Defamation Flashcards
A message is defamatory if it:
Subjects plaintiff to scorn and ridicule;
or causes reputational harm
Elements
- a defamatory message
- certain pleading problems
- publication of the message
- the type of defamation
- damages
- common law defenses; and
- constitutional issues
Pleading Problems
- to bring an action for defamation, the party suffering must have been a living person OR existing organization
Publication
∆’s message must be communicated to a 3rd person, who receives it and understands it
When is a message “published?”
- 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.
Slander
Defamation in spoken form
What is slander per se?
Types of defamation historically regarded as so harmful that it was presumed that the plainitff suffered damage from the very fact of its utterance
Four types of slander per se
- a slander that imputed to the plaintiff the commission of a crime involving moral turpitude or infamous punishment (imprisonment or death);
- allegations of the plaintiff having a loathsome disease are slander (venereal disease or leprosy);
- slander which imputes to the plaintiff behavior or characteristics that are incompatible with the proper conduct of his business, profession, or office; and
- it was slander per se to falsely impute unchastity to a woman.
Common Law Defenses to Defamation
- Truth
- Absolute Privilege
- Qualified Privilege
Truth
Plaintiff must prove falsity as part of his prima facie case
Absolute Privilege
Effects
Where an absolute privilege applies, ∆ is not liable for an otherwise defamatory message as a matter of law
Qualified Privilege
If applicable, ∆ is not held liable for otherwise defamatory messages he utters unless he loses the protection of the privilege
When does ∆ lose an otherwise available qualified privilege?
- he acts out of malice;
- he exceeds the scope of the privilege; or
- he does not believe the truth of the defamatory communication.
Public Official
- If defamation is related to capacity as public official, they must prove: clear and convincing evidence of actual malice
- Plaintiff must prove ∆ knew information was false or recklessly disregarded truth or falsity
Public Figure
Are treated like public officials