OPINION
Thе defendants in these separate actions for libel have both moved under Rule 12(b) (6) F.R.Civ.P. to dismiss the complaints filed against them on the grounds that the plaintiff has failed to allege sufficiently both actual malice and damages as required by New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
The plaintiff, Arizona Biochemical Company, is in the business of collecting аnd disposing of garbage, and, at the time of the publication of the alleged libels, held contracts for garbage disposal awarded by several municipalities in the area of Albany, New York. The Hearst Corporation (hereinafter Hearst) is the owner and publisher of an Albany newspaper named THE TIMES UNION. Plaintiff alleges in its complaint against Hearst that the latter published in THE TIMES UNION several libelous articles concerning plaintiff in which articles plaintiff was charged with having associations with the “Mafia,” with paying kickbacks to obtain local garbage disposal contracts, with gaining control over the garbage collection and disposal business in the area by employing threats and physical force and violence against its competitors, with employing tactics of deceit and bad faith in acquiring a local company, with having “a long history of financial difficulties traceable in eleven states,” and with acting secretly in concert with public officials of Troy to obtain a contract from that city without revealing this to the public. Metromedia, Inc., (hereinafter Metromedia) is the operator of the New York television statiоn designated WNEW, Channel 5. In its complaint against Metromedia plaintiff alleges that this defendant, during one of its news broadcasts, repeated most of the charges against plaintiff made previously by Hearst and added, among other new charges, that plaintiff was the subject of investigation by various public agencies.
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, supra, was an action brought by an elected official of the City of Montgomery, Alabama, for a libelous advertisement which allegedly reflected upon his official conduct as supervisor of the local police department. The advertisement in question involved the civil rights movement then being led in the South by Martin Luther King. The primary holding of the case was that the guaranties of the First Amendment regarding freedom of speech required a rule that a public official cannot recover damages “for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made with ‘actual malice’ —that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
In succeeding cases the Supreme Court has expanded the scope of this rule’s protection by including within its ambit actions by public figures suing for libel, Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts,
The ambit of the Supreme Court’s ruling was not finally delineated by the New York Times opinion itself.
1
**The Court, rather, has proceeded on a case by case basis in determining to what new categories of cases — other than those involving сivil actions for defamation brought by public officials — its ruling is to apply. For example, in Garrison v. Louisiana,
In any particular context “the scope of the [New York Times] privilege is to be determined by reference to the functions it serves.” Rosenblatt v. Baer,
supra,
Viewed in this light, the privilege accorded by New York Times is designed “* * * to insure the ascertainment and publication of the truth about public affairs.” St. Amant v. Thompson,
In modern democratic society the public judgment makes itself felt on a great variety of subjects in a great variety of ways, official and unofficial. If decision on these matters is to be adеquately informed every effort ought to be made to free the channels of communication with respect to these subjects. It is therefore the function of the first amendment to *415 protect the freedom of speech and press on all those matters as to which there is some element of public participation. At least on those issues where the public judgment can make itself felt through official or unofficial communication it can be said that the matter is one of proper public concern. The determination of “matters of public concern” should thus become the key to the application of the privilege recognized in the Times decision. Pedrick, Freedom of the Press and the Law of Libel: The Modern Revised Translation, 49 Cоrnell L.Q. 581, 592 (1964). Accord, Comment, The Limits of Political Speech: New York Times v. Sullivan Revisited, 14 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. 631 (1967). See Brennan, The Supreme Court and the Meiklejohn Interpretation of the First Amendment, 79 Harv.L.Rev. 1 (1965). Cf. Time, Inc. v. Hill, supra.
The conclusion reached here — that matters of public concern should become the key to the application of the
New York Times
rule — has support in case law. In United Medical Laboratories, Inc. v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
Although not a libel case, note should be taken of Pickering v. Board of Education,
In the cases at bar, the plaintiff, it will be recalled, collected and disposed of the garbage of several municipalities. By averment in its own complaints, plaintiff thereby performed “essential services for the welfare and health of the inhabitants of said municipalities.” Despite this plaintiff - argues that it is merely an ordinary business organization engaged in an unromantic business. *416 The plaintiff, however, is more than thаt. For all practical purposes Arizona Biochemical Company is the sanitation department of the several cities and towns which it serves. The operation of plaintiff’s business is infected with the public interest. It is quasi-governmental in nature and is a matter of substantial public concern. The public has a legitimate interest in discovering whether an agency that performs one of its essential services is connected with elements of organized crime, whether that agency obtains valuable contracts by bribing public officials, whether that agency is financially competent to perform its functions, etc. News reports that relate to matters such as these play an important role by informing the public about matters which are of substantial impоrtance to it. Certainly it is expression of this type that the New York Times rule is designed to protect.
One final point needs to be made on the applicability of the New York Times rule to these cases. Metromedia did not broadcast its own report relating to the plaintiff until approximately one month after Hearst first published its report. Plaintiff does not contest thq fact that by that time it had in fact become a public figure due tо Hearst’s report. Plaintiff argues, however, that the defendants cannot take advantage of this because this public figure status resulted from Hearst’s report. While this argument may be relevant against Hearst, as far as Metromedia is concerned plaintiff was a public figure at the time of Metromedia’s broadcast. For this reason too, the New York Times rule applies to the Metromedia action. 3
Having found that the New York Times rule governs these cases, these suits cannot succeed unless the plaintiff pleads and proves by clear and convincing evidence actual malice. The questions now before the court are two: has the plaintiff pleaded actual malice sufficiently, and has the plaintiff pleaded damages sufficiently?
