Defendant-appellant Gannett Co. (Gan-nett) takes umbrage at a jury verdict returned against it following a libel trial in the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire. The case was brought under diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and implicates New Hampshire law. After reviewing the evidence and the inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the verdict-winner,
Wagenmann v. Adams,
I. A USA SNAPSHOT
Dr. Jeffrey Kassel worked as a clinical psychologist at the Veterans’ Administration (VA) hospital in Manchester, New Hampshire from 1977 until 1985. Kassel counseled veterans and their families, treated emergency cases, performed psychological evaluations, and led group therapy sessions. Many of his patients had served in the Vietnam War.
Enter USA Today (USA), a daily national newspaper published by Gannett. In April 1985, USA began planning a special feature commemorating the tenth anniversary of the fall of Saigon. At the time, Ron Wy-man was USA’s principal New Hampshire correspondent. Wyman was a moonlighter; his regular job was as a news editor for a Manchester television station. Noreen Kopenhaver, a USA executive, telephoned Wyman around April 14 and assigned him to gather material for the Vietnam issue. On Sunday, April 21 — the deadline date— Wyman telephoned Kassel, a social acquaintance, and asked if he would mind talking about Vietnam. The psychologist was hosting a cookout, but nevertheless invited Wyman to visit.
Wyman conducted the interview in Kas-sel’s yard, with the barbecue in full swing. More than chopped sirloin was grilled that day. The conversation between the correspondent and the psychologist lasted fifteen to twenty minutes. The gist of Kas-sel’s remarks, Wyman recalled, was that American soldiers in Vietnam were victims, forced to fight in a war they did not want. In addition, Kassel — who ten days earlier had read a Wall Street Journal article which stated that Vietnamese veterans were “somewhat amused by the idea that their painful experiences might leave them with ‘post-traumatic stress disorder,’ the scourge of many U.S. veterans” — recalled telling the reporter that he might find a story angle in the attitudes of veterans from the other side.
Wyman read his notes to Kopenhaver over the telephone that evening. Five days later, USA published its Vietnam retrospective. On a page with paragraph-long remarks from each state, beneath the rubric “VIETNAM — A USA PERSPECTIVE— ACROSS THE USA,” the following text appeared under the subheading “NEW HAMPSHIRE”:
“We’ve become a nation of hand wringers,” says VA psychologist Jeff Kassel, 41, of Manchester. “It’s amusing that vets feel they are the victims when the Vietnamese had the napalm and ... bombs dropped on them.” Kas-sel, who had a student deferment, says winning or losing “depends on whether it’s the vet who lost his legs or the chairman of ... Bell Helicopters,”
*938 Upon seeing the piece, Kassel complained to Wyman that USA inaccurately attributed to him the “it’s amusing” sentence. He also rebuked the journalist because the source statement, as reported by the Wall Street Journal, had described Vietnamese attitudes, not American attitudes. 1 Kassel later made oral and written requests for retraction. Eventually, the newspaper sent a reporter to New Hampshire to investigate the story’s accuracy. On June 10, USA printed a lengthy correction:
A quote by Veterans Administration psychologist Jeff Kassel, Manchester, N.H., which appeared in April 26 editions should be clarified. Kassel was commenting for a USA TODAY special report on the Vietnam War and a portion of the quote attributed to Kassel — “It’s amusing that vets feel they are the victims when the Vietnamese had the napalm and ... bombs dropped on them”— was just part of a statement Kassel gave. In fact, he was quoting what he’d read in another news story, which said: “Vietnamese Vietnam veterans think it’s amusing that American vets feel they are the victims when the Vietnamese had the napalm and ... bombs dropped on them.”
Kassel, 39, who did not want to leave the wrong impression, said he has sympathy for American Vietnam veterans. “I have complete sympathy for anyone who spent time in Vietnam,” he said. “I have spent my entire career trying to help people readjust to what happened to them in Vietnam. I consider most Vietnam veterans victims.”
Meanwhile, the original (incorrect) report prompted a firestorm of hostile outcry, leading the VA to attempt Kassel’s firing. According to the notice of proposed removal, the printed statements in USA “elicited adverse wide reaction from local, State, and national veterans’ groups” and “destroyed [plaintiff’s] credibility and usefulness ... in the treatment of psychological illnesses of our veteran patients.... ” Although the VA dropped severance proceedings after USA published its correction, the agency persisted in an effort to transfer Kassel involuntarily. In Kassel’s view, the story as first printed wrecked his reputation among patients, veterans, and co-workers. He sued Gannett in August 1985, alleging that the incorrect attribution of the “it’s amusing” quotation to him was libelous.
