Hustler Magazine invaded LaJuan Wood’s privacy by publishing a stolen photograph, depicting LaJuan in the nude, that was submitted with a forged consent form. Although Texas courts have begun to flesh out the contours of the privacy cause first recognized in
Billings v. Atkinson,
I. Facts
LaJuan and Billy Wood went camping in a state park. While walking alone in a wilderness area, they became hot, disrobed, and went swimming in a river. Later they took several photos of each other in the nude. After returning home, Billy submitted the roll of film to an establishment that employed a mechanical developing proсess. They treated the photographs as private material, not showing them to anyone else and keeping them out of view in a drawer in their bedroom. One day, Steve Simpson, who resided in the other side of the Woods’ duplex, broke into the Woods’ home and stole some of the photos. Simpson and Kelley. Rhoades, who was then his wife, decided to submit a nude photo of LaJuan to Hustler for publication in its “Beaver Hunt” section. Accordingly, they *1086 filled out a consent form that requested personal information. Some of the information was true, such as LaJuan’s identity and her hobby of collecting arrowheаds. Other information was false, such as La-Juan’s age and address and a fantasy of being “tied down and screwed by two bikers.” Kelley forged LaJuan’s signature and they mailed the photograph and consent form to Hustler in California.
Hustler’s “Beaver Hunt” ’ section featured nude photographs, typically sent in by Hustler readers, of nonprofessional female “models.” If a submitted photo was selected for publication, the model would receive a $50 fee. Although Hustler had maintained its “Beaver Hunt” section for some time, it did not have a written policy or procedure for verifying the accuracy of information and signatures contained in the consent forms when a photograph was to be published. Hustler’s informal policy, however, was to call the telephone number listed in the consent form and ask whomever claimed to be the model nonleading questions designed to elicit responses that would confirm information in the consent form. If no telephone number was listed, Hustler would send a mailgram or telegram to the address shown for the model, requesting that Hustler be called collect. If either the consent form itself or the responses during verification caused Hustler to become suspicious, or if the model had developed doubts about appearing nude in print, Hustler was supposed to place the model’s entry into a “Never to Run” category.
When the Hustler staff considered La-Juan’s photo for publication, some employees thought that the name, “LaJuan Wood” was a play on words. In the photograph LaJuan was sitting on a horizontal portion of a tree trunk, creating the impression that “LaJuan Wood” was an alteration of “Lay You on Wood.” “LaJuan” ’s consent form did not list a telephone number, but provided that the $50 check be sent in Kelley’s name to LaJuan’s purported address. After Hustler selected LaJuan’s photo, Kelley received a mailgram addressed to LaJuan and called Hustler. A Hustler staff member asked Kelley a series of leading questions, answerable by “yes” or “no,” in a conversation that lasted only one or two minutes.
Hustler published LaJuan’s photo in the February 1980 issue of Hustler with the caption, “Photo by Husband.” The accompanying copy read, “Lajuan Wood is a 22-year old housewife and mother from Bryan, Texas, whose hobby is collecting arrowheads. Her fantasy is ‘to be screwed by two bikers.’ ” Two other photos were on the same page against a background that resembled a bаthroom-tile floor. The tip of a bare left foot appeared at the bottom of the page.
LaJuan and Billy first learned of the publication from friends. Although Lajuan initially did not believe that a photo of her had been published, the Woods confirmed the publication by obtaining a copy of the magazine. LaJuan sqffered mental anguish and humiliation after learning of the inclusion of her photo in Hustler. She received a series of obscene telephone calls after the magazine appeared. To help her in dealing with her feelings of degradation and embarrassment, Lajuan required psychological counseling, which extended over a six-week period.
