortion prohibitions.”

Just as this provision of the ordinance directly evidences the fact that abortion is not

currently a crime, it provides circumstantial evidence that Dickson knew when he

    7
       TAC and TEAF have argued that the Texas Legislature impliedly repealed the abortion statutes by
regulating the process of abortion in Texas. In supplemental briefing, appellants point out that the legislature
recently included the following statement in a statute that will become effective September 1, 2021:
        The legislature finds that the State of Texas never repealed, either expressly or by
        implication, the state statutes enacted before the ruling in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113
        (1973), that prohibit and criminalize abortion unless the mother’s life is in danger.

Senate Bill 8 § 2. In this opinion, we do not rely upon, and express no opinion concerning, the question of
repeal by implication.
                                                    –21–
drafted the ordinance that abortion was not currently a crime. Likewise, Dickson’s

statement to CNN about the Waskom Ordinance implies that he knew that abortion

was not currently a crime. He told CNN that “[t]he idea is this: in a city that has

outlawed abortion, in those cities if an abortion happens, then later on when Roe v.

Wade is overturned, those penalties can come crashing down on their heads.” The

statement may be ambiguous about what happens now, but it is clear that Dickson

understood the penalties would only “come crashing down” after the status of the

law changes. We conclude that the ordinance Dickson drafted, and his statements

about it, evidence—at a minimum—a serious question in his mind as to whether

abortion was currently a crime in Texas.

      After Roe declared Texas’s abortion statutes unconstitutional, the Texas

Legislature transferred those laws to articles 4512.1 through 4512.6 of the Revised

Civil Statutes. Appellants’ second legal theory posits that unconstitutional but

unrepealed criminal statutes continue to identify criminal conduct in Texas. This

theory relies heavily upon a law review article, The Writ-of-Erasure Fallacy, 104

VA. L. REV. 933 (2018), authored by Jonathan Mitchell, who is serving as one of

appellants’ attorneys of record in this Court. Dickson’s affidavit states that, although

the article does not address the status of Texas’s unconstitutional abortion statutes,

it explains that “the Supreme Court lacks any power to formally revoke or ‘strike

down’ statutes that it declares unconstitutional, and that those statutes continue to

exist as laws until they are repealed by the legislature that enacted them.” Dickson

                                         –22–
states that this article “further confirmed [his] belief that abortion remains a

‘criminal’ offense under Texas law, despite the Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade.”

      Appellants’ Texas legal authority for this conclusion is limited to a single

footnote in a Texas Supreme Court case on an unrelated issue. In Pidgeon v. Turner,

538 S.W.3d 73, 75 (Tex. 2017), taxpayers sought an injunction to prohibit the city

of Houston from providing employee benefits to same-sex spouses of city employees

who had been legally married in other states. The trial court granted the injunction,

but while the case was pending on appeal, the United States Supreme Court decided

Obergefell v. Hodges, and held that states may not exclude same-sex couples from

civil marriage on the same terms and conditions as opposite-sex couples. 576 U.S.

644, 675–76 (2015). The Pidgeon court of appeals reversed the temporary

injunction. 538 S.W.3d at 76. The Texas Supreme Court vacated the injunction and

remanded the case to the trial court. It concluded that Obergefell did not require

states to provide the same publicly funded benefits to all married persons, and the

parties should have the opportunity to develop that issue, and others, at trial. Id. at

86–87. In the course of that discussion, the court dropped this footnote:

      We note that neither the Supreme Court in Obergefell nor the Fifth
      Circuit in De Leon “struck down” any Texas law. When a court
      declares a law unconstitutional, the law remains in place unless and
      until the body that enacted it repeals it, even though the government
      may no longer constitutionally enforce it. Thus, the Texas and Houston
      DOMAs remain in place as they were before Obergefell and De Leon,
      which is why Pidgeon is able to bring this claim.
Id. at 88 n.21.

