OPINION OF THE COURT
Plаintiff was the Director of the New York State Division of the Lottery from April to December, 1975. In early 1975, defendant New York News, Inc. (the News), through its reporters Federici and Poster, began an investigation of the operation of the lottery. From their investigation, the
The articles begin by accusing the lottery of “gypping” and “systematically cheating” the public by issuing 4 to 6 million tickets, all of which participate in the weekly drawing despite sales of less than 3 million. This is stated to have been responsible for there, having been no grand prize awarded in 17 of 38 weekly drawings and the creation of a $1,500,000 surplus which “by law should never have existed”. Lottery officials are reported as having contemplated several acts of dubious legality, including transferring the whole surplus to the State treasury and “covering up” losses on one special drawing by using interest earned on undistributed installments of other prize money. However, it is stated, they were “warned off” by their lawyers. The editorial characterizes the practices described in the
In a previous appeal, we reversed Special Term’s dismissal of the complaint for legal insufficiency (Bruno v New York News,
It is uncontested that whatever critiсism of plaintiff can be read from the articles in question, all of it related to his status as a public official and to the performance of his official duties. Therefore, on this motion for summary judgment, in addition to having to present proof in evidentiary form sufficient to create a triable issue of fact concerning the defamatory character of the News’ publications
Before applying these general principles, however, we must first resolve the issue of whether the News’ attacks on the lottery itself, its operation, and “Lottery officials” may constitutionally give rise to liability as defamatory of plaintiff. In New York Times Co. v Sullivan (supra), the Supreme Court held that defamatory falsehoods concerning alleged civil rights deprivations by the Montgomery, Alabama, police could not, standing alone, be actionable on behalf of the plaintiff on the bare fact of his official position as police commissioner, because this would be tantamount to an award of damages for a libel on government itself (New York Times Co. v Sullivan, supra, pp 290-292). However, in Rosenblatt v Baer (
Even though the accusations of cheating, gypping, and being сonscienceless may be read against plaintiff, examining them in the context in which they appear leads us to conclude that they are not actionable. Expressions of opinion are constitutionally privileged when accompanied in the articles by objective facts supporting them (Gertz v Robert Welch, Inc.,
Regarding other, more factual statements contained in the October series of releases by the News of which plaintiff complains, there was a failure to submit clear and convincing proof of the newspaper’s knowledge of their falsity or probable fаlsity sufficient to establish actual malice. Thus, plaintiff has submitted no evidence to establish the News’ knowledge of any falsity or even probable falsity of the statements that he was “brought on the carpet” by the Governor concerning his conduct of the lottery, that the previous inclusion of unsold tickets continued in the conduct of subsequent games despite plaintiff’s contrary claims, or that the computer breakdown was caused by plaintiff’s hasty attempt to eliminate unsold tickets from these drawings. It does no good for plaintiff to contend that if the News had actually conducted the painstaking and thorough investigation it claimed in the articles, it would have discovered the falsity of these statements, since a failure adequately to investigate does not itself establish malice (St. Amant v Thompson,
The foregoing discussion disposes of the significant charges published in the Daily Newsxxpon which plaintiff’s second through thirteenth causes of action were founded, and the oral accusations which formed the basis for his first cause of action in slander. To the extent that factual discrepancies were reported apart from those previously discussed, our examination of the articles reveals that they would not have beеn so material as to alter in any significant way the conclusions a reasonable person might have drawn from reading them, and, therefore, they are not actionable (see Rinaldi v Holt, Rinehart & Winston, supra, p 383).
In thus determining that summary judgment was appropriately granted with respect to plaintiff’s first through thirteenth causes of action, we adopt the position taken in Yiamouyiannis v Consumers Union of the U.S. (619 F2d 932, 940) that no speсial rule applies either favoring or opposing the granting of summary judgment in public official-libel cases and that such actions, for procedural purposes, are to be treated no differently from other actions (cf. Hutchinson v Proxmire,
We reach a different conclusion regarding the existence of a triable issue of fact as to certain statements in the article published March 14, 1976. A hiatus in coveragе of the lottery of several months had taken place, during which plaintiff had resigned his position and the lottery had remained in suspension. The article, in discussing the events leading to the lottery’s shutdown and the role of the News’ investigation in bringing that about, states:
“Then the News, which had been investigating for several months * * * disclosed that the lottery was deliberately withholding prize money. State officials started to take another look at the surplus. It turned out to be money that should have been distributed in prizes.
“State officials tried to hide the scandal”.
In our view, the damaging references specifically to plaintiff appearing elsewhere in the article, together with the extrinsic proof previously discussed showing the News’ readership’s identification of plaintiff as the рerpetrator of the lottery’s wrongful activities, are sufficient to create a triable issue of fact on whether the quoted excerpt from the March 14 article was directed against plaintiff (Rosenblatt v Baer, supra, pp 81-83). Moreover, “deliberately withholding prize money” and trying “to hide the scandal” are assertions of fact, not expressions of opinion, and arе not accompanied by the inclusion of any other objective facts in the article to support them. Clearly they can be reasonably read as accusing someone of intentionally denying winners the prize money to which they were rightfully entitled, and then concealing that fact. The affidavits of plaintiff and members of his staff are amply sufficient tо raise a triable issue on falsity. Like the charges of probable corruption in Rinaldi v Holt, Rinehart & Winston (supra), they can readily be understood by the average reader as meaning
Accordingly, Special Term should not have granted summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s fourteenth cause of action based upon the article of March 14, 1976.
The order should be modified, on the law, by reversing so much thereof as grants defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s fourteenth cause of action,
Sweeney, J. P., Main, Mikoll and Weiss, JJ., concur.
Order modified, on the law, by reversing so much thereof as grants defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s fourteenth cause of action, and motion denied with respect to said cause of action, and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs.
