Lead Opinion
We granted certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ opinion in Elder v. Gaffney Ledger,
FACTS
This is a defamation case. Respondent Wayne Elder, was Chief of Police for the town of Blacksburg.
Are the drug dealers paying?
I’d like to know what the people think about this. The Chief of the Blacksburg Police Department knows that*113 these people are selling drugs and they have been selling them many years and he hasn’t done anything about it. Now I often wonder if the drug dealers are paying the Chief of Blacksburg. And too, I would like to know why the Gaffney police have to go over there and work in the police department and do their work because they work here in Cherokee County. Don’t they have enough money over there to hire Blacksburg police to do their jobs?
The editor of the paper, Cody Sossamon, made the decision to publish the above item which was phoned into the Newspaper by an anonymous caller. Although Sossamon wrote the caption, he testified he did not intend to suggest an answer to readers. However, Sossamon testified he himself believed drug dealers could be paying the chief.
After publication of the column, Elder brought this libel action. The jury awarded him $10,000 in actual damages and $300,000 in punitive damages. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
ISSUE
The sole issue we need address is whether there was sufficient evidence of constitutional actual malice to withstand Newspaper’s motion for directed verdict.
DISCUSSION
In defamation actions involving a “public official” or “public figure,” the plaintiff must prove the statement was made with “actual malice,” i.e., with either knowledge that it was false or reckless disregard for its truth. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Actual malice is a subjective standard testing the publisher’s good faith belief in the truth of his or her statements. Peeler v. Spartan Radiocasting, Inc.,
Failure to investigatе before publishing, even when a reasonably prudent person would have done so, is not sufficient to establish reckless disregard. See St. Amant, supra; Hunt v. Liberty Lobby,
The actual malice standard is not satisfied merely through a showing of ill will or “malice” in the ordinary sense of the term. Harte-Hanks,
The evidence relied upon in this case to demonstrate actual malice is as follows: 1) that Sossamon failed to investigate or verify the information left by the anonymous caller; 2) that the phone recording of the anonymous caller was “erased” by Newspaper; 3) that Sossamon pled guilty to manufacturing marijuana in 1991; and 4) that Sossamon had been “rude” to Chief Elder’s wife on one occasion when she was at the Newspaper to place an ad for her husband. This evidence is patently insufficient to demonstrate Sossamon in fact entertained serious doubts as to thе truth of the publication.
As to the. first item, the failure to investigate, while there was expert testimony that reporters verify the accuracy of news articles, and Sossamon testified he did not have sufficient evidence to develop a news story that Elder was being bribed, there was no testimony that the same verification procedures apply to editorials or opinion columns. In fаct, the experts called by Elder did not write editorials. The only testimony with respect to columns such as “What’s Your Beef?” came from Sossamon who testified that, although some newspapers have a policy against publishing anonymous items, he knew of a number which do, in fact, publish such items. Moreover, as noted previously, a mere failure to investigate is not tantamount to actual mаlice. St. Amant, supra. The fact that Sossamon did not investigate the anonymous phone call simply does not demonstrate that he “purposefully avoided” the truth.
The Court of Appeals also cited the fact that Sossamon had a 1991 conviction for manufacturing marijuana, concluding that he may have been motivated by his own problems with law enforcement to discredit Elder. In our view, the Court of Appeals placed undue emphasis on this conviction. There was no evidence Elder had anything whatsoever to do with Sossamon’s arrest; on the contrary, it appears from the record that Sossamon was arrested by a Detective Burgess. Moreover, Sossamon repeatedly testified that he owed his life to the fact that he was arrested, and in fact had called and thanked the Sheriff who had arrested him. In sum, there was simply no testimony linking Sossamon’s 1991 arrest to any ill motive toward Chief Elder such that its relevance in this case is questionable.
