Ferrari Posts Partial Victory in Atlanta Humane Society Suit
December 10, 2002
The Atlanta Humane Society is a
quasi-governmental entity and therefore cannot file libel suits, according to
a ruling filed today in Gwinnett Superior Court.
Judge William Ray also found that AHS Executive
Director, Bill Garrett, is a public figure, making his case much more
difficult to prove.
The ruling is a major victory for Ferrari, who
was sued by the AHS and Garrett jointly for $75,000 last December when she
referred to Garrett as "Mr. Kill" in an Internet e-mail group.
Because governmental entities are prohibited by
law from filing defamation suits, Judge Ray dismissed the Humane Society from
the suit.
"The question for this Court appears to be a
question of first impression under Georgia law; that is, should the
prohibition on a government entity suing for defamation extend to a private,
non-profit entity that through a contract performs essential and core
governmental functions; that is, animal control, animal shelter operations,
and enforcement of the ordinances related thereto."
"This Court is persuaded that such a bar
should and does exist under Georgia law. Plaintiff Atlanta Humane Society
receives in excess of $2,000,000.00 annually in public funds from Fulton
County to carry out the County's animal control functions ... Indeed, as the
Contract between Atlanta Humane Society and Fulton County so clearly and
plainly sets forth, Fulton County has even deputized employees of Atlanta
Humane Society to assist in carrying out these laws and enforcing governmental
regulations."
"If Plaintiff Atlanta Humane Society were
not subject to the same types of criticism that governmental entities would be
subject to in the performance of these functions, it would frustrate the
ability of the general public to complain and otherwise effectuate necessary
and desirable change when those services fall below standards which the public
demands," Judge Ray wrote.
The suit remains active with Garrett as the sole
plaintiff, but today's ruling that he is a public figure means he must prove
Ferrari made her statements with actual malice, as required by the landmark
Times vs. Sullivan case.
Ferrari is thrilled with the decision.
"I have ripped away the veil of secrecy the
Atlanta Humane Society has been hiding behind," Ferrari said.
"Although the Atlanta Humane Society is a
law enforcement and tax collection arm of the Fulton County government, they
claim to be a private entity, hiding their records from the public, refusing
to comply with open records requests and filing vicious illegal
lawsuits," Ferrari said.
"The Court saw through their lies. The
Atlanta Humane Society broke the law when they sued me."
Both sides can appeal the decision. If they
choose not to appeal, or their appeals are denied, the case will proceed to
trial.
"Garrett himself admitted that the Humane
Society has lost $250,000 as a result of this lawsuit, yet he continues to
waste tens of thousands of Humane Society dollars that were donated for the
animals, not judicial abuse," Ferrari said.
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