Blake v. Gannett Co., Inc.

529 So. 2d 595, 1988 WL 53448
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1988
Docket57341
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 529 So. 2d 595 (Blake v. Gannett Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Gannett Co., Inc., 529 So. 2d 595, 1988 WL 53448 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

529 So.2d 595 (1988)

P.L. BLAKE
v.
GANNETT COMPANY, INC., Gannett News Service, Inc., and Mississippi Publishers Corporation.

No. 57341.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 25, 1988.

*596 Fred D. Thompson, Thompson & Bussart, Nashville, Tenn., James W. Burgoon, *597 Jr., Fraiser, Burgoon & Abraham, Greenwood, for appellant.

Luther T. Munford, Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, John C. Henegan, R. Andrew Taggart, Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, Jackson, for appellees.

En Banc:

PRATHER, Justice, for the Court:

P.L. Blake filed a complaint on December 7, 1984, in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, against Gannett Co., Inc., Gannett News Service, Inc. and Mississippi Publishers Corporation alleging libel and false light invasion of privacy. The action is brought as a result of articles written in the defendants' newspaper and newswire service concerning the Federal Farm Loan Program of the Farmers Home Administration.

After extensive discovery, the trial judge issued an opinion granting the defendants' motion for summary judgment, holding that the plaintiff was a limited purpose public figure who failed to show actual malice on the defendants' part to impose liability on them. In addition, the trial court held that the plaintiff had failed to produce evidence of falsity, and therefore, his libel and false light invasion of privacy actions failed. From this ruling for summary judgment, P.L. Blake appeals and assigns as error the following findings of the Hinds County Circuit Court:

(1) AS A MATTER OF LAW, APPELLANT P.L. BLAKE IS A VORTEX PUBLIC FIGURE AND THUS HELD TO THE ACTUAL MALICE STANDARD OF PROOF; AND

(2) NO GENUINE ISSUE OF MATERIAL FACT EXISTS REGARDING APPELLEES' KNOWLEDGE OF OR RECKLESS DISREGARD AS TO THE FALSITY OF THEIR STATEMENTS CONCERNING APPELLANT; AND

(3) AS A MATTER OF LAW, THE PUBLISHED STATEMENTS CONCERNING APPELLANT AND HIS CORPORATIONS ARE NOT FALSE AND THEREFORE NOT LIBEL; AND

(4) AS A MATTER OF LAW, APPELLANT'S CLAIM FOR FALSE LIGHT INVASION OF PRIVACY MUST FAIL WHERE BASED UPON THE SAME SET OF FACTS AS THE DISMISSED LIBEL CLAIM; AND

(5) AS A MATTER OF LAW, PUBLICATION OCCURRED ON DECEMBER 4-6, 1983, AND APPELLANT'S SUIT IS THUS BARRED BY THE MISSISSIPPI STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS; AND

I.

A.

On December 7, 1984, P.L. Blake (hereafter referred to as "Blake"), a Greenwood, Mississippi resident, filed suit in the Hinds County Court for libel and invasion of privacy against (1) Mississippi Publishers Corporation, (hereinafter MPC), the owner of the Jackson based newspaper, The Clarion-Ledger, (2) Gannett News Service, Inc., (hereinafter GNS), a national newswire service headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, and (3) Gannett Co., Inc., (hereinafter GC), the parent corporation of MPC and GNS, which are wholly owned subsidiaries. The suit arose out of a series of newspaper articles written and distributed by Gannett News Service and published in The Clarion-Ledger.

The articles published by GNS concerned the Farmers Home Administration (hereafter "FmHA"), a federal agency with state offices nationwide. The authors of the articles, Mark Rohner ("Rohner") and Dennis Camire ("Camire"), both GNS investigative reporters, addressed the federal farm loan program and FmHA's alleged mismanagement of funds in approving loans for borrowers of substantial net worth.

More specifically, the reporters focused on the FmHA farm loan program as administered within the State of Mississippi. Subsequently, GNS published a series of articles from December 4, 1983, to October 2, 1984. The series featured most of Mississippi's ten largest FmHA borrowers, including the DeWitt Corporation ("DeWitt") owned by P.L. Blake. DeWitt owed FmHA *598 $3.5 million dollars and was the fifth largest borrower in the state.

Regressing in time, the origin of this series was a May 1983 Congressional Hearing. At that hearing, Dennis Camire learned that federal auditors had recently criticized FmHA programs. Subsequently, GNS editors assigned Reporter Mark Rohner to work with Camire on a series of stories concerning agency practices. Rohner had worked as an agriculture reporter in the GNS Washington office since 1978.

The reporters began their 1983 investigation by collecting a series of audits prepared by the Office of Inspector General of the United States Department of Agriculture. (USDA) These audits criticized FmHA for failing to heed agency regulations in making loans to wealthy borrowers.

Although this audit was revealing concerning FmHA loans, the DeWitt file was not examined by the Government in the course of this selective audit.

Shortly after the Congressional Hearings, Camire received from a Congressional office an article from The Greenwood, Mississippi Commonwealth concerning persons identified as the "most controversial" FmHA borrowers in LeFlore County. The article includes the name of P.L. Blake.

Following up on this article, the reporters, using the Federal Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552(a), obtained the FmHA's county loan file for Blake's company, DeWitt. The reporters used the county loan information to do further investigation into DeWitt's other business ventures in Mississippi and Texas.

With all this information in hand, GNS reporters prepared a fourteen article series. Following the editing of these articles in Washington, GNS published the articles by sending them by wire to Gannett and non-Gannett organizations. The initial articles went out over the GNS wire on December 4-6, 1983.

Therein, Blake complains on appeal about these particular articles:

(1) On December 11, 1983, in The Clarion-Ledger/Jackson Daily News "The P.L. Blake empire has good credit in Washington," a GNS article.
(2) On January 12, 1984, The Clarion-Ledger published an editorial headlined "Hopeful Sign". It concerned the FmHA series published in December, 1983. The editorial does not refer to Blake or any individual.
(3) On January 20, 1984, GNS reprinted its series of articles in a special report entitled: "FmHA The Golden Yoke." The series won some of the Nation's top awards for economic and agricultural reporting.
(4) On March 3, 1984, The Clarion-Ledger published a GNS article "FmHA Investigating Greenwood borrower," based on the FmHA reaction to the initial GNS series.

Before August 30, 1984, Blake did not complain to any of the defendants about any of these articles. On that day his counsel wrote a letter to the defendants identifying certain statements alleged to be false and defamatory. The defendants, GNS, responded on September 12, 1984. They maintained that the statements were true and that Blake's characterization of these statements were inaccurate. This suit was filed on December 7, 1984.

B.

The following is a composite of those facts of which Camire and Rohner were aware when they wrote the series and those facts which surfaced during discovery. Blake, who is the sole stockholder in DeWitt, bought the company some time prior to 1977. DeWitt, in turn, is the sole stockholder and owner of its subsidiary companies.

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Bluebook (online)
529 So. 2d 595, 1988 WL 53448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-gannett-co-inc-miss-1988.