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Burton v. Fountainhead Development, Inc.
2017 Alas. LEXIS 35
Alaska
2017
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Background

  • Burton was hired seasonally by Princess Tours as a guest service host, primarily to work at Bear Lodge (a Fountainhead property) because he lacked transportation to other hotels.
  • During training Burton criticized Bear Lodge parking; Fountainhead managers recalled past complaints and told Princess that Burton was “not allowed” on Fountainhead property and made two specific allegations: an altercation with a guest and that he “defaced” Fountainhead property.
  • Princess removed Burton from the schedule and ultimately terminated him after Burton stated he could not reliably work at locations other than Bear Lodge due to transportation limits; Princess also marked him ineligible for rehire.
  • Burton sued Fountainhead for tortious interference with a prospective business relationship (Princess) and defamation. At bench trial the court found Fountainhead privileged generally but that two statements were defamatory per se; it awarded $15,000 general damages, denied special and punitive damages, and denied Burton’s post-trial motion to amend to add a mid‑trial republication claim.
  • The superior court concluded Burton’s termination resulted from his refusal/inability to work at other Princess locations (causation), not Fountainhead’s statements; it found the conditional business privilege was abused only with respect to the two defamatory statements.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Denial of post‑trial amendment to add mid‑trial republication libel Burton: mid‑trial letter was a new publication and was tried by consent, so amendment should be allowed Fountainhead: republication was treated as evidence of failure to cure, not a separate claim; no notice or opportunity to defend a new claim Denial affirmed — no implied consent to try a new, separate claim; letter was considered as evidence for damages on pleaded claim
Existence and scope of privilege for reporting employee concerns to Princess Burton: Fountainhead’s conduct was motivated by animus/malice, so no privilege Fountainhead: had a direct business interest in excluding Burton from its property; conditional privilege applies unless abused Privilege applies (conditional business privilege); court did not clearly err in concluding Fountainhead acted to protect legitimate interests except for two unprivileged defamatory statements
Causation for tortious interference / special damages Burton: Arnold’s statements were a substantial factor in Princess’s decision to terminate and make him ineligible for rehire Fountainhead: Burton’s inability/refusal to work elsewhere caused termination; no but‑for causation from the defamatory statements Court: no clear error — termination was caused by Burton’s refusal/inability to work other locations, not the statements; special damages not proved
Damages (general, special, punitive) Burton: award should include lost wages (special damages), higher general damages because of republication, and punitive damages due to reckless/disregard Fountainhead: general damages appropriate; no special damages causally proved; punitive damages not supported by clear & convincing evidence Court: $15,000 general damages affirmed; no special damages (economic loss not causally tied to defamation); punitive damages properly denied (recklessness not shown by clear and convincing evidence)

Key Cases Cited

  • Bendix Corp. v. Adams, 610 P.2d 24 (Alaska 1980) (recognizes conditional privilege where defendant has direct interest in contractual relations)
  • Winschel v. Brown, 171 P.3d 142 (Alaska 2007) (explains substantial‑factor test for proximate cause)
  • Alaskasland.com, LLC v. Cross, 357 P.3d 805 (Alaska 2015) (sets elements of defamation claim, including per se rule and damages framework)
  • Beaux v. Jacob, 30 P.3d 90 (Alaska 2001) (discusses standard of review and trial court discretion in damages determinations)
  • Wasserman v. Bartholomew, 38 P.3d 1162 (Alaska 2002) (bench‑trial fact‑finder receives deference on credibility and factual findings)
  • Tufco, Inc. v. Pac. Envtl. Corp., 113 P.3d 668 (Alaska 2005) (addresses Civil Rule 15(b) and difficulty of proving implied consent to try unstated issues)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Burton v. Fountainhead Development, Inc.
Court Name: Alaska Supreme Court
Date Published: Mar 17, 2017
Citation: 2017 Alas. LEXIS 35
Docket Number: 7158 S-15990
Court Abbreviation: Alaska