Evans v. Dolcefino

986 S.W.2d 69, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 526, 1999 WL 33613
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1999
Docket01-97-00545-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 986 S.W.2d 69 (Evans v. Dolcefino) 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
Evans v. Dolcefino, 986 S.W.2d 69, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 526, 1999 WL 33613 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

MICHAEL H. SCHNEIDER, Chief Justice.

This is an interlocutory appeal brought by Wayne Doleefino, Capital Cities/ABC National Television Sales, Inc., and KTRK Television, Inc. (collectively, “the media defendants”) from the denial of their motion for summary judgment in a libel case. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(6) (Vernon Supp.1999). Lawrence E. LaHaie, Jr. (LaHaie), a building inspector for the City of Houston, sued the media defendants alleging that he was libeled by a series of 23 news broadcasts that were first aired on September 7,1993, and continued into 1994. LaHaie also alleged claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress, tortious interference with employment relations, and negligenee/gross negligence. The trial court granted the media defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to claims by two of the building inspectors named in the broadcasts, 1 but denied summary judgment as to LaHaie’s claims. The media defendants filed this interlocutory appeal. We reverse and render judgment that LaHaie take nothing on his claims.

I. FACTS

A. The “tip” and the hidden video

In July 1993, KTRK reporter, Wayne Dol-eefino, received an anonymous tip that city building inspectors were receiving free meals at Charlie’s Restaurant. On July 19, 1993, the anonymous tipper, who was later revealed to be Charlie’s head waiter, Tim Kidd, called back and said that three building inspectors were eating lunch at the restaurant. Doleefino and a cameraman, Noe Cadena, took a concealed camera to Charlie’s and shot footage of city building inspectors Jim Evans, Kenneth Lorton, and LaHaie eating at Charlie’s. After the inspectors left, their *72 waiter, Joseph Chubb, confirmed that the three did not receive a check because they were friends with the owner, Albert Kalas.

B. The September 7,1993 broadcast

After obtaining the hidden video footage, Dolcefino conducted an investigation that culminated in the following broadcast, which we include in its entirety.

[Anchor Dave Ward]: Good evening friends. Shara Fryer has the night off and Marvin Zindler is on special assignment. A two-month long 13 Undercover investigation tonight has sparked a corruption probe at Houston’s City Hall and the target, possible ethics violations in the City’s Building Department.
[Anchor Melanie Lawson]: Wayne Dolcefi-no is joining us tonight to start laying out the details of what we found. Wayne?
[Dolcefino]: Yeah, Melanie and Dave. Building inspectors have tremendous power. The power to decide whether a building is safe enough to open for business, safe enough for you and your children to enter. The City’s top building official freely admits many of their decisions are judgment calls. Judgment that’s not supposed to be colored by any inappropriate relationships. That’s why we began our journey into the free lunch.
It’s lunch time at Charlie’s Coffee Shop in Montrose and in an area away from the crowd, three men eat and drink. [Hidden video footage shown at this point]. What they don’t know is our hidden camera is sitting just across the room. Waiters say these are no strangers to the place.
[Charlie’s waiter Kidd]: They started out with drinks, bloody mary, uh, Corona beer, appetizers at about $6.00 a plate.
[Dolcefino]: And then the main meal. The waiter will come back often to the table.
[Charlie’s waiter Perkins]: I mean they just run me ragged.
[Dolcefino]: What’s our interest on this July afternoon? Sitting at the table under our surveillance are two of the City’s top building officials: Jim Evans, Chief of Plan Examining, and Kenneth Lorton, Chief of Occupancy and Life Safety. Two men who control many of the necessary permits for construction and remodeling in town; the men who decide, in fact, if buildings are safe enough to open for business. Between them they have 30 years with the City. The third man is building inspector Lawrence LaHaie. We were trying to confirm what present and former Charlie’s waiters had been telling 13 Undercover. That City building inspectors have been eating at Charlie’s for years, accepting what we now estimate are thousands of dollars in free meals.
[Charlies’ waiter Kidd]: Their average bill would be between $60 — for two of them— between $60 and up to $90. They have never paid a check; there’s not a waiter that’s ever worked there, past, present, that’ll ever have taken any money from them to go to the cashier to make them pay their bill.
[Charlie’s waiter Perkins]: And I said “Well, how come?” And he said well they’re building inspectors and we don’t charge them for their meal.
[Charlie’s waiter Stewart]: The manager, Leo, would tell me, “Let me have their check when they’re finished.”
[Dolcefino]: This is Leo. Charlie’s cashier.
[Charlie’s cashier, Leo Klonis]: .... and I don’t have nothin’ to say. Please.
[Dolcefino]: Are they getting free meals here?
[Klonis]: Well, I don’t know nothing about that.
[Dolcefino]: Have you seen the inspectors here?
[Klonis]: I don’t know who the inspectors you’re talking about.
[Dolcefino]: But with our hidden camera we confirmed the allegation. [Hidden video shown]. The City building officials left a small tip, but they never got a check. We called over the waiter to ask about it.
[Cameraman Noe Cadena]: I didn’t see them pay the bill. Did you give them a bill?
[Charlie’s waiter Chubb]: Oh, they’re friends with the owner.
[Dolcefino]: The owner of Charlie’s restaurant is this man, Albert Kalas. Who ac *73 cording to the tax rolls has $2.3 million in business property in town. Among his reported holdings, some of Houston’s oldest downtown hotels. They require safety permits to stay open. Kalas says the seven present and former waiters who detailed the thousands in free meals for us, are lying and so is our hidden camera video. [Hidden video shown].
[Kalas]: They always ... they always pay for it. The only one has authority to give them anything is me. If I’m there with them, if I know somebody and I want to give some food away, that’s my business. I don’t think it’s anybody else’s business.
[Dolcefino]: During the 10 days we kept the place under surveillance, the inspectors returned three times. [Hidden video shown]. Drinking alcohol inside while their City vehicles stay outside. That alone is a violation of City policy. But accepting free meals can be far more serious.
[James Evans]: I have no comment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
986 S.W.2d 69, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 526, 1999 WL 33613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-dolcefino-texapp-1999.