MEMORANDUM
Aftеr a final judgment was entered in accordance with this Court’s Order and Memorandum dismissing the Amended Complaint because Plaintiffs claims were time-barred, Plaintiff Corey Clark filed a “Motion to Vacate the District Courtis Order and Judgment in its Entirety Pursuant to Rules 59 and 60.” (Docket No. 93). Defendants E! Entertainment Television LLC (“E!”) and Fox Broadcasting Company have filed responses in opposition, to which Plaintiff has replied. (Docket Nos. 95, 95 & 99).
For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant Plaintiffs Motion to Vacate and vacate the judgment that granted Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss, and dismissed this action on statute of limitations grounds. .However, the Court will grant Fox’s Motion to Dismiss for failure to state a claim. The Court will also grant in part, and deny in part, E!’s Motion to Dismiss.
I. MOTION TO VACATE
In its Memorandum dismissing this case on statute of limitations grounds, the Court ruled:
In Milligan v. United, States,670 F.3d 686 , 698 (6th Cir.2012), the Sixth Circuit stated that “Tennessee follows the single publication rule, meaning that a plaintiffs cause of action accrues only once,*842 at the time of publication, and later publications do not give rise to additional defamation causes of action,” and cited for that proposition Applewhite v. Memphis State Univ.,495 S.W.2d 190 , 193-97 (Tenn.1973)....
The Sixth Circuit’s pronouncement in Milligan regarding the single publication rule could not be any clearer, yet Plaintiff effectively asks the Court to ignore it. He argues that “[t]he substantive law of Tennessee, not the 6th Circuit decision in the Mulligan case is controlling in the present matter” because “ ‘[w]hen a federal court’s jurisdiction is invokеd under diversity of citizenship pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the court must apply the substantive law of the state in which it is situated.” (Docket No. 60 at 6, quoting Katahn v. Hearst Corp.,742 F.Supp. 437 , 439 (M.D.Tenn.1990))....
The problem is, the Sixth Circuit was applying Tennessee law in a case on appeal from Judge Trauger’s decision ruling in favor of Sinclair Broadcasting on plaintiffs state law libel claim relating to a television broadcast by Fox 17. Milligan is controlling authority. Just as a “ ‘panel cannot’ reconsider a prior published case that interpreted state law, ‘absent an indication by the [state] courts that they would have decided [the prior case] differently,’ Blaine Constr. Corp. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am.,171 F.3d 343 , 350 (6th Cir.1999),” lower courts are not free to ignore controlling circuit authority:
“Where no controlling state decision exists, the federal court must attempt to predict what the state’s highest court would do. In performing this ventriloquial function, however, the federal court is bound by ordinary principles of stare decisis. Thus, when a panel of this Court has rendered a decision interpreting state law, that interpretation is binding on district courts in this circuit, and on subsequent panels of this Court, unless an intervening decision of the state’s highest court has resolved the issue.
Rutherford v. Columbia Gas,575 F.3d 616 , 619 (6th Cir.2009) (emphasis added).
Clark v. E! Ent. Television, LLC,
Plaintiff claims the “Court committed a clear error of law when it (1) “misconstrued the single publication rule as being exclusive of republication”; (2) “misapplied” Milligan; and (3) “failed to address in its ruling whether republication applies when a television shоw is rebroadcast with an intention to reach a new audience.” (Docket No. 93 at 1-2). All three arguments are premised on the notion that the Court did not consider that the republication rule can co-exist with the single publication rule.
“A motion to alter or amend judgment under Rule 59(e) may be granted if there is ‘(1) a clear error of law; (2) newly discovered evidence; (3) an intervening change in controlling law; or (4) a need to prevent manifest injustice.’ ” Intern Corp. v. Henderson,
Upon reconsideration, the Court reiterates that Milligan could not be any clearer. But it is clear only for the proposition that Tennessee follows the single publication rule. Milligan did not address republication, and jurisdictions that follow the single publication rule consistently appear to recognize an exception for republication. See Graboff v. Am. Ass’n of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
The single publication rule is suited to the contemporary publishing world where large numbers of copies of a book, newspaper, or magazine are circulated. It would substantially impair the administration of justice to allow separate actions on each individual copy and it would create the possibility of harassment, and multiple recoveries against defendants. Therefore, we hold under Tennessee law a plaintiff should be limited to a single cause*844 of action based on the circulation of copies of an editiоn of a book, newspaper, or periodical.
