Eric Lynn Baumgart v. Phillip Douglas Archer, KPRC-TV Channel 2, Graham Media Group, Houston, Inc., Graham Media Group, Graham Holdings Company ( 2019 )


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  • Opinion issued June 27, 2019
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-18-00298-CV
    ———————————
    ERIC LYNN BAUMGART, Appellant
    V.
    PHILLIP DOUGLAS ARCHER, KPRC-TV CHANNEL 2, GRAHAM
    MEDIA GROUP, HOUSTON, INC., GRAHAM MEDIA GROUP, GRAHAM
    HOLDINGS COMPANY, Appellees
    On Appeal from the 157th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 2017-83349
    OPINION
    When Harris County Assistant Chief Deputy Constable Clint Greenwood was
    gunned down in a courthouse parking lot, the murder made headlines. According to
    appellant Eric Baumgart, a television broadcast and related web article published by
    appellees Phillip Douglas Archer; KPRC-TV Channel 2; Graham Media Group,
    Houston, Inc.; Graham Media Group; and Graham Holdings Company (collectively,
    “Graham Media”) falsely suggested to the public that he was “the assassin.”1
    Baumgart sued Graham Media for defamation. Graham Media moved for and
    obtained dismissal of Baumgart’s claims and an award of attorney’s fees under the
    Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA or the “Act”). See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
    CODE §§ 27.001–.011. Baumgart appeals on numerous grounds, contending that
    (1) the TCPA does not protect Graham Media’s defamatory speech; (2) he made a
    prima facie showing of defamation; (3) the trial court’s refusal to allow discovery
    before dismissing his claims violated Texas’s due-process guarantee of open courts;
    (4) a jury trial on the reasonableness of Graham Media’s attorney’s fees was
    constitutionally required; and (5) the TCPA operates, on its face and as-applied, as
    an unconstitutional restraint on a plaintiff’s speech. We affirm.
    Background
    Baumgart was a reserve officer with the Liberty County Constable’s Office
    and an investigator with the Harris County Public Defender’s Office when he was
    charged with crimes—acting as a private security guard without the appropriate
    1
    Law enforcement later determined that William Kenny, a man who is not alleged to
    have any connection to Baumgart, committed the murder.
    2
    license and tampering with a governmental record.2 Baumgart pleaded not guilty, a
    jury convicted him on all charges, and all but one charge was affirmed on appellate
    review. See Baumgart v. State, 
    512 S.W.3d 335
    , 349 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017)
    (licensing violations); Baumgart v. State, No. 01-14-00320-CR, 
    2015 WL 5634246
    ,
    at *3–4 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] July 27, 2016, pet. ref’d) (tampering with
    governmental record). Baumgart began serving a 90-day sentence in January 2017.
    Baumgart was still incarcerated at the time Assistant Chief Deputy Greenwood was
    shot and killed outside a courthouse in Baytown, Texas.
    Baumgart alleges that he served time in jail because of Greenwood’s vendetta
    against him. According to Baumgart, the vendetta began when Baumgart helped
    draft a federal civil rights complaint against Harris County. And the complaint
    provoked Greenwood, who then served as an assistant district attorney in the police
    integrity unit, not only to prosecute retaliatory criminal charges against Baumgart,
    but also, to pressure the public defender to end his employment.
    While he was incarcerated, Baumgart submitted a request under the Texas
    Public Information Act, see TEX. GOV’T CODE §§ 552.001 et seq., for Greenwood’s
    “employee time records” for the month of December 2016. Greenwood perceived
    2
    Under the Private Security Act, codified in the Occupations Code, people or entities
    that engage in certain private security businesses must have a license. TEX. OCC.
    CODE § 1702.102(a); Baumgart v. State, 
    512 S.W.3d 335
    , 337, 349 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2017). Engaging in such a business without a license is a criminal offense.
    TEX. OCC. CODE § 1702.388; 
    Baumgart, 512 S.W.3d at 337
    , 349.
    3
    this as a threat and asked that his records not be released. In an email regarding
    Baumgart’s public-records request, Greenwood told a Harris County attorney that
    Baumgart “poses a real threat to my, and my family’s[,] safety.” Greenwood’s
    records were not released.
