Allied Marketing Group, Inc. D/B/A Sweepstakes Clearinghouse v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, Paramount Stations Group, Inc., Joe Tobin, Fernando Martinez, Chuck Whitlock, Barry Nolan, Lisa Gregorisch and Diane Dimond

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
Docket11-01-00240-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Allied Marketing Group, Inc. D/B/A Sweepstakes Clearinghouse v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, Paramount Stations Group, Inc., Joe Tobin, Fernando Martinez, Chuck Whitlock, Barry Nolan, Lisa Gregorisch and Diane Dimond (Allied Marketing Group, Inc. D/B/A Sweepstakes Clearinghouse v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, Paramount Stations Group, Inc., Joe Tobin, Fernando Martinez, Chuck Whitlock, Barry Nolan, Lisa Gregorisch and Diane Dimond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Allied Marketing Group, Inc. D/B/A Sweepstakes Clearinghouse v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, Paramount Stations Group, Inc., Joe Tobin, Fernando Martinez, Chuck Whitlock, Barry Nolan, Lisa Gregorisch and Diane Dimond, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                                        Opinion

Allied Marketing Group, Inc. d/b/a Sweepstakes Clearinghouse

Appellant

Vs.                   No. 11-01-00240-CV B Appeal from Dallas County

Paramount Pictures Corporation; Paramount Stations Group, Inc.;

Joe Tobin; Fernando Martinez; Chuck Whitlock; Barry Nolan;

Lisa Gregorisch; and Diane Dimond

Appellees

Allied Marketing Group, Inc. d/b/a Sweepstakes Clearinghouse (Allied) appeals from the trial court=s order granting a traditional summary judgment and a no-evidence summary judgment in favor of Paramount Pictures Corporation; Paramount Stations Group, Inc.; Joe Tobin; Fernando Martinez; Chuck Whitlock; Barry Nolan; Lisa Gregorisch; and Diane Dimond (collectively referred to as Paramount).  Allied alleged that Paramount and other defendants defamed it in a Hard Copy television show segment about a Asweepstakes scam.@[1]  Because we conclude that Paramount failed to meet its traditional summary judgment burden and that Allied met its no-evidence summary judgment burden, we reverse the trial court=s summary judgment and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings. 


On February 8, June 17, and July 29, 1996, Hard Copy aired a segment about a sweepstakes scam.  In the segment, Hard Copy producer Chuck Whitlock, accompanied by a video camera operator, went to a number of homes.  When people answered their doors, Whitlock told them that he was with Sweepstakes Clearing House and that they had won $10,000 in a sweepstakes contest. He showed them ASweepstakes Clearing House@ checks made out for $10,000.  He then told the Awinners@ that they had to pay $250 in taxes before he could give them their checks.  Each Awinner@ wrote a $250 check, payable to the I.R.S., as directed by Whitlock. Whitlock then returned the $250 checks to the Awinners@ and informed them that he was doing a national consumer awareness show for Hard Copy.  Whitlock stated that A[t]his is a con that=s perpetrated all over the country from coast to coast.@  The segment=s narrator stated that con-artists cash the Aincome tax@ checks through a bogus company set up with the initials I.R.S.  A Hard Copy anchor referred to it as a Anationwide scam.@

Paramount intended to use a fictional company name in connection with the sweepstakes company depicted in the segment and thought that ASweepstakes Clearing House@ was a fictional name.  However, unknown to Paramount, Allied had been using the name ASweepstakes Clearinghouse@ since 1984 in connection with a direct mail offer business.  Sweepstakes Clearinghouse=s stated goal Ais and always has been to promote, via direct mail, the sale of brand name products at discount prices, in connection with various sweepstakes for both cash and merchandise.@  It sends out millions of mailers a year to consumers and has conducted various kinds of sweepstakes contests, including a sweepstakes contest that has many similarities to the Ascam@ depicted on the Hard Copy segment.          

This is Allied=s second appeal from a summary judgment in this matter.  In the first appeal, Allied complained that the trial court erred in concluding that Allied was a public figure for the purposes of its defamation claim.  In an unpublished opinion, the Dallas Court of Appeals held that Allied was not a public figure and, therefore, reversed the summary judgment and remanded the cause to the trial court for further proceedings.  See Allied Marketing Group, Inc. v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, No. 05-99-00165-CV, 2000 WL 283834, at *3 - *4 (Tex.App. - Dallas, March 17, 2000, pet=n den=d)(not designated for publication). 


After remand, Paramount moved for traditional and no-evidence summary judgments, asserting that Allied=s defamation claim failed because:  (1) the Hard Copy segment was not Aof and concerning@ Allied; (2) even if the Hard Copy segment was Aof and concerning@ Allied, the segment was a Afictional@ work, and Paramount did not intend to refer to Allied in the segment; and (3) even if the segment was Aof and concerning@ Allied, the segment did not defame Allied.  Paramount further asserted that, because the defamation claim failed, Allied=s other claims also failed.  In its first two appellate issues, Allied complains (1) that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on its defamation claim based on conclusions that the Hard Copy segment was not Aof and concerning@ Sweepstakes Clearinghouse or defamatory and (2) that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on its other claims.[2]

The trial court did not specify the grounds for summary judgment in its order.  Therefore, we will affirm the summary judgment if any of the theories advanced in Paramount=s motion for  summary judgment are meritorious.  Carr v. Brasher, 776 S.W.2d 567, 569 (Tex.1989).

We will apply the well-recognized standard of review for traditional summary judgments.

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Allied Marketing Group, Inc. D/B/A Sweepstakes Clearinghouse v. Paramount Pictures Corporation, Paramount Stations Group, Inc., Joe Tobin, Fernando Martinez, Chuck Whitlock, Barry Nolan, Lisa Gregorisch and Diane Dimond, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-marketing-group-inc-dba-sweepstakes-clearinghouse-v-paramount-texapp-2003.