Applewhite,
In arriving at its conclusion, the Tennessee Supreme Court discussed two prior appellate court decisions applying Tennes-' see’s statute' of limitations in defamation cases where republication occurred: Underwood v. Smith,
Plaintiff concedes that “[n]o Tennessee appellate court has ever addressed the issue of whether to extend the common law single publication rule to include the exception of republication.” (Docket No. 94 at 7). “In the absence of a clear pronouncement from the [Tennessee] Supreme Court, a federal court sitting in diversity ‘must predict how the court would rule by looking to all the available data.’ ” Stryker Corp. v. XL Ins. Am.,
The program which serves as the basis for Plaintiffs claims was aired on January 27, 2012, and this lawsuit was filed within a year thereafter on January 25, 2013. Under the republication exception to the single publication rule, Plaintiffs complaint was timely.
II. MOTIONS TO DISMISS FOR FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM
A. Background
In its prior Memorandum, the Court summarized the allegations in the Amended Complaint. The Court reiterates that summary here so as to place the parties’ arguments in context:
Plaintiff was a top ten finalist in the second season of Fox’s American Idol talent show when TheSmokingGun.com website reported that he had previously been arrested in Topeka, Kansas. As a result of that report, Plaintiff was disqualified from further competition on March 31, 2003, purportedly because he had failed to disclose or reveal information about the arrest, which had occurred on October 12, 2002. On the day of the disqualification, Fox issued a statemеnt to TheSmoking-Gun.com which stated that Plaintiff had been removed from the show and continued:
All participants are required to provide full and accurate information to assist in background checks, including disclosure of any prior arrests. Corey withheld information about a prior arrest which, had it been known, might have affected his participation in the show. Due to his failure to disclose, compounded by an error in a police report which misspelled Corey’s name, the incident was not discovered during the background check. The producers and network feel that Corey’s behavior warrants his disqualification. ...
(Docket No. 17, Amended Complaint ¶ 182).
Sometime after his ouster from the contest, Plaintiff publicly proclaimed that Ms. Abdul had been his mentor on the show, that the two had become romantically involved, and that he had an affair with Ms. Abdul while still a contestant on American Idol. Ms. Abdul has publicly denied the charges.
In response to Plaintiffs claimed relationship with Ms. Abdul, Fox issued a series of statements in 2005. In a May 4, 2005 statement to Primetime, Fox stated:
Despite documented procedures and multiple opportunities for contestants to raise any concerns they may have, the producers of ‘American Idol’... were never notified or contacted by Mr. Clark, nor presented any evidence concerning his claims. We will, of course, look into any evidence of improper conduct that we receive. In the meantime, we recommend that the public carefully examine Mr. Clark’s motives, given his apparent desire to exploit his prior involvement with ‘American Idol’ for profit and publicity.
(Id. ¶ 207). The day after the Primetime special, Fox issued a press release that stated:
We have concerns about the motives behind last night’s purported news special ... as much of it was filled with rumor, speculation, and assertions from a disqualified contestant who admitted during the special to telling lies. Regardless, we are absolutely committed to the fairness of this competition. We take any accusations of this nature very seriously, no matter their source, and we have already begun looking into them.
(Id. ¶ 216).
Fox issued additional statements over the next several months. These included
Many of the claims surrounding Plaintiffs disqualification from American Idol, the imbroglio surrounding his claim of an allegеd affair with Ms. Abdul, and Fox’s handling of the matter were contained in the Program, which first aired as early as August 2005. The original program was updated and rebroadcast on January 27, 2012, and that republication serves as the basis for Plaintiffs present claims.
The Program focuses on Ms. Abdul’s career, including her role as a judge on American Idol. It also describes Plaintiffs participation on that show, his ascension to becoming a finalist, and his disqualification after the TheSmokingGun.com report. Included is a clip from an American Idol producer who explains that Plaintiff was cut from the show because he did not disclose on a background questionnaire that he had been arrested. The Program then states Plaintiff was in fact arrеsted, was later cleared of the charges, and because he was cleared of the charges Plaintiff did not disclose the arrest on the questionnaire.
The Program also recounts Plaintiffs later claims that he had an had an affair with Ms. Abdul. A voiceover states that Ms. Abdul initially made no public statement, but later claimed Plaintiffs allegations were lies. The Program goes on to describe media and fan reactions to the story, and reports that an investigation by independent counsel hired by Fox found that Plaintiffs claims regarding the alleged affair were not substantiated. This topic concludes with a clip of USA Today’s Elysa Gardner stating, “At the end of the day maybe only the two of them know what really happened.” Towards the end of the Program, the narrator states, “[t]he former ‘Laker girl’ who taught Janet Jackson how to be ‘nasty’ — and shot ‘straight up’ the pop charts herself — proved time and again that she’s tough enough to stay on top.”