    Phillip Douglas Archer, a Graham Media journalist working for the Houston
    NBC affiliate known as KPRC, learned of Baumgart’s public-records request during
    his investigation of Greenwood’s murder. Archer interviewed Baumgart the day
    after Greenwood died, and asked about Baumgart’s fraught relationship with
    Greenwood, whether the men perceived one another as a safety threat, and
    Greenwood’s death.
    The same day, KPRC ran a television news story and related article, both of
    which KPRC published on its website, about Greenwood’s murder and the
    documented hostility between Baumgart and Greenwood. Archer was the reporter.
    The web article—entitled “Slain deputy constable feared former officer he had
    investigated, source says”—read in its entirety:
    Five days before he was slain, Clint Greenwood told officials in the
    county attorney’s office that he believed a man he’d helped send to jail
    was a threat to him and his family.
    The man he was talking about is currently a prisoner in the Harris
    County Jail, Eric Baumgart, a former investigator for the Harris County
    Public Defender’s Office and a reserve officer with the Liberty County
    police agency.
    4
    Greenwood helped convict him of tampering with a government
    document and with providing private security services without a license
    in 2014.
    Baumgart, 47, was sentenced to 90 days in jail and five years of
    probation. He began serving his sentence in January.
    In an interview Tuesday afternoon at the jail, Baumgart said county
    detectives searched his belongings on Monday, following Greenwood’s
    death, but he says they still haven’t spoken to him.
    Last January, a source close to the murder investigation said Baumgart
    submitted a freedom of information request from jail asking for
    Greenwood’s pay records.
    Greenwood was contacted by the county attorney’s office, and asked
    that the records not be released.
    Greenwood sent another email on March 30 saying he believed
    Baumgart was a threat to him and his family, according to the source.[3]
    On Tuesday, Baumgart attributed that statement to what he calls a
    vendetta Greenwood waged against him after Baumgart helped a friend
    file a civil rights lawsuit against the county in 2012.
    He says Greenwood ruined his career and put him in jail. He said he
    considered Greenwood a threat to him.
    During the election last fall, Baumgart ran an ad accusing Greenwood’s
    boss at the time, District Attorney Devon Anderson, of corruption –
    naming Greenwood in the ad – among others.
    When asked if he wanted Clint Greenwood dead – or had anything to
    do with his murder, Baumgart said, “Of course not.”
    He says he expects investigators will be talking to others who were
    involved in the lawsuit with him.
    3
    In court filings, Graham Media identified Robert Soard, a Harris County attorney,
    as “the source” of this information.
    5
    Police investigating Greenwood’s death have not named Baumgart, or
    anyone else, as a suspect in this case.
    Editor’s note: An earlier version of this story reported that Baumgart
    had been questioned in connection with Greenwood’s homicide, and
    that Baumgart worked as a reserve deputy at the Liberty County
    Sheriff’s Office. The corrected version of the story is above.
    This same information was also conveyed to a viewing audience in a television
    broadcast.
    Baumgart asserts that the murder coverage published by KPRC falsely
    portrayed him as Greenwood’s “assassin.” According to Baumgart, the defamatory
    coverage was motivated by Graham Media’s desire to increase advertising revenue
    through click-bait headlines. He sued Graham Media, pleading causes of action for
    defamation per se and per quod and negligence. Graham media moved to dismiss
    Baumgart’s lawsuit under the TCPA. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(a)
    (“If a legal action is based on, relates to, or is in response to a party’s exercise of the
    right of free speech, right to petition, or right of association, that party may file a
    motion to dismiss the legal action.”). Baumgart opposed the motion and requested
    discovery. Before it ruled on Baumgart’s discovery request, the trial court issued an
    order granting Graham Media’s TCPA motion and dismissing all Baumgart’s
    claims. After a subsequent hearing, the trial court awarded Graham Media more than
    $130,000 in attorney’s fees, costs, and sanctions. See 
    id. § 27.009(a)
    (“If the court
    orders dismissal of a legal action . . . , the court shall award to the moving party:
    6
    (1) court costs, reasonable attorney’s fees, and other expenses incurred in defending
    against the legal action as justice and equity may require; and (2) sanctions . . . as
    the court determines sufficient to deter the party who brought the legal action from
    bringing similar actions[.]”).
    TCPA Rulings
    We first consider whether Graham Media and Baumgart satisfied their
    respective burdens under the TCPA and whether the trial court erred by not
    permitting Baumgart to conduct discovery before dismissing his claims.
