Lead Opinion
Sports agent A.J. Faigin represented James E. Kelly, a quarterback for the National Football League’s Buffalo Bills, from 1983 to 1987. Kelly spoke unfavorably of Faigin in an autobiography (ARMED And Dangerous) that he co-wrote with sports writer Vie Carucci. Faigin filed a diversity suit against Kelly, Carucci, and the book’s publisher, Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc., claiming defamation and the intentional infliction of emotional distress. Faigin filed the suit first in the Northern District of Illinois, voluntarily dismissed it, and then refiled in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. There the district court dismissed Kelly and Carucci for lack of personal jurisdiction, a ruling that Faigin does not challenge on appeal. The court also granted summary judgment in favor of Doubleday on the defamation claim, finding it to be untimely.
I.
Wisconsin has a two-year statute of limitations for libel actions, and Faigin’s suit was filed within that two-year period; but the state also has a borrowing statute designed “to resolve conflicts between jurisdictions on statute of limitations questions.” McMahon v. Pennsylvania Life Ins. Co.,
(1) If an action is brought in this state on a foreign cause of action and the foreign period of limitation which applies has expired, no action may be maintained in this state.
(2) If an action is brought in this state on a foreign cause of action and the foreign period of limitation which applies to that action has not expired, but the applicable Wisconsin period of limitation has expired, no action may be maintained in this state.
Wis.Stat. § 893.07. (Subsection (1) is the pertinent provision here, of course.) Wisconsin considers a cause of action “foreign” if the underlying injury occurred outside the state. Guertin v. Harbour Assurance Co. of Bermuda, Ltd.,
“It is clear,” the district court noted, “that Wisconsin is a place of the plaintiff’s injury.” Faigin v. Kelly, No. 94 C 616, Decision and Order at 16 (Feb. 6, 1995) (citing Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
II.
No Wisconsin court has yet considered whether a multistate defamation case in which at least some injury occurs within Wisconsin's borders constitutes a "foreign" cause of action for purposes of the state's borrowing statute. We must therefore do our best to predict what the Wisconsin Supreme Court would say if presented with this question. Todd v. Societe Bic, S.A.,
We do, of course, know how Wisconsin identifies a cause of action that is "foreign" for purposes of the borrowing statute. When the Wisconsin Judicial Council redrafted the borrowing statute in 1979, it understood the term "foreign cause of action" to be synonymous with the language of the former version of the statute, which spoke in terms of injuries "received without this state." This persuaded the Wisconsin Supreme Court that a cause of action is "foreign" if the underlying injury occurred outside the state. Guertin,
However tricky the "place of injury" test might be in other circumstances (e.g., Johnson,
The district court thought that the Wisconsin courts would treat a multi-state defamation action as "foreign," despite the fact of the plaintiff's injury within Wisconsin borders, in part based on certain language in Guertin. Decision and Order at 18. Recall that section 893.07, which we quoted earlier, invokes the foreign limitations period for a foreign cause of action if that period has expired; but, if the foreign limitations period has not expired and the Wisconsin limitations period has, section 893.07(2) provides that it is the Wisconsin period which governs. This led the Wisconsin Supreme Court to remark in Guertin:
The manifest intent of the legislature in enacting this borrowing statute was to adopt the shortest possible limitation period for actions litigated in this state potentially subject to more than one statute of limitations. The policies advanced by such a statute include the reduction of forum shopping, the prevention of stale claims, the expedient litigation of controverted matters, and the avoidance of uncertainty in assessing the timeliness ofbringing an action in this state without the necessity of a court hearing to make such a determination, thereby preserving scarce judicial resources.
The district court also looked to the Eighth Circuit’s decision in Patch v. Playboy Enters., Inc., supra, but the Missouri borrowing statute at issue in Patch differs in a key respect from Wisconsin’s statute. The Missouri statute provides:
Whenever a cause of action has been fully barred by the laws of the state, territory or country in which it originated, said bar shall be a complete defense to any action thereon, brought in any of the courts of this state.
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 516.190 (emphasis supplied). The Eighth Circuit was thus called upon to decide where the plaintiffs libel claim had “originated” for purposes of the borrowing statute. The plaintiff was a Missouri resident, and presumably copies of Playboy magazine, in which he allegedly was libeled, were circulated in Missouri. On the other hand, Playboy had its principal place of business in Chicago, the magazine was edited, assembled, and printed there, and copies of the magazine were distributed to its readers from Chicago. Ultimately, the court concluded that the libel claim was subject to the Illinois limitations period, which had expired before Patch filed suit. The significance of the term “originates” to that decision is evident from the outset of the court’s analysis. The court noted that Missouri courts, like most, had typically borrowed another state’s limitations period when the injury occurred outside the state.
Wisconsin’s statute, by contrast, lacks the equivalent of a term like “originates” that might enable us to single out one of the many states in which Faigin purportedly was injured and invoke that state’s limitation period. Apparently without libel cases in mind, the Wisconsin legislature has given us no more guidance than the place of injury rule supplies, and as the Eighth Circuit pointed out in Patch, that rule “does not answer whether the place of first injury, most injury, or any injury governs.”