Based upon the foregoing, Plaintiff filed a 346-paragraph, 68-page Amended Complaint. He sues both E! and Fox under Tennessee common law for defamation (Count I) and false light invasion of privacy (Count II).
B. Standard of Review
As a general rule, in considering a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a court must take “all well-pleaded material allegations of the pleadings” as true. Fritz v. Charter Township of Comstock,
Further, in determining whether a complaint sets forth a plausible claim, a court may consider not only the allegations, but “may also consider other materials that are integral to the complaint, are public records, or are otherwise appropriate for the taking of judicial notice.” Ley v. Visteon Corp.,
C. Analysis
“ ‘To establish a prima facie case of defamation in Tennessee, the plaintiff must establish that: 1) a party published a statement; 2) with knowledge that the statement is false and defaming to the other; or 3) with reckless disregard for the truth of the statement or with negligence in failing-to ascertain the truth of the statement.’ ” Seaton v. TripAdvisor, LLC,
A claim for defamation often overlaps with a claim for false light invasion of privacy, but the Tennessee Supreme Court has determined that “the differences between the two torts warrant their separate recognition.” West v. Media Gen’l Convergence, Inc.,
1. Defamation
“The basis for an action for defamation, whether it be slander or libel, is that the defamation has resulted in an injury to the person’s character and reputation.” Quality Auto Parts Co., Inc. v. Bluff City Buick Co.,
In determining whether a statement is capable of a defamatory meaning, the “[a]llegedly defamatory statements should be judged within the context in which they are made,” and given their usual meaning, “as a person of ordinary intelligence would understand them in light of the surrounding circumstances.” Revis v. McClean,
“ ‘However, in cases involving tеlevision broadcasts with a stream of audio and visual components interacting with each other, the plaintiffs burden of identifying allegedly defamatory words with absolute precision and exactitude is much more complicated and poses an especially difficult problem.’ ” Id. In an analysis agreed with by the Sixth Circuit, the district court in West explained the difficulties inherent in establishing defamation in cases involving television programs, writing:
... [Television programs are divided into a number of video and audio segments. In some segments, the audio and video are of the same event such as when a person makes a remark or statement on camera. In other segments, the audio may be а “voice-over” to a different video or photograph. “It is the juxtaposition of these varying segments into an audio and video mosaic that conveys the meaning or meanings intended.” ... In reviewing a television broadcast for possible defamatory statements, a court and jury cannot confine their analysis to the words alone. The court and jury are necessarily required to also consider the impact of the video portion of the program since the television medium offers the publisher the opportunity, through visual presentation, to emphasize and convey ideas in ways that cannot be ascertained from a mere reading of the words in a written trаnscript.
... Although it is important, as in any defamation case, to focus on the words and language published by the defendant, this should not be the only focal point to the exclusion of other relevant facts and details. The words must be' viewed in their proper context in juxtaposition to all of the audio and visual components of the television broadcasts as a whole. The defendant’s defamatory words, standing alone, cannot readily be identified in isolation without also considering the accompanying visual images, the tone of voice of the announcer or reporter, along with the combined audio and video editing effects. If words are taken completely out of the context of the audio and visual components of the television broadcasts as a whole, then it would not constitute a satisfactorily accurate, effective method for identifying televised statements and visual images which are alleged to have a combined defamatory meaning.
In response to both Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss, Plaintiff argues that the Program is capable of a defamatory meaning because
the assertion by Abdul that Plaintiff is a liar ... combined with E!’s statement. that Abdul’s “proved time and again that she’s tough enough to stay on top” anyway ... implies that she overcame Plaintiffs lies to recover her career and stay on top. Certаinly these statements are capable of defamatory meaning in the eyes and ears of the audience.
(Docket No. 60 at 13; Docket No. 62 at 6)
Simply quoting Plaintiffs argument shows just h'ow attenuated his defamation claim is against Defendant Fox. Plaintiffs claim is based upon what Abdul is alleged to have said and El’s statement about her ability to persevere. Even under the republication doctrine which allow for an original defamer to be held hable for reasonably foreseeable re-broadcasts, Plaintiff does not adequately explain how an original defamer can be liable for a rebroadcast which alters the original statement and it is that altered statement that is said to be defamatory.
Regardless, and just аs it did in conjúnetion with its earlier decision, the Court has viewed the Program. Based on that review, the Court concludes that the Program is not capable of a defamatory meaning and, therefore, both Defendants are entitled to judgment on Plaintiffs defamation claim.
