356 A.2d 472 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1975
The complaint in this action alleges that the defendants, Register Publishing Company and Lionel Jackson, on November 13, *6 1970, published an article in their newspaper, the New Haven Register, which was written by the defendant Leona Peterson and which is claimed to have libeled the plaintiffs. The article stated that a seventeen-year-old youth, Dennis J. Corbett, had been arrested by the Branford police following a telephone call from his mother, Mrs. George Corbett, and that, when the police arrived, he used foul language and attempted to kick one of the policemen. The article also stated that he was the son of Youth Officer George Corbett, a misstatement which is the basis for this action. It is alleged that the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., was an officer of the Branford police department and that he was a detective sergeant youth officer at the time of publication. The plaintiff Eleanor Corbett is his wife and the plaintiff George Corbett III, who was seventeen years old at the time, is his son. The complaint alleges that the article was published in an improper and unjustifiable manner with improper and unjustifiable motives. It is also alleged that a retraction of the article was requested and that it was published on November 14, 1970, but that it was inadequate.
The defendants have moved for summary judgment and have filed in support of the motion an affidavit of the defendant Leona Peterson, pertaining to the circumstances of writing the article, and an affidavit of Clarence French, suburban editor of the New Haven Register, relating to the retraction. No counter affidavits have been filed in behalf of the plaintiffs, as Practice Book § 299 seems to demand, nor has any claim been made that affidavits of material facts are unavailable to the plaintiffs or that a continuance is needed to obtain such affidavits, as permitted by Practice Book § 301. The court, therefore, must rely on the facts as stated in the affidavits filed by the defendants. *7
General Statutes §
The complaint alleges humiliation and embarrassment resulting from the libel but no pecuniary special damages. In response to interrogatories the plaintiffs' disclosure states that no actual damage was sustained. Since it is also admitted that no written request for a retraction was made, as required by General Statutes §
The statutory requirement of "malice in fact" has never been construed to require proof of spite, ill will, or personal pique on the part of the perpetrator of a libel. Proof of any improper or unjustifiable motive will suffice. Moore v. Stevenson,
It cannot be said, therefore, that the undisputed facts in the affidavits establish as a matter of law that the plaintiffs cannot prove "malice in fact" at a trial. Since negligent misconduct may provide the basis for drawing that inference, a factual issue remains which cannot be decided in this proceeding. "Issues of negligence are ordinarily not susceptible of summary adjudication but should be resolved by trial in the ordinary manner." Spencer v. GoodEarth Restaurant Corporation,
The complaint contains no innuendo specifying the manner in which the newspaper article was defamatory of the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., although such an allegation is made in respect to the plaintiff George Corbett III. In his brief the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., suggests that the "false statement that he was the arrestee's father is the only way he is connected to the subject of the article." The complaint, however, does refer in several places to the status of the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., as a Branford police officer and, despite the quoted statement in the brief, it is obvious that the only defamation of that plaintiff contained in the article lies in the implication of his incompetency as a "youth officer" by virtue of his relationship to an unruly adolescent. The mere linkage by paternity to a youth arrested for a minor offense could not reasonably have any defamatory import. Furthermore, since special damages are not alleged *10
and are actually disclaimed by the disclosure, it is the imputation of incompetency in his profession which affords the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., ground for an actionable libel, that kind of aspersion falling into one of the recognized categories of libel per se. Charles Parker Co. v. Silver CityCrystal Co.,
It is apparent, therefore, that any libel of the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., involved his position as a Branford police officer having special duties as a youth officer. He cannot, therefore, rely on mere negligence in failure to investigate the facts properly but must prove, in accordance with theNew York Times standard, at least that the defendants were aware of the probable falsity of the statements before publication. Moriarty v. Lippe, supra, 381.
The uncontroverted facts in the supporting affidavits indicate no basis for an inference of reckless misconduct on the part of the defendants, let alone actual knowledge of falsity or malevolence toward the plaintiffs. The erroneous information was obtained routinely from a normally reliable source, the Branford police department desk officer. At most it could be claimed that there had been insufficient checking of the details of this rather humdrum news story, a nonfeasance which would amount to no more than negligence. In Moriarty v. Lippe,
supra, a jury verdict for a plaintiff, also a police officer, against a newspaper publisher under essentially similar circumstances was set aside and a verdict directed on remand. The same criteria involved in directing a verdict apply to a motion for summary judgment. On the facts presented by the affidavits, "viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant," the trier could not reasonably reach any other conclusion than that the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., cannot prevail. Spencer v. *11 Good Earth Restaurant Corporation,
The New York Times requirement of actual malice has been applied to defamation suits of "public figures" as well as to those of public officials.Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts,
Although Gertz v. Welch,
That rather vague guideline seems to mean that the plaintiffs Eleanor Corbett and George Corbett III might prove an actual injury to their reputation sufficient to support an award of damages, *13 despite their admission of no "actual damages" capable of calculation in precise monetary terms to which the interrogatory probably was directed. Especially in view of the probable lack of awareness on the part of the plaintiffs of the significance of that response to the interrogatory in the light ofGertz v. Welch, supra, and the inconsistency of that response with the allegation of damages to reputation in the complaint, it would be unwise to attribute to that disclosure a greater import than was intended.
Furthermore, the requirements that the defamatory words fall into one of the recognized categories — infamous crime, loathsome disease, incompetency in a trade, or female unchastity — in order to be admissible without proof of special damage does *14 not apply to libel as opposed to slander according to the general rule. Harper James, op. cit. § 5.9, p. 374; Prosser, op. cit. § 112, p. 762. For that reason, the claim that the allusion to the plaintiff Eleanor Corbett in the article, which involves none of the slander per se stereotypes, is not actionable without proof of special damages is also unfounded. Although her maternal relationship to the offender would not in itself be defamatory, it is possible that her action in calling the police to deal with her son might be so regarded by some people.
It is clear that these questions cannot be resolved until trial.
The motion of the defendants for summary judgment is granted with respect to the plaintiff George Corbett, Jr., only.