Following nearly three years of pretrial wrangling, and a 12-day trial, a jury awarded Kassel damages of $300,000.
II. NEWSMAKERS
It is well settled that, short of imposing liability without fault, states may define appropriate standards regarding defamation of private individuals.
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
There are various ways in which the
New York Times
standard can come into play. A defendant can assert, for example, that a particular complainant was either an all-purpose public figure or a limited-purpose public figure.
See Gertz,
A. The “Public Official” Rule.
In a sense, every public employee is a “public official” — but in the idiom of libel law, the term has a much narrower sweep. Generally speaking, the classification embraces only those public employees with “substantial responsibility for or control over the conduct of governmental affairs.”
Rosenblatt v. Baer,
The caselaw does not leave us entirely rudderless on these uncertain seas. The Court has emphasized that the “public official” concept “cannot be thought to include all public employees.”
Hutchinson,
B. The Three-Legged Stool.
The first leg of the stool is a frank recognition that the First Amendment requires maximum latitude for “uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” discourse on issues of public importance.
New York Times,
How far the net is cast, and how fine its mesh is strung, depends upon a series of functional assessments. In general, we believe that government posts entailing no particular responsibility for governance are likely to slip between the strands. Thus, notwithstanding his notoriety and public concerns anent national security, “a night watchman accused of stealing state secrets” is not a public official.
Id.
at 86 n. 13,
The second leg of the stool implicates communication. Those who hold public office are frequently able to defend themselves in the media. That ability is tantamount to the ability to engage in self-help. When the need arises to respond to charges, such officeholders “usually enjoy
*940
significantly greater access to the channels of effective communication and hence have a more realistic opportunity to counteract false statements than private individuals normally enjoy.”
Gertz,
The last leg of the stool recognizes the reality of assumed risks. Persons who actively seek positions of influence in public life do so with the knowledge that, if successful in attaining their goals, diminished privacy will result. The classic case, of course, is the aspirant to elective office: a candidate is on fair notice that adverse, even negligent, press coverage is a “necessary consequence[ ] of that involvement in public affairs.”
Gertz,
On the other hand, many public-sector jobs seemingly imply no special prospect of life in a fishbowl. Those who have not jumped into the net, that is, those who have accepted public employment but have not assumed “an influential role in ordering society,”
Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts,
C. Application of the Rule.
In this case, the district court determined that Kassel was not a “public official” for libel law purposes. We think that the three legs of the doctrinal stool — character of employment, access to means of self-help, and assumed risk — fully support the court’s conclusion. We examine the evidence.
Kassel’s job as a staff psychologist fell below the middle of the YA’s organization chart. He did not routinely supervise, manage, or direct government operations. He did not formulate policy. He did not govern; Kassel was a clinician whose work, by and large, was confined to seeing patients and administering tests.
3
Although the taxpayers have a general interest in oversight of
any
publicly-funded employment, we discern no “independent” public interest in plaintiff’s job performance.
See Rosenblatt,
By the same token, plaintiff had no preferred access to channels of self-help. His position commanded no extraordinary media exposure. His duties did not involve answering press inquiries; quite to the contrary, the VA employed its own media liaison person. Gannett says, accurately enough, that Kassel attracted considerable attention following publication of the Vietnam retrospective. But, that is bootstrapping of the most flagrant sort. As the Supreme Court has recognized in an analogous context, “those charged with defamation cannot, by their own conduct, create their own defense by making the claimant a public figure.”
Hutchinson,
The third leg of the stool is similarly shaped. We see no evidence that, by accepting employment as a staff psychologist in a VA hospital, Kassel assumed the risk of sensationalist media coverage. He did not publicly campaign for the job. Once hired, he dealt with his patients, to the exclusion of the general public. Beyond the penetralia of his treatment and consultation rooms, he wielded no special influence. Nothing in the record suggests that plaintiff could reasonably have anticipated widespread coverage of his performance and conduct.
4
To call non-supervisory staff doctors at a VA hospital “public officials” would undervalue privacy rights by “distortpng] the plain meaning of the ‘public official’ category beyond all recognition.”
Gertz,
In this case, the three legs of the stool rest on the same level and solidly support exemption from the rigors of New York Times. We decline to carve the contours of the “public official” designation more extravagantly and blur the taxonomy to the point where it loses all shape and meaning. We agree with the district court that plaintiff, though a public employee, was a private person for purposes of defamation law.