Moreover, even if Sossamon’s conviction and his “rudeness” toward Mrs. Elder are somehow relevant to a determination of “ill will” toward Chief Elder, they are insufficient to demonstrate the requisite constitutional actual malice in publishing the item. As noted by the United States Supreme Court, the actual malice standard is not satisfied merely through a showing of ill will or “malice” in the ordinary sense of the term. Harte-Hanks, supra,
Under the facts of this case, even if we assume Sossamon’s conviction and alleged “rudeness” tend to demonstrate that he in fact held some ill will toward Chief Elder, those factors far fall short of the requisite clear and convincing standard of demonstrating he deliberately published “Whаt’s Your Beef?” with a “high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity.” Garrison v. Louisiana, supra.
Finally, Sossamon testified that he believed the information contained in “What’s Your Beef?” could be true because Chief Elder knew some people in Blacksburg who had been selling drugs for many years and had not done anything about it,
CONCLUSION
Essentially, the evidence of actuаl malice in this case boils down to Sossamon’s failure to investigate an anonymous phone call prior to publishing it in a clearly designated editorial/opinion column,
REVERSED.
Notes
. He retired voluntarily in 1995 after twenty-five years of service.
. "Whаt’s Your Beef?” is an opinion column in which readers are invited to telephone the newspaper and express their opinion or "tell [the paper] what [they] think” on an answering machine. Callers need not identify themselves.
. In light of our holding, we find it unnecessary to address Newspaper’s contention that the phrase “Now I often wonder if the drug dealers are paying the Chief” is incapable of a defamatory meaning.
. Elder also contends the fact that Newspaper failed to list Sossamon as a witness who could corroborate the truth of the statement in its answers to interrogatories constitutes evidence of constitutional actual malice. We fail to see how a party’s failure to list a witness in answers to interrogatories demonstrates actuаl malice in the publication of the article. Moreover, Sossamon was listed as a witness in Newspapers’ answers to interrogatories; he was simply not listed in response to interrogatory number 6.
. The Court of Appeals made much of the fact that Sossamon conceded he did not have sufficient information to develop a news story. -511
. The message was left on what Sossamon described as a “computer recording.” When Sossamon went to retrieve it for Elder the day following the publication, he was told it had been “killed” off the computеr (or recorded over). Newspaper was subsequently able to retrieve the original message from a mirror recording, a copy of which was given to counsel for Elder prior to trial.
. Moreover, this Court has recognized that erasure of a tape recording is not evidence of actual malice. Peeler, supra.
. Elder essentially conceded this fact at trial.
. The fact that the item was published in “What’s Your Beef?” militates against a finding оf actual malice. The column was clearly labeled as
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
I respectfully dissеnt. In my opinion, Chief Elder presented clear and convincing evidence of Sossamon’s actual malice in publishing the anonymous commentary in The Gaffney Ledger.
The constitutional standard for proving actual malice is well-established. In N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
“... [RJeckless conduct is not measured by whether a reasonably prudent man would have published, or would have investigated before publishing.” Id. at 731,
On appeal, this Court has “a constitutional duty to ‘exercise independent judgment and determine whether the record establishes actual malice with convincing сlarity’.” Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton,
In my opinion, de novo review of the record demonstrates clear and convincing evidence of actual malice. Sossamon’s claim he believed the anonymous recording was true because Chief Elder had previously notified him a newspaper employee was “hanging out” with a drug dealer who was going to be arrested does not support the recording’s assertion Chief Elder was taking bribes from drug dealers. In fact, it suggests the contrary: that Chief Elder, was actively arresting drug dealers. In that the United States Supreme Court has recognized the danger inherent in relying on anonymous sources, St. Amant,
Moreover, Sossamon’s attitude towards Chief Elder’s wife prior to the publication of the recording indicates a degree of apparent hostility towards Chief Elder. Further, notwithstanding his claims to the contrary, Sossаmon’s own arrest and conviction for manufacturing marijuana are evidence of his motive for publishing the recording without regard to whether its assertions were true. Id. at 668,
The First Amendment prevents the threat of litigation from inhibiting the freedom of the press. Nonetheless, its protection is not without limit. Where, as here, a newspaper heedlessly and falsely accuses a public official of a crime solely
. Our Court previously recognized this St. Amant standard in Holtzscheiter v. Thomson Newspapers, Inc.,
. Statements of opinion are not automatically entitled to constitutional protection. Mitkovich v. Lorain Journal Co.,