    A.    Principles of law and standard of review
    “The Texas Citizens Participation Act is a bulwark against retaliatory lawsuits
    meant to intimidate or silence citizens on matters of public concern.” Dallas
    Morning News, Inc. v. Hall, No. 17-0637, 
    2019 WL 2063576
    , at *4 (Tex. May 10,
    2019). A defendant in a case that is “based on, relates to, or is in response to a party’s
    exercise of the right of free speech” may move for dismissal under the Act. TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(a). Dismissal requires two steps. First, the
    defendant must show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the “legal action is
    based on, relates to, or is in response to [its] exercise of the right of free speech.” 
    Id. § 27.003(a)
    (internal punctuation omitted). Upon this showing, the burden shifts to
    the plaintiff to establish “by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for each
    essential element of the claim in question.” 
    Id. § 27.005(c).
    The Act also requires
    7
    dismissal of the case if the defendant “establishes by a preponderance of the evidence
    each essential element of a valid defense to the [plaintiff’s] claim.” 
    Id. § 27.005(d).
    A prima facie case is “the ‘minimum quantum of evidence necessary to
    support a rational inference that the allegation of fact is true.’” KBMT Operating Co.
    v. Toledo, 
    492 S.W.3d 710
    , 721 (Tex. 2016) (citing In re Lipsky, 
    460 S.W.3d 579
    ,
    590 (Tex. 2015)). The clear-and-specific-evidence requirement means the plaintiff
    “must provide enough detail to show the factual basis for its claim” and must provide
    enough evidence “to support a rational inference that the allegation of fact is true.”
    
    Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 590
    –91; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.005(c).
    If the plaintiff fails to carry his burden—or if the defendant establishes the
    essential elements of a valid defense under section 27.005(d)—the trial court must
    dismiss the suit. In deciding if dismissal is warranted, we consider all the “pleadings
    and supporting and opposing affidavits stating the facts on which the liability or
    defense is based.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.006(a). We review de novo
    whether each party carried its assigned burden under the TCPA. Better Bus. Bureau
    of Metro. Houston, Inc. v. John Moore Servs., Inc., 
    441 S.W.3d 345
    , 353 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, pet. denied).
    B.    Whether Graham Media satisfied its TCPA burden
    The trial court found that Baumgart’s lawsuit was based on Graham Media’s
    exercise of the right of free speech, which the TCPA defines as “a communication
    8
    made in connection with a matter of public concern.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    § 27.001(3). A “[m]atter of public concern” includes an issue related to “health or
    safety;” “community well-being;” “the government;” or “a public official or public
    figure.” 
    Id. § 27.001(7).
    Baumgart does not dispute that the murder of a high-ranking law enforcement
    officer was a matter of public concern. His complaint is that Graham Media
    identified him as a past threat to Assistant Chief Deputy Greenwood even though
    Graham Media knew he could not have committed the murder because he was in jail
    at the time. According to Baumgart, “[k]nowingly linking an innocent person to an
    assassination and placing a family in harm’s way” is neither “free speech” under the
    TCPA nor “journalism . . . intended to benefit the community.”
    We agree with Graham Media that its reporting on Baumgart’s historical
    conflict with Greenwood involved a matter of public concern and, thus, is speech
    protected by the TCPA. “Speech deals with matters of public concern when it can
    ‘be fairly considered as relating to any matter of political, social, or other concern to
    the community’” or when it “‘is a subject of legitimate news interest; that is, a
    subject of general interest and of value and concern to the public.’” Snyder v. Phelps,
    
    562 U.S. 443
    , 453 (2011) (quoting Connick v. Myers, 
    461 U.S. 138
    , 146 (1983)).
    The courts routinely hold that “matters related to the reporting of crimes and related
    proceedings are matters of public concern.” Klentzman v. Brady, 
    456 S.W.3d 239
    ,
    9
    258 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014), aff’d, 
    515 S.W.3d 878
    (Tex. 2017). So
    too are the activities of government officials and law enforcement personnel.
    
    Klentzman, 456 S.W.3d at 258
    ; see Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps, 
    475 U.S. 767
    , 769 (1986) (holding that news articles asserting that private businessman
    used organized-crime connections to influence governmental processes were on
    issues of public concern); 
    Connick, 461 U.S. at 148
    (holding that speech seeking to
    “bring to light actual or potential wrongdoing or breach of public trust” by
    government official constitutes speech on matter of public concern); Brawner v. City
    of Richardson, 
    855 F.2d 187
    , 191–92 (5th Cir. 1988) (holding that alleged
    misconduct by public officials, particularly law enforcement officials, is matter of
    public concern).
