*80 OPINION
This defamation suit arises from statements made by Defendant Kevin Wilks (Wilks), an employee of Defendant Volvo Finance of North America (Volvo Finance), regarding Plaintiff Clifford Lapkoff (Lap-koff). The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants. Plaintiff appeals. We affirm.
I.
From October, 1988 through April, 1990 Lapkoff was an aggressive and effective sales manager at Anton Motors, Inc. (Anton Motors). At all relevant times, Wilks was the mid-Atlantic regional manager for Volvo Finance. Volvo Finance provides financing for purchasers of Volvo automobiles from Volvo dealerships, including Anton Motors.
Wilks became aware that a high percentage of Anton Motors’ customers were delinquent on their loans. After an investigation by Volvo Finance’s collections department, the problem was found to be with the customers referred by Fred Byrd (Byrd), a man in the business of helping those with marginal credit buy cars. Apparently, the credit applications submitted to Volvo Finance by Anton Motors for customers referred by Byrd contained false and misleading information. Wilks advised Lapkoff to cease dealing with Byrd and Lapkoff agreed.
Lapkoff contends that he later heard a rumor that Anton Motors’ finance manager was altering credit applications but did not report it to his supervisor, nor did he report the conversation he had with Wilks about Byrd to his supervisor. Lapkoff subsequently fired a sales person after discovering the sales person had dealt with Byrd without Lapkoff's knowledge. Lapkoff indicated he later resigned from Anton Motors because he did not want to be involved in any illegal activity.
On September 4, 1990, Ronald Johnston (Johnston), general manager of Brown’s Volvo and Subaru of Alexandria, Inc. (Brown’s), hired Lapkoff as sales manager. Wilks was also the principal contact between Volvo Finance and Brown’s on matters of financing. During a routine sales call to Brown’s, Johnston asked Wilks about Lapkoff. Wilks stated to Johnston that Lapkoff was good at his job of motivating salesmen and closing deals but that on a personal level he [Wilks] “wouldn't trust him [Lapkoff] any farther than [he] could throw him.” Wilks also related to Johnston the problems at Anton Motors with fraudulent loan applications and something to the effect that if a manager condoned that type of situation, there was a problem, and if he was not aware of it, there was also a problem.
Johnston confronted Lapkoff about the trouble at Anton Motors. Lapkoff admitted that there had been a problem and that he had known about it. Lapkoff, however, stated that he had not been involved in any wrongdoing. Johnston testified that he fired Lapkoff because he “could not afford to have a man working at [his] dealership who had been general sales manager in a store where [those] things had been happening.”
Lapkoff then filed suit against Wilks alleging defamation. The district court granted summary judgment in Wilks’ favor. Relying on
Chaves v. Johnson,
II.
On appeal, we review
de novo
a district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Higgins v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
The district court, however, also relied on
Milkovich
for the standard to determine whether Wilks’ comments were statements of opinion or fact. In
Milkovich,
the Court was asked to determine whether a newspaper article implying that a local high school football coach lied under oath in a judicial proceeding was a constitutionally protected opinion. The Court, reversing the Ohio State Supreme Court, declared that it was “not persuaded that, ... an additional separate constitutional privilege for ‘opinion’ [was] required to ensure the freedom of expression guaranteed by the First Amendment.”
Milkovich,
497 U.S. at-,
The Virginia state constitution expressly provides “that the freedoms of speech and of the press are among the great bulwarks of liberty” and protects the rights of the citizens to “freely speak, write, and publish his sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that right ...” Va. Const. Art. I, § 12. Moreover, Virginia statutory law provides that “all words shall be actionable which from their usual construction and common acceptance are construed as insults and tend to violence and breach of the peace.” Va.Code Ann. § 8.01-45 (Michie 1984). This court has interpreted Virginia statutory law to be coextensive with a common law action for defamation.
Potomac Valve & Fitting Inc. v. Crawford Fitting Co.,
In
Chaves,
the Virginia Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether certain statements were defamatory. There, an architect brought suit against a competitor alleging that a letter written by the competitor to the city council characterized the architect as inexperienced and maintained he charged excessive fees. The court found that “a charge of inexperience is in its nature a relative statement, depending for its import largely upon the speaker’s viewpoint,” and that the listener “could only regard it as a relative statement of opinion grounded upon the speaker’s obvious bias, and having no tendency to defame.”
Chaves,
In determining whether a statement expresses an actual fact about an individual such that the comment is actionable or whether the comment is a non-actionable opinion, the court may consider the type of language used, the meaning of the statement in context, whether the statement is verifiable, and the broader social circumstances in which the statement was made.
Potomac Valve & Fitting,
With regard to the first allegedly defamatory remark that “personally, I [Wilks] wouldn’t trust him as far as I can throw him,” the court concludes that this comment is clearly Wilks’ opinion because it is a relative statement completely dependent on Wilks’ obvious bias toward Lapkoff. Johnston could have only regarded it as an opinion and, by any standard, it is protected speech.
With regard to the second statement about the fraud problems at Anton Motors, the court notes that true facts cannot be the basis of a defamation action.
Massey v. Jones,
With regard to the third allegedly defamatory statement that if the sales manager condoned the behavior there was a problem and if he did not know of the behavior there was a problem, the court will address two alternative interpretations. First, Plaintiff argued before the district court that Wilks’ comments to Johnston indicated that Lapkoff knew about the fraud and was involved. However, no reasonable jury could construe Wilks’ first remark to mean that Lapkoff was involved in fraud. Wilks’ comments were directed to Lap-koff’s awareness of the fraud not his participation in it. Therefore, we find that summary judgment is appropriate under this interpretation of the statement.
The second interpretation of the statement suggests that Lapkoff either knew about the fraud, was not involved, but did nothing to stop it or Lapkoff did not know about the fraud and was not involved. Plaintiff’s main contention on appeal is that this statement imputes condonation or negligence, which is a disputed question of fact and not proper for disposition by summary judgment. * However, by couching the statement in the disjunctive, that is either/or, no reasonable jury could interpret the statement as expressing an established fact about Lapkoff.
Moreover, there is no question that Wilks was correct in at least half of what he said. Lapkoff acknowledged to Johnston that he was aware of the credit fraud activity at Anton Motors (App. at 101). As to Wilks’ belief that Lapkoff’s inaction in the face of fraudulent activity created some type of “problem,” presumably that Lapkoff was a poor sales manager, that position can only be construed as a relative statement, again *83 dependant on Wilks’ viewpoint that it was a problem. Therefore, we conclude that under the standard set out in Chaves, the statement is a non-actionable opinion and the district court properly granted summary judgment for Defendants.
CONCLUSION
We find that Wilks’ comments regarding Lapkoff are statements of opinion and non-actionable in defamation. Further, because we resolve this issue on state law grounds, we find it unnecessary to consider the federal constitutional question of whether the First Amendment protects a private plaintiff against a non-media defendant on issues of private matters. Therefore, for the foregoing reasons, the opinion of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Defendant contends that the issues of condonation and negligence are new theories which were neither presented to, nor ruled upon by the district court. We disagree. Although con-donation and negligence by imputation were not specifically pleaded in the complaint, we note that the district court had all three allegedly defamatory statements before it, including the third statement which is the thrust of Plaintiff's condonation and imputation argument. As this statement was before the district court and discussed by the court in its Memorandum Opinion, Plaintiff may raise it on appeal.
