Daigle v. Computrac

835 F. Supp. 903, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15865, 1993 WL 460692
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 20, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 93-0189
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 835 F. Supp. 903 (Daigle v. Computrac) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daigle v. Computrac, 835 F. Supp. 903, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15865, 1993 WL 460692 (E.D. La. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

FELDMAN, District Judge.

Before the Court is defendant’s motion for summary judgment against plaintiffs claim for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. For the reasons that follow, the motion is GRANTED.

Background

This is a diversity-based suit for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The defendant, CompuTrac 1 , first hired the plaintiff, Lisa S. Daigle, in February of 1988 to work as a sales representative at its main office in New Orleans, Louisiana. Less than three years later, the defendant’s President, Timothy Slater, informed the plaintiff that she was going to be promoted to Marketing Manager. 2

On December 5, 1991, the day after she learned of her promotion to Marketing Manager, Ms. Daigle, who is white, was involved in an incident 3 with a co-worker, Kathleen Maston, who is black. 4 Ms. Maston resigned after the incident. The plaintiff, however, was permitted to return to work. After she returned to work, Ms. Daigle was told by Mr. Slater that she would report only to him; that she was not to speak with anyone in the office; she should not provoke anyone, and should not even have eye contact with anyone. Their relationship was obviously not the best.

At some point after the December incident, a Ms. Schenkel, an Employee Relations Manager with Dow Jones Company, discussed the incident by telephone with other CompuTrac employees. The record does not suggest that any defamatory comments were made. Thereafter, Dow Jones sent David Sears, Director of Employee Relations, to investigate what happened between Ms. Daigle and Ms. Maston. Based on his investigation, Mr. Sears concluded that the plaintiff had provoked the incident. She was immediately fired. 5

Ms. Daigle then applied for unemployment benefits. Some time after applying for unemployment benefits, Ms. Daigle says that she received a phone call from a woman, whom she knows only as Debbie, from the *905 state Office of Employment Security. According to the plaintiff, Debbie said that she had spoken to Mr. Slater, and that Mr. Slater had told her that Ms. Daigle was not entitled to unemployment benefits because Ms. Daigle had been fired for using racial slurs, profanity and for fighting. The plaintiff told Debbie that Mr. Slater’s version of the Maston incident was not accurate.

Mr. Slater asserts that he does not remember speaking with Debbie or anyone else at the unemployment office, but admits that he may have talked to someone (the OES file reflects only one communication with an employee or representative of CompuTrac). On February 3, 1992 Ms. Schenkel completed a state form (LDET-ES 110.D), as required by law, and returned it by mail to the OES. In response to the question, “Reason for separation from Your Employ,” Ms. Schenkel wrote: “Altercation with another employee caused by verbal abuse by claimant towards the other employee.” Nevertheless, the OES awarded full unemployment benefits to Ms. Daigle. She immediately began to receive her unemployment benefits, which continued until April 1993.

Animated by who was right, Ms. Daigle or Ms. Maston, plaintiff sued CompuTrac over what happened.

Ms. Daigle alleges in her complaint that she has “applied for over 200 positions, and she has contacted numerous potential employers in the securities field, as well as many other fields in which she had education, experience, and expertise.” Additionally, she alleges that CompuTrac defamed her and caused her mental distress because it “published abroad ... to prospective employers to whom plaintiff applied for employment after her termination” false and defamatory information concerning termination.

Ms. Daigle identifies only two allegedly defamatory communications. First, the alleged communication by Mr. Slater to the OES. Second, an alleged telephone conversation in which Ms. Daigle herself, posing as a prospective employer, claims she spoke with an employee, unnamed, of the Dow Jones Human Relations Department. According to Ms. Daigle, the unidentified employee stated that Ms. Daigle had been a sales representative with CompuTrac, not the Marketing Manager (the position to which Ms. Daigle was informed of her promotion the day before the Maston events). It is useful to underscore, however, that nothing was said of the Maston incident.

Ms. Daigle also offers a series of anecdotes describing encounters with prospective employers. But at no time does she point to a specific communication made by any of the defendant’s people to any of these prospective employers. She only speculates about such communications. One telling example, is Ms. Daigle’s account of her interview with a Boca Raton software company, System Writer, in February 1992. Ms. Daigle states that System Writer seemed interested in her at first, and then she makes what is at best a leap of faith: that Mr. Cruz of System Writer knew Tim Slater and “they probably communicated to one another about me as a potential employee.” When pressed on this point, however, Ms. Daigle is unable to provide any specific evidentiary-directed information to establish or even infer that Mr. Slater and Mr. Cruz ever had such a discussion.

I.

CompuTrac correctly argues that summary judgment is appropriate here because Ms. Daigle cannot prove that CompuTrac disseminated any defamatory information about Ms. Daigle and, therefore, she has no claim for relief. The defendant maintains that its communication to the OES was required by law and was made in good faith. CompuTrac thus concludes that under Louisiana law this information was a privileged communication that may not serve as a basis for plaintiffs claims. The defendant emphasizes that plaintiff cannot prove on the record before the Court that the defendant disseminated this information to her prospective employers. Evidence of such dissemination, defendant asserts, is wholly speculative and insufficient to constitute a genuine issue of material fact under the established summary judgment standards that must direct this Court. Finally, CompuTrac attacks Ms. Daigle’s attempt to invoke the doctrine of “compelled defamation,” claiming, first, that Loui *906 siana courts have yet to adopt such a theory and, second, that even if Louisiana were to adopt such a theory, plaintiff still could not recover under it.

Plaintiff admits that her defamation claim cannot be based on defendant’s communications with the unemployment office under Louisiana defamation law. Ms. Daigle invokes Melancon v. Hyatt Corp., 589 So.2d 1186 (La.App. 4 Cir.1991), writ denied, 592 So.2d 411 (1992), however, for the argument that circumstantial evidence supports her claim that CompuTrac made defamatory statements about her to prospective employers. Ms. Daigle further argues that CompuTrac should also be held liable for the defamatory statements that she herself was allegedly compelled to disclose on her employment application with Miles, Inc. (thus invoking the “compelled defamation” doctrine). See Lewis v. Equitable Assurance Soc.

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Bluebook (online)
835 F. Supp. 903, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15865, 1993 WL 460692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daigle-v-computrac-laed-1993.