85 A.D.2d 924 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1981
Order unanimously modified and, as modified, affirmed, with costs to plaintiff, in accordance with the following memorandum: Plaintiff is a Buffalo police officer who was erroneously identified in a series of articles in the Buffalo Courier Express as a participant in a vicious beating of a city employee. In his defamation action against the newspaper, its former executive editor, and present and former reporters, he submitted a series of interrogatories. Defendants answered some interrogatories but moved to strike certain others on various grounds. Plaintiff brought a cross motion to compel more responsive answers. With respect to those interrogatories as to which there was a claim of privilege, Special Term correctly struck the interrogatories. New York’s “shield law” (Civil Rights Law, § 79-h, subd [b]) provides defendants with a privilege against disclosure of both news and news sources (see Greenberg v CBS Inc., 69 AD2d 693, 708); nevertheless, such privilege may be invoked only after there has been established an express or implied agreement of confidentiality (Matter of Dock [Beni Broadcasting of Rochester], 101 Mise 2d 490; Matter of Andrews v Andreoli, 92 Mise 2d 410). Special Term properly ordered stricken those interrogatories as to which defendant asserted the privilege with an accompanying allegation of a promise of confidentiality. With respect to Interrogatory No. 6 (a) directed to defendant