    The speech Baumgart complains of concerned (1) the fraught relationship
    between Greenwood, a high-ranking peace officer, and Baumgart, a former peace
    officer, which at least Greenwood believed could become violent, and (2) allegations
    of official misconduct by Greenwood in prosecuting Baumgart in retaliation for his
    effort to hold the county responsible for alleged civil rights violations. Such speech
    detailing the prosecution of one peace officer and the allegations of misconduct
    against another peace officer and former prosecutor is a communication made in
    connection with an issue related to health or safety, community well-being,
    government, or public officials, and thus, is a matter of public concern. See Cox
    10
    Broad. Corp. v. Cohn, 
    420 U.S. 469
    , 492 (1975) (“The commission of crime,
    prosecutions resulting from it, and judicial proceedings arising from the prosecutions
    . . . are without question events of legitimate concern to the public and consequently
    fall within the responsibility of the press to report the operations of government.”);
    see also Opaitz v. Gannaway Web Holdings, LLC, 
    454 S.W.3d 61
    , 66 (Tex. App.—
    Amarillo 2014, pet. denied) (explaining that because of public trust placed in law
    enforcement officers, public has interest in information considering an officer’s
    fitness for duty). Baumgart’s legal action asserting claims against Graham Media
    was filed “in response to” this speech addressing his relationship with Greenwood.
    See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(a). Accordingly, Baumgart’s contention
    that Graham Media failed to meet its initial burden is without merit.4
    4
    Baumgart also argues, for the first time on appeal, that his legal action is exempted
    from the Act’s protection because it is “commercial speech.” See TEX. CIV. PRAC.
    & REM. CODE § 27.010(b); Castleman v. Internet Money Ltd., 
    546 S.W.3d 684
    , 688
    (Tex. 2018) (setting forth elements of TCPA’s commercial-speech exemption). We
    do not reach this contention because it is waived by Baumgart’s failure to raise it
    with the trial court. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1 (explaining that, as prerequisite to
    presenting complaint for appellate review, record must show complaint was made
    to trial court and trial court ruled or refused to rule); Newspaper Holdings, Inc. v.
    Crazy Hotel Assisted Living, Ltd., 
    416 S.W.3d 71
    , 88–89 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2013, pet. denied) (holding that burden of proving TCPA exemption under
    Section 27.010 is with party claiming it); see also Elite Auto Body LLC v. Autocraft
    Bodywerks, Inc., 
    520 S.W.3d 191
    , 206 n.75 (Tex. App.—Austin 2017, pet. dism’d)
    (concluding that application of commercial-speech exemption could not be raised
    for first time on appeal).
    11
    We thus turn to the question whether Baumgart met his burden to establish by
    clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for each essential element of his claims
    that were subject to dismissal. See 
    id. § 27.005(c).
    C.    Whether Baumgart satisfied his TCPA burden
    Baumgart asserted defamation and negligence claims against Graham Media;
    however, only his defamation claim is at issue on appeal. Beyond his threshold
    assertion that Graham Media’s speech is not protected by the TCPA, which we
    rejected above, Baumgart has made no argument in support of his negligence claim.
    We thus consider the negligence claim abandoned on appeal and only decide
    whether the record establishes “by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for
    each essential element of the [defamation] claim in question.” Id.5
    The parties we refer to collectively as “Graham Media” are undisputedly
    media defendants, and we have already determined that their publications
    communicated matters of public concern. When a plaintiff sues a media defendant
    over statements on matters of public concern, the elements of defamation are (1) the
    5
    Baumgart did not include a challenge to the trial court’s finding that he failed to
    satisfy his TCPA burden in his list of issues presented. However, he argued that he
    presented sufficient evidence of defamation in the body of his brief, and Graham
    Media responded in its brief. Given our obligation to construe the briefing rules
    liberally, we will consider Baumgart’s evidence. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.9; see also
    TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1; Sterner v. Marathon Oil Co., 
    767 S.W.2d 686
    , 690 (Tex. 1989)
    (“[I]t is our practice to construe liberally points of error in order to obtain a just, fair
    and equitable adjudication of the rights of the litigants.”).
