Anderson v. City of Troy

2003 MT 128, 68 P.3d 805, 316 Mont. 39, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 210
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 2003
Docket01-761
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2003 MT 128 (Anderson v. City of Troy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. City of Troy, 2003 MT 128, 68 P.3d 805, 316 Mont. 39, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 210 (Mo. 2003).

Opinion

JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 William Allen Anderson sought legal redress from the City of Troy and its Chief of Police for slander. On summary judgment, the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, Lincoln County, held that the term “gang banger” does not impart a clear defamatory meaning. We affirm.

¶2 The dispositive issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment as a matter of law to the City of Troy and its Chief of Police.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Anderson filed a Complaint on August 23,2000, alleging that Troy police chief Mitch Walters made false and defamatory statements on four occasions between May 1999 and October 1999 that referred to Anderson as a “gang banger.” The Complaint stated that the term “gang banger,” as intended by Walters and understood by the persons to whom the statements were made, “denotes a person who is a member of a gang whose members: commit crime; are real gangsters; are the wrong people that do crime; are worthless; and, are bottom of the barrel.” Anderson sought $20,000 in general damages for slander.

¶4 Walters answered that the statements attributed to him did not constitute slander. In addition, he asserted that each utterance cited *41 in the Complaint enjoyed protection as a statement of opinion and as privileged communication spoken in the proper discharge of Walters’s official duties as a police officer. At the close of discovery, the City and Walters moved for summary judgment.

¶5 Walters admitted that during a two-hour conversation with Barbara Anderson, Anderson’s mother and the Mayor of Troy at the time, he stated that Anderson “was acting like a god-damn gang banger.” Barbara recalled that Walters also asked, ‘Why does your son dress like that at 28 years old?” For the purposes of summary adjudication, the City of Troy and Walters invited the District Court to accept as true other instances when Walters allegedly referred to Anderson as a “gang banger from California,” as recounted by Anderson’s father, Allen Anderson, and two of Anderson’s friends in depositions.

¶6 Allen Anderson testified that in June 1999 a clerk at the IGA supermarket in Troy called the police when she felt threatened after a verbal altercation with William Anderson at the store. After William had departed, Allen went to the store and spoke with Walters, who was at the store in response to the clerk’s complaint. Walters asked Allen, “Is your son a gang banger from Los Angeles?” Allen said “No,” and explained that William “was car-jacked by gang hangers in LA one month before I sent him out of state.” According to Allen, William was 16 or 17 years old at the time.

¶7 David Cooper testified that when he was discussing his City towing contract at the police station in May 1999, Walters asked him, “What the hell are you doing with the likes of a gang banger like Bill?” A few months later, David confronted Walters at the Troy City Hall about the behavior of another police officer and recalled that Walters again asked David what he was doing hanging around with Anderson, without using the term “gang banger.” David stated that he had no knowledge of any other statements concerning Anderson made by Walters.

¶8 Brenna Meyer rented from Anderson’s parents and testified that she and Anderson were best friends. She stated that Walters “always made it known that he does not like Bill.... Well, in an instance, he said that [Bill Anderson] was just a gang banger from California who didn’t belong in a town like Troy.” Brenna remarked, “I mean, Mitch [Walters] was my friend at the time, you know, and Bill [Anderson] was my friend. It’s kind of hard when you have two of your friends that don’t like each other.”

¶9 All deposed witnesses testified that Walters’s direct references to *42 Anderson as a “gang banger” had no impact on their personal relationship with or perception of Anderson. Each stated that he or she knew that Anderson was not a member of an organized gang. No evidence was presented that indicated the allegedly slanderous statements were made to others who might have believed that Anderson was a gang member.

¶10 The District Court granted summary judgment in Walters’s favor on August 28, 2001.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶11 Our standard of review on appeal from summary judgment is de novo and we apply the same criteria as the district court based on Rule 56, M.R.Civ.P. Bruner v. Yellowstone County (1995), 272 Mont. 261, 264, 900 P.2d 901, 903). We review the legal determinations made by a district court to determine if the legal conclusions are correct. Bruner, 272 Mont. at 265, 900 P.2d at 903.

DISCUSSION

¶12 Anderson appeals the District Court’s conclusion that the term “gang banger” as applied to him is not slander per se. Anderson admits that no evidence indicates that the statements allegedly made by the Chief of Police affected his car detailing business or his family’s clothing store in Troy, but he argues that the law presumes injury as a consequence of slander per se and he need not prove specific damages.

¶13 As a threshold matter, the police chiefs statements must satisfy the statutory definition of slander to be actionable. Section 27-1-803, MCA, sets forth the following definition:

Slander is a false and unprivileged publication other than libel which:
(1) charges any person with crime or with having been indicted, convicted, or punished for crime;
(2) imputes in him the present existence of an infectious, contagious, or loathsome disease;
(3) tends directly to injure him in respect to his office, profession, trade, or business, either by imputing to him general disqualification in those respects which the office or other occupation peculiarly requires or by imputing something with reference to his office, profession, trade, or business that has a natural tendency to lessen its profit;
(4) imputes to him impotence or want of chastity; or
*43 (5) by natural consequence causes actual damage.

¶14 To determine whether false defamatory words about a person are slanderous, this Court stated in Keller v. Safeway Stores, Inc. (1940), 111 Mont. 28, 108 P.2d 605, that the challenged statement is to be construed by attributing the usual, popular and commonly accepted meanings to the words and by discerning how an uninvolved person of ordinary intelligence and without special knowledge would understand the statement. Keller, 111 Mont. at 31, 108 P.2d at 608 (citing Daniel v. Moncure (1920), 58 Mont. 193, 197, 190 P. 983, 985; Burr v. Winnett Times Pub. Co. (1927), 80 Mont. 70, 75, 258 P. 242, 244; Porak v. Sweitzer’s, Inc. (1930), 87 Mont. 331, 340-41, 287 P. 633, 635; Campbell v.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 MT 128, 68 P.3d 805, 316 Mont. 39, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-city-of-troy-mont-2003.