Allen Chadwick Burbage v. W. Kirk Burbage and Burbage Funeral Home

447 S.W.3d 249, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1303, 2014 WL 4252274, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 753
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket12-0563
StatusPublished
Cited by243 cases

This text of 447 S.W.3d 249 (Allen Chadwick Burbage v. W. Kirk Burbage and Burbage Funeral Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Chadwick Burbage v. W. Kirk Burbage and Burbage Funeral Home, 447 S.W.3d 249, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1303, 2014 WL 4252274, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 753 (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

Justice GREEN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this defamation case, a jury assessed compensatory and exemplary damages against Allen Chadwick Burbage (Chad) for ten statements defaming his brother, W. Kirk Burbage (Kirk). The trial court also permanently enjoined Chad from making similar statements. We are presented with three issues: (1) whether any defamatory statements fell within a qualified privilege; (2) whether evidence supports the jury’s damage awards; and (3) whether the trial court abused its discretion by issuing the permanent injunction. Because we hold that Chad failed to preserve error in the charge, we do not reach the issue of qualified privilege. We also hold that the permanent injunction operates as an impermissible prior restraint on freedom of speech. Accordingly, we affirm those parts of the court of appeals’ judgment. But, on damages, we hold that no evidence supports the compensatory damage award. We reverse that part of the court of appeals’ judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Kirk owns and operates the Burbage Funeral Home, a centuries-old family business, in Worcester County, Maryland. Chad is Kirk’s older brother. Chad and Kirk’s grandmother, Anna Burbage, managed the funeral home from her husband’s death in the 1940s until her death in 1985. In her will, Anna left the funeral home and all of its assets to Kirk.

Anna bequeathed the land for the Bur-bage' family cemetery to her children, Richard Burbage, Sr., Chad and Kirk’s father, and Jean Burbage Prettyman. Although primarily a family cemetery, Anna and Richard gave permission for burial or entombment of several non-family members. Richard died in 1991; in his will, he left his 50% undivided interest in the family cemetery property to Chad and Kirk’s mother, Virginia Burbage Markham, but the will was never probated. Virginia conveyed this interest to Kirk by quitclaim deed in 2003. Chad felt Kirk obtained the funeral home and the family cemetery interest through manipulation, first of Anna and later of Virginia.

Although the origin of the strife between Chad and Kirk remains unclear, the “Farm Property,” a 23-acre tract that Virginia inherited from Richard in 1991, aggravated any existing discord. The potential sale of the property ultimately aligned Virginia’s four children against each other: Chad and Patrice Burbage Lehmann wanted to sell, while Kirk and his brother, Keith, demurred. Throughout 2006 and 2007, Chad exchanged heated emails with Kirk’s attorney. In late 2007 and early 2008, Chad created a website, www.anna burbage.org, to air his grievances with Kirk. Chad placed several posters around town to publicize the website. The website contained the following allegations:

• “Anna Burbage (‘Miss Anna’) was a victim of Elder Abuse. The Abuser was her grandson, Kirk Burbage and others.”
*253 • “Virginia Burbage Markham was the principal of Stephen Decatur High School serving northern Worcester County Maryland. At the present time, she is being abused by her son, Kirk Burbage, of the Burbage Funeral Home. She is currently a victim of ELDER as well as FAMILY ABUSE.”
• “The methods [of abuse] include: lies, trespassing, grand larceny, will tampering/undue influence, gifts with the intent to control his mother, discrediting fellow siblings, deceptively misrepresenting the contents of legal documents requiring the signature of the ABUSED for personal gain and to cover up land fraud and involving the ABUSED ELDER in Cemetery Land Fraud implicating several families including Shirley and Brice Phillips, of the Phillips Crab House.”
• “Kirk Burbage has also been known to abuse the dead, specifically his cousin, Anne Prettyman Jones.”

Chad also sent letters to Shirley and Brice Phillips, family friends of the Burbages who had earlier obtained permission to place a mausoleum in the Burbage cemetery. The letters espoused a common interest in settling property rights to the cemetery but stated, “You currently have no title or right to be in the Burbage Family Cemetery.” Chad made the following statements in the letters:

• “Kirk Burbage has committed numerous abuses to family members.”
• “We are the victims of the selfish, greedy and unlawful actions of Kirk Burbage.”
• “Kirk Burbage of the Burbage Funeral Home with the assistance of his attorney Robert McIntosh have fraudulently misrepresented rights which Kirk Burbage does not have....”
• “Kirk Burbage fraudulently obtained a
Quit Claim [deed] from our mother by what is believed to be elder abuse.”
• “Kirk Burbage and the Burbage Funeral Home violated Maryland law by not having a license to operate a cemetery”
• “Kirk Burbage did commit fraud.”

Kirk and the Burbage Funeral Home sued Chad for defamation in Bastrop County. 1 Chad appeared pro se. The trial court submitted ten questions — one for each of the statements reproduced above— asking the jury whether Chad had proven that the statements were substantially true. The jury answered “no” to all questions. The court also asked questions on compensatory and exemplary damages for Kirk and, separately, for the Burbage Funeral Home. The court instructed the jury that all statements were defamatory per se because each statement either leveled a criminal charge or tended to cause injury to the funeral home’s business or to Kirk’s profession. The jury awarded Kirk $6,552,000: $250,000 for past injury to reputation; $2,500,000 for future injury to reputation; $1,000 for past mental anguish; $1,000 for future mental anguish; and $8,800,000 in exemplary damages. The jury awarded the Burbage Funeral Home $3,050,000: $50,000 for past injury to reputation; $1,000,000 for future injury to reputation; and $2,000,000 in exemplary damages. The trial court also permanently enjoined Chad from future defamatory speech in a four-page list of prohibited topics (tied to the ten defamatory statements).

*254 Chad appealed. The court of appeals reduced the exemplary damages to $750,000 under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 41.008(b), upheld the other damage awards, and vacated the injunction. 447 S.W.3d 291, 295, 2011 WL 6756979 (Tex.App.-Austin 2011, pet. granted) (mem.op.). Each party petitioned for review; we granted both petitions. 57 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. 58 (Nov. 22, 2013).

II. Qualified Privilege and Charge Error

We first address Chad’s contention that qualified privilege barred Kirk’s recovery based on Chad’s defamatory statements to the Phillipses. If Chad’s statements were privileged, the jury’s answers on damages would rest upon invalidly submitted theories of liability. We hold that, even if the privilege applied, Chad failed to preserve jury charge error on this point.

A. Chad’s Qualified Privilege Claim

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447 S.W.3d 249, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1303, 2014 WL 4252274, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-chadwick-burbage-v-w-kirk-burbage-and-burbage-funeral-home-tex-2014.