Defamation Chapter 4: Libel and slander - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

Defamation Chapter 4: Libel and slander

Description:

Communications Law. COMM 407, CSU Fullerton DEFAMATION CHAPTER 4: LIBEL AND SLANDER * * Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988) Falwell sued for: 1. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:220
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: MariuszOz
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Defamation Chapter 4: Libel and slander


1
DefamationChapter 4 Libel and slander
  • Communications Law. COMM 407, CSU Fullerton

2
Protection of Persons Reputation
  • Basic human dignity protection of ones
    reputation from unjustified invasion and wrongful
    hurt

3
Defamation of character
  • Wrongfully hurting a persons good reputation
  • Slander (spoken) and Libel (written)
  • Defamation is a civil wrong (tort)
  • Any living person or legal entity (e.g.,
    corporations) may sue for defamation.
  • Special case groups (members must be affected
    as individuals)
  • Government organizations/agencies may not sue

4
Libel suits are troublesome
  • The most common legal problem faced by a person
    who work in the mass media about 75 lawsuits
    filed against the media are in this category
  • Lawsuits take a lot of money and time
  • Damage claims are often outrageous
  • Libel law is complicated and confusing (often
    judges make erroneous decisions)
  • Some plaintiffs file frivolous libel lawsuits to
    silence the critics in the media

5
Erroneous decisions
  • For most judges a libel case is a new experience
  • Jurors are confused by the legal concepts e.g.,
    actual malice
  • Thus
  • 75 of libel cases are overturned by appeal courts

6
The Lawsuit as a weapon
  • Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation
    (SLAPP) Run that story and we will take you to
    court
  • Although 90 of SLAPP lawsuits fail, they are
    intended to intimidate and silence a less
    powerful critic by so severely burdening them
    with the cost of a legal defense that they
    abandon their criticism.

7
In 1992 California enacted a statute intended to
prevent the misuse of litigation in SLAPP suits.
  • It provides for a special motion at the outset of
    a lawsuit to strike a complaint where the
    complaint arises from conduct that falls within
    the rights of free speech and lacks any basis of
    genuine substance, evidence, or prospect of
    success.
  • If this is demonstrated then the burden of proof
    shifts to the plaintiff, to present evidence
    demonstrating a reasonable probability of
    succeeding in their case by showing an actual
    wrong would exist as recognized by law, if the
    facts claimed were borne out.
  • The filing of an anti-SLAPP motion stays all
    discovery.

8
Elements of defamation
  • Defamatory content
  • Identification
  • Publication
  • Falsity
  • Fault
  • Harm / Compensation

9
Defamatory content
  • A communication which has the tendency to so harm
    the reputation of another as to lower him/her in
    the estimation of the community or to deter third
    persons from associating with him/her

10
Defamatory content
  • Imputations of criminal behavior
  • Sexual references and implications
  • Personal habits (honesty, integrity, etc)
  • Ridicule (showing someone uncommonly foolish or
    unnatural)
  • Business reputation
  • Disparagement of property (product)

11
Defamatory content
  • Libel per se (in itself damages are implied).
    A statement that is defamatory on its face
    (regardless of context) murderer, rapist, etc.
  • Libel per quod depending on the situation /
    context communist, liberal, right-winger, etc.
  • Today the distinction is not important the
    plaintiff needs to prove damages in both

12
Fair Comment and CriticismFact versus Opinion
(p. 143)
  • Expressions of pure judgments are not subject to
    libel lawsuits
  • But
  • Expressions of opinion may often imply an
    assertion of objective fact. Couching such
    statements in terms of opinion is often not
    sufficient.

13
Identification
  • At least some of the readers or listeners must
    understand to whom the defamatory statement
    refers.
  • Plaintiff explicitly named
  • Suggesting plaintiffs actual name
  • Picture, drawing, description
  • Similarities to fictional characters

14
Publication
  • Who made the statement?
  • Who disseminated it?
  • Who repeated it?
  • It must be communicated to a third person,
    someone other than the plaintiff or defendant
  • Internet services are generally exempt from
    liability

15
Fault standard for truth/falsityThe old strict
liability standard (now unconstitutional)
  • Strict liability on the part of the defendant
  • a defendant could be liable for defamation merely
    for publishing a false and defamatory statement
  • The rules did not require that the defendant knew
    that the statement was false or defamatory in
    nature.
  • The only requirement was that the defendant must
    have intentionally or negligently published the
    information.

16
New York Times v Sullivan (1964)
  • An ad in the N.Y. Times alleged that the arrest
    of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Alabama
    was part of a campaign to destroy King's efforts
    to integrate public facilities and encourage
    blacks to vote.
  • L. B. Sullivan, the Montgomery city commissioner,
    filed a libel action against the newspaper
    claiming that the allegations against the police
    defamed him personally.
  • Under Alabama law, Sullivan did not have to prove
    that he had been harmed and a defense claiming
    that the ad was truthful was unavailable since
    the ad contained factual errors. Sullivan won a
    500,000 judgment.

17
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)
  • Question 
  • Did Alabama's libel law, by not requiring
    Sullivan to prove that an advertisement
    personally harmed him and dismissing the same as
    untruthful due to factual errors,
    unconstitutionally infringe on the First
    Amendment's freedom of speech and freedom of
    press protections?