III. HELP WANTED
Appellant protests that it cannot be held liable for Wyman’s errors because he was an “independent contractor.”
See United States v. Ottati & Goss, Inc.,
In New Hampshire, the linchpin of master-servant liability is “whether on all the facts the community would consider the person an employee.”
Hunter v. R.G. Watkins & Son, Inc.,
New Hampshire, like some but not all jurisdictions, has decided to leave the marshalling and weighing of the factors, and the unavoidable policy judgments lurking beneath the surface of the amorphous ‘control’ test, to a properly instructed jury.
Wilson,
The trial court’s instructions on the issue were impeccable. Thus, defendant is reduced to questioning the quantum of plaintiff’s proof. The question is easily answered. There was competent evidence that Wyman (1) worked on a continuing basis as USA’s New Hampshire correspondent; (2) called in stories daily (or nearly so); (3) spoke with his “editor,” Kopenhaver, at least once a day, five days a week; (4) was paid not piecework but per diem for his daily submissions; (5) received paychecks directly from the newspaper; (6) understood that USA was looking for particular types of stories; and (7) wrote articles not in final form, but instead gathered and submitted factual material for rewrite by USA’s editorial staff. With specific reference to the Vietnam retrospective, there was evidence that Kopenhaver gave Wy-man fairly detailed instructions on the sort of people to interview and the kind of questions to ask.
We believe that these facts sufficed to create a jury question on the issue of Wy-man’s status. If permissible inferences favorable to Kassel were drawn, the circumstances supported the thesis that USA and the correspondent were juxtaposed as principal and agent. The quintessential “rational jury” could reasonably have found— as this jury did — that Wyman was not a free-lance independent contractor, but rather a member of USA’s reportorial staff.
IV. COVER STORY: EVIDENCE OF NEGLIGENCE
Gannett claims that plaintiff’s proof on the issue of fault was too exiguous because (1) there was no expert testimony establish *943 ing an appropriate standard of care, and (2) there was no precise showing as to how the error actually occurred. The claims are meritless.
A. Expert Testimony.
In most jurisdictions, libel is considered an ordinary tort, not a form of malpractice.
See
Simon,
Libel as Malpractice: News Media Ethics and the Standard of Care,
53 Fordham L.Rev. 449, 450 (1984) (arguing for different approach). New Hampshire is no exception; the actions of a journalist are judged not in comparison to prevailing professional standards, but according to customary tort criteria. In the last analysis, a journalist must behave like a reasonable person under all the circumstances.
See Duchesnaye,
Nor do the authorities, generally, support such an across-the-board requirement. Accepted practice may be evidence of due care, but it does not fix the standard: “Courts must in the end say what is re-quired_”
The T.J. Hooper,
B. How the Bevue Occurred.
We are also satisfied that plaintiff offered evidence of Gannett’s fault sufficient to support the verdict. We begin with the unarguable: USA mangled Kassel’s remarks. To be sure, the exact cause of the blunder was never precisely established, but all three likely causes — the “it’s amusing” language could have been misattributed by Wyman in the original interview, or garbled in the course of Wyman’s transmission to Kopenhaver, or distorted during later editing — landed squarely on defendant’s doorstep. Moreover, Gannett’s representatives confessed culpability after Kassel’s job was threatened. A VA official recalled that Peter Johnson (the employee assigned by defendant to look into the brouhaha caused by the story) stated unequivocally that USA had “goofed,” “made a mistake,” and “misquoted” Kassel. Alice Lukin, an attorney for USA, told another witness that the newspaper would publish a “correction” of the paragraph, “thereby manifesting the paper’s long-standing policy of correcting ... error.” While defendant accurately proclaims that all errors are not negligent in origin, the testimony described above stands as powerful evidence that USA personnel believed the newspaper was at fault in this instance. At the most, USA’s (rather fanciful) sug
*944
gestions that this was a case of nonnegli-gent error “are arguments as to what indi-cia of care might reasonably be expected, not absolute propositions of law etched in stone.”
Levesque v. Anchor Motor Freight, Inc.,
Then, too, whatever the reason for the original snafu, plaintiffs proof established that USA never verified its account of his statements. Following the backyard interview and prior to publication, no one revisited Kassel to check the Vietnam item for accuracy. Even Wyman was not contacted for purposes of verification; he heard nothing about the article from the time he transmitted the material to Kopenhaver until the day it was published. Kopenhaver did not edit Wyman’s submission, but merely rerouted it to another desk; like Wyman, she heard nothing more about the material until after the publication date. A jury might reasonably have believed a more meaningful check for accuracy was required, particularly since USA had condensed the fruits of Kassel’s 20-minute interview into a single paragraph and the newspaper had made at least two conscious alterations in the quotations (removing modifiers and inserting ellipses).
