John Lott, an academic and economist, believes that his reputation was sullied by Freakonomics, 1 the popular and off-beat book written by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner. Lott’s name was mentioned in one paragraph of the 200-page book, and he understood this passage to be an accusation of scholarly dishonesty. Offended, he filed suit against Levitt and HarperCol-lins, the publisher of the book, claiming that he had been defamed. The district court dismissed this claim after concluding that the passage could reasonably be read as a refutation of Lott’s controversial theories and not a swipe at his integrity. Lott now appeals.
In Freakonomics, Levitt, a self-described rogue economist, seeks to explore “the hidden side of everything.” Using an economist’s analytical tools, Levitt (and his co-author, Dubner, who is not named in this suit) embarks on a “treasure-hunt” of “freakish curiosities,” investigating, for example, the similarities between nylon stockings and crack cocaine, or the socioeconomic forces at work when parents name their children. The book, which became a New York Times Bestseller, tackled one particular oddity that had left many commentators baffled — the drop in crime rates in the 1990s. Levitt devoted a chapter to this topic, debunking several different explanations for this phenomenon (including “gun buyback” programs) before attributing the decline, at least in part, to the legalization of abortion, which meant fewer children being born to mothers who didn’t want them.
In this chapter, over the span of just one paragraph (pages 133-34), Levitt addressed Lott’s work. Lott, author of the book More Guns, Less Crime: Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws, contends that allowing law-abiding citizens to carry concealed weapons contributes to a drop in crime rates. As a champion of this politically charged idea, Levitt writes that Lott became a “lightning rod for gun controversy,” a status he exacerbated by creating a pseudonym, “Mary Rosh,” which he used to defend his theory in debates over the Internet (an embarrassing charge, but one that was apparently true as Lott takes no issue with it in this case). Levitt ends his discussion of Lott’s work by writing:
Then there was the troubling allegation that Lott actually invented some of the survey data that support his more-guns/ less-crime theory. Regardless of whether the data were faked, Lott’s admitted *567 ly intriguing hypothesis doesn’t seem to be true. When other scholars have tried to replicate his results, they found that right-to-carry laws simply don’t bring down crime.
To Lott, these sentences amounted to an accusation that he falsified his results.
Lott responded by filing a defamation suit against Levitt and HarperCollins before the district court, invoking diversity jurisdiction. In his complaint, Lott alleges that “replicate,” within the “world of academic research and scholarship,” has “a clear and unambiguous meaning.” He reads the term to mean that other scholars performed the same analysis as Lott, using identical data and methodologies. According to Lott, if the others were unable to reach the same results as him, an assertion he claims is untrue, then the inescapable conclusion is that he fabricated his findings or was too incompetent to reach the right ones. Lott added a second defamation claim regarding an e-mail exchange Levitt had with another economist, in which Levitt accused Lott of buying support for his theory by paying for the publication of a journal filled only with non-peer refereed articles that bolstered his hypothesis.
Both Levitt and HarperCollins filed motions to dismiss the suit, arguing that the statements in
Freakonomics
were not defamatory and were otherwise protected by the First Amendment. The defendants attached a copy of the book to their motions, which the district court (Judge Ruben Castillo) considered part of the pleadings because the book was central to Lott’s claim.
See Cont’l Cas. Co. v. Am. Nat’l Ins. Co.,
Seven months after this decision, and shortly before discovery was set to end, a flurry of activity ensued. A settlement of the remaining claim was reached, and, at the same time, Lott (who hired new counsel) filed a motion to reconsider the district court’s decision to dismiss the defamation claim based on Freakonomics. In that motion, Lott argued that Virginia law, and not Illinois law, should have applied, despite his prior counsel’s acceptance and reliance on Illinois cases. The district court denied this motion, reasoning that Lott waived the choice-of-law argument. At this time, Lott also asked the court for leave to file an amended complaint, which reiterated his defamation claim based on Freakonomics, a request that was denied as untimely and futile. Today we resolve Lott’s appeal from these decisions.
First things first — we must decide what law to apply. Lott contends that the district court erred by applying Illinois law and argues instead that Virginia law should apply. The defendants first addressed this issue in their motions to dismiss, in which they argued that Illinois substantive law should apply, raising and rejecting the possible application of Virginia law. In Lott’s response, he stated that he “agree[d] with Defendants that Illinois law governs this dispute,” made no separate choice-of-law analysis, and cited no Virginia cases. Accordingly, the district court decided the motions based on Illinois law. Seven months later, Lott argued for the first time that Virginia law should have governed and asked the court to reconsider its ruling, contending, as he does here, *568 that he only agreed that Illinois choiee-of-law principles should apply, not that Illinois substantive law should govern. Under Illinois’s choice-of-law rubric, Lott contends the law of his domicile, Virginia, should control this case.