LaJuan and Billy sued Hustler for defamation and for invasion of privacy on two theories — publication depicting the subject in a false light highly offensive to a reasonable person and public disclosure of private facts not of legitimate public concern and highly offensive to a reasonable person. The district court determined that the law of Texas, not California, applied. Although the Woods’ defamation cause was time-barred by article 5524, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. (Vernon 1958) (one year), the district court held that the privаcy causes was governed by the two-year limitations period of article 5526. Holding that Hustler had invaded the Woods’ privacy both by publicly disclosing private facts in an offensive manner and by placing them in an offensive false light, the court awarded $150,000 in compensatory damages to LaJuan and
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$25,000 in compensatory damages to Billy. The court found that Hustler invaded Billy’s privacy less intrusively and that some of his anguish was attributable to the invasion of his wife’s privacy. Texas does not recognize a relational or derivative right of privacy.
See Moore v. Charles B. Pierce Film Enterprises, Inc.,
II. Choice of Law
Hustler argues that California substantive law applies to this case.
See, e.g., Briscoe v. Reader’s Digest Ass’n,
Sitting in diversity, we follow the conflict-of-law rules of Texas, the forum state.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co.,
The district court properly applied Texas law. Under section 145 of the Restatement, the contacts of Texas predominate: the injury occurred in Texas, the relationship of the parties was centered in Texas, and the plaintiffs’ residence was in Texas. “In situations involving the multistate publiсation of matter that ... invades his right of privacy (see § 153), the place of the plaintiff’s domicil ... is the single most important contact for determining the state of the applicable law.” Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 145 comment f (1969). The only contacts pointing to California áre the defendant’s place of business and the place where the conduct causing injury occurred. Because Texas has the most significant relationship to this litigation, Texas substantive law applies. We need not address whether California’s statute of limitations is substantive or procedural. Texas courts, applying Texas substantive law, would clearly apply a Texas limitations period.
See Ellis v. Great Southwestern Corp.,
III. Statute of Limitations
Hustler contends that article 5524(1), Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. (Vernon 1958), which provides a one-year limitations period for actions “for injuries done to the character or reputation of another by libel or slander,” applies to invasion of privacy causes of action. The district court applied the two-year statute of limitations of article 5526(3), Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. (Vernon Supp.1984), which governs actions “for injury done to the person of another.” The Woods filed suit approximately a year and two weeks after the February 1980 issue of Hustler was published. If the district court erred by applying article 5526, the Woods would be barred from obtaining a remedy, and we would reverse. We hold, however, that the district court properly applied the two-year limitations period of article 5526 to privacy causes.
In' the relatively short time since Texas recognized a cause of action for invasion of privacy, Texas courts have not had occasion to decide which limitations period applies. See generally, Comment, The Privacy Action in Texas: Its Characterization, and a Determination of Applicable Statutes of Limitations, 29 Sw.L.J. 928 (1975). Thus, we must predict how Texas courts would resolve the issue.
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Dean Prosser formulated the four distinct torts encompassed under the category of invasion of the right of privacy.
See
W. Prosser,
Handbook of the Law of Torts
§ 117 at 802-18 (4th ed. 1971); Prosser,
Privacy,
48 Calif.L.Rev. 383 (1960). The American Law Institute later adopted these four types of privacy invasions in the Restatement (Second) of Torts.
See
Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 652A, 652B, 652C, 652D & 652E (1976). Texas courts recognize these four forms of privacy invasion.
See Braun v. Flynt,
Hustler urges that we apply the one-year statute of limitations governing defamation actions to bar the Woods’ remedy, primarily because of the similarity of a “false light” privacy action to defamation. We acknowledge the kinship of defamation to a false light claim, but we see them as distinct torts involving different injuries. Although Hustler’s publication of LaJuan’s photograph with the accompanying copy was actionable under either а defamation or a false light theory, the false light tort is broader than defamation. In his seminal law review article, Dean Prosser described the interest invaded by placing plaintiff in a false light as “that of reputation, with the same overtones of mental distress as in defamation.” Prosser,
supra,
48 Calif.L. Rev. at 400. Nevertheless, we have recently noted that different interests are invaded by the two torts, despite the similarities of false light invasion of privacy to defamation.
See Braun v. Flynt,
Speaking generally of injury caused by the invasion of privacy, the Texas Supreme Court has described it as mental suffering and mental and subjective injury.