Failure to verify the story — and thus to catch the error — was independently actionable. This is especially so in a case like this one where (1) time was not a critical problem (there were four full working days between deadline and publication), and (2) the means of checking were readily at hand (a telephone call to plaintiff would have prevented the blunder). In light of these facts, we cannot gainsay the jury’s determination that reasonable editors under the totality of the circumstances would have made some further attempt at confirmation.
8
Viewed in the requisite light,
Wagenmann,
V. WHAT’S HOT
Appellant’s assignments of error in the admission of evidence offer no incentive for reversal of the verdict on liability. We consider two items.
A. The Forms.
The district court admitted two “Report of Contact” forms filled out by Paul Lam-berti, a ranking VA official in Manchester. The documents described telephone contacts with aides to Senators Rudman and Humphrey who had called the VA in response to constituent complaints about the USA article. The forms were introduced as business records under Fed.R.Evid. 803(6) over defendant’s hearsay objection. 9
At the expense of belaboring the obvious, we start by acknowledging that the VA, as an institution, keeps records. Those records, if compiled in compliance with the strictures of the rule, would not be excludable as hearsay. Defendant’s principal challenge to the contact reports is that they were not recorded as a regular part of the VA’s activities. This objection is based upon Lamberti’s testimony that he did not “usually” complete such forms, but did so only when he “perceive[d] the need.” We agree with the district judge that appli *945 cation of Rule 803(6) is not necessarily foreclosed by this fact.
The contact reports were typed on pre-printed government forms which included space for the name and address of the person contacted, and for a brief statement of the information requested and given. A legend on the form stated that it “must be filled out in ink or on typewriter, as it becomes a permanent record in veterans’ folders.” Lamberti served as the VA’s “media liaison person” and “spokesperson” in the Manchester office. The processing of contact forms fell within his ordinary job duties. In this case, he personally made the contacts described and signed each form. He testified that they were completed “right after” or “soon after” the conversations they recounted.
Under the circumstances, we think the completion of these reports qualified as a “regular” practice. The fact that a form is not inscribed every time a telephone call is made or received has evidentiary significance, but does not, in itself, demand exclusion. While the business records exception does not extend to activity that is “casual or isolated,”
Hiram Ricker & Sons v. Students Int’l Meditation Soc’y,
The long and short of it is that the district court enjoys considerable latitude in admitting and excluding evidentiary proffers.
See, e.g., Linn v. Andover Newton Theological School, Inc.,
B. The Board of Inquiry Report.
Appellant challenges admission of the investigative report issued on May 24, 1985 by the VA’s three member board of inquiry (Board). The district court was scrupulous in redacting the report, allowing only a small portion of it (comprising the Board’s conclusions and recommendations) to go to the jury. This careful microsurgery notwithstanding, appellant claims error, arguing that the conclusions and recommendations were hearsay.
In our view, the extracts were not hearsay at all, for they were not offered “to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Fed.R.Evid. 801(c). Kassel offered the Board’s report not to vouch for the conclusions reached, but simply to show the VA’s state of mind.
See Conway v. Electro Switch Corp.,
■ Considering that, throughout the case, plaintiff sought to link the Vietnam retrospective to various actions taken against him by his employer, such state-of-mind evidence was admissible.
Cf. Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey,
— U.S. -,
VI. MONEYLINE
USA launches a raft of attacks aimed at the damage award. We examine the relevant issues one by one.
A. Causation.
Defendant asserts that Kassel’s damages were not linked specifically to the “it’s amusing” sentence, as opposed to the other (accurate) quotations contained in the article. But, the mills of the law do not grind so fine. There is no requirement that an allegedly libelous statement be parsed so that its defamatory content is presented in isolation. The opposite is true: such statements “must be read in the context of the publication taken as a whole.”
Duchesnaye,
Context is vital. The “it’s amusing” statement, conceded on appeal to be false and defamatory, could reasonably be said to have tainted the rest of Kassel’s comments, making them appear insensitive of —and derisive toward — veterans of the Vietnam conflict. Read alone, the sentences which bracketed the offending sentence are not noticeably anti-veteran. But, they take on markedly different connotations when read in conjunction with Kassel’s supposed assertion that the plight of American soldiers was somehow “amusing” compared with that of their Vietnamese counterparts. Seen in this (false) light, the “hand wringers” statement seems to refer to veterans who wrongly “feel they are the victims,” and the remark about veterans who have lost their legs strikes a shockingly callous note.
