Opinion
In this case we hold that plaintiffs may not maintain causes of action for defamation and related torts against a credit reporting company which publishes a report which plaintiffs concede is true. This is hardly a groundbreaking result; truth has been used as a defense to a defamation
Facts
The facts, literally, are not in dispute. In the late 1970’s, plaintiff Raymond J. Francis started an entity called Crisp International, which manufactured potato chips. In 1982 Crisp International crumbled and was forced intо bankruptcy proceedings. Sometime in mid-1982, Francis became involved with another company called California Trim Plan, a diet business. In August 1985, he resigned as president and chairman of the board of directors of California Trim Plan, and his wife Maria resigned as secretary. California Trim Plan filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy three months later.
In 1989, Dun & Bradstreet published a credit report regarding plaintiff California Diet Worldwide (Cal Diet), the corporation with which Francis is currently affiliated. The report contained the following two paragraphs, set forth here in their entirety:
“On Jan 28, 1982, Crisp International Inc., a Georgia Corporation, filed a petition under Chapter Eleven of the Bankruptcy Act, Case #SA82-00335 (PE) in U S Bankruptcy court, Santa Ana, CA. The petition was signed by Raymond J. Francis, President. According to a declaration filed February 2, 1982, Raymond J. Francis and his wife, Maria Francis, owned all the stock at the time of the filing. On November 11, 1982, the petition was converted to a Chapter 7 and the case was closed on October 30, 1986. Comment: According to a letter dated June 8,1982, from Fulop & Hardee, attorneys for Crisp International, Crisp suffered millions of dollars of losses when it was sold defectively designed containers which caused product damage, thereby forcing Crisp into bankruptcy proceedings.
“On Nov 1,1985, California Trim Plan Inc. a/k/a California Natural Foods Corporation, filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Act, Case #SA85-04586 (PE) in the U S Bankruptcy Court in Santa Ana, CA. The petition was signed by Michael F. Lambert, president. On August 25, 1987, the case was converted to a Chapter 7 proceeding. The trustee declared this a no asset case on December 19,1987, and the case was closed on February 10,1989. According to Mr. Francis, he and his wife were
Prior to publication of the credit report, Francis asked Dun & Bradstreet to omit reference to the two bankruptcies, claiming they werе affecting his credit. 2 Dun & Bradstreet refused. According to Francis, after publication of the report Cal Diet lost a $1 million revolving credit line with Barclays Bank, lost a “factoring arrangement” it had with Republic Factoring, and was declined a loan from City National Bank. Francis stated these events occurred because the various financial institutions felt Francis was responsible for the bankruptcy of California Trim Plan.
Francis and Cal Diet filed a complaint against Dun & Bradstreet in December 1989, alleging defamation, interference with рrospective economic advantage, injurious falsehood, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Five months later, after answering the complaint and deposing Francis, Dun & Bradstreet filed a motion for summary judgment. It asserted that аll the statements in its credit report were true, and submitted copies of letters and bankruptcy court documents to back up its claim. In their opposition, plaintiffs conceded that every statement in the credit report was “uncontroverted.” They contended, however, that the credit report taken as a whole implied Francis was responsible for the prior bankruptcies. The trial court was not impressed, stating that the report was not reasonably subject to plaintiffs’ interpretation and that plaintiffs had “enlarged the meaning of the statement which does not appear to the court to be ambiguous at all.”
Discussion
I
Although plaintiffs’ notice of appeal states they are appealing “from thе judgement made and entered in the above-entitled action on Tuesday August 21, 1990,” there in fact is no judgment. Thus, plaintiffs are attempting to appeal from a nonappealable order. Unfortunately, this is a common mistake among attornеys. (See cases collected in
Cohen
v.
Equitable Life
As a reviewing court, our task is to resolve appeals on the merits if at all possible.
3
Therefore, consistent with our past practice, “we construe the order [granting summary judgment] to incorporate a judgment in the interests of justice and to avoid delay.”
(Lindgren
v.
Baker Engineering Corp.
(1988)
II
Plaintiffs contend that, while each one of Dun & Bradstreet’s statements is true, taken together they imply Francis was responsible for the bankruptcies of his two prior businesses. Plaintiffs argue thеy are the victims of defamation by innuendo. We, however, are persuaded by a very similar case from the Ninth Circuit,
Lyon Furniture Mercantile Agency
v.
Carrier
(9th Cir. 1958)
The Ninth Circuit in
Carrier
reversed a trial court verdict in plaintiff’s favor, finding that the report was true or (in the case of the C.O.D. question) at least substantially true. In so doing the court made the following statements, with which we are in complete agreement: “It may well be that the reports as to the financial condition of the businеss, as contained in the Lyon
Carrier
stands for a sound proposition of law: A credit report, even one that causes harm, is not defamatory if it is true. In the present case, as in
Carrier,
a report containing facts adverse to the business can well cause problems securing credit. But one cannot sue the credit reporting agency just because the business (or people involved with the business) hаs had financial problems in the past. Plaintiffs’ brief goes on at length about “innuendo,” “implication,” and “reading the report as a whole,” but all of this discussion is irrelevant. There can be no defamation without a false statement of fact, and рlaintiffs admit all the statements are true. As one court held recently (and succinctly), “Plaintiff’s admission of truth bars his defamation cause of action.”
(Hejmadi
v.
AMFAC, Inc.
(1988)
Ill
There remains the fate of plaintiffs’ remaining causes of action, namely, interference with prospective economic advantage, injurious falsehood, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Unfоrtunately for plaintiffs, the admitted truth of Dun & Bradstreet’s credit report eviscerates these causes of action as well. In
Jennings
v.
Telegram-Tribune Co.
(1985)
Plaintiffs do not attempt to refute the rationale of
Jennings,
but instead rely solely upon
U.S. Aluminum Siding Corp.
v.
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
Conclusion
Dun & Bradstreet defended this action in the best way the law currently allows: it answered the complaint, conducted four months’ worth of discovery, established that its credit report was true, and filed a motion for summary judgment. It is almost a shame Dun & Bradstreet had to do that much. Credit reports are sometimes unflattering, but they are necessary in modern society. If a credit report is untrue, thе agency should be held responsible. (See, e.g.,
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
v.
Greenmoss Builders
(1985)
Sonenshine, J., and Crosby, J., concurred.
Notes
A thorough recounting of Zenger’s case, complete with the closing argument of Zenger’s attorney, Andrew Hamilton, can be found in Angle, By These Words: Great Documents of American Liberty (1954) at pages 49-58.
If Francis’s request indeed predated publication, we do not understand how the unpublished credit report could have harmed Francis at that time.
Respondent does not seek dismissal of the appeal, which is yet another reason to dеcide this case on the merits.
See also
Masoni
v.
Board of Trade of S.F.
(1953)
