North Mississippi Communications, Inc. v. DeSoto County Board of Supervisors

681 F. Supp. 1185, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1122, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2143, 1988 WL 22167
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedMarch 8, 1988
DocketDC81-220-NB-O
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 681 F. Supp. 1185 (North Mississippi Communications, Inc. v. DeSoto County Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Mississippi Communications, Inc. v. DeSoto County Board of Supervisors, 681 F. Supp. 1185, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1122, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2143, 1988 WL 22167 (N.D. Miss. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BIGGERS, District Judge.

This case involves a small county newspaper, once influential and potent in its county but later devitalized and enfeebled by a combination of people, circumstances, and institutions it had sought to influence in order to maintain its own position of dominance in the county. In its later days before it was taken over by new owners, the newspaper fired a broadside of cannon fire at those it sought to hold legally accountable for its demise. Those receiving the fire were a fledgling newspaper from the other side of the county, a banking institution, the DeSoto County Board of Supervisors, and individual persons associated with those organizations. The volley of charges included violations of antitrust laws, civil rights laws, and state laws of libel.

After a bench trial the court dismissed the charges at the close of the plaintiffs’ case for failing to present sufficient evidence to justify the allegations charged. The order of this court was affirmed by the appellate court 1 as to the dismissal of the antitrust and libel charges but the appellate court remanded the case back to the trial court for findings of fact on the claim brought against the DeSoto County Board of Supervisors under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This court conducted a second trial and, after hearing testimony from the defendants in regard to the section 1983 claim and consideration of the briefs and memoranda submitted by the parties, the court is now rendering its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The only defendants now remaining are the Board of Supervisors of DeSoto County, Mississippi. Specifically, the plaintiff Times has alleged that the Board of Supervisors violated the Times’ First Amendment rights by withholding newspaper advertising from the Times and giving it to its competitor, the Tribune, in retailiation of the Times publishing critical stories and editorials about the Board of Supervisors.

The plaintiff, North Mississippi Communications, Inc., was the owner of the North Mississippi Times newspaper, hereinafter referred to as the “Times,” a weekly newspaper in DeSoto County. The DeSoto County Tribune, hereinafter referred to as the “Tribune,” was another newspaper on the other side of the county but since its inception had been only a fledgling paper and never had sought to invade the area served by the Times or compete with the Times for the business of publishing county legal advertisements. When the fledgling Tribune began stretching its wings and submitted a bid to the county Board to publish county Board proceedings and legal advertisements, which are required by law to be published in a newspaper of the county, the Times did not take kindly to this *1187 attempted invasion of its heretofore exclusive domain and in April, 1976, brought suit in state court to enjoin the Board of Supervisors from publishing any county notices in the Tribune, claiming that the fledgling was too small to meet the qualifications required to publish county legal notices. The Times’ claim was rejected by the state court and, for the first time, DeSoto County had two newspapers rather than only one competing for the county’s business.

The county’s legal notices consisted of two types which are required by law to be published — (1) the monthly Board proceedings and (2) the notices advertising for bids on county purchases and county contracts. The Board determined that only the monthly proceedings were required to be placed with the lowest bidding newspaper. The other notices, which were more desirable from a newspaper’s point of view because there were more of them, could be placed with any qualified papers at the Board’s discretion. Before the Tribune was ruled qualified to publish the notices, the Times was the only paper in the county qualified to publish the notices and so received them all. Then the Times found itself having to compete with the new force. The financial amounts involved in publishing these legal notices were rather insignificant in the overall scheme of things. For the five and a half years which are the subject of this suit, the total amount of the Board’s legal ads published in both newspapers totaled only approximately $4,600.00 a year.

Rejected by the state court in its attempt to maintain a monopoly on the county legal notices, the Times nevertheless was undaunted in its determination to prevail on this issue. So when the time came for the county to receive bids to publish the monthly Board proceedings, the Times, through its editor, bid zero dollars ($0.00) to publish the monthly proceedings. The editor of the Times later stated that it was her impression at the time that if her newspaper received the business of publishing the monthly Board proceedings, it would also get the better paying business of printing the legal notices; however, her impression was ill-founded. The Board decided it had the discretion to publish the legal notices in either of the two qualified papers regardless of who published the monthly Board proceedings and it began to grant this business to both papers. When the Times saw that its $0.00 bid on the Board proceedings was not going to result in the Times also getting all of the legal notices and the accompanying income, the Times notified the Board in writing on August 6, 1976 that it was withdrawing its agreement to print the Board’s monthly proceedings and the Tribune could have the business. That notification was only a few months after the Times had agreed to make these publications.

The record shows that after the Tribune began successfully competing and receiving county business the personal relations between the members of the Board of Supervisors and the editor of the Times, already strained, rapidly deteriorated. The Times wrote castigating and critical articles and editorials about the Board and its members, as was its constitutional right to do. The record also shows that the Board began to allocate more of its legal notice business to the Tribune. In fiscal 1977, the amount of legal notice business was approximately equally divided between the Times and the fledgling Tribune. Again, in fiscal 1979, the Times attempted to secure the county’s legal advertising business and again bid $0.00 to publish the monthly Board proceedings, but again after the Board accepted the bid of the Times to print the monthly Board proceedings, the Times withdrew its agreement and suggested that the Board give this business to the Tribune, which the Board quickly did.

At one point in 1978 a detestable and abhorrent letter was mailed to hundreds of persons in the county degrading and libeling the editor of the Times. The evidence shows that the names and addresses of the receivers of that despicable document were taken from a list of Times subscribers. The Board had asked the Times for such a list sometime before the mailing of the letter, but no evidence was presented at trial to prove with specificity who was responsible for these libelous acts. Many people could have had access to the list, *1188 and there is no more evidence in the record to point to the Board than to other persons. Would that the plaintiff could prove the identity of the culprits. Punitive damages surely would lie.

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681 F. Supp. 1185, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1122, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2143, 1988 WL 22167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-mississippi-communications-inc-v-desoto-county-board-of-msnd-1988.