MEMORANDUM AND ORDER GRANTING SUMMA’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT RE PUNITIVE DAMAGES
This is a defamation action brought by plaintiff, Robert A. Maheu, against defendant, Hughes Tool Company, now known as Summa Corporation, to recover compensatory and punitive damages.
On July 1, 1974, after a four month bifurcated trial, requested by Summa, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Maheu on the issue of liability. 1 The second phase of this action to determine Maheu’s damages and to dispose of Sum-ma’s counterclaims is now scheduled for trial before the same jury for October 29, 1974.
The matter now before the court is Summa’s motion for partial summary judgment, filed August 22, 1974, pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 56(a), which challenges the constitutionality of punitive damages in a defamation action involving a public figure plaintiff when liability is founded upon actual malice.
The defamatory statements which sparked this lawsuit were uttered on January 7, 1972, by Howard R. Hughes during a telephonic press conference with seven newsmen at the Sheraton Universal Hotel. Hughes’ defamatory utterance is contained in the following colloquy:
“Q. Was Maheu fired on your orders and because of
A. (Answer not audible)
MR. NEAL: Would you ask him to repeat that, please.
Q. Would you repeat that, please.
A. Specifically.
Q. Why?
A. Because he’s a no-good, dishonest son-of-a-bitch, and he stole me blind.
*169 Q. Thank you. Mr. Hughes, this is your first news conference in how long?
A. I don’t suppose I ought to be saying that at а news conference, but I just don’t know any other way to answer it. If you, if you would even —you wouldn’t think it could be possible with modern methods of bookkeeping and accounting and so forth for a thing like the Maheu theft to have occurred, but believe me it did, because the money is gone and he’s got it.”
Prior to the liability trial, Summa admitted that the utterance of those words by Hughes satisfied all elements necessary to fix its liability for damages for defamation, except for the overriding issue of truth. In other words, Summa conceded legal responsibility for the utterance, admitted publication, and agreed that the utterance was defamatory if found by the trier of fact to be untrue. Moreover, Summa assumed the burden of proof on the truth issue and conceded that if it did not prevail on thаt issue at trial, Summa would be deemed to have acted with actual malice,
i. e.,
that it had knowledge of falsity or acted in reckless disregard of the truth.
2
See
New York Times v. Sullivan,
Defendant’s present motion for partial summary judgment on punitive damages raises an issue of first impression. This court must decide whether the First Amendment to- the United States Constitution precludes the recovery of punitive damages when the plaintiff is a public figure and liability is founded upon actual malice. Having studied the briefs of both parties and having heard oral argument on September 9, 1974, this court concludes that punitive damages in this context have a chilling effect on freedom of speech, and that these arbitrary awards do not narrowly and necessarily promote an important and substantial state interest. Therefore, plaintiff Maheu may not recover punitive damages in this action.
In recent opinions, the United States Supreme Court has questioned the constitutional propriety of punitive damages for defamation.
See
Gertz v. Welch,
In most jurisdictions jury discretion over the amounts awarded is limited only by the gentle rule that they not be excessive. Consequently, juries assess punitive damages in wholly unpredictable amounts bearing no neсessary relation to the actual harm caused. And they remain free to use their discretion selectively to punish expressions of unpopular views.
A similar discussion of punitive damages may be found in Justice Marshall's dissenting opinion in Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc.,
supra,
The manner in which unlimited discretion may be exercised is plainly unpredictable. And fear of the extensive awards that may be given under the doctrine must necessarily produce the impingement on freedom of the press recognized in New York Times. * * * * *
The unlimited discretion exercised by juries in awarding punitive damages compounds the problem of self-censorship that necessarily results from the awarding of huge judgments. This discretion allows juries to penalize heavily the unorthodox and the unpopular and exact little from others. Such free wheeling discretion presents obvious and basic threats to society’s interest in freedom of the press. And the utility of the discretion in fostering society’s interest in protecting individuals from defamation is at best vague and uncertain. These awards are not to compensate victims; they are only windfalls.
The foregoing analysis demonstrates the chilling effect that punitive dаmages have on the exercise of First Amendment rights. Individuals “steer far wider of the unlawful zone,” Speiser v. Randall,
There are several state interests which punitive damages in defamation actions might vindicate. First, these awards might serve the stаte’s interest in the protection of reputation against harm. However, the prospect of protracted and expensive litigation and the award of compensatory damages adequately serve this same interest. Thus, the addition of punitive damages to promote this deterrent purpose is unnecessary under ordinary circumstances. In this regard, it should be added that the Gertz decision does not diminish the de *171 terrent effect of compensatory damages. This opinion catalogs a very broad range of compensable items capable of yielding substantial awards for successful plaintiffs :
We need not define “actual injury,” as trial courts have wide experience in framing appropriate jury instructions in tort action. Suffice it to say that actual injury is not limited to out-of-pocket loss. Indeed, 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. Of course, juries must be limited by appropriate instructions, and all awards must be supported by competent evidence concerning the injury, although there need be no evidence which assigns an actual dollar value to the injury.
Moreover, the state’s interest to safeguard the reputation of public figures is not clearly compelling or substantial. As
Gertz, supra
at 3009-3010, points out, public figures generally have access to channels of effective communication. Consequently, they have an opportunity to rebut defamatory statements through the news media. In addition,
Gertz
suggests that public figures have relinquished a part of their reputational interest by thrusting themselves “to the forefront of particular public cоntroversies,” or by securing positions of substantial power and influence.
