Someone played a dirty cyber-trick on WPWX-FM by posting offensive content on WPWX.com. Mark Cody, who had worked at the station for six months but was terminated right before the offensive posting, was accused of the misdeed by his former boss. Cody, who in fact had nothing to do with the prank, sued his former employer for defamation and interference with contractual relations. Of the nine counts in his comрlaint, the district court dismissed five and granted summary judgment for the defendants on the remaining four. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
I. History
We summarize the facts as pled by Cody. WPWX-FM is an urban-contemporary radio station owned and operated by Dontron, Inc., and broadcast from Crawford Studios in Hammond, Indiana. Cody started working as the station’s general sales manager, under general manager Tаft Harris, on March 26, 2001. His major responsibilities included hiring and managing the station’s sales staff, setting a sales budget, and attaining the sales budget. On October 4, 2001, while he was on paternity leave, Cody received a facsimile informing him that he had been fired by WPWX. The station cited Cody’s failure to hire the sales team he had promised and failure to achieve the required sales budget as the reasons for termination.
While acting as general sales manager, Cody thought it would be wise for the station to establish a presence on the internet. He recommended to Harris and other management personnel that the station reserve “WPWX.com” as a domain name, but, in early June 2001, Cody found out that a William Slembarski already owned that domain name. After receiving authorization from managеment, Cody tried to work out a deal to purchase the domain name from Slembarski. The negotiations were ongoing when Cody was terminated and the purchase was never completed.
At some point after Cody’s termination, offensive content including some pornographic images appeared on WPWX.com. Harris viewed the website after a January 2002 sales meeting and said, “This has got to be Mark Cody. I know Mark did this. I know he is responsible for this.” Later, at another sales meeting, Harris commented to the sales staff that there was evidence pointing to Cody’s involvement in posting the offensive content. Harris also told other WPWX executives that Cody was behind the situation.
Inside Radio, an independent radio industry publication, published two articles having to do with Cody and WPWX. The first, dated October 8, 2001, discussed Cody’s termination. The second, published on January 11, 2002, discussed the website incident. It quoted Harris as speculating that “[i]t’s got to be a competitor or one particular ex-employee,” and went on to describe the website and state that Crawford Broadcasting planned to take le *856 gal action against the perpetrator. Harris claims that he never made the statements attributed to him in this article. While he admits- to speaking with reporter Jerry Del Colliano, Harris claims that he told Del Colliano he had “no idea” who was responsible for the website, even when specifically asked whether he thought Cody was the culprit.
After some difficulty in finding a new job, Cody accepted a position as independent contractor for WVON-AM in Novembеr 2001. In that role, he accompanied WVON’s general sales manager, Dan Johnson, to Crawford Studios. Cody alleges that a Crawford Studios employee then placed a call to WVON indicating that Johnson was banned from Crawford Studios because of his relationship with Cody. Cody claims that, as a result of this call, his independent contractor relationship with WVON “disintegrated” in January 2002.
In March 2002, Cody entered into an agreement with Central City Productions, Inc. (“CCP”), which also had a business relationship with Crawford Studios. Cody alleges that, in July 2002, CCP refused to pay Cody per their agreement because of pressure exerted by Crawford Studios. He claims that Harris directed Crawford Studios not to deal with CCP because of its relationship with Cody, and that Harris told CCP’s chief executive officer that Cody misrepresеnted CCP’s capabilities to prospective business partners.
Cody initially brought suit against Harris and Dontron in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, in December 2002. The defendants properly removed the case to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332; 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Cody’s nine-count third amended complaint, filed on August 6, 2003, alleged: (1) that Harris’s statements about Cody at staff meetings (indicating his involvement in the offensive wеbsite postings) constituted defamation per se; (2) that Harris’s statements to Inside Radio constituted defamation per quod and defamation per se; (3) that Harris and Dontron intentionally interfered in Cody’s contract with CCP; and (4) that Dontron intentionally interfered in Cody’s contract with WVON.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the five counts related to Harris’s statements in staff meetings and contract interference. After discovery, the court granted summary judgment for the defendants on the counts regarding Harris’s statements to Inside Radio. Cody appeals both rulings.
II. Analysis
The parties agree that Illinois law applies to each of Cody’s substantive claims. For the reasons stated below, we do not believe that Harris’s comments to WPWX staff members constituted defamation per se under Illinois law. Cody has also failed to state a claim for interference with contractual relations. Finally, because the district court did not abuse its discretion in ruling thаt the Inside Radio articles were inadmissible hearsay, summary judgment for Harris and Dontron was proper on the defamation counts related to those articles.
A. Counts I and II: Harris’s Statements in Staff Meetings
Count I of Cody’s complaint alleges that Harris’s comments at WPWX staff meetings, accusing Cody of posting the offensive material on WPWX.com, constituted defamation per se. Count II seeks damages from Dontron for the same statements under the theory of respondeat superior.
Both counts were dismissed by the district court for failing to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). We review a motion to dismiss
de novo. Horwitz v. Bd. of Educ. of Avoca Sch.
*857
Dist. No. 37,
Under Illinois law, a statement is defamatory if it harms the reputation of another, lowering him in the eyes of the community, or if it discourages others from associating with him.
Bryson v. News Am. Publ’ns, Inc.,
On appeal, Cody argues that Harris’s statements in staff meetings accusing Cody of posting pornography on WPWX. com qualify as defamation
per se
under the first, third, and fourth categories. In the district court, however, he made arguments based only on the third and fourth categories. An argument raised for the first time on appeal is waived, so we need not discuss whether Harris’s statements impute the commission of a crime.
