Robert K. Bell Enterprises, Inc. v. Tulsa County Fairgrounds Trust Authority

1985 OK 10, 695 P.2d 513, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 5, 1985
Docket59971
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1985 OK 10 (Robert K. Bell Enterprises, Inc. v. Tulsa County Fairgrounds Trust Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert K. Bell Enterprises, Inc. v. Tulsa County Fairgrounds Trust Authority, 1985 OK 10, 695 P.2d 513, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 104 (Okla. 1985).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

Appellant, Robert K. Bell Enterprises, Inc., owns and operates a facility known as Bell’s Amusement Park. Bell’s is located upon land comprising a portion of the Tulsa County Fairgrounds. The Tulsa County Fairgrounds Trust Authority leases the entire Tulsa County Fairgrounds from Tulsa County. The Trust Authority, in turn, subleases that portion of the Fairgrounds upon which the Amusement Park is located to appellant. The most recent lease agreement between appellant and the Trust Authority was entered into on June 23, 1975, to be effective from June 1, 1975 to June 1, 1985.

Appellant initiated the present action on August 16, 1982. The second amended petition, the sufficiency of which is at issue in this appeal, was filed on November 12, 1982. This petition set forth five causes of action. The first cause of action, which is not at issue, requested a declaratory judgment from the trial court that appellant was not indebted to appellee Trust Authority for any sums of money. The second cause of action pled alleged that “each and every named defendant orally stated or caused to be printed” a statement in notes to the financial statement, in connection with the 1981 audit of the Trust Authority, to the effect that an account due from appellant had been included in the accounts receivable. This explanatory note went on to indicate that appellant had been paying 15 percent of gross revenue on games and arcade while the Trust Authority contended that 25 percent was the proper rate of payment. This discrepancy was the basis for the Trust Authority’s assertion of the debt due. Appellant stated that this publication was libelous per se and that it had been damaged in the sum of one dollar and went on to request punitive damages in the sum of one million dollars.

As grounds for the third cause of action, appellant set forth a special meeting notice which stated that the purpose of the meeting would be to determine whether to make demand on appellant for payment of the sum due. The fourth cause of action was *516 based on a written memorialization of a motion made in a meeting of the trustees to the effect that the dispute with appellant over the sum due should be referred to counsel for resolution. For both the third and fourth causes of action appellant again alleged actual damages of one dollar and sought punitives in the amount of one million dollars on each count.

In the fifth and final cause of action pled by appellant, it sought redress for alleged violations of constitutional rights of due process and equal protection. The gist of appellant’s argument was that other lessees of appellee Trust Authority had been given better treatment under their leases than had appellant.

At hearing held February 28, 1983, the trial court entertained argument on demurrers filed by all named defendants. The court considered the demurrers as addressed to the second amended petition and its inclusions by reference of the earlier filed petitions. Appellant’s first pled cause of action was deemed sufficient to withstand a demurrer as to appellee Trust Authority. The remaining portions of the pleading were found to be insufficient to state a cause of action against appellee Trust Authority or the various trustees and agents of the Trust named as defendants by appellant. The trial court dismissed these named defendants from the cause and stated that this was a final order of the court. Appellant now challenges this order.

I.

In assessing appellant’s challenge to the trial court’s order we are guided by this Court’s statement from the case of White v. Wint: 1

A demurrer is a form of pleading used to challenge the legal sufficiency of an adversary’s petition. The demurrer admits that the facts as stated in the petition are accurate but it avoids the conclusion drawn from these facts by pointing out that the facts are insufficient to constitute a cause of action. Acting as a screening device, the demurrer .eliminates those cases at the pleading stage which do not warrant a trial. This is true whether the petition is attempting to state a cause of action at law or in equity, Kimmell v. Powers, 19 Okl. 339, 91 P. 687 (1907), or whether the petition is alleging different or alternate rights of recovery. Caldwell v. Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co., 187 Okl. 523, 104 P.2d 237 (1940).
The Court, when confronted with a demurrer, has the duty to liberally construe the challenged petition and to take as true all the factual allegations and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. If the Court finds any fact stated in the petition which entitles the plaintiff to any relief, the Court must overrule the demurrer. Rotramel v. Public Service Co., 546 P.2d 1015, 1919 [sic] (Okl.1975); Johnson v. Steward, 397 P.2d 907 (Okl.1965). The Court will not assume facts in favor of the petitioner which have not been averred, “since the law does not presume that a party’s pleadings are less strong than the facts of the case warrant.” Westheimer v. Byrne, 110 Okl. 107, 109, 236 P. 589, 591 (1925).

Thus, in reviewing the trial court’s order, we must determine whether appellant’s pleading stated any facts which would entitle it to relief.

II.

Appellants first three propositions of error argue that the trial court erred in sustaining demurrers to the second, third and fourth pled causes of action for the reason that the second amended petition set forth facts sufficient to establish libel per se. The question of whether a writing is libelous per se is a question of law for determination by the Court. 2 The writings which appellant alleges were libelous per se simply stated that appellant *517 owed money to the Trust Authority under their lease. It is apparent from the language of the writing presented as the basis for appellant’s second cause of action that the dispute over the sum concerned a difference of opinion over the lease provisions. 3 The writings which form the subsequent basis for the third and fourth causes of action also concern the disputed debt. The publication of a writing which merely alleges the existence of a debt does not constitute libel unless it impeaches one’s skill or knowledge or attacks one’s conduct of business. 4

Appellant argues that the mere publication of the statement that a debt is due and owing attacks its skill and conduct of business. This construction violates the basic rule that the words published must be taken in their most natural sense. 5 Also, in order to constitute libel per se the words must be capable of being construed to have only one meaning, and that one opprobrious. 6 Here the natural sense of these publications establishes that the Trust Authority considered a debt to be due from appellant but that a dispute existed as to the debt. Thus the publications may not be considered libelous per se, as the mere indication of a disputed debt is not libelous.

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1997 OK 127 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1997)
Hinesburg Sand & Gravel Co. v. State
693 A.2d 1045 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1997)
Osteopathic Hosp. Founders Ass'n, Inc. v. Splinter
955 F. Supp. 1351 (N.D. Oklahoma, 1996)
Wilhelm v. Gray
766 P.2d 1357 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
Long v. Egnor
346 S.E.2d 778 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
1985 OK 10, 695 P.2d 513, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-k-bell-enterprises-inc-v-tulsa-county-fairgrounds-trust-okla-1985.