ERIC L. PRIDONOFF, Aрpellant, v. ZLATKO BALOKOVICH et al., Respondents.
L. A. No. 21512
In Bank
Mar. 5, 1951
788. [789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799]
Edward Mosk, Pacht, Tannenbaum & Ross, Clore Warne and Stuart Kadison for Respondents.
TRAYNOR, J.—Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal of his action for libel, entered pursuant to an order sustaining without leave to amend defendants’ demurrer to his third amended complaint.
Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that “defendants together composed, wrote and caused to be printed and published, of and concerning the plaintiff, in a daily newspaper known as ‘Narodni Glasnik,’ and distributed to, and which was read by, large numbers of people in the County of Los Angeles, and in other parts of the State of California, and numerous other cities and counties throughout the United States, the following matter:
“‘Eric Pridonoff, while one of the American Embassy in Belgrade, was caught carrying on flagrant espionage activities. The Yugoslav government requested his recall and we recalled him. When Pridonoff got back to the United States, he wrote a series of articles for the Hearst press violently attacking the Yugoslav government and intimating clearly that if the Yugoslav people wоuld revolt against their government, we would help them. These articles were mimeographed both in English and Serbo-Croatian, and distributed through the American Reading Room in Belgrade. We read them ourselves while we were there.‘”
In the first count of his complaint plaintiff alleged that defendants wrote and published the allegedly libelous article, that all the statements therein, with the exception of the statement that plaintiff was a member of the American Embassy, were false, that defendants knew the statements were false and caused their publication out of malice and ill will toward plaintiff with intention to injure, disgrace, and defame him, and that as a result of the publication of the statements plaintiff suffered general damages in the amount of $100,000.
Libel is defined as “a false and unprivileged publication by writing . . . which exposes any person to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy, or which causes him to be shunned or avoided, or which has a tendency to injure him in his occupation.” (
Plaintiff cannot recover general or exemplary damages, however.
“In any action for damages for the publication of a libel in a newspaper, or of a slander by radio broadcast, plaintiff shall recover no more than special damages unless a correction be demanded and be not published or broadcast, as hereinafter provided. Plaintiff shall serve upon the publisher, at the place of publication or broadcaster at the place of broadcast, a written notice specifying the statements claimed to be libelous and demanding that the same be corrected. Said notice and demand must be served within 20 days after
knowledge of the publication or broadcast of the statements claimed to be libelous.”
The plain language of the statute governs “any action for damages for the publication of a libel in a newspaper.” (Italics added.) Even though plaintiff‘s action is for the publication of a libel in a newspaper, he contends that by virtue of the provision requiring service of the demand for correction on the publisher the statute applies only to the publisher and not to his employees, columnists, and other authors. (See Comer v. Louisville etc. Railroad Co., 151 Ala. 622 [44 So. 676, 677].) Since his action is against the authors of the alleged libel and not against the newspaper publisher he concludes that
Plаintiff does allege, however, that he has suffered special damages as a result of the publication of the alleged libel.
Special damages are “all damages which plaintiff alleges and proves that he has suffered in respect to his property, business, trade, profession or occupation, including such amounts of money as the plaintiff alleges and proves he has expended as a result of the alleged libel, and no other.” (
Plaintiff‘s allegation of special damage is sufficiently specific. He alleges that as a result of the publication of the alleged libel he has lost employment with a specific employer, the Parsons Aerojet Company, for a specified period, to his damage in the amount of $5,000. Defendants are thereby informed of the exact nature of the claim of special damages and afforded an opportunity to prepare a defense against it. That is all that is required of the allegation.
Defendants contend, however, that the allegation is insufficient for the reason that the special damages are alleged only on information and belief. Plaintiff may allege on information and belief any matters that are not within his personal knowledge, if he has information leading him to believe that the allegations are true. (
Hall v. James, 79 Cal.App. 433, 435-436 [249 P. 876], does not compel a contrary result. In that case the court held insufficient an allegation on information and belief of the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff as the result of
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer and to allow defendants to answer.
Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
CARTER, J.—I concur in the reversal of the judgment of dismissal, but do not agree with the law stated in the majority opinion. The majority decision holds that, by implication at least, section 48a of the Civil Code is valid and that it applies to the author of a newspaper article although he has no connection with the newspaper or its publisher; that is, that unless a correction or retraction is demanded and refused, only special damages may be recovered against the author for the publication of a libelous article in a newspaper. I cannot agree with that proposition for two reasons: (1) Section 48a, which grants to newspapers immunity from liability for libelous publications, is invalid, and its invalidity is brought into sharp focus when it is extended to the author of the libelous article. (2) Section 48a dоes not apply to authors.