As noted previously, in determining whether a statement is defamatory, context matters. Viewed in context, the Program reports both Plaintiffs claim of an affair and Ms. Abdul’s denials, but takes no affirmative position in the dispute. It did not adopt Ms. Abdul’s statements or claim that they were accurate— E! simply reported them. In fact, the Program explicitly states, “only the two of them know what really happened.” ■
As for the statement thаt Ms. Adbul was “tough enough to stay on top,” even out of context it is incapable of a defamatory meaning and, when considered in context, is clearly not defamatory. The statement was towards the very end of the lié hour Program that describe many of the ups and down in Ms. Abdul’s career. It comes just after a recounting of her. short-lived show “Live to Dance” and her rejoining Simon Cowell on the X-Factbr in 2011 and states:
The former Laker girl who taught Janet Jackson how to be “nasty,” and shot straight up the pop charts herself, proved time and again that she’s tough enough to stay on top. Paula Abdul just keeps on doing what she loves the most — inspiring young talent all over the world.
“Stay on top” was not said in the context of Clark’s allegations and, in fact, the segment discussing the alleged affair concludes with the statement by Ms. Gardner of USA Today that “at the end of the day maybe only the two of them know what really happened.”
Plaintiffs reliance on Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co.,
This ease is markedly different from Milkovich. Neither E! nor Fox stated that Plaintiff was a liar, or that it was their opinion that he was a liar. Rather, the Program reports on what Ms. Abdul is alleged to have said in response to Plaintiffs allegation and tracks what occurred once the allegations were made. Unlike the defendant in Milkovich, Ms. Abdul was responding to an allegation (to which any denial would suggest Plaintiff lied), and E! reported the dispute as it was entitled to do. Green v. CBS, Inc.,
2. False Light
As noted, the Tennessee Supreme Court in West recognized false light invasion of privacy as a tort distinct from defamation. Therefore, it is possible that a statement, while not defamatory, can place a plaintiff in a false light. See Eisenstein v. WTVF-TV News Channel 5,
With regard to both Defendants, Plaintiff argues that “[t]he false light that Defendant has painted of Plaintiff is that he is a liar who neаrly destroyed Paula Abdul’s career with his ‘lies,’ and that he lied in order to get ahead by selling more CDs.” (Docket No. 60 at 13; Docket No. 61 at 10). Each “Defendant painted this false light,” Plaintiff argues, by:
• Quoting directly from Abdul that she does not “respond to lies, no matter how vicious, no matter how hurtful,” regarding Plaintiffs allegations about her;
• Inserting Abdul’s opinion that the Prime Time special Fallen Idol occurred to her as an infomercial (although the narrator himself bent the truth himself by stating that Abdul said that Plaintiff appeared on the show because he had a national audience to plug his upcoming album when she never said that); and,
• Asserting, via E’s narrator, that Abdul’s “proved time and again that she’s tough enough to stay on top anyway.”
(Docket No. 60 at 13-14; Docket No. 61 at 10) (internal сitations to Amended Complaint omitted).
Again Plaintiffs claim against Fox is attenuated and the Court concludes that he fails to state a false light invasion of privacy claim as to that Defendant. The entire Program at issue is El’s take on Ms. Abdul career and its recounting of the alleged relationship between Plaintiff and her. E! may have paraphrased statements made by Fox, but it was E! that produced, narrated, edited, and provided the audio and visual effects for the Program. While an original speaker may be liable for republication that is “reasonably foreseeable” or its “natural and probable consequence,” the Program is an E! broadcast (or publicatiоn) that Fox is not alleged to have had a hand in creating or producing.
The Court will not, however, dismiss the false light invasion of privacy claim as to E! at this time. This is so even though E! may have accurately reported that Plaintiff made a claim which Ms. Abdul characterized as a he.
In West, the Tennessee Supreme Court stated:
The facts may be true in a false light claim. However, the angle from which the facts are presented, or the omission of certain material facts, results in placing the plaintiff in a false light. “ ‘Literal accuracy of separate statements will not render a communication “true” where the implication of the communication as a whole was false.’ ... The question is whether [the defendant] made ‘discrete presentations of information in a fashion which rendered the publication susceptible to inferences casting [the plaintiff] in a false light.’ ” Santillo v. Reedel,430 Pa.Super. 290 ,634 A.2d 264 , 267 (1993) (citing Larsen v. Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc.,375 Pa.Super. 66 ,543 A.2d 1181 (1988)) (emphasis added). Therefore, the literal truth of the publicized facts is not a defense in a false light case.
