Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. v. Penick

219 S.W.3d 425, 2007 WL 486634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2007
Docket03-05-00504-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 219 S.W.3d 425 (Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. v. Penick) 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.

Bluebook
Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. v. Penick, 219 S.W.3d 425, 2007 WL 486634 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

W. KENNETH LAW, Chief Justice.

Appellants Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. d/b/a the Smithville Times, Cox Texas Partners, Inc., d/b/a the Smithville Times, and Tyanna Tyler (“Cox Newspapers” and “Tyler” or, collectively, “appellants”) 1 *430 bring this interlocutory appeal challenging the district court’s partial denial of appellants’ motion for summary judgment in a defamation action brought by appellee Charles Penick. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (West Supp. 2006).

District Attorney Penick, a public figure, filed suit claiming that he had been defamed in thirteen publications (including articles, an editorial series, and letters to the editor regarding a murder trial prosecuted in part by Penick) appearing in the Smithville Times between August 2, 2001, and January 3, 2002. The district court granted appellants’ summary judgment motion regarding nine of the publications but denied their motion regarding four of the publications, which appeared on October 18, December 13 and 20, and January 3. 2 On appeal, Cox Newspapers and Tyler assert that the district court erred in concluding that a genuine issue of material fact remained about whether these four publications were of a libelous nature because (1) the October 18 editorial was not “of and concerning” Penick, (2) the December 13 and January 3 articles and the December 20 letter to the editor were substantially true, and (3) Penick failed to present any evidence of actual malice regarding any of these four publications.

Because Penick fails to present any evidence to demonstrate that the October 18 article was “of and concerning” him or that any of the disputed publications were published with actual malice, we will reverse the portion of the district court’s order that denied appellants’ summary judgment motion as to these four publications and render a take-nothing judgment in favor of appellants.

BACKGROUND

This action arises out a series of articles, editorials, and letters to the editor published in late 2001 and early 2002 in the Smithville Times regarding the investigation of Stacey Stites’s murder and the subsequent trial of her accused murderer, Rodney Reed. On April 23, 1996, the body of Stacey Stites, a 19-year-old woman, was discovered partially undressed beside a country road in Bastrop County. Stites had been sexually assaulted and strangled. Initially, the victim’s fiancé, Jimmy Fen-nell, Jr., a Giddings police officer, was a suspect, but DNA evidence from semen found in Stites’s body diverted the focus to Rodney Reed. Reed was arrested, tried, and convicted of capital murder. He was then sentenced to death in 1998. 3 Appel-lee Charles Penick was the Bastrop County District Attorney at the time of Reed’s trial. Penick enlisted the Attorney Gener *431 al’s office to lead the prosecution. Assistant Attorney General Lisa Tanner was assigned to the case and acted as chief prosecutor.

The Smithville Times covered the story of the murder investigation and Reed’s trial from 1996 through 2002. 4 Appellant Tyanna Tyler, a reporter for the Smith-ville Times, was initially assigned in 2001 to cover a writ of habeas corpus proceeding in which Reed’s attorney asserted that DNA evidence from saliva found on beer cans near Stites’s body had been suppressed during the trial by the prosecution. Testing of the DNA evidence ruled out Reed as a donor but could not exclude two police officers who were friends of Fennel, the initial suspect in the murder.

Thereafter, Tyler continued to research Reed’s case. She read the trial record and investigative files and interviewed Reed, his family, friends, and defense counsel. Tyler also asked David Fisher — a local citizen who had previously conducted his own independent investigations of public employees — to look into the “inconsistencies” of the Reed case. Tyler used some of Fisher’s research in her articles.

Tyler authored a series of ten editorial articles highlighting why “reasonable doubt” existed in the Reed case and who may have acted inappropriately in their official capacity. The Smithville Times ran the editorial series from August 2 to October 18, 2001. Eight of the editorials present a detailed review of the evidence and are void of commentary about the prosecution. Only the opening and closing editorials, published on August 2 and October 18, contain Tyler’s criticism of the prosecution. In both, Tyler refers expressly to Assistant Attorney General Lisa Tanner. Penick is never mentioned in the ten-part editorial series by name or by title.

In early December 2001, Fisher filed a complaint with the Travis County District Attorney’s Special Prosecution Public Integrity Unit against Penick, Tanner, Attorney General Greg Abbott, and the Capital Litigation Division of the Attorney General’s office. Fisher’s complaint alleged violations of Reed’s constitutional rights, prosecutorial misconduct, and a “conspiracy to commit fraud.” The Smithville Times reported Fisher’s filing on December 13, 2001, in an article with the headline “Fraud Charges filed on DA in Reed Case.” This article was not part of the ten-part editorial series, which had concluded on October 18. Although the December 13 article accurately reported the substance of Fisher’s complaint, it is undisputed that this article contained three errors — namely, that (1) Fisher’s complaint had been filed with the Attorney General’s office, (2) Tanner had asserted at trial that she had made every effort to deliver a May 13 lab report to the defense, and (3) the chief counsel for the court of criminal appeals had advised Fisher to contact the FBI or Judge Towslee.

In the next issue published on December 20, 2001, the Smithville Times printed a letter to the editor written by Fisher titled, “Fisher appologizes [sic] for errors.” 5

*432 The letter thanked the paper for reporting on the charges that he filed against Penick and Tanner and offered corrections to the three errors contained in the December 13 article. Specifically, Fisher’s December 20 letter stated that “the resulting few errors that need to be restated are my fault”:

First, I filed the complaint with the Travis County District Attorney’s Special Prosecution/Public Integrity Unit, not with the Attorney General’s Office.
Second, it was at the hearing that Lisa Tanner asserted that she made every effort to deliver the May 18th lab report to the Defense, not at the trial.
Third, George Wetzel, Counsel of the Court of Criminal Appeals did not advise me to contact the FBI or Judge Towslee. The FBI asked that I notify Judge Towslee and [Reed’s] attorney of my findings.

On January 3, 2002, the Smithville Times

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Elon Musk v. Benjamin Brody
Tex. App. Ct., 3rd Dist. (Austin), 2026
Mariann Bacharach v. Eufemia Garcia
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015
in Re Steven and Shyla Lipsky and Alisa Rich
411 S.W.3d 530 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2013)
Main v. Royall
348 S.W.3d 381 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2011)
Neely v. Wilson
331 S.W.3d 900 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2011)
Vice v. Kasprzak
318 S.W.3d 1 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2009)
Joachim Osayande Osojie v. Vivian Osojie
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2009
FREEDOM COMMUNICATIONS, INC. v. Coronado
296 S.W.3d 790 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.3d 425, 2007 WL 486634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-texas-newspapers-lp-v-penick-texapp-2007.