The validity of section 48a has been before this court heretofore (Werner v. Southern Cal. Associated Newspapers, 35 Cal.2d 121 [216 P.2d 825, 13 A.L.R.2d 252]). I filed a dissenting opinion in that case, and the Supreme Court of the United States allowed an appeal, but a settlement was made of plaintiff‘s claim and the appeal has been dismissed. I adhere to the views expressed in my dissent in the Werner case, but it is apparent that the broadened scope now given to section 48a by the majority opinion in this case emphasizes its unconstitutionality and calls for further discussion. Under the construction now given to section 48a, a correction or retraction would have to be demanded of an author of an
In holding there was no denial of equal protection, the majority said in the Werner case (p. 132): “The Legislature could reasonably conclude that defamation suits against newspapers and radio stations constituted the most conspicuous example of the danger it sоught to preclude. It is not prohibited by the equal protection clause from striking the evil where it is felt most. . . . Similarly in this case, we cannot say that the Legislature could not reasonably conclude that because of the business they are engaged in, newspapers and radio stations are the most frequent objects of defamation actions and that the danger of excessive damages in actions against them is greatest because of their reputed ability to pay. See, Morris, Inadvertent Nеwspaper Libel and Retraction, 32 Ill.L.Rev. 36, 43; cf., Packard v. Moore, 9 Cal.2d 571, 578-580 [71 P.2d 922], discussing rule of inadmissibility of evidence that defendant is insured in personal injury actions:
“Moreover, in balancing the danger of recoveries of excessive general damages against leaving plaintiffs with no effective remedy for injury to their reputations, the Legislature could properly take into consideration the fact that a retraction widely circulated by a newspaper or radio station would have greater effectiveness than a retraction by an individual and could thus class newspapers and radio stations apart. . . .
“Section 48a may also be sustained under the equal protection clause on the theory that its purpose is to encourage the dissemination of news. Although it extends its protection to those who may deliberately and maliciously disseminate libels, the Legislature could reasonably conclude that it was necessary to go so far effectively to protect those who in good faith and without malice inadvertently publish defamatory statements.” (Emphasis added.) Thus it is seen that several things are stressed as a basis for the classification approved by the majority in the Werner case—the Legislature could decide that unfounded suits against newspapers,
It should be clear, therefore, that none of the reasons for the approval of the classification sanctioned in the Werner case fit the author of the defamatory statements here involved. All of those reasons are pertinent only to the newspaper business—a publisher. They do not justify a different liability merely because the defamation appears in a newspaper regardless of who prepared it. The ramifications arising from a contrary view are disturbingly many. An advertiser, a writer of a letter, a columnist and similar contributors to newspapers would thus have their liability restricted to special damages.
Comer v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 151 Ala. 622 [44 So. 676], is precisely in point. There the statute was similar to our section 48a, and the defendant had prepared an article which he paid the newspaper to publish. It was held that the statute did not apply to suсh person, the court saying: “. . . we are left to the wording of the statute and its apparent object for our guide in its interpretation. The statute provides that the notice shall be served in writing ‘on the publisher or publishers of said newspaper,’ and no provision is made for serving notice on any other person. The act seems to be for the purpose of preventing litigation in regard to those articles which may have found their way into the columns of the newspapers by inadvertence or withоut knowledge or care-
That the intention of the Legislature must be ascertained from the words it uses is clearly stated by the author of the majority opinion in this case as author of the majority opinion in People v. Knowles, 35 Cal.2d 175, 182 [217 P.2d 1]. He there said: “The will of the Legislature must be determined from the statutes; intentions cannot be ascribed to it at odds with the intentions articulated in the statutes. . . . The court turns first to the words themselves for the answer. . . . Primarily, however, the words, in arrangement that superimposes the purpose of the Legislature upon their dictionary meaning, stand in immobilized sentry, reminders that whether their arrangement was wisdom or folly, it was wittingly undertaken and not to be disregarded.” Even if the statute is susceptible of either construction, that given it by the majority decisiоn raises serious constitutional questions not considered in the Werner case and hence the established rule applies that: “It is a well-recognized canon of interpre-
Being of the opinion that the complaint states a cause of action for special, general and exemplary damages, the judgment should be reversed with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer and allow the defendants to answer as to all the issues presented by the complaint.
SCHAUER, J.—I concur generally in the views and conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Carter. The vice in section 48a which seems to me most lethal, as I endeavored to point out in my dissent in Werner v. Southern Cal. etc. Newspapers (1950), 35 Cal.2d 121, 150 et seq. [216 P.2d 825, 13 A.L.R.2d 252],1 is its licensing of twо arbitrarily selected groups to maliciously engage in deliberately false libels.
The courts of last resort, both state and national, have unremittingly given staunch support to the constitutional freedoms of speech and press as against prior restraints. I am one who has been zealous to that end; but I had thought that the injustices which sometimes must flow from lack of prior restraints would be deterred, mitigated or compensated by subsequent responsibility, general and punitive, for abuses of the right.2 Then in the Werner case, I found the state Legislature giving, and a majority of this court upholding, prior absolution to the selected groups of newspapers and radio broadcasters as against subsequent responsibility for either general or punitive damages and regardless of whether the libel or slander were inadvertent or knowingly and maliciously false.
An author, my prevailing associates hold, may deliberately and maliciously compose the vilest calumny, and if he can procure its publication in a newspaper or by a broadcasting company, by paid advertisement or otherwise, he can come within the encouraging arms of section 48a and repose securely immune from either genеral or punitive damages.
Does the spawning of such a doctrine bring pride to the free press of America? Or, perhaps, does the insistence of the newspapers and broadcasters on having something very akin to foolproof statutory immunity from liability in all libel-slander cases, just and unjust, rather than leaving to the courts their protection as against unfounded claims, stem in some measure from the very fact that a court of last resort which will sustain such a doctrine may be found?
