Forbes Inc. and William P. Barrett v. Granada Biosciences, Inc. and Granada Foods Corporation

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2003
Docket01-0788
StatusPublished

This text of Forbes Inc. and William P. Barrett v. Granada Biosciences, Inc. and Granada Foods Corporation (Forbes Inc. and William P. Barrett v. Granada Biosciences, Inc. and Granada Foods Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Forbes Inc. and William P. Barrett v. Granada Biosciences, Inc. and Granada Foods Corporation, (Tex. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

No. 01-0788

Forbes Inc. And William P. Barrett

v.

Granada Biosciences, Inc. And Granada Foods Corporation

On Petition for Review from the

Court of Appeals for the Fourteenth District of Texas

Argued on January 15, 2003

Justice O=Neill delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Phillips, Justice Hecht, Justice Owen, Justice Jefferson, Justice Smith, Justice Wainwright, and Justice Brister joined.

Justice Schneider did not participate in the decision.

            Granada Biosciences, Inc. and Granada Foods Corporation sued Forbes, Inc., publisher of Forbes magazine, and writer William P. Barrett for business disparagement.  The trial court rendered summary judgment for Forbes and Barrett, and the court of appeals reversed.  49 S.W.3d 610.  We hold that the court of appeals erred in reversing the trial court=s summary judgment because the plaintiffs produced no evidence that Forbes and Barrett acted with actual malice in publishing the article that is the subject of this controversy.  Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals= judgment and render judgment for Forbes and Barrett.


I


In its issue dated November 11, 1991, Forbes published an article entitled AThe Incredible Shrinking Empire.@[1]  The article, authored by Barrett, focused on the financial condition of the Granada Corp., a privately held company, and on its chairman, David Eller.  Granada Corp. was the parent of a number of other private and public entities.  While the Granada organization consisted of dozens of entities, the article only named two of the public entities, Granada Foods Corp. (GFC) and Granada Biosciences, Inc. (GBI).  In general, the Granada entities were engaged in developing and applying advanced technology in the area of agriculture, primarily cattle production.  The article noted that the Wall Street Journal had described Granada Corp. as a Acorporate star[] of the future@ in 1989, and that the organization, under Eller=s stewardship, had garnered much favorable publicity.  But, the article said, Athere is less to Granada than meets the eye.  Actually, its total revenues, $1 billion as recently as 1988, will scarcely be $200 million for 1991.  Profits: zilch.  Granada=s work force has shrunk to below 900 from 2,200; its cattle herd has dwindled to 25,000 from 1 million.@  The article identified GFC and GBI as the two publicly traded stock companies within the Granada organization, and said that they were Aso broke they haven=t been able to publish their 1990 annual reports.@  It went on to say that AGranada is beset with a series of serious shareholder lawsuits,@ including one filed by AFort Worth near-billionaire Edward Bass.@  It is undisputed that, while a person with that name had sued one of the Granada entities, it was not the AFort Worth near-billionaire.@  Furthermore, the article described a number of other signs of serious financial trouble: APossibly anticipating a bankruptcy filing, former Granada employees say officials in recent months have moved some farm equipment and vehicles off Granada books and gotten rid of backup documentation.@

According to Barrett=s affidavit, he used the term AGranada@ in a generic sense to describe the various entities controlled by Eller, and when he Aintended to specifically address Granada Biosciences, Inc. or Granada Food Corporation, [he] did so by name.@  The day the article was released, the shares of GBI and GFC dropped precipitously, and trading was permanently suspended in early 1992.


GBI, GFC, Eller, and his wife, Linda, sued Barrett, Forbes, Inc., and Cheryl Munke, an employee of a former Granada affiliate, for damages allegedly caused by the article=s publication.  Forbes and Barrett (collectively AForbes@) filed joint motions for summary judgment, which the trial court granted.  On appeal, the Seventh District court of appeals, to which the case was transferred, reversed, holding that Forbes=s summary judgment motion did not address the plaintiffs= business disparagement claims.  Granada Biosciences, Inc. v. Barrett, 958 S.W.2d 215, 221 (Tex. App.BAmarillo 1997, pet. denied).[2]  On remand, Forbes filed a renewed and supplemental summary judgment motion under Rule 166a(c) and(i), which specifically addressed the plaintiffs= business disparagement claims.  The trial court again granted summary judgment in Forbes=s favor, but the Fourteenth District court of appeals reversed, concluding that several fact issues precluded summary judgment.  The court determined that there were fact issues concerning whether the article as a whole and several specific passages in the article were false and disparaging.  49 S.W.3d at 621-22.  The court agreed with Forbes=

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