Lloyd v. Alaska Worldwide, Inc.

550 S.W.2d 343, 2 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2149, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 2824
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1977
Docket19261
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 550 S.W.2d 343 (Lloyd v. Alaska Worldwide, Inc.) 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
Lloyd v. Alaska Worldwide, Inc., 550 S.W.2d 343, 2 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2149, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 2824 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

AKIN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a temporary injunction granted appellee-plaintiff, Alaska Worldwide, Inc., doing business as Wilson International, enjoining appellants, Glen Lloyd and his employer, KDFW-TV, Inc., the owner of a television station, from broadcasting stories which interfere with plaintiff’s business, from communicating with plaintiff’s employees, from going about plaintiff’s place of business, from doing any acts calculated to harass or injure plaintiff’s business, and from harming or destroying any materials in defendants’ possession. Because we hold that the injunction violates the Texas and United States Constitutions and that it is unsupported by the evidence, we dissolve the injunction.

As part of KDFW’s news broadcasts, Lloyd presents “Action Four," a program designed to assist consumers with complaints and questions, both of which the program solicits. After receiving complaints about Wilson International, a “job-search” firm engaged in the business of preparing resumes and providing names of prospective employers for persons interested in overseas employment, Lloyd produced two segments of “Action Four,” each lasting two minutes, which were broadcast on February 1 and 2,1977. In these programs, Lloyd stated that two Wilson International clients claimed that a Wilson International employee made misrepresentations to them. Essentially, these clients asserted that the employee of Wilson International guaranteed that Wilson International would locate for them highly paid positions with substantial fringe benefits in Arab countries. Instead, a written contract between the client and Wilson International provided that the client would be responsible for contacting prospective employers. Each client only received mailing lists of prospective employers and copies of resumes. Some of these prospective employers were no longer in business. The evidence indicates that it was rare, if ever, that Wilson International clients secured jobs as attractive as promised. For these services, clients paid up to $450 upon signing the contract. Lloyd also stated on television that Wilson International had refunded one client’s money voluntarily and that it had refunded the other client’s money after “Action Four” became involved. At one point, Lloyd referred to one of these people as Raving been “ripped-off.” Another segment of the telecast also included a quote from Joe Wilson, president of Wilson International, that he appreciated having the complaints called to his attention “because we want to run a good business, and we want to treat people fairly.” After these broadcasts, Lloyd received additional complaints concerning Wilson International which he forwarded to Wilson at Wilson’s request.

Wilson International’s attorney, in oral argument, conceded, and the record reflects, that there was no evidence that Lloyd made any false statements in the broadcasts. However, he contends that the injunction was proper because of Lloyd’s motive in broadcasting the story, which ap-pellee characterized as malicious and as a deliberate attempt to harm the business as indicated by Lloyd’s use of the term “ripped-off.” We cannot agree that freedom of speech and freedom of the press are limited to those with the purest of motives. Section 8 of Article I of the Texas Constitution states:

Every person shall be at liberty to speak, write or publish his opinions on any subject, being responsible for the abuse of that privilege; and no law shall ever be passed curtailing the liberty of speech or of the press. .

The Texas Supreme Court, in Ex parte Tucker, 110 Tex. 335, 220 S.W. 75, 76 (1920), held that this section prohibits a court from limiting what a person may say of another. In so holding, the court stated:

*346 The purpose of this provision is to preserve what we call “liberty of speech” and “the freedom of the press,” and at the same time hold all persons accountable to the law for the misuse of that liberty or freedom. Responsibility for the abuse of the privilege is as fully emphasized by its language as that the privilege itself shall be free from all species of restraint. But the abuse of the privilege, , the provision commands, shall be dealt with in no other way. It is not to be remedied by denial5 of the right to speak, but only by appropriate penalties for what is wrongfully spoken.
It has never been the theory of free institutions that the citizen could say only what courts or legislatures might license him to say, or that his sentiments on any subject or concerning any person should be supervised before he could utter them. Nothing could be more odious, more vio-lative or destructive of freedom, than a system of only licensed speech or licensed printing. .
Let it once be admitted that courts may arrogate the authority of deciding what the individual may say and may not say, what he may write and may not write, and by an injunction writ require him to adapt the expression of his sentiments to only what some judge may deem fitting and proper, and there may be readily brought about the very condition against which the constitutional guaranty was intended as a permanent protection. Liberty of speech will end where such control of it begins.
For these reasons the court held that prior restraint of false and defamatory statements are prohibited under Article I, section 8. We cannot conceive that any less protection should be afforded to statements which, on the record before us, must be regarded as true.. •

The supreme court notes, however, that speech may be restrained in extreme situátions: !

Equity will protect the exercise of natural and contractual rights from interference by attempts at intimidation or coercion. Verbal or written threats may assume that character. When they do, they amount to conduct, or threatened conduct, and for that reason may properly be restrained.

Id. We find here no evidence of the kind of intimidation or coercion that may be subject to restraint. Obviously, any publication of an unflattering nature may “intimidate” or “coerce” an individual to change or rectify the behavior which, is reported if the publication has adverse business or social effects. Such an effect does not, in itself, remove its constitutional protection. “Threat,” in law, means “an expression of an intention to inflict loss or harm on another by illegal means, especially when effecting coercion or duress of the person threatened.” Webster’s New Internat’l Dictionary, p. 2633 (2d ed. unabr. 1941); see McMorries v. Hudson Sales Corp., 233 S.W.2d 938, 940 (Tex.Civ.App.—El Paso 1950, no writ). Wilson International has failed to show that any contemplated acts of Lloyd or KDFW-TV are in any way illegal. The supreme court in Tucker did not intend that any statement which may coerce another should be subjected to injunction. The coercion must be by verbal or written statements that the defendant will perform illegal acts harmful to the plaintiff. We have found no case in which the Texas Supreme Court has approved an injunction on this basis. 1 In light of the broad language of Tucker

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Bluebook (online)
550 S.W.2d 343, 2 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2149, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 2824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lloyd-v-alaska-worldwide-inc-texapp-1977.