Dell R. Cullum v. Dalene M. White and Diamond A. Ranch

399 S.W.3d 173, 2011 WL 6202800, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9733
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 2011
Docket04-09-00695-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 399 S.W.3d 173 (Dell R. Cullum v. Dalene M. White and Diamond A. Ranch) 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
Dell R. Cullum v. Dalene M. White and Diamond A. Ranch, 399 S.W.3d 173, 2011 WL 6202800, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9733 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

SANDEE BRYAN MARION, Justice.

Dell Cullum appeals the judgment awarding Dalene White actual and punitive damages on her libel claim and the permanent injunction entered as a pretrial sanction.

Background

White is the owner of Diamond A Ranch in Leakey, Texas, which among other enterprises, operates an exotic game ranch. White and her family are well known in the community as long-time residents and ranchers. White hired her son Damon to run the hunting operation on the Ranch, and witnesses testified he was a proficient ranch manager. Residents of the community and family friends testified that White has a reputation of honesty, and she ran the Ranch in a professional manner. White testified she sees herself as Diamond A Ranch and considers comments about the Ranch to be about her.

Cullum worked for White from 2005 to 2006 as a ranch hand. He is also a photographer who took photographs of the Ranch. Cullum testified White treated him as family, was always nice to him, and he thought of her as a second mother. Damon testified that when the Ranch’s website went up in June 2006 it included photographs taken by Cullum and that Cullum did not object. Cullum left the ranch in August 2006. Damon testified he took Cullum’s photographs off the website that same month. However, Cullum testified that after leaving his employment at the Ranch his photographs were being used on the Ranch’s website without his permission so he filed a copyright lawsuit in federal court.

The evidence demonstrates that Cullum sent emails to Roger Raglin and Donald Thacker, both of whom had hunted at the Ranch. Raglin is the owner of a company that films hunting and fishing shows. The email to Raglin included information regarding Damon and made comments on how the Ranch was operated. Cullum stated he left the Ranch due to Damon’s “behavior,” referred to a “severe drinking issue,” and called him a “pathological liar.” He stated he was suing the Ranch for copyright infringement and insinuated White and Damon would be federally charged. He also stated he had tape recordings of Damon admitting to shooting and killing a Mexican transient on the Ranch and that Damon was being “flagged” by the FBI for possible “terrorist activity.” Cullum wrote he offered the tapes to Damon’s “mother but she refused to acknowledge them.”

The email also included information regarding one of Raglin’s hunting trips at the Ranch. Cullum stated that the black-buck deer Raglin shot was domesticated and Cullum had been instructed not to inform Raglin of that fact. Cullum explained he was instructed “to rile [the blackbuck] up” before Raglin arrived so “it wouldn’t just walk up to you the first night,” which Cullum said he did by chasing it with his four wheeler. Cullum also made claims regarding how the hog hunts were conducted in the same manner. After setting out these facts Cullum wrote “[t]his is the kind of behavior and ethic they run their business on.... ”

Cullum also sent an email to Donald Thacker. Thacker owned a production company called Big Timber Trails Outdoor Production. Thacker testified he paid for his first hunting trip at the Ranch and thereafter he traded hunting on White’s *179 property for advertisement on his national television show. In the email, Cullum accused Thacker of infringing on his copyright by posting the Ranch link and logo on his webpage. Cullum also made comments in the email about tapes he sent to the FBI and wrote that after the copyright case was finalized “we will be filing Federal Charges.” Thacker testified that after receiving the email, he informed the Whites he would not be able to advertise or promote the Ranch on his show or on his website. Cullum also sent an email to Feather Flage, a company that sells hunting clothing, after seeing its link on the Ranch’s website. The email made similar representations as in the emails to Raglin and Thacker.

Cullum posted a website called “diamon-dalcoholicranch.com” that White believes referred to her and the Ranch. The web-page appeared as follows:

COMING SOON
The Whole Story — The Real Story
The Pictures — The Video — The Audio Tapes
The Letters — The Photo Shoot — The Witness’s
The Seams — The Lies — The Secrets
The Claims — The Crimes
THE PROOF
Pornography — Alcohol Sickness— Drugs — Murder—Militia—Terrorism
Child Endangerment — Animal Abuse — Sabotage—CIA—FBI
Corruption
Dysfunctional Family — Mental Illness — Sex—Adultery—Felony
Thievery — Pathological Liar — Family Secrets
Bad Business — Dishonesty—Illegal Alien — Tax Evasion — Failure
Arrogance — Racism—Cheating Girlfriend — Porn Star — Exhibitionism
Military School Secrets — The Excuses — The Spies — The Insider
The Set Up’s — The Stupidity — The Slander
The English Connection — The Cosmetic Connection
The Cowboy in a Woman’s Body — The Piranha Girl — The Crazy Mexican
And the Evil that Rules it All!!

A fictional tale of the most bizarre Ranch in America You’ll never look at Hunting the same.

There was evidence that individuals associated with the Ranch saw Cullum’s website. A friend of White testified that when he viewed the Ranch’s official website he observed a posting on the guestbook that had a link to “diamondalcoholicranch.com.” The posting identified the author as a former ranch hand and included derogatory comments about how the Ranch was run. A friend of White testified he saw the link on the guestbook posting and clicked through to the “diamondalcoholi-cranch.com” webpage.

The Ranch as a limited partnership and White individually sued Cullum for libel. White also sued for intentional infliction of emotional distress. White sought a temporary and permanent injunction to enjoin Cullum from ever speaking or posting anything on the internet about White or the Ranch. The trial court granted the temporary injunction and ordered the website taken down. Cullum complied. Before trial White moved for a permanent injunction as a death penalty sanction against Cullum for alleged misconduct on the part of Cullum and his counsel. The trial court conducted a pretrial hearing and entered a *180 permanent injunction as a sanction that provided in part:

IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that Defendant, DELL R. CULLUM be, and hereby is, commanded to desist and refrain from:
1. contacting any existing or former clients of Plaintiffs for any purpose;
2. posting any information, on any internet medium, about Plaintiff White, the Diamond A Ranch, or any operations, affiliations, or employees associated therewith;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
399 S.W.3d 173, 2011 WL 6202800, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 9733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dell-r-cullum-v-dalene-m-white-and-diamond-a-ranch-texapp-2011.