In contrast, when Kassel’s actual utterances are truthfully reported, the entire paragraph is transformed. Its tenor becomes positive and empathic. The “hand wringers” statement becomes a comment not on veterans, but on the media blitz accompanying the tenth anniversary of the war’s end. And the statement as to loss of limb takes on a solicitous tone, evincing understanding rather than contempt. The trial testimony, we suggest, makes this very point rather forcefully. To cite one example, Kelleher (the director of the medical center) wrote to plaintiff on the heels of Gannett’s published correction as follows: “It is my belief that the clarification print *947 ed by USA ... changed the content of your statement to the point that I must conclude that the proposed letter of removal was in error.” To mention another example, Dr. Anzola, chief of staff at the Manchester VA hospital, testified that the “winning or losing” sentence could appear sympathetic to veterans if the “it’s amusing” quotation were replaced with Kassel’s (authentic) statement that Vietnam was a “big tragedy”.
The reactions of these readers provide adequate evidence that the misquotation damaged plaintiff, in part, by creating a misleading context which infected the remainder of the paragraph. The complete text was thus a proper predicate for liability. Gannett cannot so easily separate the hemlock from the nectar with which it was intermixed.
B. Proof of Injury.
Once satisfied that causation was established, we turn our attention to proof of harm. Both the federal Constitution and New Hampshire law constrain the recovery of compensatory damages in defamation cases. Read in the ensemble, these constraints impose significant limitations upon the types of damages which New Hampshire libel plaintiffs may recover from “merely negligent” defendants.
The applicable federal curbs derive from the First Amendment, as weighed against a state’s interest in compensating individuals for the harm caused by defamatory falsehood.
See Gertz,
[Ajctual injury is not limited to out-of-pocket loss.... the more customary types of actual harm inflicted by defamatory falsehood include impairment of reputation and standing in the community, personal humiliation, and mental anguish and suffering.
Id.
at 350,
Prior to
Gertz,
New Hampshire law allowed defamation victims to recover from “merely negligent” defendants general presumed damages,
i.e.,
“all damages which would normally result from such a defamation, such as harm to ... reputation,” without any requirement that specific damages be proven.
Chagnon,
In New Hampshire, then, federal and state law interact in cases of negligent defamation to produce the following matrix:
1. General reputational damages are recoverable so long as supported by evidence of actual injury to reputation.
2. At least some special damages are recoverable (but even when the underlying psychic injuries are actual, and Gertz would therefore permit recovery as a federal constitutional matter, it is problematic whether New Hampshire allows recovery for emotional distress and humiliation in cases of negligent defamation). 11
*948 In the case at bar, Kassel provided plethoric evidence that USA’s piece tarnished his image. As the Board observed:
Reaction from veterans, representatives of veterans’ organizations, VA employees and other professionals working directly and indirectly with Vietnam veterans has unanimously been [one] of outrage, calling for a range of responses from questioning Dr. Kassel’s suitability for VA employment to demands for his dismissal from the Veterans Administration.
The Manchester chapter of Disabled American Veterans (DAV) dispatched a delegation to demand that Kassel be fired. The VA was deluged by anti-Kassel calls and letters, many “extremely negative” and “extremely hostile.” The associate director of the hospital recalled that the article spurred more public comment than almost any other VA incident in memory. Kassel received threats of violence at his office and at home. 12
We need not paint the lily. Plaintiff’s reputation was obviously trampled in the aftermath of USA’s publication. There was sufficient proof of actual injury.
C. Damages.
Having determined that the evidence was sufficient to establish both causation and injury, we focus on the damage award. The injury to plaintiff's reputation by USA was compensable,
see supra,
and the jury must be accorded considerable latitude in translating the harm into dollars. After all, reputational losses “are not readily measurable in monetary terms.” W. Kee-ton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton & D. Owen,
supra,
§ 116A at 843;
see also Gertz,
1. Emotional Distress. In Part VI(B), supra, we reserved our discussion of whether one negligently defamed may recover damages for emotional distress under New Hampshire law. In the case at bar, the district court resolved this issue in plaintiff’s favor and charged the jury that:
If you decide for Dr. Kassel on the issue of liability, then with respect to compensatory damages, you must fix the amount of money which will reasonably and fairly compensate him for any of the following elements of damages proved by the evidence to have resulted from the defendant’s publication.... the pain[,] discomfort, personal humiliation, mental and emotional anguish and suffering experienced by him as a result of the defamatory publication....
