Kaplan Pgs 670-684 Nuisance and Defamation Flashcards

1
Q

How do you know if a message is defamatory?

A

If it lowers the plaintiff in the esteem of the community or discourages third persons from associating with him

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2
Q

Generally only statements of fact are actionable as defamatory. What are situations when expressions of opinion might also be the defamatory?

A

If they imply that the speaker knows facts to be true, or that those facts exist

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3
Q

When is a message defamatory per se?

A

If it is apparent on the face of the message that it will injure the plaintiffs reputation

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4
Q

What is defamation per quod?

A

If a message does not on its face seem to injure a plaintiff’s reputation, the plaintiff has to plead ADDITIONAL EXTRINSIC FACTS that make the message defamatory

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5
Q

What are different types of publication that count for defamation?

A

Any form of communication such as television or radio broadcast, films, plays, novels, cartoons, sculpture, etc.

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6
Q

Is it considered to be defamation if the thing you say is only sent to the plaintiff?

A

No, it has to be communicated to a third person receives it and understands it

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7
Q

Who is considered a primary publisher with regard to defamation?

A

All persons who participate originally in a defamatory message

Ie: the author of a book, the editor, and the company that printed the book could all be liable as primary publishers

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8
Q

What is considered to be a publisher when it comes to defamation?

A

Anyone who repeats the defamatory message. This is even true when the repetition is qualified by words like “alleged“ or is said to not be the opinion of the republishers

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9
Q

In what situation would’ve re-publisher cause extra liability to a primary publisher?

A

If the primary publisher could reasonably have foreseen the defamatory message would be re-published, then he is liable to the plaintive for additional damages caused by the republishing

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10
Q

In what situation are people that distribute an original defamatory message as a commodity held to be liable for defamation?

A

Only if they knew or should have known that the material was defamatory. I.e.: booksellers, newspaper vendors.

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11
Q

Can libel only be things that are written?

A

No, it can be anything that is relatively permanent in form, like a sound recording, video recording, picture, sculpture, etc.

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12
Q

Is slander only things that are spoken?

A

No, it is anything that is not preserved in permanent form

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13
Q

Under slander per se for the category that calls for falsely suggesting that a woman is unchaste, would that also be true if the suggestion was about a man?

A

Yes, likely

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14
Q

If it isn’t clear whether a defamatory message is libel or slander, how do you figure it out?

A

– look at how PERMANENT it is
– look at the AREA it is disseminated in
– look at the EXTENT it was planned instead of spontaneous.

The more permanent the form, widely disseminated, and planned a message is, the more likely it is libel

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15
Q

What are the three different types of damages that you can recover for defamation?

A

– pecuniary damages
– general damages
– punitive damages

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16
Q

What are pecuniary damages with regard to defamation, and how do you recover them?

A

Quantifiable monetary losses suffered by the plaintiff due to the injury to reputation. I.e.: loss of customers or loss of job.

The plaintiff must present evidence of specific actual monetary losses to recover this

17
Q

What are considered to be general damages with regard to defamation?

A

Nonpecuniary aspects of injury to the reputation such as humiliation or loss of friends.

It is presumed that the plaintiff suffered general damages, so no proof of actual damage is needed

18
Q

In order to prove actual malice for defamation, what does the “convincing clarity” standard mean?

A

This is essentially the clear and convincing evidence standard. It requires something more than proof by a preponderance of the evidence and less than beyond a reasonable doubt