The complaints filed against Hearst and Metromedia differ with regard to their allegations of аctual malice. Paragraph 16 of the Hearst complaint reads as follows:
At the time of said publications defendant intentionally refrained from ascertaining that the aforesaid matters contained in said articles were false.. Upon information and belief, the defendant * * * intentionally so refrained and malevolently published such false and defamatory matter to influenсe and achieve the impending election of public officials. Said defendant * * * [was] actuated by actual malice and wantonly and wrongfully intended by such publication to injure plaintiff.
Paragraph 12 of the Metromedia complaint contains the allegation that the defendant acted “maliciously and falsely, and in violation of its obligation to disseminate truthful facts and news” аnd made its charges against plaintiff “without substance or foundation.” Also, in Paragraph 13 plaintiff alleged that defendant’s statements were “intended maliciously to and did injure plaintiff in his good name.”
Defendants contend that these allegations are merely conclusory and are fatally deficient because they fail to allege any facts which, if proven, would support a finding of аctual malice as defined by New York Times. This objection, however, is without substance.
Under
New York Times
actual malice is a vital element of a libel action and it must be alleged if the complaint is to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Whether a defendant acted with actual malice, though, is a question of fact.
See
St. Amant v. Thompson,
*417
swpra;
Pape v. Time, Inc.,
Defendants argue that the threat of an expensive and prolonged litigation can deter an otherwise crusading publisher, and it is precisely this form of chilling effect which the
New York Times
rulings sought to avoid. For this reason, defendants argue, policy demands that if a plaintiff cannot plead facts which will support a claim of actual maliсe, he cannot maintain a suit even though the necessary facts may well be ascertainable only through discovery. Summary judgment, a procedure much better suited to a consideration of evidentiary matter than is a motion to dismiss, is still available, however, to those defendants who fall victim to groundless litigation. Defendants also rely on the rejection by the Supreme Court of the complaint filed in Linn v. United Plant Guard Workers of America, Local 114,
Hearst contends that despite the language of Paragraph 16 of the complaint filed against it, plaintiff has not satisfied the
New York Times
requirements because the Hearst newspaper stories included in the complaint document the investigation of the facts conducted by Hearst. This documentation, Hearst argues, eliminates any doubt that Hearst was neither aware of, nor proceeded in reckless disregard of the falsity of its charges. Hearst’s state of mind, however, is precisely the point that will have tо be determined subsequently, St. Amant v. Thompson,
supra
at 732,
Metromedia also argues that the allegations made against it do not conform to the New York Times definition of actual malice. Here the court agrees. The clear mеaning of the language used in paragraphs 12 and 13 of the Metromedia complaint is simply that Metromedia acted with ill will towards plaintiff and that the report published about plaintiff contained false statements. Plaintiff attempts to bring its allegations within the reckless disregard portion of the New York Times definition of actual malice by arguing that its allegation that Metromedia’s reports were withоut foundation must be read in light of the fact that Metromedia conducted its own investigation of the charges first made by Hearst. If so understood, plaintiff argues, given the *418 number and the seriousness of the accusations hurled at it, the complaint means that “Metromedia’s investigation was so ‘slipshod and sketchy’ * * * as to constitute the reckless conduct requirement by the Times case.” This misses the point. In order to satisfy the New York Times standard plaintiff must charge а doubting state of mind on the part of the defendant.
These cases are clear that reckless conduct is not measured by whether a reasonably prudent man would have published, or would have investigated before publishing. There must be sufficient evidence to permit the conclusion that the defendant in fact entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication. Publishing with such doubts shows rеckless disregard for truth or falsity and demonstrates actual malice. St. Amant v. Thompson, supra at 731,88 S.Ct., at 1325 .
This leaves only the final issue, namely, whether plaintiff has pleaded damages sufficiently. The complaints are almost identical in this respect.
At the time of said malicious utterances, plaintiff was and is conducting its business throughout the United States and said false utterances have seriously injured and prejudiced plaintiff in the financial markets, in its relationships with its customers and municipalities, and in its business endeavors to obtain valuable contracts in the tens of millions of dollars with others.
Thereby plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $45,000,000.
Concededly, plaintiff has not pleaded special damages.
It is clear that the complaints in both actions allege libel
per se,
and the general common law rule of libel is that where libel
per se
is alleged, a presumption of harm to thе plaintiff’s reputation arises and there is thus no need, in such a case, for the plaintiff to either plead or prove special damages. The defendants contend, however, that the pleading of special damages is constitutionally required in an action governed by
New York Times.
This issue has just been considered by the Court of Appeals for this Circuit and the Court has held that nothing in New York Timеs or related cases alters state law in this regard. Goldwater v. Ginzburg,
The motion of defendant Hearst is denied. The motion of defendant Metro-media is granted, except that plaintiff is granted leave to replead within twenty days.
So ordered.
Notes
. The Court explicitly admitted this in footnote 23 of the opinion,
. The public figure in Butts was a famous college fоotball coach and the public figure in Walker was a retired general who had taken vocal positions concerning civil rights.
. Defendants have also argued that plaintiff is a public figure simply because of the nature of the work performed by it. In view of the court’s decision as to the proper definition of the scope of the New York Times rule, the court finds it unnecessary to consider this contention.
