Walpole v. Charleston County

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 6, 2019
Docket5691
StatusPublished

This text of Walpole v. Charleston County (Walpole v. Charleston County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walpole v. Charleston County, (S.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Amy Garrard and Lee Garrard, Guardians Ad Litem for R.C.G., A Minor; and Dean Frailey and Kathryn Frailey, Guardians Ad Litem for C.F., A Minor, Richard Nelson and Cheryl Nelson, Guardians Ad Litem for D.G.N., A Minor; Adam Olsen Ackerman; and A.E.P., III, Plaintiffs,

v.

Charleston County School District, Kevin Clayton, Axxis Consulting Company, and Jones Street Publishers, LLC, Defendants,

And

Eugene H. Walpole, Plaintiff,

Charleston County School District, Kevin Clayton, Axxis Consulting Company, and Jones Street Publishers, LLC, Defendants,

Of Whom Eugene H. Walpole, Amy Garrard and Lee Garrard, Guardians Ad Litem for R.C.G., A Minor; and Dean Frailey and Kathryn Frailey, Guardians Ad Litem for C.F., A Minor, Richard Nelson and Cheryl Nelson, Guardians Ad Litem for D.G.N., A Minor; Adam Olsen Ackerman; and A.E.P., III, are the Appellants,

Of Which Jones Street Publishers, LLC, is the Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2016-002525 Appeal From Charleston County Jean H. Toal, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5691 Heard April 1, 2019 – Filed November 6, 2019

AFFIRMED

John E. Parker and William F. Barnes, III, of Peters, Murduagh, Parker, Eltzroth, & Detrick, P.A., of Hampton, for Appellants.

Wallace K. Lightsey and Meliah Bowers Jefferson, of Wyche, PA, of Greenville, for Respondent.

GEATHERS, J.: In this defamation action, Appellants—six members of the 2014-2015 Academic Magnet High School (AMHS) football team and their head coach, Eugene Walpole (Coach Walpole)—appeal the circuit court's order granting summary judgment to Respondent Jones Street Publishers. Appellants contend the circuit court erred in (1) finding the statements of fact in certain articles published by Jones Street Publishers are protected by the fair report privilege, (2) finding the opinions expressed in the articles are not actionable, (3) finding Appellants have not shown proof of injury to reputation, (4) finding the alleged defamatory statements were not "of and concerning" the students, and (5) finding Coach Walpole has not shown that Jones Street Publishers acted with actual malice. We affirm.

FACTS/ PROCEDURAL HISTORY Appellants initiated this defamation action against Jones Street Publishers following its publication of two opinion editorials in the Charleston City Paper (City Paper)1 concerning a post-game watermelon ritual performed by the AMHS football team. News regarding the watermelon ritual began on October 21, 2014, when the

1 Jones Street Publishers owns and publishes the City Paper. superintendent of Charleston County School District (the School District), Dr. Nancy McGinley, issued a press release stating,

There was an allegation related to inappropriate post game celebrations by the Academic Magnet High School (AMHS) Football Team. An investigation was conducted and, as a result of the investigation, the head football coach will no longer be serving as a coach for Charleston County School District.

Following this press release, Superintendent McGinley held a press conference in which she described the post-game ritual that prompted the investigation. Superintendent McGinley stated that "allegations" were brought to her attention by one of the School District's board members who indicated AMHS's football team was practicing a watermelon ritual that involved students making "monkey sounds" as part of their post-game celebration. She expressed that the board member was concerned about the "racial stereotypes related to this type of ritual." Superintendent McGinley contacted AMHS's principal to investigate the matter. The principal indicated that "the coaches were aware of the ritual following the victories[,] but they did not observe any cultural insensitivities." The principal reported back to Superintendent McGinley that it was an "innocent ritual." However, Superintendent McGinley decided that further investigation was necessary because the board member stated that the football team engaged in a "tribal-like chant that [was] animalistic or monkey-like."

Superintendent McGinley asked the School District's diversity consultant, Kevin Clayton and Associate Superintendent Louis Martin to conduct the investigation. Mr. Clayton and Mr. Martin interviewed the students on the football team and the coaches. The investigation revealed that "players would gather in a circle and smash the watermelon while others were either standing in a group or locking arms and making chanting sounds that were described as 'Ooo ooo ooo,' and several players demonstrated the motion." Superintendent McGinley stated the AMHS team named the watermelons "Bonds Wilson"2 and drew a face on each watermelon "that could be considered a caricature." A copy of the caricature that

2 Bonds Wilson is the name of a formerly segregated African-American school that was located at the campus where AMHS is now located and was named in honor of two prominent African-American educators from Charleston. was drawn on the watermelons was shown at the press conference.3 Superintendent McGinley concluded the press conference by stating that it was "our conclusion that the accountability lies with the adults" and that the Charleston County School District (the School District) had "taken action to relieve the head coach of his responsibilities." No students were named during the press conference.

After the press conference, several news media outlets ranging from national publications to the AMHS's newspaper reported on the firing of Coach Walpole, and numerous commentators expressed their opinions concerning the post-game ritual.

City Paper's editor, Chris Haire, watched Superintendent McGinley's press conference by a live television broadcast from the School District's public hearing room. After viewing the press conference, Mr. Haire wrote an opinion editorial about the events described entitled, "Melongate: Big toothy grins, watermelons, and monkey sounds don't mix," which was published in the City Paper on October 21, 2014. The article, in its entirety, provided,

Today, Charleston was consumed by one story and one story only: the removal of Academic Magnet football coach Bud Walpole amid allegations that his players more or less behaved like racist douchebags. And if there's one lesson to be learned from all of this[,] it's this: big toothy grins, watermelons, and monkey noises don't mix. Any sensible person can see that.

Apparently not. And apparently not the coaching staff and the players on the Academic Magnet Raptors.

Somewhere along the way in this year's unexpectedly successful season, the Raptors took a liking to buying watermelons before their games. They apparently drew a face on it each time—a big toothy, grinning face. The first time the watermelon was named Junior. The next time it was Bonds Wilson, the name of the campus the AMHS shares with School of the Arts. That name stuck.

But here's where the things get even worse. At the close of each game, the players smashed the watermelon on the

3 The picture was drawn by the same football player who drew the faces on the watermelons during most of the post-game celebrations. ground while reportedly making the monkey-like sounds of 'ooh ooh ooh ooh.' Apparently, the players did this after four or five games, each time evidently after the largely white Raptor squad beat one of their opponents, each one largely an African-American team. Parents of players on one of the opposing teams reportedly brought this to the attention of African-American Board member Michael Miller last week.

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Bluebook (online)
Walpole v. Charleston County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walpole-v-charleston-county-scctapp-2019.