This argument is disingenuous. To read Lott’s agreement to the governance of Illinois law so narrowly robs it of both its obvious meaning and its context. Lott explicitly submitted to Illinois law and relied solely on it, and having done so, the district court was right to apply it to the dispute.
Whirlpool Fin. Corp. v. Sevaux,
On, then, to Illinois law. Defamation is the publication of a false statement that “tends to harm a person’s reputation to the extent that it lowers that person in the eyes of the community or deters others from associating with that person.”
Tuite v. Corbitt,
But not all statements that fall into one of these five categories are necessarily actionable
per se
— the statement’s only reasonable readings must also be defamatory in nature. In other words, a statement that is reasonably capable of an innocent construction is not
per se
defamatory.
Tuite,
Lott’s first argument turns this substan-tiative law on its procedural head. Lott argues that the district court erred when it dismissed his defamation claim on the basis of this innocent construction rule. He notes that the district court was bound by federal, not Illinois, pleading standards, and argues that federal standards preclude a preference for an innocent interpretation over a defamatory one at the pleading stage. Instead, Lott argues that his claim should have survived the motions to dismiss because the passage in Freakonomics *569 is reasonably susceptible to a defamatory interpretation, notwithstanding any equally reasonable innocent interpretations that may exist.
It is true that federal courts sitting in diversity are bound by federal procedural rules, but those rules impose no impediment for a judge to decide the natural and obvious meaning of an allegedly defamatory passage at the pleading stage. Courts, when reviewing a motion to dismiss, are indeed required to accept as true the facts alleged in the complaint, including the words used in the allegedly defamatory statement, and make all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff. But that does not mean that the court must take the plaintiffs
interpretation
of the allegedly defamatory words at face value. Figuring out the meaning of a statement and whether it is reasonably susceptible to an innocent construction is a question of law for the courts to resolve.
Madison v. Frazier,
Now, on to the alleged defamation. Lott contends that Levitt’s refutation of his more-guns/less-crime hypothesis can be read only as a smear of his professional reputation and is therefore defamatory per se. Using an academic definition of “replicate,” Lott maintains that the passage means that others repeated, to a tee, his technical analysis but were unable to duplicate his results, suggesting that he either faked his data or performed his analysis incompetently.
But this technical reading is not the only reasonable interpretation of the passage. After all, Freakonomics didn’t become a bestseller by targeting just academics. The book takes into account the lay reader, breaking down technical terms into easily understandable, if imprecise, ideas. For example, the technicalities of regression analysis are explained by an analogy to a golfer’s handicap, since both even the playing field so that variables (or golfers) can be compared on all fours. The book relies on anecdotal evidence and describes with only the broadest strokes the statistical methodologies used. In this context, it is reasonable to read “replicate” in more generic terms. That is, the sentence could mean that scholars tried to reach the same conclusion as Lott, using different models, data, and assumptions, but could not do so. This reading does not imply that Lott falsified his results or was incompetent; instead, it suggests only that scholars have disagreed with Lott’s findings about the controversial relationship between guns and crime. By concluding that this more generic definition of “replicate” is reasonable, we are not assuming that the reader is a simpleton. After all, econometrics is far from conventional wisdom. We are, however, taking into account the context of the statement and acknowledging that the natural and obvious meaning of “replicate” can lie outside the realm of academia for this broadly appealing book.
*570
A closer look at the paragraph where the contested sentence is found supports this innocent reading. The paragraph describes and critiques Lott’s “idea,” “theory,” and “hypothesis,” but makes no mention of his methodology or what data set he used. In this context, it is natural to read Levitt’s statement as a critique on his theory, rather than an accusation of falsifying data. In fact, instead of weighing in on the rumor that Lott faked some of his results, Levitt distanced himself from it. Levitt mentioned the “troubling allegation,” but noted that “[r]egardless of whether the data were faked, Lott’s admittedly intriguing hypothesis doesn’t seem to ’ be true.” Far from assailing Lott’s competence, he acknowledged that Lott’s theory is “sensible” and “intriguing.” To the extent that Lott is complaining about an attack on his ideas, and not his character, he is barking up the wrong tree. The remedy for this kind of academic dispute is the publication of a rebuttal, not an award of damages.
Dilworth v. Dudley,
Finally, Lott also contends, couched in two distinct procedural arguments, that he had a viable claim for pro quod defamation' — that is a defamation claim where damages cannot be presumed. He first argues that the district court missed the pro quod claim in his original complaint and therefore erred by failing to address it. Alternatively, Lott argues that the district court should have allowed him to file an amended complaint that explicitly added a pro quod claim, instead of refusing to do so on the grounds that the proposed complaint was untimely and futile.
Both these arguments fail for the same reason — Lott neglected to allege any special damages in both his original complaint and his proposed amended complaint. In Illinois courts and federal courts sitting in diversity, special damages must be specifically stated in a
pro quod
claim. Fed.R.CivJP. 9(g);
Muzikowski v. Paramount Pictures Corp.,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner, Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything (2005).
