Jeff Hughes v. Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/b/a The Advocate

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 2021
Docket2021CA0201
StatusUnknown

This text of Jeff Hughes v. Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/b/a The Advocate (Jeff Hughes v. Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/b/a The Advocate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeff Hughes v. Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/b/a The Advocate, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NUMBER 2021 CA 0201

JEFF HUGHES

VV VERSUS

r C- T-A-L-CITY PRESS, L.L.C. D/B/A THE ADVOCATE r,,

Judgment Rendered: DEC 0 7 2021

Appealed from the Eighteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Iberville State of Louisiana Docket Number 79,978, Div. A

The Honorable J. Kevin Kimball, Judge Presiding

Scott L. Sternberg Counsel for Defendant/Appellant, Marcia Suzanne Montero Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/ b/ a Michael S. Finkelstein The Advocate Graham Williams New Orleans, LA

John H. Smith Counsel for PlaintifVAppellee, Loren D. Shanklin Jeff Hughes Alicia M. Sosa Baton Rouge, LA

Ford Barry Marionneaux Elizabeth M. Mayeaux Plaquemine, LA

Anthony M. "Tony" Clayton Port Allen, LA

Katie M. Schwartzmann Amicus Curiae Counsel for New Orleans, LA Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

BEFORE: LANIER, WOLFE, AND WILLIAMS,' JJ.

1 Retired Chief Judge Felicia Toney Williams, serving as judge ad hoc by special appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court. WILLIAMS, J.

In this defamation action, defendant, Capital City Press, L.L.C. d/ b/ a The

Advocate (" The Advocate"), appeals from the judgment of the trial court, denying

its special motion to strike pursuant to La. C. C. P. art. 971, known as Louisiana' s

anti -Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation (" anti- SLAPP") statute,2 and

awarding plaintiff, Jeff Hughes (" Justice Hughes"), $ 5, 000. 00 in attorney' s fees, in

addition to court costs.' For the following reasons, we affirm and we award

7, 500. 00 to Justice Hughes for defense of this appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On June 25, 2019, The Advocate, a daily Baton Rouge newspaper, published

an article about plaintiff, Justice Hughes, currently an Associate Justice of the

Louisiana Supreme Court, and his actions as the presiding judge over a child

custody case ( hereinafter " the Nicholson custody case") in 1998 and 1999, when

he was a district court judge at the Twenty- first Judicial District Court for

Livingston, St. Helena, and Tangipahoa Parishes. The article, which was

published in the " Opinion" section of The Advocate, was entitled " Jeff Hughes has

made a mockery ofjustice[.]" The June 25, 2019 article stated:

As a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, Jeff Hughes is supposed to embody the highest standards ofjudicial conduct.

He failed that standard miserably two decades ago when he presided over a controversial custody case while he was, according to several people, romantically involved with one of its lawyers.

His behavior, brought to light this week by an Advocate investigation of the long -ago legal battle, should alarm voters who have elected him to the state' s highest court. Maybe they would have made another

2 Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 971 was enacted by 1999 La. Acts, No. 734, § 1. Anti- SLAPP statutes typically apply in cases where a litigant alleges defamation, in an effort to chill the First Amendment speech of its target. See Stabiler v. Louisiana Business, Inc., 2016- 1182 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 9/ 26/ 17), 232 So. 3d 555, 557 n. 1, writ denied, 2017- 1824 ( La. 12/ 15/ 17), 231 So. 3d 639.

3 The judgment was designated as a final judgment pursuant to La. Code Civ. P. art. 1915( B).

4 The June 25, 2019 article does not contain the author' s name.

2 decision if they had known of Hughes' sordid conduct, which

attracted the attention of the FBI when he was a state judge in Livingston Parish.

The fact that citizens generally didn' t known about it is an even bigger scandal. It points to a pervasive lack of transparency in Louisiana' s judicial system — a problem that hampers accountability and

compromises confidence in how justice is carried out.

Some of the details of the custody dispute are mentioned in an unrelated court case. That information, along with other documents The Advocate located, form the basis of what we know. Some documents were suspiciously missing from the official record. And, since the records of the state' s Judiciary Commission, which

disciplines judges for bad behavior, aren' t routinely made public, we don' t know what, if anything, was done to address Hughes' s clearly unethical behavior.

The facts that have made it into the light of day read like a horror story. In 1999, while on the state bench in Livingston, Hughes was romantically involved with lawyer Berkley Durbin, according to several people familiar with the situation. Even so, he didn' t recuse himself from a custody case and related legal matters involving a five- year- old boy named Austin Nicholson. Durbin represented Austin' s mother, who was fighting for custody even though her boyfriend, who would become her husband, had been accused of scalding Austin in a tub of hot water.

Hughes refused to recuse himself and ruled in favor of Austin' s mother, though child welfare officials strenuously objected. The case was eventually turned over to another judge, and in 2004, Hughes wrote a note to the boy' s grandmother in which he appeared to apologize for his conduct, saying it was " inimical to the pursuit of the truth and that, because of my actions, justice suffered. For this, I am deeply remorseful."

If Hughes were truly remorseful, he' d speak publicly about the case, which prompted an FBI probe that ultimately did not produce any charges against him.

Sadly, without basic transparency, the public doesn' t know how many other abuses have occurred in Louisiana' s judiciary and what was done about them.

State lawmakers had a chance last session to approve a bill making the records of the judiciary commission public. They balked, no doubt because many legislators are lawyers who are friends of judges or aspire to the bench themselves.

Austin Nicholson, now grown, survived his ordeal and now lives out of state. But Jeff Hughes failed him, and the system did, too. Until more light is shed on the Louisiana judiciary' s dirty dealings, we can expect more victims like Nicholson in the future.

3 On June 23, 2020, Justice Hughes filed this defamation action against The

Advocate, alleging The Advocate published a series of articles in 2019 that were

designed to cast him in a negative light. In particular, Justice Hughes alleged the

June 25, 2019 article contained false and defamatory language, as it stated that at

the time he refused to recuse himself from the Nicholson custody case, and ruled in

favor of the mother, he was romantically involved with her lawyer, Berkley

Durbin. Justice Hughes further alleged at the time The Advocate published the

June 25, 2019 article, it had actual knowledge, as evidenced by its previously

published June 23, 2019 article, that Durbin had withdrawn from the Nicholson

custody case over seven months before he granted custody to the mother.

Accordingly, Justice Hughes alleged the June 25, 2019 article was published with

actual malice because The Advocate had knowledge that the defamatory statements

were false, or acted with reckless disregard as to whether or not they were false.

Justice Hughes alleged he met with the editors and reporters for The Advocate and

requested a correction, but The Advocate refused, and continued to publish

additional articles implying Justice Hughes had acted unethically. Justice Hughes

alleged The Advocate' s repeated publication of the unflattering articles in 2019 was

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