Appellant took a timely, specific objection to this portion of the charge. We believe that the objection was well-founded; this instruction, unconditioned on proof of malice, was erroneous under existing New Hampshire law.
In
pre-Gertz
libel cases, only when malice was proven could the New Hampshire factfinder take into account “considerations which cannot be made the subject of exact pecuniary compensation ... [such as] mental distress and vexation, what in common language might be spoken of as of-fences to the feelings, insult, degradation, [and] offences against honest pride....”
Chagnon,
Nor is there a tide running from which we can presume that New Hampshire is now ready, regardless of prior precedent, to abandon its long-held rule. We recognize that in
Corso v. Merrill,
The common strand which ties these cases together seems to be a wariness about the ease of claiming, and the difficulty of measuring, psychic harm. The New Hampshire courts recognize that the imposition of emotional distress damages, if not closely cabined, might become an instrument of oppression; courts “would run the risk of penalizing and over-deterring merely negligent conduct.”
Cote,
Given these factors, it would be rash to assume that the
Chagnon/Baer
formulation, no longer represents the law of New Hampshire. Although it is possible that the state supreme court might be ready to adopt a different view, we cannot lightly indulge such speculation. Where a directly pertinent precedent of the state’s highest court obtains, a federal court applying state law must be hesitant to blaze a new (and contrary) trail. Absent more solid evidence than is available here,
see, e.g., Provencher v. Berman,
It follows, therefore, that the jury ought not to have been instructed on emotional distress damages. Moreover, the error requires reversal. Despite the fact that USA urged the adoption of a special verdict form which would have solved the present problem, the court rejected the suggestion and the jury returned only a general verdict. Such a circumstance usually necessitates a new trial because “there is no way to know that the invalid claim ... was not the sole basis for the verdict.”
United New York & New Jersey Sandy Hook Pilots Assoc. v. Halecki,
2.
Earnings.
The trial court also charged on loss of future earnings. While prospective pecuniary injury is a recognized element of actual damages for defamation,
Chagnon,
In New Hampshire, a plaintiff “has the burden of proving the extent and amount of [his] damages,”
Whitehouse v. Rytman,
The record on lost earnings is too thin to cast a shadow. While we know that Kassel made roughly $50,000 per year at the VA, he offered no evidence as to when — or whether — the VA stopped paying his salary after the Vietnam story appeared. Plaintiff testified that in March 1988 he was “medically retired,” and that he now receives a government pension (amount unspecified). We are given no inkling as to whether the USA piece had anything to do with Kassel’s eventual retirement; plaintiff failed to state the nature of his medical problems and offered no evidence linking these problems to the libel. 15
To be sure, Kassel testified at length concerning difficulties he encountered at work following USA’s gaffe. He now points, in particular, to testimony anent his stint at Bedford, where the VA placed him in a basement office, provided him with no job description, and gave him nothing to do. After three days, Kassel “couldn’t take it any more,” and left. Such evidence was useful for proving, say, general damage to plaintiff’s career — but it does not address the issue of lost income or diminished earning capacity. The record fails to reflect for how long, if at all, his salary continued. Unlike
Van Hooijdonk v. Langley,
There is little point in flogging a dead horse. Given the gaps in the proof, the jury should not have been instructed on the issue of future earnings.
3. The Brief. When plaintiff challenged his reassignment to Bedford, he filed a labor grievance against the VA. In that proceeding, he maintained that the VA initiated a series of adverse personnel actions in reprisal for his union activities and prior successful grievances. After an arbitrator ruled in the VA’s favor, Kassel appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. 16 He signed and filed a 49-page pro se brief (Brief). He charged therein that the VA’s true motive was a desire to “get even” for prior asserted grievances; that the USA article was being used as an “absurd pretext” for his transfer; that the VA “mounted a media campaign” to disgrace him; and that “the whole world knew” USA had misquoted Kassel once the newspaper published the correction. The Brief contained numerous variations on the same themes.
Plaintiff moved to bar any use of the document at trial, on the ground that it would tend to confuse the jury. USA responded that, since Kassel was claiming to have been transferred because of the newspaper article, his assertions that other factors caused the move were classic admissions against interest. It beseeched the court not to “rule out a whole area of cross-examination” by blanket exclusion of the document, but to “take [particular statements] up as they come along.” The district court, without any on-the-record ex *952 planation of its reasons, ruled in plaintiffs favor. It declared that statements from the Brief were “not admissible, period.” We assume, as plaintiff suggests, that the court acted under Fed.R.Evid. 403 (“[although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury”) and banned the Brief as overly confusing.
