Opinion
Plaintiff Larry L. Moyer, a teacher by profession, filed a 12-count complaint seeking damages on theories of defamation and infliction of emotional distress arising from the publication of a story in a high school student newspaper. Plaintiff now appeals from an order dismissing his complaint following the sustaining of general demurrers without leave to amend. The appeal is presented against the following factual and procedural background.
On March 11, 1988, an article appeared in In Flight, a student publication of Foothill High School, reporting that a smoke bomb had gone off in plaintiff’s classroom. The headline stated: “Students terrorize Moyer.” The article quoted the bomb-throwing student who merely “wanted to play a joke” as well as “The Shadow,” the student who supplied the smoke bomb because “Mr. Moyer is a babbler, and babblers are annoying to me .... [¶] Also he pissed me off, he is the worst teacher at FHS.”
The complaint named as party defendants the school district, school principal, student newspaper adviser, the students who made and reported the comments, including another student who reported plaintiff’s filing of a governmental tort (libel) claim and republished the “babbler” and “worst teacher” remarks. The opposing arguments below centered on whether the challenged remarks constituted nonactionable expressions of opinion or arguably triable factual issues.
While sustaining the general demurrers, the trial court denied the school district’s motion for costs, including attorney fees, under the authority of Code of Civil Procedure section 1038. The district has filed a separate appeal from that order which we have consolidated herein.
I. Defamation
Prior to the filing of briefs herein, the courts perceived a fundamental distinction between statements of fact and statements of opinion. Statements of opinion were held to be protected by the First Amendment and thus not actionable. (Baker v. Los Angeles Herald Examiner (1986)
On June 21, 1990, while this appeal was pending, our highest court filed its opinion in Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co. (1990)
Before Milkovich, the California courts had employed a “totality of the circumstances” test to differentiate between fact and opinion: “First, the language of the statement is examined. For words to be defamatory, they must be understood in a defamatory sense . . . . [¶] Next, the context in which the statement was made must be considered. . . . [¶] This contextual analysis demands that the courts look at the nature and full content of the communication and to the knowledge and understanding of the audience to whom the publication was directed.” (Baker v. Los Angeles Herald Examiner, supra, 42 Cal.3d at pp. 260-261.) The crucial determination whether the statement was fact or opinion was held to be a question of law for the court. (Id. at p. 260; see generally Letter Carriers v. Austin, supra,
Milkovich did not substantially change these principles; it underscored that in cases such as this, raising First Amendment issues, a reviewing court must make an independent examination of the whole record in order to ensure that there is no infringement of free expression. (
Turning to the relevant circumstances herein, plaintiff essentially asserts the publication contained three factual statements: (1) the headline, “Students terrorize Moyer”; (2) “Mr. Moyer is a babbler . . . .”; and (3) “he is the worst teacher at FHS.” Thus, the narrow issue before this court is whether these statements can reasonably be understood to state actual facts about plaintiff. In determining that issue, we consider the nature and meaning of the language used, including the verifiability of the statements, and the context in which the statements appeared. Viewed through that analytical prism, we are impelled to conclude that the statements are not actionable.
As to the third or “worst teacher” statement, there is no factual assertion capable of being proved true or false. Clearly, the statement is an expression of subjective judgment by the speaker. The full text of the sentence confirms that the statement was simply an expression of anger or disgust on the student-speaker’s part. The statement contains no verifiable facts and is clearly protected under the First Amendment. (See, e.g., Botos v. Los Angeles County Bar Assn. (1984)
Nor does the second or “babbler” statement fall within the legal framework of actionable speech. A commonly accepted definition of “babbler” is
Finally, as to the first statement, we agree with plaintiff that by its nature a headline over a news story arguably implies a factual assertion.
In summary, we conclude that the statements are not actionable, that no fact finder could reasonably interpret the statements as stating actual facts about plaintiff, and, consequently, that the demurrers were properly sustained.
The judgment or orders appealed from, and each of them, are affirmed. The parties shall bear their respective cost on appeal.
Newsom, J., and Stein, J., concurred.
Notes
We note that the two dissenting justices in Milkovich agreed with the majority’s legal analysis but disagreed as to the application of the announced principles to the statements at issue. (497 U.S. at pp._,_ [111 L.Ed.2d at pp. 21-23].) Indeed, the notion that a statement may be understood as a factual assertion though phrased as an opinion has long been recognized in California. (See Okun v. Superior Court, supra,
The common law rule that truth is a defense to alleged defamation with the burden of proof on the defendant (Lipman v. Brisbane Elementary Sch. Dist. (1961)
The U.S. Supreme Court has yet to decide the applicable standard when the defendant is not a media defendant. (Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps, supra,
We assume only for purposes of discussion that the statement is defamatory. In all candor, however, we have great difficulty seeing anything false or defamatory in the assertion that plaintiff was “terrorized.”
The subsequent story reporting plaintiff’s filing of a libel claim eventually republished the substance of the original In Flight story.
See footnote, ante, page 720.