    12
    publication of a false statement of fact to a third party, (2) that was defamatory
    concerning the plaintiff, (3) was made with the requisite degree of fault, and
    (4) damages, in some cases. Hall, 
    2019 WL 2063576
    , at *5; 
    Lipsky, 460 S.W.3d at 593
    . “In a defamation case that implicates the TCPA, pleadings and 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
    .
    Here, the evidence of falsity and defamatory content is lacking. Baumgart had
    the burden of establishing by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case that
    Graham Media’s publications were false. See D Magazine Partners, L.P. v.
    Rosenthal, 
    529 S.W.3d 429
    , 434 (Tex. 2017) (“Because of the importance of
    cultivating and protecting freedom of expression, the plaintiff bears the burden of
    proving falsity if the alleged defamatory statements were made by a media defendant
    over a matter of public concern.”). To not be false, “[a] statement need not be
    perfectly true[ ] as long as it is substantially true.” 
    Toledo, 492 S.W.3d at 714
    (citing
    Neely v. Wilson, 
    418 S.W.3d 52
    , 63–64 (Tex. 2013)). Substantial truth may be
    measured by whether the article, taken as a whole, is more damaging to Baumgart’s
    reputation than a truthful report would have been. 
    Toledo, 492 S.W.3d at 714
    . In
    making this determination, we do not compare the gist of the article to the actual
    facts; instead, we must determine whether the article is a “fair, true, and impartial
    13
    account of the proceedings” reported. See 
    id. at 715.
    Whether a publication is not
    substantially true depends on a “reasonable person’s perception of the entirety of a
    publication and not merely on individual statements.” Turner v. KTRK Television,
    Inc., 
    38 S.W.3d 103
    , 115 (Tex. 2000).
    Baumgart does not argue on appeal that Graham Media falsely stated that he
    was guilty of murder or other criminal misconduct related to Greenwood’s death.
    Neither does he argue that the individual statements published by Graham Media are
    not substantially true. Rather, he argues that Graham Media implied his guilt. “[A]
    plaintiff can bring a claim for defamation when discrete facts, literally or
    substantially true, are published in such a way that they create a substantially false
    and defamatory impression by omitting material facts or juxtaposing facts in a
    misleading way.” 
    Id. at 115;
    see Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Tatum, 
    554 S.W.3d 614
    , 627 (Tex. 2018) (explaining that, in defamation-by-implication case,
    defamatory meaning arises implicitly from statement’s text). So even if a publication
    “gets the details right but fails to put them in the proper context and thereby gets the
    story’s ‘gist’ wrong,” it may be liable for defamation. 
    Turner, 38 S.W.3d at 115
    (internal citation omitted).
    The Texas Supreme Court’s opinion in Rosenthal is instructive here. In
    Rosenthal, the Court recognized that true statements strung together and
    accompanied by speculative commentary might wrongly imply that the subject of a
    14
    publication has committed a crime. See 
    Rosenthal, 529 S.W.3d at 431
    –32. The case
    concerned an article, “The Park Cities Welfare Queen,” that described a woman
    living in a wealthy neighborhood but receiving food stamps. 
    Id. When the
    woman
    sued the article’s publisher, D Magazine, for defamation, the magazine argued that
    each of its statements was literally true and that its article never expressly accused
    the woman of lying or committed fraud. 
    Id. at 438.
    This argument was correct as far
    as it went, but the article also speculated that the plaintiff “must have been less than
    forthcoming” to welfare authorities. 
    Id. at 437.
    And the article ran under the topic
    heading “CRIME.” 
    Id. at 438.
    The Court held that the article impliedly accused the woman of obtaining
    welfare benefits by fraud. 
    Id. at 439.
    The Court highlighted sections of the article
    that juxtaposed statements in a way that insinuated accusations. For example, the
    article reported that the address on file with the welfare authorities was an older
    address. It then used another to show her current home was worth more than
    $1 million and noted parenthetically that “[f]alsifying such a document is a felony.”
    
    Id. The Court
    held that by combining facts in this way, with such statements about
    the law, in the magazine’s section on crime, the article taken as a whole implied that
    she had committed a crime. 
