ORDER
This is the case of the mouse that roared invective. One of the defendants, Darrel “Mouse” Davis, in a statement to newspaper reporters, called the plaintiff a “sleazebag agent” who “slimed up from the bay-ou_” Plaintiff, J. Harrison Henderson III, is an agent for professional football players. By this lawsuit, Henderson takes exception to Davis’ comments and seeks damages. Also named as defendants are a news editor and two newspaper companies whose papers published Davis’ remarks. Jurisdiction is founded on diversity under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and is not disputed. Defendants have moved for dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Briefs have been filed, oral argument has been heard and the motions are ripe for decision.
Plaintiff’s complaint asserts claims of: (1) libel and slander per se and per quod; (2) disparagement; and (3) intentional interference with contractual relations. Specifically, Henderson alleges that in January 1985 the Denver Gold professional football team wanted to hire, and negotiated directly with, a quarterback named Raphel Cherry. During the course of the negotiations, Cherry hired the plaintiff as his agent to assist in negotiations. After the plaintiff commenced representing Cherry, negotiations with the Gold Collapsed. Thereafter “Mouse” Davis, as head coach of the Gold, told news reporters that the Gold had offered Cherry more than $100,000 before Henderson became his agent and upped the asking price to $200,000, thus terminating the negotiations. Davis admittedly referred to the plaintiff as a “sleazebag” who kind of “slimed up from the bayou.”
Plaintiffs’ complaint further alleges that on or about January 8, 1985, the defendant Times Mirror Company, in its paper,
The Los Angeles Times,
published an article quoting Davis’ description of the plaintiff as “a sleaze-bag agent” who “kind of slimed up from the bayou” together with an additional statement by Davis that the
As to The Sporting News Publishing Company, the plaintiff contends that its associate news editor, the defendant Howard Balzer, and its paper, The Sporting News, published an article that quoted Davis’ abusive description of the plaintiff, and further stating that “[t]he Gold offered Cherry more than $100,000.00, but Henderson upped the asking price to $200,-000.00.”
As stated, the defendants Times Mirror Company, Sporting News Publishing Company and Balzer have moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s amended complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), contending:
(1) that Davis’ comments were merely opinion and, therefore, their republication of those remarks is not actionable as defamation, and
(2) that the remarks, as opinion, are protected by the First Amendment.
Defendant Davis has filed a motion in effect adopting his co-defendants’ position.
In reviewing the sufficiency of a complaint, when tested by a motion to dismiss, I must accept as true the complaint’s allegations, and view them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
Whether a statement is protected by the First Amendment is a question of law to be determined by the court.
Rinsley v. Brandt,
‘‘Gertz elevated to constitutional principle the distinction between fact and opinion, which at common law had formed the basis of the doctrine of fair comment. Gertz’s implicit command thus imposes upon both state and federal courts the duty as a matter of constitutional adjudication to distinguish facts from opinions in order to provide opinions with the requisite, absolute First Amendment protection.”
See Lewis v. Time, Inc.,
Long before Gertz our forebears recognized the importance of allowing men and women to express their opinions freely. Thomas Jefferson stated:
“The basis of our government being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.” Letter to Colonel Edward Carrington (January 16, 1787).
Similarly, John Stuart Mill observed that “[w]e can never be sure that the opinion we are endeavoring to stifle is a false opinion; and if we were sure, stifling it would be an evil still,” J.S. Mill, On Liberty, Introduction (1859). And Mark Twain declared “difference of opinion makes horse races.” And football games.
This is not to say that our law and literature have been callously indifferent to the very real hurt that may be inflicted by insults or invective pronounced in the form of opinion. As observed by Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, “[a]n injury is much sooner forgotten than an insult.”
Letters to His Son
(October 9, 1746). The
In
Gertz,
the Supreme Court stated that “there is no constitutional value in false statements of fact”,
In
Oilman v. Evans, supra,
a plurality of the
en banc
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit adopted a four-part test to assist in determining whether a statement asserts a fact or merely expresses an opinion. The factors to be considered are: (1) the common usage or meaning of the specific language in the challenged statement; (2) whether the truth or falsity of the state-, ment can be objectively verified; (3) the full context in which the statement was made; and (4) the broader context or setting in which the statement appears.
Here, the specific meaning of the allegedly defamatory terms is far from clear. “Sleazebag” apparently has yet to earn a mention in popular dictionaries. “Sleazy” is defined as being “thin or poor in texture.” The Random Home College Dictionary, at 1236 (rev. ed. 1982). To be “sleazy” is “to be contemptibly low or unimportant.” Id.
In contrast, to “slime” is “[t]o smear or cover with slime” or “[t]o crawl or steal along.” Webster’s New International Dictionary, at 2365 (2d ed. 1950).
While it can be agreed generally that the terms “sleazebag” and “slime” do not rank as descriptive words one would prefer to have in letters of recommendation, their meanings in the context of Davis’ comments is so imprecise that they cannot be considered as asserting facts. While it may not be a compliment to be called a “sleaze-bag agent,” or “sleaze-bag journalist,” or “sleaze-bag coach,” or whatever kind of sleaze-bag one may happen to be, the mere absence of complimentary affect does not render a statement defamatory.
