Opinion
Thе trial court granted the defense motion for summary judgment in this action “for libel and interference with business.” Plaintiff Joseph R. Grillo appeals.
Grillo was Presiding Judge of the Los Angeles Municipal Court when defendants, the corporate owner and individual publisher of the Los Angeles Times, allegedly defamed him in an article published August 7, 1976 (the Article) and an editorial published October 18, 1976 (the Editorial). 1 The complaint seeks $300,000 general damages, $50,000 special damages and $5 million punitive damages. Because the following issues are dispositive of this appeаl, we do not reach other contentions of the parties:
1. Are subjective words or ambiguous syntax in a news report of a judicial proceeding sufficient to present a triable issue in a libel action against a newspaper? No.
*871 2. Is hostile editorial opinion сouched in terms of factual conclusions about the conduct and motives of a high public official sufficient to raise a triable issue in a libel action against a newspaper? No.
The Article and Editorial both concerned an incident which occurred Friday, August 6, 1976. On thаt date Grillo’s clerk, personally accompanied by the judge, served James Czarnecki, a transportation officer in the office of the Auditor of Los Angeles County, with an “Order for Issuance of Airline Transportation.” The order directed Czarnecki to issue airline tiсkets to Grillo and two other judges who desired to travel to Sacramento to attend hearings concerning legislation related to the operation of the municipal court. When Czarnecki refused to issue the tickets under orders from his superior, Grillo personally рlaced him under arrest.
Czarnecki was then escorted to Grille’s courtroom, where a contempt proceeding was held despite the attempted personal intervention of the County Counsel of Los Angeles County. At the hearing itself, a deputy county counsel represented Czarnecki, who was convicted and ordered to serve two days in jail with execution stayed until the following Wednesday. Grillo said the sentence was both coercive and punitive, i.e., designed to achieve compliance with the order to providе air transportation, as well as punish Czarnecki. He indicated he would “mitigate” the punishment, provided the tickets were furnished to the other judges forthwith; he offered to buy his own.
Grillo asserts three triable issues of fact exist with respect to the Article. First, he denies he was “angry” or “shouted” or “stormed” during the colloquy with Czarnecki. Second, he objects to the “kangaroo court” description of the August 6, 1976, proceeding. Finally, he argues the statement, “There is insufficient time to go through that red tape,” is out of context because it related to the mеchanics of acquiring air tickets from the county auditor, not counsel’s complaints concerning the failure to inform Czarnecki of his rights and afford him due process.
The initial determination as to whether a statement constitutes fact or opinion is one of law.
(Okun
v.
Superior Court
(1981)
The First and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution оf the United States and article I, section 2 (formerly section 9) of the California Constitution confer an absolute privilege on statements of opinion concerning the conduct of public officials in office.
(Yorty
v.
Chandler
(1970)
“Our political history reeks of unfair, intemperate, scurrilous and irresponsible charges against those in or seeking public office. Washington was called a murderer, Jefferson a blackguard, a knave and insane (Mad Tom), Henry Clay a pimp, Andrew Jackson a murderer and an adulterer, and Andrew Johnson and Ulysses Grant drunkards. Lincoln was called a half-witted usurpеr, a baboon, a gorilla, a ghoul. Theodore Roosevelt was castigated as a traitor to his class, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt as a traitor to his country. Dwight D. Eisenhower was charged with being a conscious agent of the Communist Conspiracy.”
The Times’ contentiоn that “angry,” “shouted,” and “stormed,” are simply not defamatory in any context may also have merit but we need look no further than the opinion-fact question to dispose of the issue. Also, it is of no significance that the phrase “kangaroo court” may be a quotation of a third party’s opinion. As a third party opinion it is doubly protected: “[t]he public interest in being fully informed about controversies that often rage around sensitive issues demands that the press be afforded the freedom to report such charges without assuming responsibility for them.”
(Edwards
v.
National Audubon Society, Inc.
(2d Cir. 1977)
The argument that Grillo was libeled by the printing of an admittedly accurate quotation in an incorrect context (the “red tape” statement) was not raised in the affidavits below or in the brief filed in opposition to the
*873
motion, except in the most general of senses. Neither is it mentioned in the complaint, which is quite specific as to the Editorial but vague and general as to the Article.
2
Since defendants’ affidavits were clearly adequate to establish the accuracy of the Article, it was incumbent upon plaintiff to raise a triable issuе of fact by counteraffidavit to avoid the thrust of the motion.
