This case is before the court on appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The National Foundation for Cancer Research, Inc., [hereinafter “Foundation” or “NFCR”], the plaintiff/appellant, has appealed the order of the district court which granted summary judgment in favor of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc. [hereinafter “Council” or “CBBB”], the defendant/appellee. Although the summary judgment order did not dispose of the entire case, the district court, pursuant to a stipulation of dismissal, dismissed without prejudice that portion of the action which remained for trial.
The NFCR sought both monetary and injunctive relief, alleging it had been wrongfully injured by an August 1981 report wherein the CBBB purported to “evaluate” the NFCR as a charitable institution. In the report, it was noted that the NFCR did not meet the Council’s standards which call for spending a reasonable percentage of a charity’s total income on program services. In addition, the CBBB indicated it regarded certain statements contained in the NFCR’s 1980 fund raising appeals as inaccurate and misleading. As a result of this evaluation, the Foundation claims it was defamed by the CBBB. Furthermore, the NFCR asserts that the Council has a substantial effect upon the economic viability of charitable organizations by its promulgation of certain standards and its reporting of compliance, or lack of compliance, with these standards to potential donors. As a consequence of this influence, the CBBB, it is alleged, owes a duty to the charities it evaluates to apply its standards fairly and reasonably. The NFCR claims this duty was breached and that the Council is liable in a civil action for the resulting damage.
Ruling on the Council’s motion for summary judgment, the district court found against the NFCR on three crucial legal issues, all of which are before this court today. With respect to the NFCR’s suit for defamation, the court ruled, first, that the Council’s statement that the NFCR did not spend a reasonable percentage of its total income on program services was a statement of opinion and, accordingly, not actionable. The second ruling was that, under
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
I. A Common Law “Duty of Fairness” Is Not Applicable
The appellant urges this court to adopt the position that the CBBB’s imprimatur of approval is so crucial to a charitable organization’s institutional viability by virtue of the effect it has on potential donors that, under the common law applicable to private associations, the CBBB has a duty to apply its standards fairly and reasonably to those charities it evaluates. Of course, concomitant with that “duty” is an action for breach, which the appellant would have this court recognize. The court finds it curious that neither party specifically addressed itself to the common law of Virginia, for this court, hearing this matter under its diversity jurisdiction, is obliged, under the principles of
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
The case before us simply does not fit this fact pattern. Although we accept, as did the district court for summary judgment purposes, the NFCR’s characterization of the Council as an organization which can significantly affect the economic viability of charitable organizations by virtue of its evaluations, the court cannot find that a positive evaluation by the CBBB is a prerequisite to a charity’s economic viability in the same way as the cases noted above, and others cited by the appellant, require before the common law duty of fairness is triggered. The CBBB neither licenses, nor certifies, nor confers membership upon the charities it evaluates. It is merely a “consumer’s guide” to charitable donations, albeit an influential one.
In light of the above, we believe it unlikely that the Virginia Supreme Court would recognize the Foundation’s proposed extension of the common law duty of fairness, particularly considering the lack of any analogous Virginia precedent. The NFCR’s remedy for unfair or unreasonable evaluations must be found, if at all, in an action for defamation.
II. CBBB’s Views On “Reasonable” Spending Are A Protected Statement Of Opinion
The district court ruled the following excerpt from the CBBB’s August 1981 Report to be a constitutionally-protected statement of opinion:
The National Foundation for Cancer Research (NFCR) does not meet the provision of the CBBB Standards for Charitable Solicitations which calls for spending a reasonable percentage of total income on program services, as distinct from fund raising and administration.
The Foundation challenges this ruling on the grounds that the comment is a statement of fact, not of opinion. It seems to the court that what the NFCR is ultimately challenging is the Council’s benchmark of 50 percent as the minimum percentage of total income which a charity should spend on its program services. In the court’s view, that percentage which constitutes a “reasonable” percentage of total income spent on program services is merely an opinion, over which the parties disagree, and not a defamatory false statement of fact.
1
Since the Supreme Court has specifi
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cally recognized that the characterization of a person’s conduct as reasonable or unreasonable is a protected statement of opinion,
Greenbelt Cooperative Publishing Association v. Bresler,
III. NFCR Is A “Public Figure” For Defamation Purposes
The district court ruled that the NFCR was a public figure for the purposes of its defamation action against the CBBB. Accordingly, the NFCR would be held to the strict standard of proof enunciated in
New York Times v. Sullivan,
The appellant asserts that the district court, in finding that it was a public figure for some purposes, misapplied the Supreme Court test enunciated in
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
We think it is the appellant who misapplies the Gertz test. Gertz recognizes that the key to determining whether a party is a public figure is the party’s own conduct.
It is preferable to reduce the public-figure question to a more meaningful context by looking to the nature and extent of an individual’s participation in the particular controversy giving rise to the defamation.
Id.
at 352,
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The appellant would, by its reliance on such cases as
Hutchinson v. Proxmire,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In its August 1981 Report, the Council provided the Foundation’s view.
NFCR POSITION: NFCR contends that comparisons of program expenses and total income in any given year do not fully or fairly reflect the full extent of its program expenses. It reports that there is a long “lead time” between public fund raising and cash program expenses due to the need to carefully define the work to be done and to be able to ensure that projects likely to take several years to complete will be fully funded. Thus current program expenses should, in NFCR’s view, be compared to the smaller amounts of cash contributions which the organization received in prior years. When viewed in this manner, NFCR reports that its program expenses exceed 50% of contributions, and thus believes that it meets the [Council’s] standards.
In a similar vein, the Foundation also challenged the Council’s method for computing its percentages. The Foundation would, for instance, include certain non-cash contributions *101 of computer time and other services by universities through which research was conducted as both income and program expenditures. The Council apparently excludes non-cash contributions in its computations of expenditures and income. Questions as to the amounts expended and the inclusion of certain non-cash items as contributions are certainly factual, but the contrary conclusions drawn from those facts present the real point of contention between the parties. Each party having determined the facts according to that party’s standards, each then applies its judgment and its criteria to those facts, and forms its opinion as to the meaning of those facts. This does not alter the court’s view that CBBB’s standard of reasonableness is still an opinion, and not a defamatory false statement of fact.
