The question in this case is whether a statement by a professor serving on an academic tenure committee at a private college was privileged so as to prevent his colleague’s recovery of damages for slander. We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court (Kennebec County, Alexander, J.) granting summary judgment to the defendant.
In the course of the plaintiff Gautschi’s tenure review at Colby College, the tenure committee obtained a letter from a professor Preston at the University of Maryland reviewing Gautschi’s scholarly work. As Gautschi contends, the review was “laudatory.” During tenure committee deliberations, however, the defendant Maisel stated, according to the affidavit most favorable to Gautschi, that he had talked to Preston and that Preston “had said he didn’t really believe strongly in what he had said about Rick [Gautschi] in the letter;
Gautschi correctly points out that the Superior Court apparently misapprehended the nature of his claim so far as slander was concerned and granted summary judgment because on the affidavits he could not show special damages. Under our case law a plaintiff need not prove special damages to recover general damages for slander when the falsely spoken words impugn his profession, occupation or official status.
See, e.g., Farrell v. Kramer,
It is also clear, however, that Maisel enjoyed a conditional privilege in his work as a Colby College employee, engaged in an activity of benefit to his employer in reviewing another employee’s credentials for whether he should be granted permanent employment.
See Greenya v. George Washington Univ.,
Maisel’s motion for summary judgment clearly established that he was entitled to the conditional privilege unless he abused it. Since Gautschi could not contest that Maisel’s status entitled him to the privilege, the burden shifted to Gauts-chi to come forward with evidence that could go to a jury that Maisel abused the privilege.
Saunders,
At oral argument Gautschi added a new dimension not raised in his appellate brief nor in his argument filed with the trial court, namely, that he had produced competent evidence of falsehood from Mai-sel’s own statements concerning the number of times Preston had spoken to Maisel. Specifically, he maintains that Maisel has admitted that only one such conversation occurred and that it took place before Preston sent the laudatory letter. Another professor who heard the allegedly slanderous statement, however, asserted by affidavit that Maisel said there was a second conversation. This argument fails for two reasons. First, it was not argued in the trial court and it was not argued in the briefs on appeal.
See Graybar Elec. Co. v. Sawyer,
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
All concurring.
