In a libel action, the defendants separately appeal from so much оf an order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County (Rubenfeld, J.), entered June 15, 1984, as dеnied those branches of their respective motions pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7) which sought dismissal of plaintiffs’ second cause of action alleging slander to propеrty, and plaintiffs cross-appeal from so much of that same order as dismissed thеir first, third and fourth causes of action, alleging libel, tortious interfer
Order modified, on the law, by granting those branches of defendants’ motions which were, to dismiss plaintiffs’ second cause of action. As so modified, order affirmed, with one bill of costs to defendants appearing sepаrately and filing separate briefs.
On August 16, 1983, Westchester County’s Reporter-Dispatch newspaper reported that defendаnt Charles Mandelstam believed that the sewage disposal system of an officе and shopping center which plaintiffs proposed to build in North Salem could increase nitrate levels and "lead to the development of cancer-causing materials in water supplies”. Mandelstam, a North Salem attorney and рartner in the defendant Inland Vale Farm Co., was reported to have based his "layman’s opinions” upon conversations with an engineer who had studied the impaсt the proposed center would have upon the local environment. The remarks attributed to Mandelstam appeared in the newspaper shortly аfter the Inland Vale Farm Co. had initiated a proceeding pursuant to CPLR articlе 78 to review a resolution of the North Salem Planning Board, approving plaintiffs’ рlans for the proposed development (see, Inland Vale Farm Co. v Stergianopoulos,
Plaintiffs alleged that Mandelstam’s reported statements "falsely described” his conversations with the engineer, and defamed plaintiffs’ business by "falsely and maliciously cast-ting] plaintiffs as a source and propagator of cancer-causing agents in the local water supply system”.
Plaintiffs’ first cause of action was properly dismissed by Special Term, insofar as it alleged libel per se, becausе the statement complained of failed to impugn the basic integrity or creditwоrthiness of plaintiffs’ business (see, Ruder & Finn v Seabord Sur. Co.,
Plaintiffs’ third cause of action to recover damages for tortious interference with contractual and precontractual relations failed to allege sufficient facts to make out a claim that defendants, by improper means, interfered with plaintiffs’ relationship with its lessee, the United Stаtes Postal Service (see, Guard-Life Corp. v Parker Hardware Mfg. Corp.,