                                        –23–
       Our colleagues on the El Paso court of appeals have rejected reliance on the

Pidgeon footnote in another context. In Zimmerman v. City of Austin, 620 S.W.3d

473, 476 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2021, pet. filed), Zimmerman challenged the city’s

allocation of $150,000 for “abortion access logistical support services.” He alleged

that the City’s proposed expenditures were ultra vires because they violate the state’s

abortion laws, which made it a crime to assist a woman in procuring an abortion. Id.

at 477. He argued that—because the Texas Legislature never repealed the statutes—

“they remained in effect for any application outside of that addressed in Roe v.

Wade.” Id. at 477–78. He contended that the City’s proposed expenditures “would

in effect assist women in obtaining an abortion in conflict with these unrepealed

statutes.” Id. at 478.

       The El Paso court identified four “problems” with relying on the Pidgeon

footnote. We summarize them briefly:

       (1) The opinion in Pidgeon focused on two facts—Obergefell did
       not directly address the constitutionality of any laws in Texas, and the
       trial court had not yet had the opportunity to examine the scope and
       extent of Obergefell’s holding as it applied to the Texas laws at issue.
       Roe, in contrast, was fully litigated up to the United States Supreme
       Court, which specifically declared the Texas abortion statutes
       unconstitutional.
       (2) The rationale expressed by the Pidgeon footnote, i.e., that an
       unconstitutional statute “remains in place unless and until the body that
       enacted it repeals it,” does not necessarily mean the Texas abortion
       statutes still have any enforceable effect. Even if the court does no more
       than declare that the courts will not enforce an unconstitutional law, no
       court would have a basis to enforce the Texas abortion statutes.

                                         –24–
       (3) The Pidgeon footnote has not been validated by subsequent
       opinions from the Texas Supreme Court. Instead, the Court has more
       recently treated statutes that have been declared unconstitutional as null
       and void and has stated that an offense created by an unconstitutional
       statute “is not a crime.” See, e.g., Ex parte E.H., 602 S.W.3d 486, 494
       (Tex. 2020) (recognizing that an “unconstitutional law is void, and is
       no law,” and that an offense created by an unconstitutional statute “is
       not a crime”).

       (4) The Court of Criminal Appeals recognized over a century ago,
       when a legislative act is declared to be unconstitutional, the act is
       “absolutely null and void,” and has “no binding authority, no validity
       [and] no existence.” See Ex parte Bockhorn, 62 Tex. Crim. 651, 138
       S.W. 706, 707 (Tex. Crim. App. 1911) (pronouncing that an
       unconstitutional law should be viewed as “lifeless,” as “if it had never
       been enacted,” given that it was “fatally smitten by the Constitution at
       its birth).
Id. at 484–85. The court concluded that the unconstitutional abortion statutes could

not serve as a basis for Zimmerman to challenge the City’s budget allocation. Id. at

486.

       Likewise, we conclude that the Pidgeon footnote cannot defeat appellee’s

evidence and legal argument showing that appellants knew or should have known

that appellees were not criminals or murderers under Texas law. To the extent that

later cases have not implicitly overruled the footnote, we conclude that it represents

no more than an interesting metaphysical theory of where and how unrepealed and

unconstitutional statutes exist. The footnote does not support a legal argument that

unrepealed and unconstitutional statutes can be enforced in any fashion. To the

extent those statutes continue to exist, it is not as part of the criminal law of the State

of Texas. A violation of such a statute is not a crime.

                                          –25–
        We conclude that anyone making a serious investigation into the status of

Texas criminal law would learn that the overwhelming body of that law confirms

that a mother’s termination of a pregnancy is not a crime and is certainly not murder.8

Thus, we conclude that TAC and TEAF have carried their TCPA step-two burden to

make a prima facie case that appellants knew or should have known that their

statements declaring appellees criminal organizations and accusing them of murder

were false. We overrule appellants’ second issue.

                                   Appellees’ Conspiracy Claim

        Appellees also pleaded a claim against both appellants alleging that they

conspired to defame appellees. In their fourth issue, appellants contend that

appellees failed to produce clear and specific evidence of a conspiracy between

them.

        A civil conspiracy involves a combination of two or more persons to

accomplish an unlawful purpose or to accomplish a lawful purpose by unlawful

means. Tilton v. Marshall, 925 S.W.2d 672, 681 (Tex. 1996) (orig. proceeding). “[A]

defendant's liability for conspiracy depends on participation in some underlying tort

for which the plaintiff seeks to hold at least one of the named defendants liable.” Id.

