Moresi v. Teche Publishing Company, Inc.

298 So. 2d 901
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1974
Docket4583
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 298 So. 2d 901 (Moresi v. Teche Publishing Company, Inc.) 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
Moresi v. Teche Publishing Company, Inc., 298 So. 2d 901 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

298 So.2d 901 (1974)

George MORESI, Sr., d/b/a Cypremort Point Campground, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TECHE PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 4583.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 28, 1974.
Rehearing Denied September 4, 1974.
Writ Refused November 8, 1974.

*902 Alfred R. McCaleb, III, Baton Rouge, La., for plaintiff-appellant.

Caffery, Duhe & Davis by Patrick T. Caffery, New Iberia, Sessions, Fishman, Rosenson, Snellings and Boisfontaine, by Robert E. Winn, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before FRUGÉ, DOMENGEAUX and WATSON, JJ.

WATSON, Judge.

Plaintiff, George Moresi, Sr., d/b/a Cypremort Point Campground, is the owner of that campground and the lessee of Cypremort Point Beach in the St. Mary and Iberia Parishes of Louisiana. He filed this suit, contending that he was damaged by articles which appeared in the Daily Iberian newspaper on Sunday, June 24, 1973, and Friday, June 29, 1973, concerning Cypremort Point Beach and by a UPI wire service report. Made defendants were: Teche Publishing Company, Inc., d/b/a the Daily Iberian, a Louisiana Corporation; United Press International, a foreign corporation, which allegedly stated in a story on its service wires that Cypremort Point Beach would be closed on *903 July 4, 1973, because of water pollution; Woody Baird, the reporter who wrote the news articles; and M. A. Wolcott, the managing editor of the Daily Iberian.

Plaintiff stated in deposition that he had operated the Cypremort Point campground for two years commencing in May of 1972. The campground and a store operated by plaintiff are located on property leased for $3,000.00 a year from the Bourgeois family. Plaintiff also has a concession from the State of Louisiana to operate the Cypremort Point Beach. The concession from the state provides for a rental of $100.00 per month and requires plaintiff, as concessionaire, to keep the beach open to the public for twelve months a year and to operate and maintain rest rooms, utilities and a water well on the property. The concession agreement grants plaintiff the right to charge $1.00 per person per day as an entrance fee for the use of the beach. The property and facilities are under the jurisdiction of the Louisiana Parks and Recreation Commission. Plaintiff stated that he had spent between fourteen and fifteen thousand dollars improving and cleaning up the beach. Plaintiff admitted that the articles published in the Daily Iberian on June 24 and June 29, 1973, did not defame him personally but said that they hurt his business. The portion of the article of June 24 objected to by plaintiff is worded as follows:

"Moresi, however, said that the condition of the beach is getting better and people are commenting on it to him. But now, another problem is showing itself.
"According to the Iberia Parish Health Unit, the water at the beach is polluted. A spokesman for the health unit said that they could not recommend water contact sports at the beach area." (Exhibit M-2, TR. 146).

Mr. Moresi stated in his deposition that he felt the article made it appear that he, Moresi, was saying that the water was polluted.

Mr. Moresi also complained that, as a result of a UPI wire service story, KFRA radio and KLFY, Channel 10 TV, on Monday, July 2, 1973, broadcast a story that the Cypremort Point Beach was closed indefinitely because of pollution. As a result of these reports and those carried by the Daily Iberian newspaper, Mr. Moresi stated that his business deteriorated, resulting in only six people being in his campground the 4th of July and 115 people on the beach, an incredibly small number for that holiday. Mr. Moresi contrasted his business of the previous year, his only other year of operation, as being a good crowd consisting of two or three thousand people on the beach and 50 or 60 people at the campground.

In the deposition of Woodrow Wilson Baird, Jr., or Woody Baird, a reporter for the Daily Iberian, he stated that Leonard LeBlanc, the executive editor, assigned him to do a series of articles on Cypremort Point a week or ten days before the 4th of July. He stated that Leo Thomas of the Iberia Parish Health Unit told him that there were E Coli bacteria in the water at Cypremort Point and therefore Thomas could not recommend swimming or water contact sports. On the basis of this and other information, he wrote the article of June 24 stating that the water was polluted.

In deposition, Mr. M. A. "Red" Wolcott, publisher and editor of the Daily Iberian, stated that he was in Mexico at the time the articles in question were published and was not aware that the articles were published.

A motion for summary judgment was filed on behalf of defendants, Teche Publishing Company, Inc., M. A. Wolcott and Woody Baird. Attached to the motion were the three depositions and three sworn affidavits: one, by A. Leo Thomas, Chief Sanitarian of the Iberia Parish Health Unit, stating that he had examined the June 24 and June 29 and July 3, 1973, editions of the Daily Iberian and the articles *904 therein by Woody Baird concerning coliform bacteria in the waters of Vermillion Bay off Cypremort Point and the statements in the articles that he could not recommend water contact sports represent a true and accurate representation of what he said to Woody Baird; another, by John Koury, regional engineer for the Louisiana Department of Health in the Lafayette region, stating that he had examined the edition of the Daily Iberian for July 3, 1973; and the article concerning coliform bacteria in the waters of Vermillion Bay off Cypremort Point and that the article is true and accurate to the best of his knowledge; and a third, by Ben Potier, Chief Sanitarian in the St. Mary Parish Health Unit, stating that he had read the articles in the Daily Iberian on June 24, June 29 and July 3, 1973, concerning coliform bacteria in the waters of Vermillion Bay off Cypremort Point, that tests by the St. Mary Parish Health Unit show the presence of such bacteria, that he discussed the water quality of the area with Woody Baird prior to June 29, 1973, and stated to Mr. Baird that, although the samples indicated the water would not be dangerous for swimming, he could not recommend swimming and water contact sports in Vermillion Bay at that time.

An opposition to the motion for summary judgment was filed by attorney for plaintiff, accompanied by an affidavit from Mr. Ben Potier stating that coliform bacteria are found in every natural body of water and an affidavit from Mr. Moresi stating that Mr. Baird's articles hurt his business, that the water adjacent to the beach is safe for swimming and that Mr. Baird's articles were not based on proper research.

The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment[1] on behalf of defendants, Woody Baird, M. A. Wolcott and Teche Publishing Company, Inc.

Defendant, United Press International, filed a petition in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, Lafayette division, requesting that the state court action be removed to the federal district court under the provisions of 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1446(b).

Plaintiff, George Moresi, Sr., has appealed to this court from the trial court's granting of the motion for summary judgment on behalf of the other three defendants. We affirm.

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Related

McGowen v. Prentice
341 So. 2d 55 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
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Moresi v. Teche Publishing Co.
302 So. 2d 309 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)

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