Billings v. Atkinson,
The privacy tort of public disclosure of highly offensive private facts more clearly invades personality than reputation. “[Wjhat is involved in a privacy case is not damage to reputation but primarily emotional disturbance.” Wade, The Communicative Torts and the First Amendment, 48 Miss.LJ. 671, 707-08 (1977); see Nimmer, The Right to Speak from Times to Time: First Amendment Theory Applied to Libel and Misapplied to Privacy, 56 Calif.L.Rev. 935, 958 (1968).
We do hot think that the Texas Supreme Court would apply a one-year limitations period to a false light privacy action, while applying a two-year period to the tort of publicizing private facts, which more clearly does not substantially involve damage to reputation or character. Rather, we think that, in the absence of direction by the Texas legislature, Texas courts would apply the two-year limitations period of article 5526 to both privacy torts because they involve injury to the person. We are aided by
Whitley v. Whitley,
We also note that Texas courts construe statutes of limitations strictly, requiring that an action be specifically excepted in order to avoid application of the general statute of limitations.
See Robin v. Ely & Walker Dry Goods
Co.,
IV. Hustler’s Liability for Placing La-Juan in a False Light
In this appeal we are concerned with the two forms of privacy invasion that share the element of publicity — false light and disclosure of private facts. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652A comment d & illustration (1976). Hustler’s primary challenge to its liability focuses on the standard of care. Hustler argues that the First Amendment requires, at a minimum, that a publisher must act in reckless disregard of the falsity and the offensiveness of material before it can be liable for invasion оf privacy by placing an individual in a false light. Hustler claims that it did not publish in reckless disregard, because it did not know of or did not have serious doubts about the falsity of the consent form.
The district court, guided by language in
Gill v. Snow,
The fault under each theory was Hustler’s publication without LaJuan’s consent. The central inquiry concerning Hustler’s liability focuses on its procedure for verifying the truth of consent forms submitted with photographs for publication in the Beaver Hunt section. 1 Although the district court did not specifically link La-Juan’s recovery to one of the two privacy *1090 causes, we infer that she recovered on the false light theory because some of her damages resulted from publication of the false and highly offensive fantasy. 2 This component of damages could not have been awarded under the private facts theory because the fantasy did not truthfully reflect LaJuan’s private life. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652D & comments a & b (1976); id. § 652E comment b (1976). Therefore, we address the standard of care applicable to a media defendant who invades a private figure’s privacy by placing that person in a false light. Hustler does not dispute that LaJuan was and remains a private figure.
A. Standard of Care
The Supreme Court first enunciated the actual malice standard in
New York Times v. Sullivan,
The Court substantially altered the direction of First Amendment law in
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
B. Texas Law
In Foster, the Texas Supreme Court held that
a private individual may recover damages from a publisher or broadcaster of a defamatory falsehood as compensation for actual injury upon a showing that the publisher or broadcaster knew or should have known that the defamatory statement was false.
Foster,
No Texas court has set forth the standard of care applicable to publishers who invade the privacy of a person, public or private, by placing him in a false light.
3
Therefore,
Erie
requires us to make our own conclusion as to the standard of сare that the Texas Supreme Court would require to hold a publisher liable for placing a private plaintiff in a false light.
See Bryan v. Kershaw,
We are convinced that a Texas court would apply no different standard of care to a false light claim than it would to a defamation action. We note that the principal justification in
Time, Inc. v. Hill,
This circuit, however, applying Texas law in a recent false light case, helps decide the constitutional question. In
Braun v. Flynt,
We think that Texas courts would apply the negligence standard of liability enunciated in
Foster v. Laredo Newspapers, Inc.,
Under the Foster negligence standard the record prominently shows that. Hustler carelessly administered a slipshod procedure that allowed LaJuan to be placed in a false light in the pages of Hustler Magazine. The nature of material published in the Beaver Hunt section would obviously warn a reasonably prudent editor or publisher of the potential for defamation or privacy invasion if a consent form was forged. The wanton and debauched sexual fantasies and the intimate photos of nude models were of such a nature that great care was required in verifying a model’s consent.