    8
        While discussing the higher standard of actual malice, our supreme court stated: “A failure to
investigate fully is not evidence of actual malice; a purposeful avoidance of the truth is.” Bentley, 94 S.W.3d
at 596. A failure to investigate fully is evidence of negligence.
                                                    –26–
Thus, appellees’ conspiracy claim depends on appellants’ participation in the alleged

defamation.

      In a TCPA appeal, we do not analyze a trial court’s refusal to dismiss a

plaintiff’s cause of action for conspiracy separately from its refusal to dismiss the

plaintiff’s underlying cause of action. See Minett v. Snowden, No. 05-18-00003-CV,

2018 WL 2929339, at *11 (Tex. App.—Dallas June 12, 2018, pet. denied) (mem.

op.). Therefore, because we have determined that the trial court properly refused to

dismiss appellants’ defamation claim, we conclude that it did not err by refusing to

dismiss the conspiracy to defame claim as well. See id.

      We overrule appellant’s fourth issue.

                            Derivative Liability of RLET

      In their fifth issue, appellants argue that appellees have failed to produce clear

and specific evidence establishing that RLET should be legally responsible for

statements published only by Dickson. Appellants acknowledge that two of the

statements identified by appellees’ petition that were authored by Dickson were

posted by RLET on its Facebook page. They contend that all other statements at

issue were published only by Dickson.

      Appellees, however, have pleaded that RLET is liable directly—not

derivatively through respondeat superior—for Dickson’s statements. Regardless, to

the extent that such derivative liability is or becomes an issue in this case, it is not

an issue for the TCPA. A motion to dismiss under the TCPA must be directed at a

                                         –27–
“legal action.” CIV. PRAC. & REM. § 27.003. That term is defined to mean “a lawsuit,

cause of action, petition, complaint, cross-claim, or counterclaim or any other

judicial pleading or filing that requests legal, declaratory, or equitable relief.” Id.

§ 27.001(6). The common law doctrine of respondeat superior is not the equivalent

of these requests for relief: it is instead a recognition that “liability for one person’s

fault may be imputed to another who is himself entirely without fault solely because

of the relationship between them.” St. Joseph Hosp. v. Wolff, 94 S.W.3d 513, 540

(Tex. 2002). Because it is not a separate legal action, we do not address it separately

from the underlying cause of action for defamation in a TCPA motion to dismiss.

Jones v. Pozner, No. 03-18-00603-CV, 2019 WL 5700903, at *1 n.2 (Tex. App.—

Austin Nov. 5, 2019, pet. denied) (mem. op.).

      We overrule appellants’ fifth issue.

                   Step 3: Proof of Defense as a Matter of Law

      In their third issue, appellants contend that—even if appellees have produced

clear and specific evidence of the essential elements of their defamation claim—

appellants are entitled to judgment based on their defensive theories. Appellants’

burden in the proceeding below was to establish such a defense or ground as a matter

of law. CIV. PRAC. & REM. § 27.005(d). We consider all the evidence in determining

whether appellants established a defensive ground. D Magazine Partners, L.P. v.

Rosenthal, 475 S.W.3d 470, 480–81, 488 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2015), aff'd in part,

rev’d in part, 529 S.W.3d 429 (Tex. 2017).

                                          –28–
                              Truth or Substantial Truth

       Both common law and statute provide that truth and substantial truth are

defenses to defamation. Neely, 418 S.W.3d at 62 (citing CIV. PRAC. & REM. § 73.005,

Turner v. KTRK Television, Inc., 38 S.W.3d 103, 115 (Tex. 2000)). Appellants

contend that all statements for which they have been sued are true or, at the very

least, substantially true.

