Rachal v. Department of Wildlife
This text of 918 So. 2d 570 (Rachal v. Department of Wildlife) 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.
Opinion
Carla RACHAL
v.
STATE of Louisiana, DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE & FISHERIES, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*572 Daniel E. Broussard, Jr., Broussard, Bolton, Halcomb & Vizzier, Alexandria, Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees: Carla Rachal David McAlpin Leslie McAlpin.
Lewis O. Lauve, Jr., Special Assistant Attorney General, Alexandria, Counsel for Defendants/Appellants: State of Louisiana, Department of Wildlife & Fisheries Kelly Fannin.
Court composed of SYLVIA R. COOKS, MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN, and JAMES T. GENOVESE, Judges.
SULLIVAN, Judge.
Carla Rachal and David McAlpin, employees of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF), sued LDWF and Lieutenant Kelly Fannin for defamation. Leslie McAlpin, Mr. McAlpin's wife, sued Defendants for loss of consortium. The trial court awarded judgment in Plaintiffs' favor. LDWF and Lt. Fannin appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
Facts
This matter arises out of a report prepared and disseminated by Lt. Fannin. The report outlines details of an alleged telephone call Lt. Fannin received on August 27, 1999, in which the caller reported that he observed Ms. Rachal and Mr. McAlpin engaging in sex on a four-wheeler on August 26, 1999. On that date, Ms. Rachal and Mr. McAlpin were working a complaint of deer stand damage, as assigned by Lt. Fannin. Lt. Fannin did not prepare a report of the complaint until May 2000.
*573 The trial court outlined the following facts in its Written Reasons for Judgment, which we adopt as our own:
On July 1, 1999, Ms. Rachel [sic] received a one-day suspension for being out of uniform and not having her equipment in working order. Also on July 1, 1999, Mr. McAlpin was suspended one day for failure to follow his supervisor's instructions, intentionally or due to unsatisfactory performance, divulging confidential information supplied by an informant, and recording the conversation of the agents without their consent. In both occurrences, it was defendant Fannin who observed the actions of the plaintiffs that led to the disciplinary actions. Defendant Fannin initiated the complaint and recommended the disciplinary action.
On July 12, 1999, plaintiff McAlpin filed an appeal of the disciplinary action with the State Civil Service Commission. This was plaintiff McAlpin's second civil service action against defendant Fannin. McAlpin and Fannin have a documented tumultuous history.
Ms. Rachal filed a civil service appeal alleging that the disciplinary action was a result of sex discrimination by defendant Fannin. Additionally, on July 19, 1999, plaintiff Rachal was given an employee evaluation of "Needs Improvement" by defendant Fannin. On August 17, 1999, Rachal filed a Request for Review of the rating defendant Fannin had given her with the then Secretary of LDWF Jimmy Jenkins.
On August 26, 1999, defendant Fannin assigned McAlpin and Rachal to work together at the Sugar Hill Hunting Club area in Natchitoches Parish. Defendant Fannin had received an undocumented complaint regarding vandalism of deer stands on the hunting lease and sent the agents to patrol the area. Defendant Fannin and Agent Joe Tarver were also working a complaint in the area. McAlpin and Rachal testified that nothing out of the ordinary occurred that night.
Defendant Fannin testified that on August 27, 1999, he received the report of sexual misconduct on the part of the plaintiffs at his home. It was made anonymously by telephone. From that day until May 26, 2000, defendant Fannin never mentioned to anyone with the LDWF or to the plaintiffs about the report that he received.
On October 8, 1999, Secretary Jenkins granted Rachal's request for review and reversed the "Needs Improvement" rating Fannin had given her. In December of 1999, Fannin filed a petition for damages against McAlpin in Winn parish. The petition alleged that McAlpin's letter of appeal to the Civil Service Commission contained slanderous and defamatory statements about Fannin. On May 15, 2003, the suit was dismissed with prejudice for failure to prosecute.
On May 25, 2000, a public hearing was held on Rachal's Civil Service appeal in Baton Rouge before a Civil Service referee. Defendant Fannin was subpoenaed to testify. Agent Tarver and defendant Fannin rode together from Winnfield to Baton Rouge. On the ride, defendant Fannin told Agent Tarver about the August 27, 1999 complaint he received regarding McAlpin and Rachal. This was the first substantiated time that defendant Fannin told anyone about the complaint he had received. Plaintiff McAlpin testified on behalf of Rachal at the hearing. The appeal was later found to be valid in plaintiff's favor.
... Ms. [Christy] Ellington was a secretary at the LDWF Regional office.... Ellington testified that Fannin was mad that Rachal had won her appeal. Ellington based this testimony on Fannin's *574 demeanor following the ruling on the appeal.... Ms. Ellington worked in the office with Fannin for several years and stated, "If you know Kelly, he doesn't hide it when he's mad."
The day after the Rachal hearing, a meeting of LDWF agents was held at the Pineville Regional Office to gather documents that had been subpoenaed by McAlpin's attorney for his Civil Service hearing, which was to be held on June 1, 2000 at Pinecrest.... [A]t this meeting... defendant Fannin handed Agent[s] Bonner and Constance the handwritten document detailing the complaint of sexual misconduct on the part of the plaintiffs on the night of August 26, 1999, and told them to review it. Subsequently, defendant Fannin showed the document to Captain Bryan Poston who was in charge of the region. Captain Poston called Major Keith LaCaze in Baton Rouge and reported the document. He had his secretary, Christy Ellington, fax it to Major LaCaze. Ms. Ellington was told by Agent[s] Bonner and Constance to read the document.
....
... The testimony of Agent[s] Tarver, Constance, and Bonner, as well as Fannin's testimony as to what he told Melinda Martin [a confidential informant Lt. Fannin considered reliable] satisfy the publication element. Further, Major LaCaze testified that it was not proper to discuss the complaint outside the LDWF nor was it appropriate to talk to Tarver, Constance, and Bonner about the complaint.
Plaintiffs denied that they had ever engaged in sexual activities with one another. The allegations of misconduct were never proven. Further, McAlpin requested the LDWF to investigate and even offered to take a polygraph test. The plaintiffs called the president and several members of the Sugar Hill Hunting Club who attested to the fact that they were not aware of any report of sexual misconduct by plaintiffs on the night in question. Major LaCaze spoke with defendant Fannin about the report and determined it was an unsubstantiated report. Further, Major LaCaze testified, that in his opinion, based on his knowledge of McAlpin, he determined that the report was false.
Issues for Review
1) The trial court erred in finding that plaintiffs satisfied the elements of a defamation claim.
2) The trial court erred by rendering a decision based on conjecture, supposition, and hearsay.
Standard of Review
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918 So. 2d 570, 2005 WL 3579312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rachal-v-department-of-wildlife-lactapp-2005.