Washington v. Thomas

778 S.W.2d 792, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1259, 1989 WL 102150
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1989
Docket54737
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 778 S.W.2d 792 (Washington v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. Thomas, 778 S.W.2d 792, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1259, 1989 WL 102150 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

CARL R. GAERTNER, Judge.

Defendants W.A. Thomas & Company, Inc. and W.A. Thomas appeal from the judgment entered against them in plaintiff Ronald Washington’s suit for libel.

For a better understanding of the facts giving rise to this litigation we commence with an identification of the parties involved:

Lucas Heights Village I, Ltd., a limited partnership, owner of Lucas Heights Village, a 192-unit apartment complex.
*794 Lucas Heights Redevelopment Corporation, the corporate general partner of Lucas Heights Village I, Ltd.
Joseph M. Brown, president of Lucas Heights Redevelopment Corporation.
Reverend R.L. Fisher, individual general partner of Lucas Heights Village I, Ltd., Bishop of the African Metropolitan Episcopal Zion Church.
W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc., a corporation, a management consulting firm under contract with Lucas Heights Village I, Ltd., to manage and operate the apartment complex.
W.A. Thomas, president of W.A. Thomas Co., Inc.
Turner Lacey, employed by W.A. Thomas Co., Inc., as director of operations.
Stephanie Stafford, employed by W.A. Thomas Co., Inc., as executive manager of the apartment complex.
Ronald Washington, a supervisor of maintenance and resident manager of the apartment complex.

On August 17, 1982, Mr. Washington was fired after a dispute with Stephanie Stafford, his immediate supervisor, over the vacation policy of W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc. Ms. Stafford testified that she refused Mr. Washington’s request for a vacation, and when he reacted in an insubordinate manner, she fired him. She testified that she felt physically threatened when he yelled incoherently, pushed books off of a file cabinet, and threw his keys at her.

After this incident Mr. Washington went to his home. He testified that he placed pieces of a disassembled pistol in an envelope and brought it to Reverend Fisher. Mr. Washington explained at trial he wanted this pistol out of his possession because Ms. Stafford knew he owned a gun and he did not want to be falsely implicated in threatening her with the pistol. He claimed he never threatened Ms. Stafford. Reverend Fisher testified that Mr. Washington came to his office with what appeared to be a fully operative loaded pistol. He recalled Mr. Washington explained he gave him the pistol so he wouldn’t blow Ms. Stafford’s head off. He obtained the pistol from Mr. Washington, removed the bullets and placed the pistol and the bullets in an envelope.

Reverend Fisher promptly reported the details of this meeting with Mr. Washington to Turner Lacey. Reverend Fisher testified he told Lacey, “Ron is going around with a gun threatening to blow Stephanie Stafford’s head off.” Turner Lacey reported this information to Stephanie Stafford who in turn advised W.A. Thomas later that day. At Mr. Thomas’s direction she wrote a letter to Mr. Washington dated August 17, 1982, advising him that his employment was terminated because of his “lack of following instructions and harsh misconduct relating to a company policy.”

The next day Stephanie Stafford prepared a typewritten memorandum based in part upon the information she had received from Turner Lacey. She filed this document in Mr. Washington’s personnel file.

On August 26, 1982, W.A. Thomas wrote a letter to Mr. Washington in which he refused a requested meeting because:

1. Your dismissal was not based on disputed company policies, but rather the belligerent behavior and unacceptable attitudes displayed at a meeting with your immediate on-sight [sic] supervisor on the morning of August 17, 1982.
2. The whole incident of the weapon charge and implications resulting from the same.

Copies of this letter were directed to Reverend Fisher, Joseph Brown, Stephanie Stafford, and Turner Lacey.

On that same date, August 26, 1982, W.A. Thomas responded by letter to the Missouri Division of Employment Security protesting Mr. Washington’s claim for unemployment benefits. This letter stated Mr. Washington’s employment had been terminated because of his “threat to do bodily harm with a loaded weapon, misconduct to his immediate supervisor ... and the belligerent actions concerning office policy....” Included as an attachment to this letter was a copy of the memorandum Stephanie Stafford had placed in Mr. Wash *795 ington’s personnel file. No copies of this letter were distributed.

On September 7,1982, in response to Mr. Washington’s request for a service letter, Turner Lacey sent him a letter including as attachments the Stafford memorandum, her letter of August 17,1982, and the W.A. Thomas letter to Mr. Washington of August 26, 1982. Copies of Lacey’s letter, including the attachments, were sent to Reverend Fisher.

The case was tried upon the allegations of plaintiff’s first amended petition. In Count I, entitled “Prima Facie Tort,” plaintiff alleged that he was employed by W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc., “and/or” Lucas Heights Redevelopment Corporation, that he was wrongfully discharged and prayed for actual and punitive damages against those corporate defendants. In each of four additional counts plaintiff alleged that his character was defamed and his reputation damaged by the malicious publication of documents “accusing plaintiff of threatening to do bodily harm with a loaded weapon to his superiors.” Count II alleged such a publication by W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc. through its agent W.A. Thomas and sought actual and punitive damages from those two defendants. Count III alleged the same publication was made by W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc. through its agent Turner Lacey and sought actual and punitive damages from those two defendants. Count IV alleged the same publication was by W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc. through its agent Stephanie Stafford and sought actual and punitive damages from those two defendants. Count V alleged, as an alternative to Count IV, that the publication was by Lucas Heights Redevelopment Corporation and its agent Stephanie Stafford, if she was not an employee of W.A. Thomas & Co., Inc., and sought actual and punitive damages against Lucas Heights Redevelopment Corporation and Stephanie Stafford. Each of these counts alleged the publication of the documents “injured plaintiff in his good name, reputation and business and have accused him of committing á crime.” No special damages were alleged.

On the fifth day of trial after the conclusion of all the evidence, plaintiff dismissed Count V, and his claims against Turner Lacey in Count III and against Stephanie Stafford in Count IV. The trial court sustained the corporate defendants’ motion for directed verdict on Count I, the wrongful discharge — Prima Facie Tort count. The remaining three counts were submitted to the jury: Count II based upon the allegedly defamatory publication by W.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
778 S.W.2d 792, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1259, 1989 WL 102150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-thomas-moctapp-1989.