       Appellants’ evidence of this defense is Dickson’s affidavit testimony. There

he states that he believes the Texas abortion statutes continue to impose criminal

liability on anyone who “furnishes the means for procuring an abortion knowing the

purpose intended,” citing article 4512.2. He also testifies that he believes an

ordinance that outlaws abortion within its city limits successfully eliminates the legal

status of abortion in that city. And as to the pronouncements of the United States

Supreme Court, Dickson states:

       I understand that the Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade means that the
       federal judiciary is unlikely to sustain criminal convictions obtained
       under the Texas abortion statutes for as long as the Court adheres to the
       notion that abortion is a constitutional right. I also understand that Roe
       makes it unlikely that any prosecutor in Texas will attempt to bring
       criminal charges against abortion providers for their violations of state
       law because the courts are unlikely to uphold those convictions until
       Roe is overruled. But none of that changes the fact that the law of Texas
       continues to define abortion as a criminal offense. I believed (and
       continue to believe) that it is truthful to call abortion a “crime” under
       state law even if abortion providers are not currently being prosecuted
       for their criminal acts. I believed (and continue to believe) that a person
       or organization that breaks a criminal statute is a “criminal”—
       regardless of whether they are ultimately prosecuted and punished for
       their unlawful conduct.

                                         –29–
Finally, Dickson asserts that he did not act negligently (or with reckless disregard,

as actual malice requires) in making the statements at issue because he “carefully

researched the law and consulted with legal counsel” before publishing them.

      A TCPA movant cannot carry his step-three burden with self-serving and

conclusory affidavits. Camp v. Patterson, No. 03-16-00733-CV, 2017 WL 3378904,

at *10 (Tex. App.—Austin Aug. 3, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.). “Imagining that

something may be true is not the same as belief.” Bentley, 94 S.W.3d at 596.

      To reach the legal conclusions he does, Dickson ignores or rejects out of hand:

the clear language of penal code section 19.06 excepting abortion from the definition

of murder; article XI, section 5 of the Texas Constitution, which prohibits a local

government provision from conflicting with the penal code; opinions of the Texas

Attorney General, the Texas Supreme Court, and the Texas Court of Criminal

Appeals, which acknowledge that once declared unconstitutional, a statute has no

legal effect; and the pronouncements of the United States Supreme Court that declare

a constitutional right of a woman to terminate a pregnancy. He relies instead upon a

law review article and a strained interpretation of a single footnote that subsequent

cases may have implicitly overruled. See In re Lester, 602 S.W.3d 469, 483 (Tex.

2020) (J. Blacklock dissenting) (“[T]he Court overrules sub silentio its prior, correct

statement—just three years ago—regarding judicial declarations of the

unconstitutionality of statutes . . . After today, that statement from Pidgeon hangs

                                        –30–
from a thread (though it remains correct). Under today’s decision, statutes declared

unconstitutional by courts no longer exist.”).

         The gist of appellants’ statements is that TAC and TEAF are criminal

organizations whose conduct amounts to murder. We concluded above that

appellees’ evidence and legal argument have made a prima facie case that those

statements are not true. We have considered appellants’ evidence and legal argument

in rebuttal to appellees’ proof. We conclude that appellants have failed to establish

they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the defense of truth or substantial

truth.

                          Constitutionally Protected Opinion

         Appellants’ argument here is straightforward: Dickson argues he has the right

to believe that the Supreme Court was wrong in Roe v. Wade when it concluded there

was a right to abortion in the Constitution. We agree that Dickson has a right to his

opinion. But he has not been sued on the basis of that opinion; he has been sued for

publishing statements that call TAC and TEAF criminal organizations that commit

murder. If those statements are proven at trial to be defamatory, his personal opinions

about Roe v. Wade will not provide him, or RLET, a defense. Simply put, while

Dickson has the right to his opinions, he does not have the right to defame someone

who disagrees with those opinions. TAC and TEAF have raised fact issues in support

of their defamation claim. Appellants have not established that they are entitled to

judgment as a matter of law on the basis of any constitutionally protected opinion.

