A judgment on the, pleadings for de~ fendants, Curtis Publishing Company and Curtis Circulation Company, was granted pursuant to defendants’ motion. The case is reviewed, therefore, the same as would be a judgment of dismissal entered following the sustaining of a general demurrer, and the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint must be taken as true, and so taken the question is whether a cause of action has been stated.
(Rannard
v.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp.,
Plaintiffs are husband and wife. Defendants publish, circulate and sell for profit a monthly magazine named Ladies’ Home Journal. Cartier-Bresson, a photographer, and Dahl, a writer, are in the employ of defendants.
Plaintiff's own and operate a confectionary and ice cream concession in the Farmers’ Market in Los Angeles. They have a reputation for industry, integrity, decency and morality. Cartier-Bresson, in the course of his employment, plaintiffs at their place of business without their knowledge or consent. The photograph depicts them apparently seated on stools side by side at the patron’s side of the counter at their concession; plaintiff, Mr. Gill, has his arm around his wife and is leaning forward with his cheek against hers. The picture was published by defendants in their May, 1949, issue of the Ladies’ Home Journal, in connection with an article entitled “Love” written by Dahl in the course of his employment. Under the picture appears the caption “Publicized as glamorous, desirable, ‘love at first sight’ is a bad risk.” The article is a somewhat and sociological discussion of love between the opposite sexes and its relation to divorce. Love is classified generally on the basis of the extent it is founded upon “sex attraction” or “affection” and “respect.” One of the is called love at first sight, which is founded upon 100 per cent sex attraction, the kind which the photograph is captioned to portray. That kind of love is called the “wrong” one, not lasting and will be followed by divorce. In this connection, plaintiffs allege that the picture depicts them “in such a manner as to indicate said plaintiffs are loose, dissolute and immoral persons engaged in the so-called ‘wrong kind of love’ ...”
Defendants knew, or should have. known, it is further asserted, plaintiffs were happily married and had a high moral reputation, but nevertheless, in a malicious disregard
Recognition has been given of a right of privacy, independent of the common rights of property, contract, reputation and physical integrity, generally described as “the right to live one’s life in seclusion, without being subjected to unwarranted and undesired publicity. In short it is the right to be let alone.”
(Melvin
v.
Reid,
We believe the reasons in favor of the right are persuasive, especially in the light of the declaration by this court ‘that “concepts of the sanctity of personal rights are specifically protected by the Constitutions, both state and federal, and the courts have properly given them a place of high dignity, .and worthy of especial protection.”
(Orloff
v.
Los Angeles Turf Club,
The difficulty in defining the boundaries of the right, as applied in the publication field, is inherent in the necessity of balancing the public interest in the dissemination of news, information and education against the individuals’ interest in peace of mind and freedom from emotional disturbances. When words relating to or actual pictures of a person or his name are published, the circumstances may indicate that public interest is predominant. Factors deserving consideration may include the medium of publication, the extent of
In
Melvin
v.
Reid, supra,
Defendants rely upon eases where through their own acts or by an incident thrust upon them, a person’s affairs became of public interest and he cannot recover for the publicity given; that they have waived their right of privacy. We have seen, however, that there was no legitimate interest
The article may be interpreted as not dealing with actual recent or past events in the lives of actual persons. It is more a philosophical or psychological or semi-educational discussion of abstractions. Hence, such cases as
Sidis
v.
F-B Pub. Corp., supra,
Plaintiffs do not allege that their right of privacy was invaded or that they suffered mental distress, assert defendants, and thus no cause of action is stated. Plainly the complaint alleges facts which clearly show a violation of plaintiffs’ right of privacy. More is not necessary. It is alleged that in disregard of plaintiffs’ feelings and rights the publication was made; that the article depicted plaintiffs as dissolute and immoral persons and robbed them of public esteem; that by reason of the acts alleged, plaintiffs were damaged in the sum of $200,000. We think that it may be at least inferred therefrom that their feelings were hurt and they suffered mental anguish. The proceeding is, as heretofore stated, to be treated as though a general demurrer had been sustained. So treated, the complaint states a cause of action.
(Hudson
v.
Craft.
It is said the allegation that the publication depicts plaintiffs as dissolute persons and holds them up to public
Judgment reversed.
Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
