Ester Salinas v. Pat Townsend and Norberto Salinas

365 S.W.3d 368, 2011 WL 61844, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 2011
Docket13-09-00421-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 365 S.W.3d 368 (Ester Salinas v. Pat Townsend and Norberto Salinas) 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
Ester Salinas v. Pat Townsend and Norberto Salinas, 365 S.W.3d 368, 2011 WL 61844, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 91 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Memorandum Opinion by

Justice GARZA.

Appellant, Ester Salmas, was found liable for slandering appellees, the current and former mayors of Mission, Texas. Appellant challenges the judgment by six issues, contending that: (1) her speech was constitutionally protected; (2) her statements were not, as a matter of law, unambiguous defamatory statements of fact; (3) appellees did not prove mental anguish; (4) appellees did not prove that her statements were made with actual malice; (5) there was a fatal variance between the pleadings and the proof; and (6) the trial court erred in admitting certain evidence. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

I. Background

Appellee Pat Townsend was mayor of the city of Mission, Texas from 1984 to 1992 and was its city manager from 1995 to 2001; appellee Norberto Salmas (“Salinas”) is the city’s current mayor. Appellant is a self-described community activist representing the interests of residents affected by chemical contamination at the former Hayes-Sammons pesticide plant in Mission. 2 According to appellant, she became concerned about chemical eontainination in 1998, when her son alerted her to the presence in their neighborhood of “[m]en dressed in scientific biohazardous [sic] outfits with tanks on their backs and total protection on their faces and their bodies.” Appellant learned that these “men in white” were removing “toxic dirt” from various sites around Mission; she also discovered that the areas had been designated as “Superfund” sites by the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”). 3

Over the course of the next decade, appellant performed extensive research on the history of the Hayes-Sammons plant and the effects of chemical contamination on the area’s land and its inhabitants. She, along with a committee of other affected citizens, eventually learned that thousands of people living in the Mission area were suffering from various “abnormal” illnesses, that hundreds of the residents’ children were stillborn, and that many other area children were born with birth defects. As a result of her research and investigation, appellant developed a fervent belief that these health problems were caused by chemical contamination emanating from the Hayes-Sammons *374 plant, and that city officials were negligent in failing to notify Mission residents prior to 1998 that their land was contaminated. Appellant further believed that city officials, including both appellees, failed to adequately address the crisis because they did not arrange for the affected citizens to be relocated from the contaminated areas.

In 1999, appellant retained an attorney to represent her in potential litigation against Hayes-Sammons’s successor entities and other suppliers that contributed chemicals to the sites in question. Appellant entered into a “fee sharing agreement” with the attorney whereby she would purportedly earn a percentage of the attorney’s fees resulting from the representation of any plaintiffs that appellant referred to him. Appellant later learned that this “fee sharing agreement” was unenforceable because it contravenes the ethical rules governing Texas attorneys. See Tex. Disciplinary R. Prof’l Conduct 5.04(a), reprinted in Tex. Gov’t Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. G, app. A (Vernon Supp.2010) (providing generally that “[a] lawyer or law firm shall not share or promise to share legal fees with a non-lawyer”). Nevertheless, according to appellant, she eventually received at least $30,000 in payments from the attorney; appellant characterized these payments as reimbursement for expenses she incurred in investigating and preparing the case against the chemical companies.

In 2000, appellant, at the advice of counsel, recommended that the city retain the services of Dr. Robert K. Simon, a toxicologist, to perform testing at the contaminated sites. The city acceded to the recommendation. However, Townsend, city manager at the time, was skeptical of Dr. Simon’s work and received the city council’s permission to hire a second toxicologist, Dr. K.C. Donnelly, to do additional testing. According to Townsend, appellant “wasn’t happy” about the hiring of a second toxicologist. Townsend further testified that, to his knowledge, Dr. Simon “never delivered the results of the tests” that the city had paid him to perform.

Appellant’s obvious frustration and anger at city officials led her to make the four statements that are the subjects of the underlying suit. The first of these statements was made at a Mission city council meeting on March 24, 2003. At this meeting, members of the public were invited to comment on the proposed appointment of Townsend to lead the Mission Economic Development Authority (“MEDA”). Appellant publicly made the following statement there:

Let me say my family and friends are severely opposing the outrageous nomination of Mr. Pat Townsend as Interim CEO/President of this MEDA or any position in the City of Mission. The days of slavery and corruption and abuse in South Texas have finished. This man in the past has known of pollution and has known of contamination and has betrayed the citizens that he was supposed to have represented. He has acted with me and many people of the South side with negligence for the name of self-profit and personal political gratification. Many families in the Southwest side have come to me to complain to me about the way the infrastructure has been. They went to him about sewage and water and one family came to me with a deed from 1930 how Shary Union Pacific stole the land way [sic], to Mr. Pat Townsend asking for his help and what did he do instead of helping the families he yelled, insulted, and suppressed the truth for the victims[. 0]n many occasions he has treated us with negligence which is heartless and malice [sic] behavior.... Mr. Townsend dwelled on Shar[]yland, Cimarron and *375 factories to further pollute Mission. He was instrumental in inflicting human sufferage [sic] and sever[e] property-damage. He had little respect for human health in environmental damages of 3,000 citizens. He resigned his former position as City Manager due to high stress levels and the way he treated Dr. Simon or was it because of guilt. My recommendation is that you be fair and you deal with proper [sic] in the total development of our community and not insult us with this man who has caused so many additional health problems, property damage and emotional distress. I, my family and friends are in opposition to this man being recommended for this position.

The second statement was made by appellant at an August 25, 2005 city council meeting 4 :

Good afternoon Mayor and Members of the Council and public. Ester Pena Salinas, we the people from the super fund areas demand justice, justice for all where is it[?] Congratulation[s] to Miss Flores and I wish the five hundred ... babies who were born died [sic] also had that opportunity to live and breath[e] unfortunately five hundred ... of our babies were lost and nobody seems to care and if they do care there is no justice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
365 S.W.3d 368, 2011 WL 61844, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ester-salinas-v-pat-townsend-and-norberto-salinas-texapp-2011.