We are thus left with the argument that the antipathy to forum shopping reflected in Wisconsin’s borrowing statute (in all such statutes, really) is best assuaged by labeling multi-state defamation eases “foreign.” That might not seem such a bad result for this case, which by all accounts has little to do with Wisconsin. But given the ease with which libelous publications can and do cross state lines these days, a rule deeming all multi-state defamation eases foreign would have an extremely broad sweep. As a practical matter, any plaintiff libeled in a publication that is not truly intrastate would have to conduct a quick survey of the limitations
At oral argument, Doubleday’s counsel suggested that if ninety-nine percent of the plaintiffs injury occurred in Wisconsin, the result might be different. In a like vein, our dissenting colleague suggests that where, as here, it appears that nearly all of the plaintiffs injury occurred outside of Wisconsin, an exception to the rule we embrace should apply. But such proposals put each plaintiff in the uncomfortable position of having to predict how a court would assess the facts of her case. A plaintiff who waits to file suit in Wisconsin while the statutes of limitations of other states expire is then gambling, for if a court deems her cause of action “foreign” due to instances of publication outside the state, that is it, the courthouse door will be slammed shut, and there will be no arguing about how significantly the claim is related to Wisconsin. Guertin,
Forced as we are, then, to decide between a rule that deems all multi-state libel claims foreign or all of them not, we think that the latter is the better of two imperfect choices, and the one that the Wisconsin Supreme Court would adopt. Admittedly, treating any libel claim as “domestic” so'long as some publication occurred within Wisconsin allows for a great deal of forum shopping. Anyone libeled in a national publication, for example, can repair to Wisconsin if she misses the earlier cut-offs of other states. That is nothing new. See Keeton,
Wisconsin can, of course, shorten its limitations period if it fears that it will become to multi-state libel suits what Las Vegas is to weddings. But that is an action better accomplished by the legislature than by a judicially fashioned rule which treats all multi-state defamation cases as “foreign” for purposes of the borrowing statute. As it stands, the Wisconsin statute asks one question: did the injury occur inside Wisconsin? The answer here is yes, if not exclusively. That is enough, we are persuaded, to remove the case from the operation of the borrowing statute.
III.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Neither Doubleday, in moving for summary judgment, nor the district court, in granting Doubleday’s motion, addressed the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim. That claim was subsequently dismissed pursuant to the parties’ stipulation, and the district court clerk entered an amended judgment from which this appeal was taken. Two earlier appeals that Faigin had filed were then dismissed by order of this court.
. Faigin claimed alternatively that even if a one-year statute of limitations applied, Doubleday was equitably estopped from relying on that period because it had misrepresented to Faigin the date that ARMED A~w DANGEROUS was published. The district court found no evidence to support this argument. Our conclusion that Faigin's defamation claim is not a foreign cause of action and is therefore governed by Wisconsin's more generous two-year limitations period obviates any need to consider this alternate theory.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Sports books are a dime for two dozen. Bookstores often have heaps of them, many
A.J. Faigin, one of Kelly’s agents from 1983 to 1987, says in this suit that he was libeled on page 57 and pages 159-60 of “Armed and Dangerous.” Here, in its entirety, is the claimed libelous allegation uttered by Kelly:
I was in Akron, Ohio, where my agents at the time — Greg Lustig, AJ. Faigin and Weinberger — were based. (I wanted to use another word besides “agents” here, but that’s better left for the lawsuit that is currently pending in Texas. My mother always said if you don’t have anything good to say about somebody, don’t say anything at all.)
I learned my lesson the hard way about whom to trust and whom not to trust in business. I had had complete faith in my first agents, Greg Lustig and A.J. Faigin. Before signing with them out of college, I talked to a bunch of other players they represented and they all said Lustig and Faigin did a good job on their contracts. Even Jack Lambert, the former Steeler great, gave them a strong recommendation.
Then Danny and the Trevino brothers started taking a closer look at my business affairs. And the more they looked, the more they didn’t like what they found.
Finally, I saw the light. In 1988, I fired Lustig and Faigin and put my brother and the Trevinos in charge of all my business dealings. Then I filed a major lawsuit against my former agents as well as the former owners of the Gamblers for defaulting on the payment of my signing bonus. Fortunately, I was able to catch the problem before it was too late, which made me luckier than a lot of other pro athletes.
Personally, I doubt whether, in the brutal world of professional athletes and professional sports agents, the tepid passages about Faigin could be construed as defamatory. But we need not consider that question, for our task, as the majority correctly notes, is simply to predict whether a Wisconsin court would consider Faigin’s claim to be a “foreign cause of action” under § 893.07(1), Wis. Stat. We must make a prediction because Wisconsin law controls, and its courts have not spoken on the issue. So the majority reads the sibylline leaves and predicts Wisconsin would say no. But I think the crystal ball is cloudy; the answer should be yes.
Wisconsin has absolutely no interest in this suit. And the suit, which actually is the reincarnation of a time-barred suit originally filed in Illinois, arrived in Wisconsin in a naked attempt to take advantage of a quirk in libel law that seems to regard a plaintiff, as the majority notes, as “generally considered to be injured wherever the defamatory writing is published,” citing Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
So we get to a prediction. I think the better one for us to make in this ease is that Wisconsin would view Faigin’s obvious forum shopping with disfavor. I think Wisconsin would closely examine the facte of this so-