See Maciosek v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wis.,
Whether Harris’s statements fall into the third or fourth categories of defamation per se is the question we must answer. We begin by reviewing exactly what the statements were: “This has got to be Mark Cody. I know Mark did this. I know he is responsible for this.” Basically, Harris was saying to WPWX staff that Cody, an ex-employee, was retaliating against the station by posting offensive or obscеne content on the website bearing the station’s call letters in its domain name. He was not disparaging Cody’s ability to manage a sales force. A careful study of Illinois caselaw shows that this is not defamation per se.
Statements that have been deemed defamatory
per se
by Illinois courts under the third and/or fourth categories have always been related to job performance; to succeed, the plaintiff must have been accused of lacking
ability in his trade
or doing something bad
in the course of carrying out his job. See Clarage v. Kuzma,
Conversely, attacks related to personal integrity and chаracter have not been deemed defamatory
per se. See Heying v.
Simonaitis,
In this case, Harris’s comments did not disparage Cody’s skills as a sales manager, but were critical of his personal integrity. We do not believe that because Cody undertook the task of procuring the WPWX website while he held the position of sales manager, any accusations related to misuse of that website after employment reflect on his abilities in that job. The comments at issue were not related to Cody’s work at WPWX; Harris essentially implied that Cody has a bad temper, is unable to control his anger, and lacks the integrity and judgment to resist getting revenge in an immature and vicious manner. All of these implications go to Cody’s personal, rather than professional, traits. The alleged misconduct did not even occur while Cody was on the job, as it did in Sangston; Harris accused Cody of retaliating against the station not while he was an employee, but after (and aрparently because of) his termination. This situation is not like the Illinois cases that have found defamation per se when a plaintiffs work or conduct while carrying out his employment-duties has been impugned.
In some cases, personal integrity is so intertwined with job skills, that an attack upon it could constitute defamation
per se. Kumaran v. Brotman,
B. Counts VII, VIII, and IX: Tortious Interference with a Contract
In counts VII and VIII of his complaint, Cody alleges that Harris and Dontron interfered in his contractual relationship with CCP. Cody says that the defendants pressured CCP to terminate its agreement with him and told a CCP executive that he made misrepresentations about CCP’s capаbilities. In count
*859
IX, Cody alleges that Dontron also interfered with Cody’s WVON contractual relationship by banning the station’s general sales manager from Crawford Studios after he was spotted on the premises with Cody. Because these counts were dismissed by the district court, our review is
de novo
and we take all well-pled facts as true.
See Horwitz,
In order to state a claim for tortious interference with contractual rights, Cody must plead: (1) the existence оf a contract; (2) the defendants’ awareness of the contract; (3) the intentional inducement of a contract breach; (4) an actual breach of the contract; and (5) damages.
See HPI Health Care Servs., Inc. v. Mt. Vernon Hosp., Inc.,
Apparently conceding that he should have pled these counts as interference with prospective economic advantage, Cody invites this court to treat the counts as if they had been so pled and reverse. “[A] plaintiff cannot amend his complaint in his appeal brief[,]”
Kennedy v. Venrock Assocs.,
C. Counts III, IV, V, and VI: Harris’s Stаtements to Inside Radio
The remaining counts in Cody’s complaint are related to the statements that Harris allegedly made to
Inside Radio.
Counts III and V seek to recover from Harris for defamation
per quod
and defamation
per se,
respectively.
*860
Counts IV and VI seek the same from Dontron under the theory of
respondeat superior.
The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants on all counts. We review a decision granting summary judgment
de novo
and consider all evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Smock v. Nolan,
Summary judgment is proper if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . .. the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The initial burden is on the moving party (in this case, the defendants) to demonstrate that there is no material question of fact with respect to an essential element of the nonmoving party’s case.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
To succeed on a claim for either defamation
per se
or defamation
per quod,
a plaintiff must first prove that a defamatory statement has been made.
See Parker,
The article is clearly hearsay. Fed. R.Evid. 801(c) (defining hearsay as a statement made by an out-of-сourt declarant offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted). The out-of-court declarant, Inside Radio reporter Del Colliano, quoted Harris as saying that “a particular ex-employee” was behind the website. 3 Cody is offering the article as proof that Harris made the accusation. Cody urged the district court to admit the article under either the present sense imprеssion exception or the residual exception to the hearsay rule. Fed.R.Evid. 803(1), 807.
The district court did not find application of either exception appropriate in this case. The three criteria for admission of a statement as a present sense impression are: “(1) the statement must describe an event or condition without calculated narration; (2) the speaker must have personally perceived the event or condition described; and (3) the statement must have been made while the speaker was perceiving the event or condition, or immediately thereafter.”
United States v. Ruiz,
The district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to admit the article itself as evidence of Harris’s statement. Cody has not, then, satisfied the burdеn he carries of demonstrating that there is a material fact in issue, and we must also affirm the district court’s decision granting summary judgment for Harris and Don-tron.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court dismissing counts I, II, VII, VIII, and IX, and granting summary judgment for the defendants on counts III, IV, V, and VI.
Notes
. Cody does not dispute that his relationships with both entities were terminable at will. The CCP agreement stated that it was to "сommence on March 1, 2002 and continue until revoked by either party in writing.” (Compl., Ex. 4, 112.) Similarly, the agreement between Cody and WVON stated that it "may be terminated by either party upon 30 days written notice to the other party.” (Compl., Ex. 2.)
. It is not clear why Cody did not amend his complaint to reflect the more appropriate claim at an earlier time; he filed four versions of his complaint in thе lower courts, and the defendants moved to dismiss earlier iterations of the contract interference counts with the same arguments they make now.
. Cody asserts in his reply brief that Harris is the declarant, but he is wrong. The truth of Harris’s alleged accusation, that is, whether or not Cody posted the material on WPWX. com, has never been at issue in this case; we are concerned with whether or not Harris made the accusation to Del Colliano as Del Colliano represented in the article.