In verifying the forged consent form sent with LaJuan’s picture, Hustler did not even follow its own questionable procedure. The district court found that, during a brief telephone conversation, a Hustler research assistant merely asked a few leading questions of the same person who submitted the forged consent form. James Heinsch, who was Hustler’s managing editor for the February 1980 issue, testified that verifying by asking leading questions was a breach of Hustler's verification policy. Hustler also claimed that its policy was to throw out or place in a “Never tо Run” category photos and consent forms *1093 that gave rise to suspicions concerning their accuracy. The Hustler staff, however, did not question the accuracy of the name, “LaJuan Wood,” even after employees suspected that it was a pseudonym. The fact that the $50 check was to be sent to a person other than LaJuan at what was alleged to be LaJuan’s address also did not trigger an inquiry.
The verification procedure was deficient even when Hustler followed it. When La-Juan’s photo was published, Hustler did not require the submission of a social security number or a driver’s license number, from whiсh Hustler could easily have verified its source. Nor did Hustler require notarization of the consent form. Another flaw in the verification procedure was exposed in cases where the model did not list a home telephone number. If such a model’s photo was selected, the model would call Hustler after she had received a mail-gram. A “model” engaged in a fraud would know that she was calling Hustler, and would be prepared to answer questions that confirmed the information she submitted. Because Hustler did not call back as an additional safeguard, the “model” could call from any undisclosed telephone number. At least when Hustler called a number listed on the form it would have an element of surprise. By asking for a model by name, Hustler would probably' get that person on the phone before she knew Hustler was the caller and, in a case of fraud, before she was prepared to supply false answers. Hustler acted negligently.
Because we affirm the judgment for La-Juan on the false light theory, we need not address Hustler’s liability for publicly disclosing the highly private, but truthful, fact of her nudity.
V. Invasion of Billy’s Privacy
The district court found that Hustler invaded Billy’s privacy by publishing the caption “photo by husband” along with the photo of LaJuan. The court determined that the fact that Billy took photos of his wife in the nude would be highly offensive to a reasonable person. By disclosing this fact, the district court found that Hustler invaded Billy’s privacy. The court also found that the caption placed Billy in an offensive false light because it indicated that he had taken the picture for publication in Hustler’s Beaver Hunt section.
Hustler argues that Billy’s privacy was not invaded because the fact that he photographed his wife in the nude was not private and that a' reasonable person would not find it highly offensive. Moreover, Hustler contends that the caption was accuratе and that Billy was not placed in a false light. It argues that models are the persons. who typically submit photos and that it would be unreasonable to infer that the photographer submitted the photo for publication in Hustler.
We need not address these contentions because we agree with Hustler on another issue. The district court was clearly erroneous in finding that Billy suffered mental anguish for the invasion of
his
privacy. Texas does not permit a plaintiff to recover for injury caused by the invasion of another’s privacy.
See Moore v. Charles B. Pierce Film Enterprises, Inc.,
VI. Damages
Hustler argues that the $150,000 damages award to LaJuan was the result of passion and prejudice and that it exceeds the amount supported by the evidence. We
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disagree. The record contains no evidence that the district court was prejudiced or awarded punitive damages in the guise of actual damages. Moreover, after examining the record, we are convinced that the award of damages is not “beyond the maximum possible award supported by the evidence ____”
Keyes v. Lauga,
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part.
Notes
. If LaJuan had truly consented to the publication and submitted personal information on the consent form, she would not have been placed in an offensive false light nor would publicity have been given to her private life in an offensive manner. Hustler would have an absolute privilege because of her cоnsent. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652F comment b (1976).
.
A plaintiff whose privacy has been invaded can have only one recovery if alternative causes of action contain identical elements of damages flowing from the same publication.
See Braun v. Flynt,
. The Texas Court of Civil Appeals affirmed a judgment based on invasion of privacy in
National Bonding Agency v. Demeson,
. The reckless disregard aspect of the New York Times actual malice test
is not measured by whether a reasonably prudent man would have published, or would have investigated before publishing. There must be sufficient evidence to permit the conelusion that the defendant in fact entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication. Publishing with such doubts shows reckless disregard for truth or falsity and demonstrates actual malice.
St. Amant,
