ROBERTS v. BUSH

2023 OK CIV APP 32
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 10, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 OK CIV APP 32 (ROBERTS v. BUSH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ROBERTS v. BUSH, 2023 OK CIV APP 32 (Okla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

ROBERTS v. BUSH
2023 OK CIV APP 32
Case Number: 121284
Decided: 08/10/2023
Mandate Issued: 09/21/2023
DIVISION III
THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, DIVISION III


Cite as: 2023 OK CIV APP 32, __ P.3d __

SEAN ROBERTS, Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
CAROL BUSH, Defendant/Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF
TULSA COUNTY, OKLAHOMA

HONORABLE DAMAN H. CANTRELL, TRIAL JUDGE

AFFIRMED

C. Scott Loftis, LOFTIS LAW FIRM, Ponca City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff/Appellant,

Joel L. Wohlgemuth, Chad J. Kutmas, NORMAN WOHLGEMUTH, LLP, Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Defendant/Appellee.

THOMAS E. PRINCE, PRESIDING JUDGE:

¶1 Plaintiff/Appellant, Sean Roberts, was a candidate for Oklahoma Labor Commissioner during the 2022 election cycle. Defendant/Appellee, Carol Bush held a press conference on August 8, 2022, during which she asserted that "[a] judge found, 'the court is fearful that the minor children will suffer immediate and irreparable injury,' in a very strong statement against Roberts. This is based upon sworn affidavits by his previous wife . . . ." Bush further concluded that this made him "grossly unfit for higher office, or his current office for that matter." Eight days later, on August 16, Mr. Roberts filed the instant action and sought relief under a claim of slander per se. Ms. Bush filed a Motion to Dismiss on January 20, 2023, pursuant to the Oklahoma Citizens Participation Act. See 12 O.S. § 1430et seq. A hearing was held on April 6, 2023, and the Motion to Dismiss was granted by the trial court on April 17, 2023. Mr. Roberts has appealed that order. After reviewing the record, we find that Mr. Roberts was deficient in his duty to establish a prima facie case for slander and that the trial court did not commit error. We, therefore, affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 This appeal stems from a dispute between two former members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives. Ms. Bush had served for six years before retiring in November, 2022. During her time in office, Ms. Bush was elected House Chair for the bicameral Legislative Women's Caucus. In 2022, Mr. Roberts, also then a member of the Oklahoma House, became a candidate for the statewide office of Oklahoma Labor Commissioner. His official office in the Oklahoma House of Representative did not expire until January 2023. On August 8, 2022, approximately two weeks before the run-off primary election in the Republican Primary for Oklahoma Labor Commissioner, Ms. Bush held a press conference on behalf of the Legislative Women's Caucus, requesting that Mr. Roberts drop out of the race for Labor Commissioner. She also caused a Press Release to be published.

¶3 The Press Release issued by Ms. Bush included the following:

Denouncing Candidate's History of Abuse and Unsuitable Candidacy

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Rep. Carol Bush, House Chair of the Women's Caucus, and the following women of the legislature...[names are omitted]...declare Rep. Sean Roberts, candidate for Labor Commissioner, grossly unfit for higher office, or his current office for that matter.
"Rep. Roberts' past behavior of threats and controlling behavior towards his previous wife and minor kids are characteristics of someone who should not hold any office and are inexcusable." This is according to a joint statement of the undersigned.
A judge found, "the court is fearful that the minor children will suffer immediate and irreparable injury," in a very strong statement against Roberts. This is based upon sworn affidavits by his previous wife....
"We find it to be repugnant. The claims of emotional, physical, and psychological abuse are all disqualifiers for office." This in a continuation of the joint statement.

(emphasis added).

¶4 Ms. Bush argued that falsity or reckless disregard concerning the statements she made in the Press Release could not be shown because those statements were "based upon" the documents she submitted to the trial court on January 20, 2023, as exhibits to her Motion to Dismiss. Those documents show, in part, that Mr. Roberts and his ex-wife were divorced in the State of Tennessee during May, 2003. Various statements of alleged abuse were made by Mr. Roberts' ex-wife in a Complaint for Divorce filed during March, 2002, and in a Petition for Orders of Protection filed during November, 2002. Although the Tennessee court did not specifically find that Mr. Roberts committed acts of domestic abuse, at the divorce hearing during May, 2003, the court stated on the record:

You tell me that you cannot remember whether you physically assaulted her, but you can't tell me that you did not, so the Court has to consider that.

The Tennessee court specifically found that Mr. Roberts had harassed his wife and the court further found that both parties admitted calling each other vile, ugly names. On the other hand, the Tennessee court found that Mr. Roberts was a fit parent and granted him unsupervised parenting time with the his children.

¶5 In a subsequent filing in May 2012, approximately nine years later following the 2003 divorce, Mr. Roberts' ex-wife filed a Petition to modify the parenting time schedule with the minor children. That Petition primarily focused on the children's alleged desire, as teenagers, to not be required to spend extended amounts of time in Oklahoma with their father during the summer. The Petition included allegations that Mr. Roberts' living conditions were not appropriate, that one of the children wished to participate in extra-curricular activities in Tennessee during the summer, that Mr. Roberts' ex-wife had information that led her to believe that Mr. Roberts continued to use corporal punishment on the children, and that he allegedly yelled and cursed at the children. The record shows that, based upon those allegations, not the allegations of abuse from 2002, the Tennessee court issued a Temporary Emergency Injunction on June 11, 2012, which stated, in part, the following:

After reviewing the pending petition in this matter, the Court is fearful that the minor children will suffer immediate and irreparable injury before a hearing can be held to determine whether Father shall be allowed to exercise Summer Vacation with the minor children, and, if so, what terms and conditions will be placed on that parenting time.

(emphasis added). The appellate record does not include any documents to demonstrate the outcome of the 2012 Petition to Modify that had been filed in the Tennessee proceedings.

¶6 During the press conference on August 8, 2023, eleven years following the 2012 Motion to Modify proceedings and nineteen years following the 2003 divorce, Ms. Bush stated, inter alia, that:

This violent behavior has no place in politics, governance, or leadership. Not standing up and saying anything about this abuse sends a message that it is okay. And it's not okay.
Unfortunately, we continue to promote and elect abusers to leadership roles; national politicians, professional sports players, athletes, and local officials. It is time that we stand up against those who exhibit these violent behaviors.

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ROBERTS v. BUSH
2023 OK CIV APP 32 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 OK CIV APP 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-bush-oklacivapp-2023.