TRT DEVELOPMENT CO.-KC v. Meyers

15 S.W.3d 281, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1935, 2000 WL 305505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 2000
Docket13-98-254-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 15 S.W.3d 281 (TRT DEVELOPMENT CO.-KC v. Meyers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TRT DEVELOPMENT CO.-KC v. Meyers, 15 S.W.3d 281, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1935, 2000 WL 305505 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice DORSEY.

Appellants TRT Development Company-KC, Shoreline Operating Company, and Wynn Chapman appeal a judgment rendered on a jury verdict that they are hable to Mark Meyers for defamation. By four issues appellants challenge the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. Meyers raises four cross-issues for our consideration. We reverse and render.

Factual Background

On Sunday May 19, 1996 Valero Refining Company held its annual family day picnic and golf tournament at the Kings Crossing Golf and Country Club located in Corpus Christi. Mark Meyers, an employee of Valero, played in the tournament with a group of three other Valero employees. After the tournament Meyers went into the Kings Crossing pro shop and gave his score card to Chad Salerno and Mark McCarthy, both of whom worked in the pro shop. Meyers stayed in the pro shop to look at the merchandise, and Salerno went to the pool area. Salerno returned about twenty minutes later and saw that Meyers was still in the pro shop, standing behind a display rack. About five minutes later Salerno walked towards Meyers and noticed that he had bulges in the pockets of his shorts. When Meyers first entered the pro shop Salerno did not recall seeing anything in his pockets. As Salerno approached, Meyers turned, walked away, and left the pro shop. As Meyers was leaving Salerno heard hangers rattling where Meyers had been standing. After Salerno found some empty shirt hangers where Meyers had been standing he and McCarthy followed Meyers to his truck, which was parked in the parking lot. McCarthy testified that when he followed Meyers into the parking lot Meyers “had his hands kind of cupped around his shorts, holding them up, and they were bulging out.” While Meyers was in his truck Salerno and McCarthy asked him if they could see what was in his pockets. Meyers ignored them and closed the door. He backed up without removing the sun screen from his windshield and drove away.

After Meyers’ departure Salerno discovered his name by questioning the three persons who had played golf in the same group with Meyers that day. Shortly thereafter the pro shop employees reported Meyers’ behavior to Wynn Chapman, the general manager of Kings Crossing. A short time later Chapman had a private meeting in his office with Robert Grimes. Grimes was at Kings Crossing for the event and worked as Valero’s manager of employee relations and public affairs. Concerning this meeting Grimes testified that Chapman had told him that Valero

had one employee that was observed around the shirt rack for sometime; the employee left in a hurry; they observed two or three shirts were missing from the rack; they approached the employee out in the parking lot, and he drove off in a hurry without responding to their questions.

*285 During trial Meyers’ counsel asked Grimes, “Based on those statements that he made to you at that time, was your understanding that Mr. Chapman was telling you that there had been a theft by a Valero employee?” He replied, ‘Tes, basically.” Grimes understood from Chapman that Meyers was the employee suspected of the theft.

The day after the incident Meyers told Grimes what had happened. Meyers admitted to being in the pro shop after the tournament, that he left the pro shop, and that one or two Kings Crossing employees approached him in the parking lot. Meyers said that an employee told him that he looked kind of fat. Meyers cussed at him and drove off. Meyers stated that he had brought “koozies” to the tournament and had stuffed them in his pockets, thus accounting for the bulges there. He denied taking anything from the pro shop.

Valero sent its security supervisor, Gwen Henzi, to Kings Crossing to investigate the theft allegations, and also conducted an in-house investigation. Henzi’s investigation did not determine that Meyers had stolen anything from the pro shop. The in-house investigation showed that Meyers had been drinking alcoholic beverages during the tournament and that he was “kind of loud and rowdy” during the tournament. People who played golf on the course said that Meyers was intoxicated. For disciplinary reasons Valero suspended Meyers for ten days without pay. Valero also requested that he undergo substance-abuse evaluation. Grimes’ testimony was that Meyers was not punished for being accused of a theft. In June 1997 Valero fired Meyers because he had filed a lawsuit 1 against Valero and because he had recorded telephone conversations with Valero employees.

Meyers sued TRT Development Company-KC, 2 Shoreline Operating Co., 3 and Wynn Chapman (collectively appellants) for tortious interference with his employment contract with Valero and for defamation. Meyers claimed that Wynn Chapman and Chad Salerno had made defamatory statements about him. The case proceeded to jury trial and resulted in jury findings that only Chapman had made defamatory statements about Meyers, that Chapman’s statements were not made with actual malice, and that appellants did not tortiously interfere with Meyers’ contract. The jury awarded Meyers $54,239.50 in lost wages.

On February 18, 1998 the court signed the judgment awarding $54,239.50 to Meyers. Appellants appeal from this judgment.

Wynn Chapman’s

Statements to Robert Grimes

By their second issue appellants assert that the evidence showed as a matter of law that Wynn Chapman’s statements to Robert Grimes are qualifiedly privileged and therefore not actionable. In its answer to question one the jury found that Chapman’s statements to Grimes in Chapman’s office were defamatory.

Appellants filed a motion for judgment n.o.v., contending that they had established qualified privilege as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motion. A trial court should grant a motion for judgment n.o.v. when the evidence is conclusive and one party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. City of Dallas v. GTE Southwest, Inc., 980 S.W.2d 928, 938 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 1998, writ denied). See Mancorp, Inc. v. Culpepper, 802 S.W.2d 226, 227 (Tex.1990).

*286 Slander is a defamatory statement that is orally communicated to a third person without legal excuse. Randall’s Food Markets, Inc. v. Johnson, 891 S.W.2d 640, 646 (Tex.1995); Hardwick v. Houston Lighting & Power Co., 881 S.W.2d 195, 197 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1994, writ dism’d w.o.j.). Slanderous statements are conditionally or quali-fiedly privileged and therefore not actionable when “made in good faith on any subject matter in which the author has an interest, or with reference to which he has a duty to perform to another person having a corresponding interest or duty.” Rogers v. Cassidy,

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15 S.W.3d 281, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1935, 2000 WL 305505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trt-development-co-kc-v-meyers-texapp-2000.