Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd Skipper v. Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins and Arts From the Heart

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 21, 2006
Docket03-05-00566-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd Skipper v. Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins and Arts From the Heart (Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd Skipper v. Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins and Arts From the Heart) 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.

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Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd Skipper v. Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins and Arts From the Heart, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

444444444444444 NO. 03-05-00566-CV 444444444444444

Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd Skipper, Appellants

v.

Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins, and Arts from the Heart, Appellees

44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 207TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 02-1793, HONORABLE RONALD G. CARR, JUDGE PRESIDING 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this defamation suit filed by appellants Jeri Lynn Ross Skipper and Robert Boyd

Skipper (the “Skippers”) against appellees Valerie Meek, William C. Meek, Lauren Robins, and Arts

from the Heart, the Skippers appeal the trial court’s rendition of a no-evidence summary judgment

in favor of the appellees. Because the Skippers failed to produce sufficient evidence to raise a fact

issue on the elements of their claims, we affirm the summary judgment rendered by the trial court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Founded in 1998 by Valerie and William Meek and Lauren Robins, Arts from the

Heart (“AFTH”) is a local, non-profit organization in Wimberley that provides art programs to the

city’s youth. The organization is funded by donations and grants, including a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts. Valerie Meek served as executive director of the organization. In 2002,

the organization provided after-school workshops at various campuses in town, including a chess

club and workshop. Jeri Skipper served on the AFTH board along with William Meek and Lauren

Robins. Robert Skipper taught chess in after-school workshops for elementary and middle school

students. He maintained a personal website on the Internet, referencing the chess club, chess

activities, and other personal interests.

On April 25, 2002, Jeri Skipper sent a year-end e-mail message to chess club parents

identifying the children who would be receiving trophies and commenting,

It has been a tough semester for scheduling and working through things. For those of you who read THE ONION online, you may agree with this recent headline: What does not kill me makes me whinier.

Following the Skippers’ names and telephone contact information, the message contained a reference

to Robert Skipper’s website which contained a link to the chess club. On the website, in addition

to a link to the home page for the AFTH chess club, Robert Skipper included a list of “favorite

links.” The favorite links included websites for The Onion, a satirical publication, and Snopes, also

known as the Urban Legends Reference Pages.

Lauren Robins, the board vice president, learned of the Skippers’ website from board

president Barbara Day who received Jeri Skipper’s e-mail. After viewing the website, Robins alerted

another member of the board. Concerned that both links contained mature-content material, Robins

attempted to call Jeri Skipper but was unable to reach her. Later that evening, she encountered Jeri

Skipper at a play at the local theater and they engaged in a contentious conversation about the

2 website. Jeri Skipper told Robins that she had never read The Onion and acknowledged that the

reference to it in her e-mail was a mistake. Robins also had a heated exchange with Robert Skipper.

As Robins explained that the linked sites contained inappropriate materials for children, Robert

Skipper accused Robins and the AFTH board of harassing him and his wife. Robins memorialized

the encounter with the Skippers in a memorandum dated May 1.1

On May 4, the AFTH executive committee—composed of Day, Robins, Valerie

Meek, and the board secretary, Donna Gaddie—met and, after seeking legal advice, forwarded a

letter to the Skippers requesting the removal of the link for the AFTH chess club from the Skippers’

website and disassociating the Skippers from the organization. The letter also stated,

When the existence of this unauthorized Art From The Heart Chess Club home page came to our attention yesterday, we also discovered that you have linked it on the Skipperweb website, under the heading of “Favorite Links,” to a website which is not intended for readers under 18 years of age. We have serious concerns about your having done this. As an organization serving youth we absolutely can not allow an individual(s) to associate our organization’s name in their advertisement or

1 In her memorandum, Robins described “attempted conversations and conversations with Jeri Skipper and Robert Skipper on April 25, 2001[sic].” She wrote,

That afternoon I had been told by Barbara Day, President of the Board of Arts from the Heart (AFTH), of an email letter sent from Jeri and Robert Skipper to the parents of the children in the Chess Club. In the email was a reference to a website called the Onion. When I was read the contents of the web site I found them lewd and offensive and certainly not something that should be affiliated with AFTH. Immediately, I called Jimmy Ash, a member of the Board of AFTH and someone who had been able to communicate with Jeri, and told him of the situation. He said he’d check into it. I suggested we call Marion Running and he suggested I speak with Jeri first. I then tried Jeri. Once I left a message on the answering machine asking Jeri to give me a call; the second time I called, her daughter said that Jeri was “unavailable.” Robins then described her encounter with the Skippers at the theater that evening.

3 promotion of websites not intended for minors. We will not allow anyone, under the auspices of Arts From the Heart, to expose students enrolled in one of our programs to the type of information found on the linked website of concern. We ask for your prompt attention to correcting this matter.

Attached to the letter were a printed copy of the contents of the Skippers’ homepage, excerpts from

The Onion and Snopes websites,2 Jeri Skipper’s April 25 e-mail, Robins’s May 1 memorandum, and

a three-page excerpt of chapter 43 of the Texas Penal Code relating to offenses involving obscenity.

The letter and attachments were identified in the pleadings and summary judgment evidence as

Exhibit A.

Jeri Skipper responded to the letter by e-mail on May 6 with a copy to AFTH board

members:

I am unaware of the existence any [sic] Executive Committee, and I disagree with your description of the facts below; however, Robert took care of this request immediately following an unpleasant exchange over the phone with board member Bill Meek on Friday night, the day before you wrote this.

[The website] has been online for five years (two of those supporting the AFTH chess program.) This is the first complaint we have had, and Robert dealt with it right away. All you had to do was ask. . . . I’m sorry you went to so much trouble and expense to draft this letter and send it registered mail. It was unnecessary.

2 The excerpts included five pages of the April 24 and May 1, 2002 on-line editions of The Onion with headlines that included “Car Salesman Three Desks over Going On And On About Chick He Banged Last Night,”and “Teen Sex Linked to Drugs and Alcohol, Reports Center for Figuring Out Really Obvious Things”; and six pages from the May 6, 2002 on-line edition of Snopes.com containing a reference page for “Sex” that included hyperlinks to sections on “adultery, aphrodisiacs, bestiality, caught in the act, celebrities, high school confidential, homosexuality, juvenilia, kinky sex, mistaken identities, penile pranks, pornography, pregnancy, prostitution, revenge, and tattled tales,” along with other mature-content material.

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