We have vouchsafed district courts “wide discretion in steadying the Rule 403 seesaw,”
Onujiogu v. United States,
We are unable to discern — and neither appellee nor the district court have explained — how these selected statements were prone to sidetrack or mislead jurors who heard the case in chief. That they were highly relevant cannot be gainsaid; each declaration is directly “contrary to [plaintiffs] position at trial.”
United States v. Palow,
We recently canvassed the law on the admission of prior inconsistent pleadings as admissions against interest, and rejected “a flat rule admitting or excluding” such allegations.
Vincent v. Louis Marx & Co.,
Importantly, we believe that wholesale suppression of the Brief necessitates retrial on the issue of damages, but not liability. By and large, those state *953 ments which were likely admissible concerned putative reasons for the adverse personnel actions directed at plaintiff, and the article’s impact upon various segments of the reading public. Such questions bore heavily on the existence and extent of plaintiff’s injuries. Conversely, the Brief apparently had no particular bearing upon the liability issues. Kassel never attempted to persuade the Federal Circuit that the Vietnam article was not defamatory or that USA had been either accurate or careful. To the extent that portions of the Brief might conceivably trench upon the matter of liability at all, we believe their relevance to be tangential, their cumulative weight to be slight, and their exclusion, if error at all, to have been entirely benign.
We have also considered plaintiff’s assertion that the blanket banning of the Brief was harmless error. The question is close (although some of the admissions were powerful stuff). The fact that, during cross-examination, defense counsel asked a number of times whether plaintiff had made certain statements in a “public document” is counterbalanced because, generally, Kassel’s answers were uncertain or qualified. Of course, due to the total bar, USA was denied the opportunity to confront him directly with the actual statements. And, we are not operating in a vacuum; we must gauge the harmfulness of the wholesale exclusion not as an isolated matter, but in conjunction with the errors committed in the charge. See supra Parts VI(C)(1), (2). When all are taken collectively, we believe that USA is entitled to a new trial on damages.
D. Scope of Retrial.
Although damages must be relitigated, there is no basis in the record for trying liability anew. The jury verdict holding Gannett responsible stands unsullied, free of discernible taint. The issues — liability on the one hand, damages on the other— and the proof adduced on them were sufficiently distinct that requiring a full retrial “would be judicially wasteful, as well as unfair to the plaintiff[ ].”
Maxey v. Freightliner Corp.,
VIL A QUICK READ
The headlines are these. The jury sup-portably found that USA’s piece was defamatory and that defendant was negligent in publishing it. Because these issues were fully and fairly tried, and because Kassel was not a “public official” for libel law purposes, the findings suffice to sustain the jury’s verdict on liability. As to damages, however, the combined effect of the three errors which we have discussed, see supra Part VI, require that there be a limited new trial.
We need go no further. What USA wrought was not amusing. It should pay Kassel for its carelessness, but in an amount fixed by a properly-instructed jury and on the basis of a better-developed evi-dentiary record.
The judgment below is affirmed as to liability, but vacated as to amount. The case is remanded for a new trial on damages. Each party shall bear his/its own costs.
APPENDIX
Representative Excerpts from the Federal Circuit Brief
1. “VA tried to fire, then involuntarily transfer Kassel because he was mis *954 quoted — clearly an absurd pretext and a continuation of their psychological warfare against Kassel.” Brief at 1.
2. “Since the misquote ... [t]here had been no complaints about Kassel’s work or from his patients. The whole world knew by the summer that Kassel had been misquoted_” Brief at 7.
3. “It is Kassel’s contention that VA wanted to ‘get rid of’ him and considered him an undesirable employee long before the USA piece.” Brief at 36-37.
4. “No doubt some vets were annoyed or even outraged by the misquote, [but] the number was small ... and was far smaller after the whole world knew Kassel was misquoted.” Brief at 41.
5. “[A]fter the correction, the ‘outrage’ subsided.” Id.
6. “Besides, just because a handful of people ‘claimed’ Kassel was damaged by the misquote, does not prove he actually was. There isn’t the slightest evidence that a majority of readers or vets felt this way.” Brief at 42-43.
Notes
. Additionally, Kassel pointed out two other be-vues: (1) he was 39, not 41; and (2) after 1969, he had a high lottery number, not a student deferment.