Nor does the mere description of one’s means of locomotion as “sliming” rise to the legal status of slander; for the term is too slippery to be a fact one can grasp and hold up to the lamp of truth in order to test whether the defense of truth applies. As the court stated in
Oilman,
“statements that are ‘loosely definable’ or variously interpretable’ cannot in most contexts support an action for defamation.”
Lest the plaintiff feel that he or his profession are singled out for less favorable treatment by the law, he is referred to the cases of
Rinaldi v. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, Inc.,
The next step under the
Oilman
test is to assess whether the statements are objectively capable of proof or disproof. “The reason for this inquiry is simple: a reader cannot rationally view an unverifiable statement as conveying actual facts.”
Id.,
Besides evaluating the precision-indefiniteness and verifiability-unverifiability of a statement at issue, courts should examine the context in which the statement occurs. Invariably, readers will be influenced by context, and thus the distinction between fact and opinion can be made only in context. Oilman, at 982. The articles in question did not appear in the news columns or even in the regular sports news columns. Rather, they were in sports columns typically devoted to relaying brief accounts of the comments and opinions of sports figures regarding recent events, together with the latest in sports gossip, humorous anecdotes and quotations. The Los Angeles Times squib appeared in a section designated “Morning Briefing,” and the Sporting News article was subtitled “Cherry Picking.” Additionally, the context of the articles signaled readers to expect a public figure’s comments on a current event in sports.
Finally, the Oilman test requires examination of the broader context in which the statement was made. There, the court said:
“Besides looking to the immediate context of the alleged defamatory statement, courts should examine, finally, the broader social context into which the statement fits. Some types of writing or speech by custom or convention signal to readers or listeners that what is being read or heard is likely to be opinion, not fact. It is one thing to be assailed as a corrupt public official by a soapbox orator and quite another to be labelled corrupt in a research monograph detailing the causes and cures of corruption in public service.”750 F.2d at 983 .
See Old Dominion Branch No. 496, Nat. Ass’n of Letter Carriers v. Austin,
Here, the context is a recruiting dispute in the rough and rowdy world of professional football. Defendants argue, and the plaintiff does not dispute in his amended complaint or brief, that “[t]he context of the statements themselves clearly apprised the reader that Coach Davis’ statements were made in reaction to the frustrating negotiations....” Closely analogous is
Likewise in
Curtis Publishing Co. v. Birdsong,
“[I]t is perfectly apparent that [the words] were used as mere epithets, as terms of abuse and opprobrium. As such they had no real meaning except to indicate that the individual who used them was under a strong emotional feeling of dislike toward those about whom he used them. Not being intended or understood as statements of fact they are impossible of proof or disproof. Indeed such words of vituperation and abuse reflect more on the character of the user than they do on that of the individual to whom they are intended to refer. It has long been settled that such words are not themselves actionable as' libelous.” Id. at 348.
Similarly, in
Pease v. Telegraph Publishing Co.,
Certainly, the sports world is an environment where the kind of “robust” debate endorsed by the Supreme Court in
New York Times, Inc. v. Sullivan,
Moreover, our Anglo-American linguistic heritage has long recognized vigorous and colorful insult as an art form, albeit not always creative. As noted by the court in
Raible v. Newsweek, Inc.,
Unfortunately, such creativity in the art of abusive epithet has all but disappeared. It is all too rare today to hear the clear, clean ring of a really original insult. We have become in our opprobrium, as in other areas of life, conformists copying from the deluge of daily drivel from television or from the only occasionally more original print media.
Historically, an insultee had several options for seeking redress in circumstances such as those here presented. For example, he could have challenged the insultor to a duel. Or, following the lead of literature, one in the plaintiff’s position might have trapped “Mouse” Davis in a wine cellar.
See
E.A. Poe,
The Cask of Amontillado,
at 1 (1846) (“[t]he thousand injuries
Similarly, the plaintiff’s claims for business and personal disparagement and intentional interference with contractual relations cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny. The elements of the tort of disparagement are: (1) a false statement; (2) published to a third party; (3) derogatory to the plaintiff’s ... business in general or to some element of his personal affairs; (4) through which the defendant intended to cause harm to the plaintiff’s pecuniary interest or either recognized or should have recognized that it was likely to do so; (5) malice; and (6) special damages.
Williams v. Burns,
Plaintiff also asserts the tort of intentional interference with contractual relations. To prove that claim the plaintiff must demonstrate: (1) the existence of a valid contract between the plaintiff and a third party; (2) knowledge by the defendant of the contract or knowledge of facts that should lead him to inquire regarding existence of the contract; (3) intent by the defendant to induce or cause the third party not to perform; (4) action by the defendant that induces or causes non-performance of the contract; and (5) resulting injury or damages to the plaintiff.
Williams v. Bums,
In his amended complaint, the plaintiff alleges that “the defendants by communication and publication of the slanderous statements ... intentionally induced Cherry to terminate his contract with the plaintiff.” However, the court in
Redco Corp. v. CBS, Inc.,
Accordingly, it is ordered that the defendants’ motions are granted and the plaintiff's complaint and action are dismissed without prejudice for failure of the complaint to state a claim for which relief may be granted.
Notes
. The problem of factual proof is further complicated by the rule that if the defendant's statements are "of public concern,” then the plaintiff bears the burden of proving that the statements are false.
Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
