ORDER ON THE DEFENDANT CHARLES’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This case probes the extent of First Amendment and common law protection for a private citizen who petitions a state administrative agency on a subject within its jurisdiction. Surprisingly, the protection turns out to be not very broad. Examination of United States Supreme Court caselaw and Maine Law Court caselaw leads me to the conclusion that if a private figure plaintiff who claims to be defamed by a First Amendment petition can show that the defamer was motivated by ill will, then statements that are false by reason* only of negligence are nevertheless actionable.
Background
Since the issues are presented on the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, I report the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. These facts, however, are hotly disputed.
In September of 1993, the defendant Robert Charles and his wife arrived at Monhegan Island off the Maine coast for a stay in a cottage that they had rented through the plaintiffs, Bill Baker and Amy Melenbacker. Shortly after arriving, Charles went to Me-lenbacker to complain about the condition of the cottage. After an exchange of words, Melenbacker ultimately fled the scene in tears and Baker called the local constable. Mr. and Mrs. Charles stayed in the rental cottage for the remainder of their two-week vacation.
Upon returning to his home in Washington, D.C., Charles, a lawyer, wrote a Sep
Melenbacker and Baker voluntarily withdrew their application from LURC in December of 1993, in light of what they perceived as a change of attitude on LURC’s part that fall. They did not learn of Charles’s letter, however, until an acquaintance brought it to their attention in the summer of 1994.
Melenbacker and Baker have filed suit against Charles and his (then) law firm alleging defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, interference with economic relations, and abuse of process, and seeking punitive damages. The defendants removed the case from state court, based upon diversity of citizenship. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a), 1441(b). I dismissed the complaint as to the law firm defendant for lack of personal jurisdiction. The defendant Robert Charles now moves for summary judgment on all counts, claiming, among other things, that his letter was privileged.
First Amendment Protection
Charles’s letter to LURC, a state agency, concerning a matter under LURC’s jurisdiction, is undoubtedly included within the protection of the First Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances.
California Motor Transport Co. v. Trucking Unltd.,
Beyond this last statement, the scope of
McDonald
is open to considerable doubt. The Court upheld North Carolina’s definition of defamation as constitutional notwithstanding the First Amendment right of petition, observing that North Carolina permitted liability only if the plaintiff could show “malice.”
If Judge Arnold’s dissent were the law, this would be an easy case, for the plaintiffs on this summary judgment record cannot show by clear and convincing evidence,
Gertz,
Maine Law
In any event, Maine law does not recognize strict liability for defamation. The Maine Law Court has held that a plaintiff must prove at least negligence in order to recover in an action for defamation.
See Lester v. Powers,
An occasion makes a publication conditionally privileged if the circumstances induce a correct or reasonable belief that
(a) there is information that affects a sufficiently important public interest, and
(b) the public interest requires the communication of the defamatory matter to a public officer or a private citizen who is authorized or privileged to take action if the defamatory matter is true.
That definition certainly includes communications to a governmental agency like LURC on subjects within its jurisdiction, like those addressed in Charles’s letter.
See
Restatement § 598 cmt. e (“The rule stated in this Section is applicable to defamatory communications to public officials concerning matters that affect the discharge of their duties.”).
2
As I have said, the plaintiffs here cannot meet the knowing or reckless falsity prong on the summary judgment record, but there is evidence from which a fact-finder could conclude that Charles did act entirely out of ill will toward the plaintiffs. Specifically, a jury could disbelieve Charles’s explanation that he wrote and sent the letter to LURC at the request of other Monhegan Island residents in a sincere attempt to ensure that LURC based its determinations upon proper facts. Instead, the jury might believe that Charles was motivated by nothing more than vindictiveness or retaliation for what he considered shabby treatment at the hands of the plaintiffs in connection "with his summer vacation. The jury need not reach that conclusion, but it might. Such a finding by the jury would be sufficient to void the Maine common law conditional privilege.
In that event, the plaintiffs would have to prove by a preponderance of the evidence only negligent defamation. Under Maine law, if a publication is not privileged, defamation consists of (1) a false and defamatory statement; (2) fault amounting at least to negligence on the part of the speaker; and (3) special harm caused by the publication or a statement that is actionable regardless of special harm.
Lester,
Because the defendant Charles has not argued whether his letter addressed a “matter of public concern” in the constitutional
I do Grant the defendant Charles’s summary judgment motion on the issues of interference with an economic relationship and abuse of process. As a matter of law the plaintiffs had no “economic relationship” "with LURC, a governmental agency,
see Grover v. Minette-Mills, Inc.,
Conclusion
Accordingly, summary judgment is Granted on Counts II, III and IV and Denied on Counts I and V.
So Ordered.
Notes
. To complicate matters, the Court went on to say that North Carolina considered its definition of malice to be “consistent with
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,"
yet also referred to North Carolina's definition as "knowledge at the time that the words are false, or ... without probable cause or without checking for truth by the means at hand.”
. The topics addressed in the letter satisfy the common law standard for information affecting a "public interest.”
See
Restatement § 598 cmt. e ("[I]t is desirable that the officers obtain information and data tending to disclose the extent and character of [social, economic and political] problems_ Testimony offered before ... commissions and other bodies properly authorized to conduct investigations is conditionally privileged unless the investigation is a judicial or legislative proceeding, in which case the testimony is absolutely privileged.”) However, it is unclear — and the defendant nowhere argues — that the letter’s contents rise to matters of “public concern” in the constitutional sense.
See Dun & Bradstreet,