. Therefore, we have no occasion to decide whether Kassel, by thrusting himself into an ongoing public controversy and/or by agreeing to be interviewed for a single newspaper article,
*939
became a limited-purpose public figure.
Compare, e.g., Gertz,
. Appellant claims that plaintiff decided who received certain veterans’ benefits and who did not. The argument will not wash. While others may have utilized Kassel’s notes and summaries in calculating disability payments, Kas-sel himself played no direct part in the decision-making process.
. The "public official” inquiry requires us to categorize the nature of the particular job which plaintiff accepted. It is thus irrelevant for our purposes that, along the way, Kassel agreed to be interviewed by Wyman. That behavior bears more upon the “public figure” inquiry than upon "public official” status, and Gannett has not pursued the possibility that Kassel was a public figure. See supra note 2.
. We reiterate a useful compendium of the most frequently encountered factors:
In determining whether one acting for another is a servant or an independent contractor, the following matters of fact, among others, are considered:
(a) the extent of control which, by the agreement, the master may exercise over the details of the work;
(b) whether or not the one employed is engaged in a distinct occupation or business;
(c) the kind of occupation, with reference to whether, in the locality, the work is usually done under the direction of the employer or by a specialist without supervision;
(d) the skill required in the particular occupation;
(e) whether the employer or the workman supplies the instrumentalities, tools, and the place of work for the person doing the work;
(f) the length of time for which the person is employed;
(g) the method of payment, whether by the time or by the job;
(h) whether or not the work is a part of the regular business of the employer;
(i) whether or not the parties believe they are creating the relation of master and servant; and
(j) whether the principal is or is not in business.
Restatement (Second) of Agency
§ 220(2) (1958). The New Hampshire Supreme Court has adopted this analysis.
See Burnham,
. The New Hampshire Supreme Court has cited
Wilson
with apparent approval.
See Continental Ins.,
. Nor does New Hampshire have any statutory requirement to the contrary in libel cases. Cf., e.g., N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 507-C:2; 507-C:3 (in medical malpractice case, claimant must prove standard of care, and its violation, by competent expert testimony).
. Appellant places undue reliance on
Geiger v. Dell Publishing Co.,
. The rule provides that "[a] memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form, of acts, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses, made at or near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge” shall not be excluded as hearsay "if kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or data compilation," so long as properly authenticated and not transparently untrustworthy. Fed.R.Evid. 803(6).
. Gannett also challenged the contact reports on the basis that they were "of questionable relevance” and more prejudicial than probative. We disagree. Like other evidence of veteran outrage, the contact forms established the article’s effect upon Kassel's reputation. Moreover, "[o]nly rarely — and in extraordinarily compelling circumstances — will we, from the vista of a cold appellate record, reverse a district court’s on-the-spot judgment concerning the relevant weighing of probative value and unfair effect.”
Freeman,
. We treat with this precise subject at greater length infra.
. Kassel remembered callers stating on the "[t]hat they were going to hurt me. In one case a veteran said he would kill me. On one occasion a veteran said that the next time I saw my name in the papers, it would be in the obituary." Dr. Anzola testified that some veterans had indicated “that there will be some harm to come to Dr. Kassel." Michael Lassonde, DAV representative, confirmed hearing a rumor about "someone trying to establish monies to have a hit man go after Dr. Kassel_” This is but a sampler of the evidence on the point.
. The reference to "malice" which appears in both Chagnon and Baer is ambiguous; the state supreme court might have meant either New York Times malice or common law malice as developed in other areas of tort law. We need not resolve the amphiboly; neither type of malice was proven in this case.
. We have considered, but decline to employ, certification of this question to the state supreme court.
Accord Fischer v. Bar Harbor Banking & Trust Co.,
. The district court denied USA's motion for a directed verdict on this point, stating that there was "no competent medical evidence ... that [Kassel] was terminated because of his medical condition [as opposed to the USA piece].” That resupinate ruling stands the law on its head. It was plaintiffs burden to offer evidence that he lost his job because of USA’s publication,
see Grant,
. Although irrelevant to either the merits of this case or to the evidentiary question, we take judicial notice that the Federal Circuit eventually dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction because the underlying arbitral decision (involving a reassignment without a concomitant reduction in pay or grade) was not subject to judicial review. See Kassel v. VA, No. 87-3472 (Fed.Cir. Aug. 3, 1988) (unpublished order).
. We do not view our decision on this point as inconsistent with the holding of
Hardy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
. We deem it open on retrial for plaintiff to attempt to produce competent evidence to link his medical retirement and/or the loss of discernible future earnings to dissemination of the libel.
