delivered the opinion of the court.
These separate libel actions were brought by Doctors P. Declan Burke and John T. Payette, Jr., plaintiffs, against Newspaper Publishing Corp. (Newspaper), publisher of the Culpeper Star-Exponent, and Dr. John J. Waldowski, defendants, to recover compensatory and punitive damages. The cases were jointly tried before a jury which, in each case, awarded $10,000 punitive damages but no compensatory damages, and also found in favor of Dr. Waldowski.
Newspaper contends on this appeal that the trial court erred in granting and refusing certain instructions, in holding that punitive damages may be awarded without an award of compensatory damages, and in not holding that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
On February 23, 1972, Bill Diehl, managing editor of the Star-Exponent, interviewed Dr. Waldowski, a pediatrician, concerning his resignation from the staff of Culpeper Memorial Hospital and other matters related to the hospital. The following day, Newspaper published an article which quoted Dr. Waldowski as stating that he resigned from the hospital staff
“ ‘[b]ecause [he] could not condone the quality of gynecological and obstetrical medicine [he] saw there.’ Dr. Waldowski said it was not uncommon for him to treat heavily sedated babies.
“Dr. Waldowski refused to identify any doctor in this connection.”
Plaintiffs were the only physicians on the hospital staff practicing gynecology and obstetrics.
Prior to the publication of the article, Diehl contacted Dr. Payette by telephone, read the article to him, and requested his comments. Payette responded that the allegations were not true. He suggested to Diehl that he check his facts, gave Diehl the names of several other doctors to contact in this connection, and asked Diehl not to print the story.
Diehl did not deny the conversation with Dr. Payette. Diehl testified that he told Dr. Waldowski he would let him check the story for accuracy, but abandoned the attempt to reach him after one or two unsuccessful phone calls.
After Diehl’s telephone call, Dr. Payette contacted Dr. Burke and then consulted an attorney. The attorney called Diehl, who read the *802 article to him, and the attorney suggested deletion of the passages in question. The attorney conceded his lack of knowledge concerning the law of “libel and slander”, but expressed the opinion that the statements were not libelous. Nonetheless, he asked that the article not be printed because he “thought it would be damaging from a community relations point-of-view.”
Dr. Waldowski testified that the statements complained of were false and denied making them to Diehl.
Both plaintiffs testified that the statements in the article were false and that its publication caused them to be depressed and kept them from sleeping. Their wives corroborated this testimony.
Dr. Cramer, head of the hospital medical staff, testified that he was unaware of any “heavily sedated babies” during Dr. Waldowski’s tenure at the hospital. If such a problem had existed, however, he was certain it would have come to his attention.
Various witnesses agreed that, to them, the objectionable statements conveyed an adverse impression of the plaintiffs’ activities at the hospital. “Heavily sedated” implied brain damage, and such a condition, if true, would cause patients to avoid plaintiffs’ services.
The power of State courts to permit awards of damages in defamation cases has been substantially limited by the Supreme Court of the United States during the past decade. In the landmark case of
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
The Supreme Court’s plurality opinion in
Rosenbloom
v.
Metromedia, Inc.,
Newspaper’s defense in the court below was based on Rosenbloom and Sanders, and it invoked constitutional privilege on the ground that the article was reported and published without “actual malice” and in good faith on a matter of public and general concern.
Subsequent to the trial of these cases but before final judgment was entered on the jury verdict, the Supreme Court of the United States handed down its opinion in
Gertz
v.
Robert Welch, Inc.,
We now direct our attention to the trial court’s instructions to the jury in the present case. The jury was told that “newspapers have no peculiar privilege, but are liable for defamatory matter which they publish in the same manner as the rest of the community, and though published in good faith and in the honest belief in its truth, the same is not privileged unless it is in fact true, and a newspaper in publishing defamatory statements takes the risk of the information on which the same is based, being correct.”
This instruction was based upon the common law principle of presumed damages. It essentially told the jury that the newspaper could be held liable without fault. Under Gertz, whether plaintiffs were *804 private persons, public figures, or public officials, the instruction was clearly erroneous. 2
The only definition of malice in the court’s instructions to the jury appeared in a mitigation of damages instruction offered by Newspaper. There, malice was defined in common-law terms as words printed with some corrupt motive, such as hatred, personal spite, and ill will, or with such recklessness as to amount to a wanton or willful disregard of the rights of the plaintiffs.
Over Newspaper’s objection, however, the trial court incorporated this common law definition of malice by reference in its punitive damage instruction. In
Old Dominion Br. No. 496, Nat. Ass’n, Letter Car.
v.
Austin,
The trial court refused an instruction based on our holding in Sanders. Newspaper conceded that in light of Gertz, it was not error to refuse that instruction unless we reaffirm our holding in Sanders, which it contends is an option left open by Gertz.
Under Gertz, the states are allowed to define for themselves the appropriate standard of liability for recovery of actual damages for media defamation of private individuals, short of liability without fault, or to reinstate the “actual malice” standard. 3
However, it is unnecessary to our decision in this case to determine the standard of liability which we will adopt in a proper case for re *805 covery of actual damages. The jury here found that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover such damages under instructions which, although erroneous as to the standard of liability, properly set forth the elements of compensatory damages. Moreover, plaintiffs did not assign cross-error to the failure of the jury to award compensatory damages. Rule 5:6. Thus, this issue is not before us.
As it contended in the court below on its motion to set aside the jury’s verdict, Newspaper argues that the punitive damage awards cannot be upheld because the trial court refused to instruct the jury on actual malice under the New York Times standard. We agree.
Gertz
requires clear and convincing proof of knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth before punitive damages may be awarded.
Newspaper also argues that an award of actual damages is a prerequisite to an award of punitive damages, and since the jury did not find any actual damage, it was improper for them to have awarded punitive damages. We do not agree.
The general rule in tort cases requires an award of actual damages as a prerequisite to an award of punitive damages.
Zedd v. Jenkins,
Newspaper next argues that the punitive damage awards cannot be sustained because there is no evidence from which the jury could conclude that the publication complained of was made with actual malice under the New York Times standard. We do not agree.
Here there was evidence in the record from which the jury could find that the defamatory publication complained of was made with constitutional malice. Dr. Waldowski denied that he had made the statements attributed to him and stated that they were false. The jury clearly accepted Dr. Waldowski’s testimony as true since it found in his favor. Although Diehl advised Dr. Waldowski that he would *806 check with him before publishing the article, he apparently could not wait to contact Dr. Waldowski, even in light of Dr. Payette’s statements to him that the objectionable portions of the article were not true. Dr. Payette also advised Diehl to check the facts and told him where he could obtain them. Hence, there was abundant evidence of fault on the part of Newspaper when it published the article.
We hold that this evidence presented a jury question whether the article was published with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or false.
Since the jury was improperly instructed, the judgments for punitive damages must be set aside, and the cases remanded for a new trial, limited to the issue of punitive damages recoverable under the actual malice standard of New York Times and Gertz.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. See Mr. Justice White’s dissenting opinion in
Gertz
v.
Robert Welch, Inc.,
. A similar instruction was held erroneous in a recent case by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
Stone
v.
Essex County Newspapers, Inc.,
-- Mass. --, --,
. Some states have adopted a negligence standard for defamed private individuals with the duty of care based on the “reasonable man” or “reasonably prudent publisher” standard.
See Troman
v.
Wood,
