Thе American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. (ABC), appeals from the denial of its summary judgment motion in a libel action brought by Garo Lauderback. The district *194 court 1 found that material factual issues remained to be resolved and that the record did not support ABC’s assertion that the allegedly libelous telecasts were privileged communications. The court certified its order to this court undеr 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Because we conclude that any inferences relating to Lauderback were protected expressions of opinion, we reverse and remand to the district court with directions to grant ABC’s motion for summary judgment.
Facts
In 1980, after receiving complaints from senior citizens in Emmet County, Iowa, John Martens, the county attorney, decided to conduct an investigation into fraud in the sale of medical and hospital policies of insurance to senior citizens. Martens wanted to videotape the sales presentations of some insurance agents, allegedly for preservation of evidence to be used in any subsequent proceedings. Martens solicited the aid of ABC and CBS. Charles Thompson, one of the producers of ABC’s 20/20 program, eventually agreed to help. Martens also solicited the assistance of a Des Moines television station, WHO-TV, and of Iowa Insurance Commissioner Bruce Fou-dree who at that time was working on a similar undercover insurance investigation.
Martens and his staff recruited senior citizens to act as “decoys” and to request information from insurance agencies. Martens chose the agencies to be contacted 2 and sent letters out in the names of his recruits. One of these letters was sent to Michael Crawford, a general agent who at that time employed Garó Lauderback. 3
Crawford sent Lauderback to discuss insurance with Carl and Dagney Matheson, two of Martens’s recruits. Martens had arranged for this meeting to be videotaped by ABC’s crew. During the course of the presentation, Lauderback made several statements about his insurance policies, some of which were made without knowledge of the subject matter and some of which were admittedly false.
Several weeks before the date on which ABC was to air the videotape on its 20/20 program, Thompson contacted Lauderback to get a statement. This was the first time Lauderback wаs informed about the videotaping. Thompson later received a phone call from Mrs. Lauderback commenting on her husband’s actions subsequent to the videotaping. No further calls were exchanged between Thompson and the Laud-erbacks.
ABC aired a portion of the videotape of Lauderback on its May 14, 1981, broadcast of the show 20/20. On June 19, 1981, Lauderback filed suit agаinst ABC alleging that the May 14 broadcast of the show and the next week’s show (which also had a report on insurance fraud but did not mention or show Lauderback) libeled him. 4
During discovery, 12 depositions were taken. On January 12, 1983, ABC filed its motion for summary judgment basing its request on two theories: (1) all the statements of fact made about Lauderback were true and other statements were protected as оpinion, and (2) the broadcast was privileged as a report of an official government investigation. The district court denied ABC’s motion. The court found that genuine issues of material fact needed to be resolved and that the official report privilege extended only to official actions that have been made a matter of public record. Upon appliсation, the matter was then certified for an interlocutory appeal under *195 § 1292(b) and this court granted the motion. 5
The relevant portion of the broadcast began with a picture of a newspaper headline which read “Emmet Grand Jury Indicts Two Iowa Insurance Agents.” While the headline was on the screen, a voice-over stated: “The fact that most policies do not cover extended nursing home сare has received some publicity.” The next picture shown was that of Lauderback during which showing the announcer stated: “So the agents just say, ‘Oh, it’s the other guys who are doing the stealing.’ ” Following this statement, a portion of the tape made of Lauderback at the Matheson’s house was shown. On this tape, Lauderback states that a director of a local nursing home had on another occasion verified that Lauderback’s insurance policy would pay for care at the facility. The next segment shows a brief interview with the nursing home director during which he denies ever having spoken to Lauderback. The final reference to Lauderback is a statement by the announcer toward the end of the segment that “Mr. Lauderback is currently under a formal investigatiоn.”
The broadcast at several points shows criminal proceedings against other Iowa insurance agents. During the broadcast epithets such as “rotten,” “unethical,” and “sometimes illegal” are used to describe the practices of agents who sell worthless policies to senior citizens. The agents themselves are referred to as “crooks” and “liars.”
On appeal, Lauderback contends that the 20/20 broadcast, on the whole, characterized him as a crook and a liar. Lauderback argues that these characterizations, although untrue, were presented as facts or, alternatively, that they were represented as opinions which appeared to be based on undisclosed facts. Because we conclude that statements made by ABC which related to Lauderback are protected opinion, we reverse the district court’s denial of ABC’s motion for summary judgment.
Discussion
The traditionally state-regulated area of defamation has in the past 20 years become increasingly dominated by the federal Constitution. With
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
A difficult question is presented when one statement may be interpreted as either fact or opinion. While the right of free spеech provides absolute protection to statements which are purely opinions,
Gertz v. Welch,
Lauderback first contends that ABC’s broadcast stated as a fact that he was a criminal or had been indicted on criminal charges. Lauderback apparently asserts that the successive showing of the newspaper headline regarding the indictment of two Iowa insurance agents and then the picture of Lauderback gave rise to the inference that Lauderback himself was one of the indicted agents. However, this purportedly misleading juxtaposition was quickly clarified when the two agents who actually were indicted were named and discussed. Also, at the end of the broadcast, the program’s announcer stated that Laud-erback was “currently under a formal investigation.” We find that the average viewer would conclude from this that Laud-erback had not yet been indicted or convicted of a crime.
Lauderback next argues that the “gist” or “sting” of the broadcast was that he was a crook or liar. We agree that, given the broadcast as a whole, Lauderback was portrayed as a less than honest or scrupulous insurance agent. However, we conclude that this portrayal indicated ABC’s opinion of Lauderback’s dealings and not a bald accusation of criminal activity. 6
In
Lewis v. Time Inc.,
If the legal profession has been reluctant to discipline its shadier practitioners, it has been swift to crack down on anyone threatening to cut fees or reduce business.
