Gary v. Crouch

923 So. 2d 1130, 2005 WL 2106539
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 2, 2005
Docket2040237
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 923 So. 2d 1130 (Gary v. Crouch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary v. Crouch, 923 So. 2d 1130, 2005 WL 2106539 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

Faye Gary, a lieutenant with the Gadsden Police Department, sued the City of Gadsden and Richard Crouch, in his individual capacity and in his official capacity as the Chief of Police for the Gadsden Police Department. Lt. Gary alleged claims of defamation and invasion of privacy against Chief Crouch and a claim of negligence against the City. The trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of the City, and later, on January 16, 2002, it entered a summary judgment in favor of Chief Crouch.

Lt. Gary appealed the summary judgment in favor of Chief Crouch, but she did not appeal the judgment entered in favor of the City. In Gary v. Crouch, 867 So.2d 310 (Ala. 2003) (hereinafter "Gary I"), our supreme court set forth the facts that form the basis of this dispute as follows:

"Faye Gary is a lieutenant with the Gadsden Police Department. Richard Crouch is the chief of police. Lt. Gary became frustrated when her superiors at the Gadsden Police Department rejected her attempt to `roll' a less senior officer *Page 1132 to a less desirable shift so that she could stay on the first shift, informing her that she could not `roll' that officer because the officer was in a different unit from Lt. Gary and that department rules prevented cross-unit `rolls.' Lt. Gary mentioned her frustration with this situation while she was talking with Robert Avery, her friend and a member of the Gadsden City Council. Councilman Avery was an outspoken critic of the administration of the Gadsden Police Department.

"Councilman Avery asked Lt. Gary if he could discuss her situation with Chief Crouch, and Lt. Gary said he could. Councilman Avery and Chief Crouch were involved at the time in a public disagreement over allegations of brutality by the Gadsden Police Department. Avery combined his concerns about Lt. Gary's situation with his other concerns about the Gadsden Police Department and placed those concerns in [an April 26, 1999,] letter to Chief Crouch. Avery also sent the letter to all members of the city council, the mayor, the local newspaper, and local radio stations.¹

"Chief Crouch drafted a reply [dated May 5, 1999,] to Avery's letter, the last paragraph of which read:

"`I . . . [instructed] . . . C[mdr.] Jeff Wright [(Lt. Gary's supervisor)] to inform Lt. Gary that if she wanted to improve her chances of receiving a specialized assignment she would 1) demonstrate some commitment to the objectives and missions of the Department, 2) demonstrate that she had some capacity for work (something which I have seen very little of over the past 14 months), and 3) set a better example for her subordinates by staying out of the hair salon and nail salon while on duty. . . . And no, Robert, I do not have a problem with females or blacks. I do have a problem with non-productive, ineffective police personnel, regardless of their rank, gender or race. And I also have a problem with elected officials whose main form of exercise is jumping to unfounded conclusions and whose political leadership is based in divisiveness and dissension, regardless of their gender or race.'

"Before mailing the [May 5, 1999,] letter to Councilman Avery, Chief Crouch sent a draft of it to Mayor Steve Means and requested his opinion. Mayor Means crossed out the paragraph set out above and returned the draft to Chief Crouch. Chief Crouch nonetheless sent the [May 5, 1999,] letter, including the paragraph Mayor Means had deleted, to Councilman Avery, Mayor Means, the city council, the local newspaper, and local radio stations.

"___________________

"¹ As it related to Lt. Gary, the [April 26, 1999,] letter [from Avery to Chief Crouch] stated, in part:

"`[D]o you have a problem with females, or do you have a problem with blacks? It's obvious that you have some type of problem, based on the fact that Lt. Gary was bumped off her job due to length of service, and yet you won't let her bump someone else for the same reason. I hope my assumptions are wrong and I'm waiting for your reply. . . .'"

Gary I, 867 So.2d at 311-12. Other portions of that opinion reveal the following additional facts relevant to this present appeal:

"While Lt. Gary and Councilman Avery testified in their depositions that the information in the [May 5, 1999,] letter had been discussed on local radio programs, they could not say whether that discussion occurred before or after Lt. *Page 1133 Gary filed this action against Chief Crouch, and, therefore, were unable to say whether the fact that the radio stations had knowledge of the [May 5, 1999,] letter stemmed from the public record of this action or from Chief Crouch's letter. However, Chief Crouch specifically stated in his deposition that it was his intention to send the [May 5, 1999,] letter to every outlet listed in the `cc' section at the bottom of his letter, which included the city council members other than Councilman Avery, the local newspaper, and various radio stations. . . .

". . . Cmdr. Wright's deposition testimony states at best that Cmdr. Wright knew that Lt. Gary had gone to an appointment at a hair salon once during her lunch hour, but that she asked his permission for that visit and he gave it to her. Cmdr. Wright denies having complained to Chief Crouch that Lt. Gary's visits to the salons while she was on duty were a persistent problem, as Chief Crouch argues in his brief to this Court, and he also confirmed that male officers also got haircuts while they were on duty. Lt. Gary testified in her deposition that she had not received any reprimands while Chief Crouch was chief of police,³ and that she had received good performance reviews during the time Chief Crouch had been with the Gadsden Police Department.

"_____________________

"³Lt. Gary does discuss a warning she received when she allowed her child to ride in her patrol car, but she said in her deposition that she was not formally reprimanded for having done so."

Gary I, 867 So.2d at 315-16. In Gary I, our supreme court affirmed that part of the January 16, 2002, summary judgment that pertained to Lt. Gary's invasion-of-privacy claim, but it reversed the January 16, 2002, summary judgment entered on her defamation claim.

On remand, Chief Crouch, on April 14, 2004, moved for a summary judgment on Lt. Gary's sole remaining claim alleging defamation. In support of his summary-judgment motion, Chief Crouch cited the recently released opinion of Smith v. Huntsville Times Co.,888 So.2d 492 (Ala. 2004). Lt. Gary opposed that motion. Both parties resubmitted the same evidence that they had submitted in support of their positions on the earlier summary-judgment motion. In addition to the evidence already set forth in Gary I, supra, that evidence reveals the following pertinent facts.

When asked to explain the basis for his comment in the May 5, 1999, letter that Lt. Gary needed to demonstrate some commitment to her job, Chief Crouch responded that he did not believe that Lt. Gary demonstrated a commitment to the objectives of the police department. Chief Crouch explained that although he reviewed arrest reports on a daily basis, he did not recall seeing any arrest reports generated by Lt. Gary. Chief Crouch also stated that he reviewed accident reports and traffic citations sporadically and that he had not seen any produced by Lt. Gary. Chief Crouch admitted that as a supervisor Lt. Gary would be less likely to make such reports on a regular basis. However, Chief Crouch testified that Lt.

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Bluebook (online)
923 So. 2d 1130, 2005 WL 2106539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-v-crouch-alacivapp-2005.