18
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)
  • Decision 9-0 for New York Times
  • The Court held that the First Amendment protects
    the publication of all statements, even false
    ones, about the conduct of public officials
    except when statements are made with actual
    malice
  • that the statement was made with knowledge that
    it was false or with reckless disregard of
    whether it was false or not.

19
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)
  • The debate on public issues should be
    uninhibited, robust, and wide open, and that it
    may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes
    unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and
    public officials
  • (from Justice Brennans opinion)

20
Public persons and officials
  • Public figures are those who thrust themselves
    into the forefront of particular public
    controversies in order to influence the
    resolution of the issues involved
  • Public officials are those who have substantial
    government responsibility

21
Gertz v. Welch (1974)(the new private person
standard)
  • Gertz was an attorney hired by a family to sue a
    police officer who had killed the family's son.
  • In a magazine American Opinion, the John Birch
    Society accused Gertz of being a "Leninist" and a
    "Communist-fronter" because he chose to represent
    clients who were suing a law enforcement officer.
  • Gertz lost his libel suit because a lower court
    found that the magazine had not violated the
    actual malice test for libel which the Supreme
    Court had established in New York Times v.
    Sullivan (1964).

22
Gertz v. Welch (1974)(the new private person
standard)
  • Question 
  • Does the First Amendment allow a newspaper or
    broadcaster to assert defamatory falsehoods about
    an individual who is neither a public official
    nor a public figure?

23
Gertz v. Welch (1974)(the new private person
standard)
  • Decision 5 to 4 for Gertz
  • The Court reversed the lower court decision.
  • The application of the New York Times v. Sullivan
    standard in this case was inappropriate because
    Gertz was neither a public official nor a public
    figure.
  • Ordinary citizens should be allowed more
    protection from libelous statements than
    individuals in the public eye.
  • However, the actual malice standard could be
    used in assessing claims for punitive damages by
    private persons.

24
The Gertz Ruling (1974) (the new private person
standard)
  • As long as they do not impose liability without
    fault (strict liability), states are free to
    establish their own standards of liability for
    defamatory statements made about private
    individuals.
  • Most states use negligence (lesser degree of
    fault)
  • A few states use actual malice
  • Negligence failure to do something that he/she
    has a duty to do, and that a reasonable person
    would do. E.g., in journalism checking the facts

25
Classifying the Plaintiff A Rough Guide
  • Public Official Government Employee
    Substantial Control or Responsibility
  • All-Purpose Public Figure Career of Courting
    Media Pervasive Fame and Influence
  • Vortex Public Figure Public Controversy
    Voluntary Leadership Role
  • Involuntary Public Figure Pattern of Notorious
    Conduct Prior (Undesired) Media Coverage
  • Private Persons Most Others

26
Damages
  • The sum of money the law imposes for a breach of
    some duty or violation of some right.
  • Presumed (before Gertzs case the court assumed
    that any defamation would be harmful)
  • Compensatory damages (special, actual) compensate
    the claimant for the quantifiable monetary losses
    suffered by the plaintiff
  • Punitive damages are intended to reform or deter
    the defendant and others from engaging in conduct
    similar to that which formed the basis of the
    lawsuit

27
Limits on damages
  • Large awards inhibit the vigorous exercise of
    First Amendment
  • Private plaintiffs must provide solid evidence of
    their injuries or prove actual malice
  • Punitive damages only when actual malice is
    proven (even in private persons cases).

28
Privilege
  • Absolute privilege
  • members of Congress engaged in congressional
    debates
  • Also most government officials while conducting
    their official duties
  • Qualified (conditional) privilege
  • a libel defense that allows the media to report
    on government proceedings and records without
    fear of libel suit

29
Libel and emotional distress
30
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • In a parody that appeared in Hustler magazine the
    prominent fundamentalist evangelist Reverend
    Jerry Falwell was depicted as a drunk in a sexual
    liaison with his mother in an outhouse

31
(No Transcript)
32
From the Campari Ad
  • But your mom? Isnt it a bit odd?
  • I dont think so. Looks dont mean that much to
    me in a woman.
  • Go on.
  • Well, we were drunk off our God fearing asses on
    Campari, ginger ale and soda And mom looked
    better than a Baptist whore with a 100 donation.

33
From the Campari Ad
  • Did you try it again?
  • Oh, yeah. I always get sloshed before I go out
    to the pulpit. You dont think I could lay down
    all that bullshit sober, do you?

34
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • Falwell sued for
  • 1. libel,
  • 2. invasion of privacy,
  • 3. intentional infliction of emotional distress.
  • In the trial court he lost on (1) and (2) but
    prevailed on (3). He was awarded 200,000
    damages for emotional distress

35
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • The Supreme Court reversed (8 to 0)
  • a public figure or official may not recover for
    intentional infliction of emotional distress
    arising from a publication unless the publication
    contains a false statement of fact that was made
    with actual malice.

36
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • That the material might be deemed outrageous and
    that it might have been intended to cause severe
    emotional distress were not enough to overcome
    the First Amendment.

37
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • Vicious attacks on public figures are part of the
    American tradition of satire and parody, a
    tradition of speech that would be hamstrung if
    public figures could sue them anytime the
    satirist caused distress.

38
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com