Martin v. Reynolds Metals Company

224 F. Supp. 978, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10082
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedDecember 11, 1963
DocketCiv. 61-545
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 224 F. Supp. 978 (Martin v. Reynolds Metals Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Reynolds Metals Company, 224 F. Supp. 978, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10082 (D. Or. 1963).

Opinion

EAST, District Judge.

The plaintiffs (Martin) are the owners of real property referred to as the Trout-dale Ranch, located just east of the Sandy River adjacent to its confluence with the Columbia River in Multnomah County, Oregon, upon which they have during the past years operated a livestock grazing ranch.

The defendant corporation (Reynolds) is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Virginia and having extensive and wide-spread general public-consumer business. Reynolds is authorized to engage in its business in Oregon, and has been for some years past and is now operating an alumina reduction plant upon its property located just westerly of the Sandy River and in the general vicinity of Martin’s Troutdale Ranch. Martin’s action herein seeks to recover from Reynolds alleged trespass general and punitive damage sustained as the result of the escapement of large quantities of fluorides from Reynolds’ alumina reduction plant which in turn settled upon the Troutdale Ranch and rendered the forage and water thereon “contaminated and unfit for ingestion by cattle” injuring the livestock grazing on the Ranch and causing the loss of the use of the land for grazing purposes.

Reynolds denies actionable trespass on its part and affirmatively asserts that it has installed efficient fume collecting systems in its plant and that if trespass was committed, Martin’s claims thereunder are barred by the statute of limitations, and further that the claims are barred by prior recoveries and adjudications of judicial claims asserted by the Martins over the past dozen or so years.

Thus is presented the stage and backdrop of Reynolds’ counterclaim presented in these proceedings against Martin.

Reynolds’ counterclaim contains two counts — the first based upon libel and the second upon tort, referred to as “injurious falsehood” and malicious interference with Reynolds’ business relations, all arising out of the erection and maintenance by Martin upon the Ranch of a large billboard-type sign which is in plain view of westbound travelers of U. S. Highway 30 expressway as the traffic passes through the Troutdale Ranch and approaches Reynolds’ alumina reduction plant lying in view to the northwest, and reads as follows:

“THIS RANCH IS CONTAMINATED 831 Cattle Killed in past six years

FLUORIDE POISON from REYNOLDS METAL CO. kills our cattle * * * endangers human health

CONTROLS MUST BE ENFORCED

THIS STATEMENT PAID FOR BY PAUL R. MARTIN”

Martin admits the construction and maintenance of the sign, but denies that its language is defamatory of Reynolds, and affirmatively asserts that the lan *980 guage contains “true statements of judicial determination” and most significantly, that the sign is “an exercise of rights guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and of the State of Oregon.”

Reynolds seeks the recovery of resulting libel damage and, significantly for our purposes here, preliminary injunc-tive relief restraining the continued maintenance of the billboard sign and the exhibiting of its language to the public.

The Court heretofore, by order, referred Reynolds’ application for the preliminary injunction to James M. Burns, a Special Master for this Court, to hear Reynolds’ claim and submit to this Court his Special Master’s findings and conclusions.

The Special Master has heard the parties, receiving as evidence affidavits and such portions of discovery deposition evidence and testimony theretofore taken by the Special Master under discovery order of this Court “which were specifically offered (by the parties) at the preliminary injunction hearing.”

The Special Master heretofore made and filed herein his findings and conclusions and Reynolds has objected thereto as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

I, II, III, IV, V and VI, which for our purposes here are adopted by the Court but not required to be set forth herein.

VII.

There is no evidence on the record in this proceeding of a competent nature to justify a finding that such fluorides “endanger human health”; therefore such statement is unsubstantiated and untrue, EXCEPT INSOFAR AS IT CONSTITUTES A JUSTIFIABLE AND PRIVILEGED REFERENCE TO THE PERSONAL INJURY ACTIONS BROUGHT BY PLAINTIFFS AND THEIR DAUGHTER AGAINST DEFENDANT IN THIS COURT. (See Martin v. Reynolds Metal Co., D.C., 135 F.Supp. 379, and affirmed as Reynolds Metal Co. v. Yturbide, 9 Cir., 258. F.2d 321.)

Reynolds objects to that part of the finding which appears in capital letters.

VIII.

FLUORIDE IS TOXIC AND THE FLUORIDE COMPOUNDS EMANATED FROM DEFENDANT’S PLANT ARE POISONOUS; INSOFAR AS SUCH COMPOUNDS SETTLE UPON PLAINTIFFS’ LAND, THEY CONTAMINATE THE SAME; TO THAT EXTENT THE PORTIONS OF THE SIGN WHICH REFER TO POISONS AND CONTAMINATION ARE TRUE; the control system installed and maintained by Defendant is the most efficient and effective system anywhere in the United States and meets all applicable standards of the air pollution authorities of the State of Oregon; THE PORTION OF THE SIGN WHICH READS “CONTROLS MUST BE ENFORCED” CONSTITUTES NOTHING MORE THAN A MERE CALL TO ACTION BY PLAINTIFFS, WHO SEEM DETERMINED TO CIRCULATE THEIR RELIEFS AMONG THEIR FELLOW CITIZENS.

Reynolds objects to those portions of the finding that appear in capital letters.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

I.

That insofar as Defendant’s counterclaim sounds in libel, the Defendant’s remedy at law for damages is adequate, and issuance of an injunction would deprive Plaintiffs of their right to trial by jury and would be an unconstitutional denial of their right of free speech and press, hence, Defendant’s application should be denied.

II.

Insofar as Defendant’s counterclaim is based upon trade libel or disparagement of property, there has been no showing whatsoever of special damages having been sustained by Defendant and in the absence of any proof of coercion or conspiracy, an injunction should not issue.

*981 III.

In either event, Defendant’s delay in application for the preliminary injunction should bar its right to such relief at this time.

Reynolds objects to the whole of each of the three numbered conclusions, and further to the failure of the Special Master to include in his conclusions of law the following conclusion in accordance with page 16 of memorandum opinion of Special Master re defendant’s application for preliminary injunction:

“Insofar as the wording on the sign accuses Defendant of poisoning livestock and poisoning humans, it is libelous per se.”

The parties have submitted the findings and conclusions of the Special Master with Reynolds’ objections thereto for adoption or rejection by the Court upon the record as made before the Special Master, together with counsels’ briefs and memoranda.

The Special Master found (findings VI and VII) that these statements in Martin’s sign:

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. Supp. 978, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-reynolds-metals-company-ord-1963.