3
(Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Fish
(1958)
Ordinary rules of appellate procedure might thus foreclose the raising of this point on appeal, but Grillo’s belated argument lacks merit in any event. A fair and true report of a judicial proceeding is privileged. (Civ. Code, § 47, subd. 4.) Thus, a fair and true report of a known falsehood concerning a private citizen uttered in a judicial proceeding is not actionable.
(Weingarten
v.
Block, supra,
The context of the “red tape” statеment from the reporter’s transcript is as follows: “This court does not ask for anything it did not already have. This court cannot stand shackled, to have to run to the C.A.O.’s office every time a position must be filled, every time a travel request is made. The whole reason Mr. Czarnecki is here is because there is insufficient time to go through this red tape. And the situation in question must be resolved.” (J. Appen. to vol. I, pp. 73-74.) The Article stated: “When Farrell suggested Grillo had rushed the contempt without informing Czarnecki of his legal rights or affording him due process, or that Grillo might file а civil suit against the supervisors in Superior Court, Grillo stormed: ‘There is insufficient time to go through that red tape.’”
The transcript of the contempt hearing supports the fact that the deputy county counsel raised the points referred to in the article; publication of his
*874
objections is obviously privileged.
(Hayward
v.
Watsonville Register-Pajaronian and Sun
(1968)
We now turn to the Editorial, apparеntly the real target of Grillo’s suit. (See fn. 3, ante.) First, it should be common knowledge to the average reader that the editorial page is the traditional location of a publication’s opinions and frequently the conflicting opinions of others. It is typically devoted to a discussion of ideas, not the transmission of news. For example, one representative definition of the word editorial is: “[Ejxpressive of an opinion ... a newspaper or periodical article that is usu[ally] given a special or significant place and that intentionally expresses the views of those in charge of the publication on a matter of current interest; also, an expression of opinion that resembles such an article.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1967).
Nevertheless, Grillo culls five alleged factual misstatements from the Editorial, which he contends raise triable issues: (1) he “swept into the man’s office, cited him for contempt, sentenced him to jail and harangued about separation of powers”; (2) he issued an “illegal court order”; (3) he “wanted the taxpayers to pay his way on a lobbying trip”; (4) he “commandeered the rights of an innocent man and embarked on an odyssey far outside his *875 court’s authority”; and (5) he later “changed his mind under pressure from his peers.”
A newspaper is perfectly free to opine that court orders are illegal and to сriticize judges for violating the rights of innocent persons and exceeding their authority. There is no requirement that opinion and criticism of that sort have any legal or factual basis whatsoever.
(Desert Sun Publishing Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
It is often said the context can determine whether a statement constitutes fact or opinion.
(Good Government Group of Seal Beach, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In light of the unique censure of his action by the Los Angeles County Bar Association, the event which triggеred the Editorial, it is surprising that a man trained in the law would not reconsider rather than compound the matter. Our highest court has repeatedly reminded the judiciary that fragile First Amendment freedoms can be threatened by litigation itself, though no recovery is ever had.
(Good Government Group of Seal Beach, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
*876 Judgment affirmed.
Trotter, P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 10, 1983.
Appendix
*877
*878
Notes
The full tеxt of each publication appears in the attached appendix.
The reason is obvious. The complaint alleges only one retraction demand per Civil Code section 48a. Pursuant to that code section, Grillo would have been limited to special damages based on the Article, since the demand was timely filed only with respect to the editorial. Proof of special damages by defamed public officials is close to impossible. (See
Fisher
v.
Larsen, supra,
Grillo seems to suggest that the trial court had the obligation to cоmpare the Article with the transcript of the contempt hearing to discover issues of fact which he did not think to raise. We disagree. The court is not obligated to comb the record for triable issues not raised by the parties on a motion for summary judgment. Such burdens are fortunately rare in the law. (See
People
v.
Wende
(1979)
We are not impressed with the often disingenuous affidavit filed by Grillo in opposition to the motion for summary judgment. There, for example, he states he never intended to actually jail Czarnecki, contrary to his statement at the hearing itself that the contempt sentence was both punitive and coercive. He also claims that a San Bernardino civil proceeding against the County of Los Angeles, which confirmed his right to the tickets, somehow vindicated the manner in which he originally attempted to obtain them, an obvious non sequitur.
