2. Defamation Flashcards
Defamation Requirements:
- Defamatory statement
♣ statement of facts - Concerning P
- Publication
♣ statement must be intentionally or negligently made to 3rd person - Harms P reputation
- Falsity and fault
♣ Only required if statement involves a matter of public concern or a public figure or official. - Damages
Constitutional Consideration to Defamation:
1st Amendment considerations arise when defamation involves a public concern:
♣ Public figure
♣ Public official
♣ Public concern
ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS:
♣ Falsity: P must prove the statement was false
♣ Fault: P must prove D was at fault
• Standards differ for public vs. private figure:
Public official or figure: actual malice standard (knowledge of the statement’s falsity or reckless disregard to whether it was false)
Private figure: negligent standard
Defamation Damages
Libel
Slander
Slander per se
Damages depend on whether defamatory statement constitutes libel, slander, slander per se
♣ Libel:
• It’s a written defamatory statement
• general damages are presumed; P does not have to prove special damages
♣ Slander:
• It’s a spoken defamatory statement
• P must prove special damages unless the statement constitutes slander per se
o Special damages: specific economic loss
♣ Slander per se o 1. Woman’s chasity o 2. Crime of moral turpitude o 3. Loathsome disease o 4. Concerns and adversely reflects on P's business or professional reputation.
Defenses to defamation:
Consent, truth and privilege may be valid defenses to defamation
♣ Consent
♣ Truth (A complete defense to a defamation claim)
♣ Privilege
• Absolute privilege:
o Protects statements by government officials in their official capacity
• Qualified privilege:
o D’s liability for defamatory statement is limited if the purpose of the statement is to promote truthfulness and/or related to fair comment and criticism
o (e.g. letter of recommendation, book review)