                                         –31–
                               Rhetorical Hyperbole

      Finally, appellants argue that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law

because their statements were merely rhetorical hyperbole. We have called the

concept of rhetorical hyperbole “extravagant exaggeration [that is] employed for

rhetorical effect.” Backes, 486 S.W.3d at 26. Such a statement is not actionable as

defamation. Id. But to qualify as rhetorical hyperbole so as to be protected from a

defamation claim, a statement must be understood by the ordinary reader as an

overstatement, a rhetorical flourish, that is not intended to be taken literally. See,

e.g., Greenbelt Co-op. Pub. Ass’n v. Bresler, 398 U.S. 6, 14 (1970) (“even the most

careless reader” would recognize that calling a proposal “blackmail” was rhetorical

hyperbole used by those who considered the negotiating position extremely

unreasonable; the record contained no evidence that anyone thought proposal maker

had been charged with a crime); Marble Ridge Capital LP v. Neiman Marcus Group,

Inc., 611 S.W.3d 113, 125 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2020, pet. dism’d) (statement

concerning “theft of assets” did not qualify as rhetorical hyperbole because

reasonable persons would understand the phrase to mean that “entities with a rightful

claim to the assets were being harmed by the designations and transactions about

which [the party] complained”).

      Appellants contend that their statements accusing TAC and TEAF of aiding

and abetting murder or criminal acts qualify as protected rhetorical hyperbole “so

long as the context makes clear that the accusations refer only to plaintiffs’

                                        –32–
involvement in abortion and nothing more.” They support this contention with

citations to two sources in which the speakers did not mean either (a) their

allegations that abortion is murder literally or (b) that an activist who identified on

his website a doctor who performed abortions was legally responsible for the

doctor’s murder. See Horsley v. Rivera, 292 F.3d 695, 702 (11th Cir. 2002) (when

doctor who performed abortions was murdered, television host’s calling anti-

abortionist an “accomplice to murder” was rhetorical hyperbole; no reasonable

viewer would conclude host was literally contending that activist could be charged

with murder); see also 1 Rodney A. Smolla, Law of Defamation § 4:13 (2d ed. 2005)

(protesters at abortion clinic with signs declaring doctor a murderer “obviously” do

not intend charge to be taken literally). These sources do not stand for the proposition

that one can use defamatory language and be protected so long as the language refers

to abortion in some manner. Instead, they instruct that—to avoid liability for

defamation on the basis of rhetorical hyperbole—the speaker must show that a

reasonable person would not understand that he meant the statement literally.

      In this case, RLET published Dickson’s assertion on Facebook: “We said

what we meant and we meant what we said. Abortion is illegal in Waskom, Texas.”

And in a June 14 Facebook post, Dickson posed the key question and then answered

it himself:

      Is abortion literally murder?
      Yes. The fact that ‘abortion is literally murder’ is why so many people
      want to outlaw abortion within the city limits of their cities. If you want
                                         –33–
      to see your city pass an enforceable ordinance outlawing abortion be
      sure to sign the online petition.
We conclude that a reasonable person reading appellants’ statements calling TAC

and TEAF criminals and murderers could believe that appellants intended the

statements literally. When we consider all the evidence before the trial court, we

conclude appellants failed to establish as a matter of law that the statements at issue

were merely rhetorical hyperbole.

      Appellants have failed to carry their third-step burden to prove they are

entitled to judgment as a matter of law on any of their defensive theories. We

overrule their third issue.

                                    CONCLUSION

      We affirm the trial court’s order.

                                             /Bill Pedersen, III//
200988f.p05                                  BILL PEDERSEN, III
                                             JUSTICE

                                           –34–
                            Court of Appeals
                     Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                  JUDGMENT

MARK LEE DICKSON AND                           On Appeal from the 116th Judicial
RIGHT TO LIFE EAST TEXAS,                      District Court, Dallas County, Texas
Appellants                                     Trial Court Cause No. DC-20-08104.
                                               Opinion delivered by Justice
No. 05-20-00988-CV           V.                Pedersen, III. Justices Osborne and
                                               Nowell participating.
THE AFIYA CENTER AND
TEXAS EQUAL ACCESS FUND,
Appellees

       In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial
court is AFFIRMED.

       It is ORDERED that appellee The Afiya Center and Texas Equal Access
Fund recover their costs of this appeal from appellant Mark Lee Dickson and Right
to Life East Texas.

Judgment entered this 8th day of September, 2021.

                                        –35–