“Full reality” is not necessarily clear from the Program itself. Obviously, because the Program is a biography of Ms. Abdul, much is heard from her. However, and even though Plaintiffs allegations were an important aspect of the show, nothing is heard from Plaintiff — his picture appears on several occasions, but there is no interview with him or a voice-over from him.
Further, the Program cites to an “independent investigation” which also allegedly rеvealed that Plaintiffs claims of the affair were unsubstantiated. But Plaintiff asserts (and maybe E! knew) that the supposedly independent investigation was actually conducted by a law firm “already on retainer to perform legal services for Fox.” (Docket No. 17 Amended Complaint ¶ 234). The Program also references a poll which allegedly showed 59% of the fans polled believed that Plaintiff was untruthful about the affair, but the basis for that poll and its scientific validity or accuracy is not explored.
When the facts are construed in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, one conclusion that can be drawn from the Program is that E! intentionally chose to present the information in such a way аs to infer that Plaintiff made up the affair, and also that he did so in an effort to advance his career at the expense of Ms. Abdul’s. This may be a tough sell, but it is not something the Court can determine based on the pleadings. Further, a reasonable person could find such a portrayal or the implications from such a portrayal to be highly offensive. As such, the Court will not dismiss Plaintiffs false light claim as to Defendant E! at this time.
The Court recognizes that to succeed on his remaining claim against E!, Plaintiff
“The ‘actual malice’ fault standard is a subjective one in which the ultimate question is whether the defendant made the statement with ‘knowledge that the statement was false’ or with ‘reckless disregard for the truth.’ ” Thomas M. Cooley Law School v. Kurzon Strauss,
In response to Plaintiffs assertion that a failure to investigate could show actual malice, E! argues:
The controversy at issue centers on a private act between two public figures— Abdul and Plaintiff — with each providing a conflicting account as to their relationship. E! has no ability, much less obligation, to investigate and determine who is telling the truth in this “he-said-she-said” controversy.
(Docket No. 66 at 10). E! may ultimately prevail on this argument, but it is premature.
“[T]he failure to investigate, alone, will not support a finding of actual malice, but the ‘purposeful avoidance of the truth’ may do so.” Cobb v. Time, Inc.,
Whether there were obvious reasons for E! to doubt Ms. Abdul’s denial or the accuracy of Plaintiffs claims the Court does not know. While “[t]he question whether there is sufficient evidence in the record to permit a finding of actual malice is a question of law,” and while “[t]he unique nature of the interest protected by the actual malice standard requires that reviewing courts conduct an independent review to determine whether that standard has been met, ... [i]n making this determination, thе reviewing court must consider the factual record in full.” Id.
III. CONCLUSION
On the basis of the foregoing, (1) Plaintiffs Motion to Vacate will be granted; (2) Defendant Fox’s Motion to Dismiss will be granted; and (3) Defendant E!’s Motion to Dismiss will be granted in part and denied in part.
An appropriate Order will enter.
Notes
. Although Plaintiff's Motion is brought under both Rules 59(e) and 60, the Court analyzes it under Rule 59(e) "because it presents a substantive legal challenge to [this] court's reasoning,” whereas “the province, of Rule 60” is "clerical error or palpable defect[.]” Kola
. The Court rejects Defendants' assertion that recognizing the republication doctrine in a single publication rule state runs the risk of allowing the exception to swallow the rule. In an oft-quoted passage, the New York Court of Appeals has observed:
Republication, retriggering the period of limitations, occurs upon a separate aggregate publication from the original, on a different occasion, which is not merely "a delayed circulation of the original edition.” The justification for this exception to the single publication rule is that the subsequent publication is intended to and actually reaches a new audience.
Firth v. State of New York,
. The Court notes that the statements attributable to Fox were made some six years before the original Complaint was filed. However, under the republication doctrine, "an original defamer is liable for republications that are the 'natural and probable result' of the detain-er's actions,” Meyers v. Levinson,
. Plaintiff also sued Defendant E! for violation of the Lanham Act (Count III), but has agreed to dismissal of that claim. (Docket No. 59 at 2).
. For purposes of the pending Motions for Summary Judgment, "Plaintiff acknowledges that he was a public figure at the time of American Idol, Season Two, and that he continues to entertain as an entertainer." (Docket No. 62 at 6).
. Fox's original statement was that "allegations that [Clark] and Ms. Abdul had a sexual relationship have not been substantiated by any corroborating evidence or witnesses, in-eluding those provided by Mr. Clark, and Ms. Abdul expressly denies that any such relationship existed.” (First Am. Comp. V 244).
