Defamation Flashcards

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1
Q

A message is defamatory if it:

A

Subjects plaintiff to scorn and ridicule;

or causes reputational harm

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2
Q

Elements

A
  1. a defamatory message
  2. certain pleading problems
  3. publication of the message
  4. the type of defamation
  5. damages
  6. common law defenses; and
  7. constitutional issues
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3
Q

Pleading Problems

A
  • to bring an action for defamation, the party suffering must have been a living person OR existing organization
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4
Q

Publication

A

∆’s message must be communicated to a 3rd person, who receives it and understands it

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5
Q

When is a message “published?”

A
  • if the defendant negligently permitted it to be communicated to third persons.

OR

  • If it is reasonably foreseeable that an eavesdropper might overhear a message, and one does so, there is a sufficient publication.
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6
Q

Slander

A

Defamation in spoken form

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7
Q

What is slander per se?

A

Types of defamation historically regarded as so harmful that it was presumed that the plainitff suffered damage from the very fact of its utterance

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8
Q

Four types of slander per se

A
  1. a slander that imputed to the plaintiff the commission of a crime involving moral turpitude or infamous punishment (imprisonment or death);
  2. allegations of the plaintiff having a loathsome disease are slander (venereal disease or leprosy);
  3. slander which imputes to the plaintiff behavior or characteristics that are incompatible with the proper conduct of his business, profession, or office; and
  4. it was slander per se to falsely impute unchastity to a woman.
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9
Q

Common Law Defenses to Defamation

A
  1. Truth
  2. Absolute Privilege
  3. Qualified Privilege
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10
Q

Truth

A

Plaintiff must prove falsity as part of his prima facie case

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11
Q

Absolute Privilege

Effects

A

Where an absolute privilege applies, ∆ is not liable for an otherwise defamatory message as a matter of law

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12
Q

Qualified Privilege

A

If applicable, ∆ is not held liable for otherwise defamatory messages he utters unless he loses the protection of the privilege

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13
Q

When does ∆ lose an otherwise available qualified privilege?

A
  1. he acts out of malice;
  2. he exceeds the scope of the privilege; or
  3. he does not believe the truth of the defamatory communication.
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14
Q

Public Official

A
  1. If defamation is related to capacity as public official, they must prove: clear and convincing evidence of actual malice
  2. Plaintiff must prove ∆ knew information was false or recklessly disregarded truth or falsity
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15
Q

Public Figure

A

Are treated like public officials

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16
Q

Private Figure

A
  1. Look at subject matter – is a public concern or privater matter
    1. Look at: form, content, and context
      1. he more widley desminiated the infor + media figure = public concern
      2. Less people, private people = private matter