This unusual libel case has arisen because two Virginia attorneys have the same first and last names.
Plaintiff Richard J. Ryder practices law in Annandale, Virginia, which is a suburb of Washington, D.C. He had been a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from January, 1970, to December, 1971, and an unsuccessful candidate for the Virginia State Senate in November, 1971. At the time he brought this suit in the court below against Time, Inc., publisher of Time magazine, he was politically active in his community, but not the holder of any public office.
Richard R. Ryder is also a Virginia attorney. However, he is located in Richmond, some 100 miles distant from Annandale. He is unrelated to and unconnected with plaintiff. In 1967, he (Richard R. Ryder) was suspended from practice for eighteen months because he had concealed stolen money and a sawed-off shotgun in his safe-deposit box. The money and weapon had been given to him by his client for safekeeping. 1
In July, 1973, Time magazine published a “Time Essay” lamenting the great number of attorneys who had abused their positions of public trust during the Watergate scandals. After observing that there are limits to the attorney-client privilege, the essay declared:
. In a 1967 Virginia case, Attorney Richard Ryder took stolen money and a sawed-off shotgun from his client and stored them in his own safe-deposit box.
*825 A U.S. district court, citing Benjamin Cardozo’s observation that “the privilege takes flight when the relationship is abused,” ruled that the special lawyer-client relationship could not be invoked in circumstances that so clearly involved obstruction of justice. Ryder was temporarily suspended from practice.
Plaintiff alleges that he has been damaged because omission of the middle initial has caused a number of people in his community to think that he is the Richard Ryder who was suspended from practice.
2
Defendant
Time
has not controverted the affidavits relied upon by plaintiff to establish that a damaging mistaken identification has occurred. Instead, it contends that plaintiff cannot recover unless he shows that the statements in the essay were published with “actual malice” as made requisite in
New York Times v. Sullivan,
The District Court found that the plaintiff was a “public figure” under the holding of
Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts,
The question presented to us calls for a further delineation of the boundary between the doctrine of
New York Times
and that of
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
Under the common law prior to
New York Times,
a defendant in a defamation suit arising out of a mistaken identification was strictly liable for any defamatory statement. Damages could often, under then applicable state law, be presumed from the mere fact of the defamation.
See
W. Prosser,
The Law of Torts,
4th ed. § 113. One
pre-New York Times
case of mistaken identity, with facts strikingly similar to the case now before us, was decided in this jurisdiction. In
Washington Post Co. v. Kennedy,
In
New York Times,
as noted above, the Supreme Court held that a public official could not recover in a libel suit unless he could show that the offending statement was made with “ ‘actual malice’—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
The question before us is whether the “actual malice” standard of New York *826 Times applies in this case. The court below held that it did because the plaintiff was a public figure. We cannot agree.
It is true that plaintiff had been a public official for a time and had been a candidate for public office. Yet these public activities had nothing to do with the reference to Richard Ryder in the essay and, in any case, those activities were no longer engaged in by plaintiff. It was Richard R. Ryder, not the plaintiff, who was the intended subject of that reference.
The distinction we make here between the public activities of an individual in one sphere, and his private status in another, was also delineated in
Gertz.
“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.”
Here, a private person, through no fault of his own, has been exposed to serious damage to reputation by the failure of defendant sufficiently to identify the person defendant intended to reference. A modicum of care would have provided the correct identity. The 1967 case to which the Time Essay referred,
In re Ryder,
The judgment of the District Court is vacated and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.
In re Ryder,
. It is also to be noted that the article did not identify that the Richard Ryder it mentioned practiced in Richmond, Virginia.
. At one time, the subject matter of a discussion, rather than the public or private status of the individuals mentioned in that discussion, was the critical determination.
Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc.,
. Determination of the status of Virginia law regarding libel of private persons and its application to the facts in this case must be made, at least initially, by the District Court in complying with our remand.