Under these circumstances, it is hardly surprising that some Americans have grown cynical about lawyers — and the law. What is more, every day’s newspaper offers up fresh horror stories____ Thanks to painfully slow bar discipline, a northern California lawyer named Jerome Lewis is still practicing law despite a $100,000 malpractice judgment against him in 1970 and a $60,000 judgment including punitive damages in 1974 for defrauding clients of money____
Lewis v. Time at 550-51. Lewis sued Time alleging that the readers of the articlе would draw negative inferences about him, that is, they would infer that he was going to be disbarred. He claimed, as does Laud-erback in the instant case, that the statements about him were understood alternatively as fact or as opinion which appeared to be based on undisclosed fact.
The Ninth Circuit rejected Lewis’s argument that the article indicated that disbarment was a fоregone conclusion. However, the court concluded that even if the article did imply this, the implication was no more than an “outsider’s prediction of the uncertain outcome of a future adjudication,” id. at 552, and was protected opinion: “The inference that Lewis’s morality or legal abilities were doubtful, or that he was unreliable and disreputable, is a broad, unfocused, wholly subjective comment, not the kind of factual expression for which the Constitution permits liability to be imposed.” Id. at 554. Time’s full disclosure of the true facts supporting its accusation brought the statements within the safeguards of the First Amendment.
Lauderback seeks support from
Cianci v. New Times Publishing Company,
The Second Circuit found that a jury “could surely conclude that New Times was saying that Mayor Cianci, instead of being the man of character he represented himself to be, was in fact a rapist and an obstructor of justice — not simply a person who had been accused of being such.” Id. at 60. The court found that the article represented as fact the rape and Cianci’s settlement with the complainant. The article also contained quotes from others who represented as faet Cianci’s involvement in the rape. The court further found that a reasonable reader of the article would infer that Cianci had paid a $3,000 settlement to the complainant before thе criminal charges against him had been dropped. The truth was that the criminal charges first were dropped due to lack of evidence and then Cianci made an offer of settlement to the complainant evidently to preempt a civil suit by her.
The court of appeals rejected the argument that these statements were protected as pure opinion. Such privilege, the court reasoned, does not exist for “a charge which could reasonably be understood as imputing specific criminal or other wrongful acts.” Id. at 64. The fair comment privilege also did not apply, the court reasoned, because “charges of specific criminal misconduct” are not “comment.” Also, the court found that the facts of the artiсle and any opinions stated therein were inextricably intertwined and in such a case, “it is meaningless to say that the opinion is protected, when the facts are not.” Id. at 67.
While allegations of specific criminal conduct generally cannot be protected as opinion, broad brush-stroked references to unethical conduct, even using terms normally understood to impute specific criminal acts, may be understood by the reasonable viewer as opinion.
See, e.g., Old Dominion Branch No. 496, National Association of Letter Carriers v. Austin,
Our analysis of Lauderback’s claim of defamation does not end by finding that the relevant statements were opinion. As we earlier have noted, opinion which purports to be based on undisclosed facts is not protectеd speech. Lauderback argues that ABC had knowledge before the date of the broadcast that no criminal charges would be brought against him. He argues that the writers had a duty to disclose this fact in order that the negative statements regarding Lauderback could be evaluated accurately by the viewing public.
Although uncontradicted statements by Martens indicated that he had dеcided by May 14, 1981 not to prosecute Lauderback for his dealings with the Mathesons, there remained a question as to whether Martens would pursue the criminal prosecution of Lauderback for his dealings with another client. Thus, ABC had grounds to believe that Lauderback might be prosecuted for some actions relating to insurance sales to senior citizens. We also point out that nоt all information favorable to the plaintiff need be disclosed as the basis of a published opinion.
Cf Brown v. Herald Co., Inc.,
We acknowledge that summary judgment is an extraordinary means of disposing of an action and, thus, should be used only when no factual disputes cloud the legal issue presented. This court has held that summary judgment may bе “particularly appropriate” in an action for defamation.
Truetlen v. Meredith Corp.,
We therefore reverse the district court’s denial of ABC’s motion for summary judgment and remand the case to the district court for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Each party to pay its own costs.
Notes
. The Honorable Edward J. McManus, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa, presiding.
. Martens chose to contact agents who had had complaints made about them to the Iowa Insurance Department.
. On Sept. 30, 1980, the Iоwa Insurance Department filed a charge against Crawford on the basis of a complaint about life insurance sold to an elderly woman. According to Crawford's deposition, the charge was later dropped.
. In his brief, Lauderback does not discuss the broadcast of May 21. We conclude that he is not relying on representations made in that broadcast and, thus, we confine our discussion to the May 14 broadcast.
. Although the trial court granted certification specifically on the issue of fair report privilege, on appeal, ail issues are before this court.
The Board of Managers of the Arkansas Training School for Boys v. George,
. It is for the court to decide whether a statement is fact or opinion.
See Old Dominion Branch No. 496, Natiоnal Association of Letter Carriers v. Austin,
. There is no dispute that the tape was a valid representation of Lauderback's meeting with the Mathesons and that Lauderback did not speak to the nursing home director. It is uncontested that prosecutor Martens was considering bringing charges against Lauderback for a sale which was referred to on the videotape. Martens also stated in his affidavit that an administrative investigation was being conducted at the time of the broadcast by the Insurance Commissioner's office.