    Id. 15 This
    is not a Rosenthal case. We cannot find any statements in Graham
    Media’s television broadcast or web article6 implying that Baumgart is guilty of any
    crime in connection with Greenwood’s murder. In Rosenthal, the magazine made
    thinly veiled accusations such as the plaintiff “must have been less than
    forthcoming” and juxtaposed damning facts with seemingly on-point criminal
    statutes. Graham Media did not take the same approach. Neither the television
    broadcast nor the web article included speculative commentary about Baumgart’s
    guilt. Graham Media made what Baumgart does not dispute are substantially true
    statements about his history with Greenwood. In reporting on the historical conflicts
    between Baumgart and Greenwood, Graham Media included both men’s
    perspectives. For example, although it reported that Greenwood believed Baumgart
    “was a threat to him and his family,” Graham Media also reported that Baumgart
    feared Greenwood and believed Greenwood had waged a vendetta against him.
    Graham Media included Baumgart’s express disavowal of any connection to
    Greenwood’s murder and informed its audience that Baumgart was incarcerated at
    the time of the murder and had not been named a suspect. In sum, the television
    broadcast and web article were not publications that got the details right but failed
    “to put them in the proper context” and thereby got “the story’s ‘gist’ wrong.”
    
    Turner, 38 S.W.3d at 115
    (internal citation omitted).
    6
    The content of the broadcast and article are the same, and we consider them together.
    16
    We conclude that Baumgart’s claim that the television broadcast and web
    article imply he murdered or was involved in the murder of Greenwood is not
    supported by the record. Accordingly, we hold that Baumgart did not meet his
    burden under the TCPA to establish by clear and specific evidence that Graham
    Media’s reporting was not substantially true or was published in such a way that it
    created a substantially false and defamatory impression, and the trial court did not
    err in dismissing his legal action under the TCPA. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    § 27.005(c) (instructing that court shall not dismiss legal action if plaintiff
    “establishes by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for each essential
    element” of his claim).
    D.    Denial of Discovery
    Baumgart also contends that the trial court’s denial of his request for limited
    discovery “unjustly denied” him access to the courts and due process under Article
    I, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution.7 We disagree.
    7
    Graham Media challenges whether Baumgart preserved the denial of discovery for
    appellate review. This is because the trial court did not expressly rule on Baumgart’s
    discovery motion in its order dismissing his claims under the TCPA. Thus, for error
    to be preserved for our review, the trial court must have implicitly denied discovery.
    See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(2)(A). One of our sister courts concluded that a “trial
    court’s conclusion that [the plaintiff] failed to make a prima facie case on his
    dismissed claims did not necessarily dispose of his motion for limited discovery
    because the court could have granted limited discovery, but still dismissed the
    claims.” Whisenhunt v. Lippicott, 
    474 S.W.3d 30
    , 41 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2015,
    no pet.) (op. on remand). We need not decide whether we agree with our sister court
    because Baumgart’s discovery challenge fails for other reasons, as explained.
    17
    Article I, Section 13 instructs that “[a]ll courts shall be open, and every person
    for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy
    by due course of law.” TEX. CONST. art. I, § 13. This is a due-process guarantee that
    a person bringing a well-established common-law cause of action will not arbitrarily
    or unreasonably be denied access to the courts. Yancy v. United Surgical Partners
    Int’l, Inc., 
    236 S.W.3d 778
    , 783 (Tex. 2007); Offenbach v. Stockton, 
    285 S.W.3d 517
    , 522 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2009), aff’d, 
    336 S.W.3d 610
    (Tex. 2011) (observing
    that “an open courts challenge is a due process complaint”). Under this provision,
    “the legislature may not abrogate the right to assert a well-established common law
    cause of action unless the reason for its action outweighs the litigants’ constitutional
    right of redress.” 
    Garcia, 893 S.W.2d at 520
    (quoting Trinity River Auth. v. URS
    Consultants, Inc., 
    889 S.W.2d 259
    , 261 (Tex. 1994)).
    Baumgart maintains that the trial court ran afoul of this guarantee by denying
    the limited discovery he requested. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.003(c)
    (stating that “[e]xcept as provided by Section 27.006(b), . . . all discovery in the legal
    action is suspended until the court has ruled on the motion to dismiss”). The TCPA
    allows limited discovery, if properly requested and upon a showing of good cause.
    
    Id. § 27.006(b).
