Scripps Np Operating, LLC, a Wisconsin Limited Liability Company, Successor in Interest to Scripps Texas Newspapers, Lp D/B/A Corpus Christi Caller-Times v. Terry Carter

573 S.W.3d 781
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2019
Docket17-0046
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 573 S.W.3d 781 (Scripps Np Operating, LLC, a Wisconsin Limited Liability Company, Successor in Interest to Scripps Texas Newspapers, Lp D/B/A Corpus Christi Caller-Times v. Terry Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scripps Np Operating, LLC, a Wisconsin Limited Liability Company, Successor in Interest to Scripps Texas Newspapers, Lp D/B/A Corpus Christi Caller-Times v. Terry Carter, 573 S.W.3d 781 (Tex. 2019).

Opinion

Justice Devine delivered the opinion of the Court.

At issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether a newspaper was entitled to summary judgment in a defamation case. The former chief executive officer of the Corpus Christi Chamber of Commerce sued the Corpus Christi Caller-Times , asserting that articles reporting he had been accused of financial improprieties were defamatory. The Newspaper filed a motion for summary judgment claiming that the allegedly defamatory articles were substantially true and that an editorial was protected opinion. The trial court disagreed and denied the Newspaper's motion. The Newspaper filed an interlocutory appeal. The court of appeals agreed with the trial court that the Newspaper was not entitled to summary judgment on those grounds. 567 S.W.3d 1 , 20-21 (Tex. App.-Corpus Christi-Edinburg 2016).

In this Court, the Newspaper again asserts that the trial court should have granted summary judgment because the articles at issue were substantially true. It argues that no fact issue regarding substantial truth exists because it accurately reported the allegations of others and because statements in an editorial, which tied together the previous reporting, were non-actionable opinions. Because we agree with the court of appeals that the Newspaper was not entitled to summary judgment, we affirm.

I. Background

Terry Carter began working for the Corpus Christi Chamber of Commerce (chamber) as the president and CEO in 2004. On February 15, 2008, the Newspaper published an article online entitled "Financial, management questions raised at CC Chamber." The article stated that three chamber officials "raised what they describe as serious financial and management issues." No chamber officials would discuss the nature of the issues, but the concerns arose after the chamber chairman-elect "recommended a raise, bonus and contract extension for Carter" and the executive committee treasurer, Damon Bentley, was asked to review the chamber's financial standing. The article also noted that an emergency meeting had taken place that day from which Carter could be heard shouting.

The next day, the Newspaper printed another article in the print version of the newspaper with additional details about the meeting the day before. The article stated that three of the chamber's five executive committee members had demanded *785 the meeting to address concerns about the chamber's "financial and management practices, which Carter oversees." But before the meeting started, two of those members were informed that they were no longer eligible to serve on the committee, "meaning they can't participate in the committee's recommendation to the full board on matters involving Carter's contract." The Newspaper quoted Bentley as saying "I was saddened and I'm still confused on why two chamber executive board members had been removed from the executive committee after being asked to assist in the evaluation process of our CEO." The article again noted that the "financial concerns" arose after a raise, bonus, and contract extension were recommended for Carter.

Over the next four months, the Newspaper published over twenty more articles about the chamber and Carter. The next article was entitled "CC Chamber meeting to discuss financial irregularities" and stated that irregularities were discovered "during a performance review of president Terry Carter after a raise and bonus for Carter had been proposed." The Newspaper next reported on a special called meeting, stating that the chamber decided to conduct a full audit "after what have been described as financial irregularities were uncovered while reviewing a proposed raise and bonus for ... Carter." The article also noted "significant developments" about two of three executive committee members who brought the financial concerns to the full committee's attention and were informed by Carter and the chamber's attorney that they were no longer eligible to serve on the committee.

The headline of the next article was "Chamber CEO shifted funds, letter says," with the subtitle "Move makes loss appear to be profit, treasurer writes." The article reported on a letter from Bentley to board members and stated that Carter, "whose bonus is based on financial performance, shifted funds to make a loss look like a profit, according to [the] letter." The letter also stated that Carter deferred part of his salary and that the chamber executive vice president was also asked to defer his salary because the chamber was in a "cash crunch" and the chamber "showed a $ 40,425 profit when it should have shown a $ 61,782 loss." According to Bentley's letter, Carter also used $ 18,312 from the chamber's building funds to pay operating expenses which, according to the chamber's accountant, could "possibly forfeit the (chamber) foundation's (nonprofit) status because of the link between the CEO's bonus to the financial performance of the chamber." The article described the February 15 meeting of the executive committee as including "a shouting match with Carter and the dismissal of two committee members" and stated that, according to Bentley's letter and witness accounts, Carter "seized" the tape recording of the meeting and left the building. The article quoted from Bentley's letter: "In the end ... this comes down to trust and accountability. Removing executive committee members who voice sincere concerns, keeping taped meetings from other board members, yelling in an attempt to intimidate board volunteers ... and attempting to justify a raise based on disputable numbers do not change my fiduciary responsibility." The article reported that Carter, also in a letter to board members, said that he deferred part of his salary for tax purposes and that the failure to record the deferral was a bookkeeping error. Carter also stated in the letter that he had discussed moving funds from the chamber's building funds with Bentley and the chamber's accountant before he did so.

In another article, the Newspaper reported on a letter to board members from one of the board members who had been *786 removed. She had concerns the Chamber had not taken sufficient steps to address the financial concerns raised by Bentley and that Carter's letter to board members "gloss[ed] over financial irregularities and the declining membership numbers." The article again noted that Carter "seized" the tape of the February 15 meeting and shouted at the board members who were removed that day. The article also stated that after Bentley reviewed the chamber's finances in anticipation of a raise, bonus, and contract extension for Carter, "Bentley found that Carter had shifted funds among accounts and deferred $ 19,992 of his 2007 salary. Without those moves, the chamber's cash flow would have been negative, according to Bentley, adding that Carter's bonus is based on the chamber's financial performance." The article additionally said that according to Bentley, the chamber's accountant told him that "the chamber foundation's nonprofit status could be in jeopardy because Carter shifted chamber foundation funds to pay operating expenses and Carter's bonus is linked to the chamber's financial performance."

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573 S.W.3d 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scripps-np-operating-llc-a-wisconsin-limited-liability-company-successor-tex-2019.