The second state interest which punitive damages might serve in the law of defamation is the protection of privacy. Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc.,
supra,
Therefore, the state’s interest in the protection of reputation and privacy of public figu.res is not important or compelling under ordinary circumstances and, therefore, does not justify the chilling effect of punitive damages.
Despite the foregoing considerations, there may be certain aggravated circumstances under which the state’s interest in the protection of reputation
*172
and privacy justifies the award of punitive damages in defamation actions. These aggravated circumstances arise only when reputation and privacy are threatened by the special dangers flowing from highly motivatеd, tortious conduct,
i. e.,
reprehensible conduct that is motivated by ill will, or is accompanied by malice, fraud, or oppression.
4
See
Cal.Civ.Code § 3294 (West 1970); Davis v. Hearst,
Having isolated the specific state interest served by punitive damages, the court must consider whether that interest, as it applies to public figure defamation actions, is important and substantial. The Supreme Court has relegated the public figure’s interest in reputation and privacy to a minimal level of protection by requiring him to show actual malice in order to recover compensatory damаges. The Court has rationalized this result, in part, by relying upon the public figure’s voluntary exposure to public comment and his ability to rebut defamatory utterances through the news media. Gertz v. Welch, supra at 3009. Just as these considerations minimize the state’s general interest in the protection of a public figure’s reputation and privacy, so they also tend to diminish the special dangers that might flow from highly motivated defamation. Because the public figure normally has access to the news media to rebut aggravated defamatory utterances, such tortious defamation of public figures does not increase the likelihood and magnitude of injury as much as similar aggravated or malicious defamation directed at private individuals. Similarly, the state’s interest in protecting the рublic figure’s reputation and privacy from the special dangers flowing from malicious defamation is decreased by that figure’s voluntary exposure to such dangers. These considerations suggest that the additional state interest to protect reputation and privacy from special dangers arising out of highly motivated tortious defamation is not compelling or substantial in public figure actions.
In any event, the court prefers to rest its holding on the determination that punitive damages do not narrowly and necessarily promote this particular state interest.
See
Keyishian v. Board of Regents, supra; United States v. O’Brien,
supra.
The decision to award punitive damages is wholly within the control of the jury and is committed to its “untrammeled discretion.” Davis v. Hearst,
It is also clear that the present, overbroad approach to the award of punitive damages is not necessarily required to achieve the state’s goal of deterrence. The state could select one of several alternative means to promote its goal and, in so doing, could decrease the chilling impact on First Amendment rights. For example, it might place a dollar limit upon the amount of recoverable punitive damages or confine punitive damages in defamation actions to a particular multiple of actual damages. 5 Finally, the legislature and the courts could seek to deter highly reprehensible conduct by awarding court costs and attorney’s fees to the plaintiff.
Furthermore, the court does not believe that the constitutional defects of discretionary punitive damage awards can be cured by instructing the jury to relate its award to the purpose of deterring malicious conduct. As Justices Marshall and Stewart make clear in their dissenting opinion in Rosenbloom, supra, this task is fraught with difficulties:
Mr. Justice Harlan suggests that on a finding of actual malice punitive damages may be awarded if they “bear a reasonable and purposeful relationship to the actual harm dоne.” My Brother Harlan envisions jurors being instructed to consider the deterrent function of punitive damages and to try to gear the punitive damages awarded in some undetermined way to actual injury. Apparently, the jury under the supervision of the court would weigh the content of the speech and the surrounding circumstances— inter alia, the position of the plaintiff, the wealth of the defendant, and the nature of the instrument of publication- — on the scale of their values and determine what amount is necessary in light of the various interest involved. Since there would be no objective standard by which to measure the jury’s decision there would be no predetermined limit of jury discretion and all of the threats to freedom of the press involved in such discretion would remain. The chant of some new inсantation will, of course, provide clear authority for a court to substitute its values for the jury’s and remake the decision. If this is what' my Brother Harlan envisions, he is merely moving the ad hoc balancing from the question of fault to the question of damages.
Because it would be difficult to objectively supervise the exercise of the jury’s discretion in this tender First Amendment area and because unlimited, discrеtionary awards of punitive damages do not narrowly and necessarily promote the special state interest to protect the reputation and privacy of public figures from special dangers flowing from highly malicious tortious defamation, i. e., the greater probability that harm will be inflicted and that the magnitude of the harm will be larger, this court concludes that the First Amend *174 ment precludes plaintiff’s recovery of punitive damages. To the extent that section 3294 of the California Civil Code authorizes this court to grant exemplary damages in public figure defamation actions, it is unconstitutional.
In light of the disposition of this matter, it is unnecessary to decide the other contentions raised in defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment.
Notes
. On January 12, 1973, the court filed its memorandum and order granting Summa’s motion, pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 42(b), for a separate trial on the issue of truth.
. See this court’s January 12, 1973 “Memorandum and Order Granting Separate Trial on Issue of Truth,” p. 3.
.
See also Gertz,
.
Gertz
recognized this function of punitive damages when it refused to permit their award “at least” in the absence of a showing of actual malice and emphasized that punitive damages “are private fines levied by civil juries to punish
reprehensible
conduct and to deter its future occurrence.”
. It should be noted that the legislature has already enacted a criminal libel statute prescribing a maximum fine of $5,000 or imprisonment not exceeding one year for malicious libel. Cal.Pen.Code § 249 (West 1970).