    This Court, and more than one of our sister courts, has concluded
    that this discovery limitation does not deny access to the courts. See Combined Law
    Enforcement Ass’n of Tex. v. Sheffield, No. 03-13-00105-CV, 
    2014 WL 411672
    , at
    18
    *10 (Tex. App.—Austin Jan. 31, 2014, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (rejecting open-
    courts challenge to TCPA’s discovery restrictions because (1) provision that stays
    discovery is tempered by another provision that permits discovery on showing of
    good cause and (2) curtailing potentially costly discovery in possibly meritless case
    serves TCPA’s goal of keeping litigation from being used to chill exercise of
    protected rights); see also Khalil, 
    2017 WL 3389645
    , at *15–17 (same); see also
    Landry’s, Inc. v. Animal Legal Defense Fund, 
    566 S.W.3d 41
    , 68 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [14th Dist.] 2018, pet. filed) (same); Abraham v. Greer, 
    509 S.W.3d 609
    ,
    615–16 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2016, pet. denied) (same). On these authorities, we
    reject Baumgart’s contention.
    We also reject Baumgart’s contention that the denial of his discovery request
    is reversible, non-constitutional error. Baumgart argues that he requested discovery
    that would have buttressed his defamation claim. In his motion, Baumgart requested
    the depositions of Archer, Soard (the county attorney who told Archer that
    Greenwood had described Baumgart as a threat in an email about Baumgart’s public-
    records request), two county attorneys who were included in the email
    correspondence, and “a designated witness from the information technology
    department” for the county. At the hearing on Graham Media’s TCPA motion,
    Baumgart argued:
    19
    The email that they are relying on that Mr. Soard gave them is an
    unauthenticated email. That is one of the things that I do want to get in
    deposition. I want that authenticated and I want the IT department to
    authenticate it.
    If you look at the exhibit that they produced, it appears to be cut and
    pasted. There’s something wrong with that email and I think I’m
    entitled to answers on it.
    Given our conclusion that Graham Media’s reporting was not capable of
    defamatory meaning, we fail to see how the requested depositions—of Archer, the
    county attorneys, and a county IT professional on the information communicated to
    Archer about Baumgart’s public-records—would have changed the result in this
    case. See TEX. R. APP. P. 44.1(a) (providing that “[n]o judgment may be reversed on
    appeal on the ground that the trial court made an error of law unless” the error
    “probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment” or “probably prevented
    the appellant from properly presenting the case to the court of appeals”).
    For all these reasons, we conclude that the record does not support reversal
    because of the denial of discovery.
    Constitutional Challenges
    Baumgart raises alternative arguments that the TCPA violates the Texas
    Constitution. Specifically, he argues that Section 27.009(a)’s language authorizing
    a trial court to award reasonable attorney’s fees violates the right to a jury trial
    guaranteed by Article V, Section 10. He also argues that the TCPA is
    unconstitutional (1) on its face because victims of defamatory speech “are denied
    20
    access to the courts and leveled with unconscionable judgments for attorney fees
    ‘incurred’ by their assailant” and (2) as applied to him because Graham Media and
    the trial court used the TCPA as a tool of oppression.
    Baumgart, however, did not raise these constitutional challenges in the trial
    court,8 and therefore they are not preserved for our review. See Sw. Elec. Power Co.
    v. Grant, 
    73 S.W.3d 211
    , 222 (Tex. 2002) (observing that litigant “must raise an
    open-courts challenge in the trial court” to preserve challenge for appellate review);
    Tex. Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs. v. Sherry, 
    46 S.W.3d 857
    , 861 (Tex.
    2001) (“‘[A]s a rule, a claim, including a constitutional claim, must have been
    asserted in the trial court in order to be raised on appeal.’” (citations omitted));
    
    Wisenhunt, 474 S.W.3d at 39
    (same); see also TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(1).
    Conclusion
    For these reasons, we conclude Graham Media met its initial burden to
    establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Baumgart’s legal action is based
    on, relates to, or is in response to its exercise of the right of free speech, as defined
    in the TCPA. Because Baumgart failed to meet his burden to establish clear and
    specific evidence of a prima facie case for each essential element of his defamation
    8
    Baumgart requested a jury trial on the issue of attorney’s fees, paid the jury-trial fee,
    and told the trial court that he believed the reasonableness of Graham Media’s
    attorney’s fees was a fact issue for a jury, but he did not argue in the trial court that
    a jury trial was constitutionally required.
    21
    claim, the trial court properly dismissed Baumgart’s legal action. We decline to hold
    that either the TCPA or any subpart at issue in this appeal is unconstitutional because
    those questions have not been preserved for our review. Accordingly, we overrule
    Baumgart’s appellate issues and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Sarah Beth Landau
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Keyes, Higley, and Landau.
    22