Joseph SALAMONE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HOLLINGER INTERNATIONAL, INC.; Chicago Sun-Times, Inc.; Chris Fusco, Individually and as Agent of Chicago Sun-Times, Inc. and Hollinger International, Inc., Defendants-Appellees.
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Second Division.
*1088 Stephen Fiorentino, of Stephen Fiorentino, Ltd., and David A. Novoselsky and Leslie J. Rosen, of Novoselsky Law Offices, Chicago, for Appellant.
Damon E. Dunn, of Funkhouser Vegosen Liebman & Dunn Ltd., Chicago, for Appellee.
Justice CAHILL delivered the opinion of the court:
The dispute in this case arose from a news article published in the Chicago Sun-Times on March 7, 2001, headlined Mob links hurt Rosemont casino bid. Plaintiff Joseph Salamone, who was referred to in the article as a "reputed organized crime figure," filed a defamation and false light invasion of privacy action against Chris Fusco, Chicago Sun-Times, Inc., and Hollinger International, Inc. The trial court dismissed the action under section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2000)). We affirm.
Here, in full, is the article on which the complaint is based:
"Mob links hurt Rosemont casino bid
The Illinois Gaming Board Tuesday released more than a dozen pages of reasons for revoking Emerald Casino's state gambling license and denying its request to open a Rosemont gambling barge.
Mob ties, lies by company executives and a decision to begin building the Rosemont casino without gaming-board approval all were cited in two legal orders from the board.
Their release set off what could be a long battle in the northwest suburb. Emerald is denying the board's allegations and plans to file an appeal, which it must do by the end of business Tuesday.
*1089 The company disagrees with the preliminary findings and intends to file its response,' Emerald [p]resident Kevin Larson said in a news release. Emerald officials declined to comment further.
The company, the board said, failed to conduct a proper investigation before allowing a trust held by Sherri Boscarino, wife of reputed mobster, Nick Boscarino, to get a stake in the planned casino. Joseph Salamone, another reputed organized crime figure, was another investor.
Gaming Board investors also learned that one of the subcontractors working on the casino site was D & P Construction. The owner of that company, Josephine DiFronzo, is married to Peter DiFronzo and is the sister-in-law of John DiFronzo, both of whom have been connected to the mob, according to the gaming board.
Emerald's decision to hammer out an agreement with Rosemont to begin construction compromised its financial integrity and business practices, the board ruled. Emerald already has spent $25 million on the project.
The board also cited misleading statements by principal owners Kevin Flynn and his father, Donald, regarding the selection of Rosemont as a site." (Emphasis added.) Chris Fusco, Mob links hurt Rosemont casino bid Chicago Sun-Times, March 7, 2001, at NP 27.
Plaintiff filed a first amended complaint on January 11, 2002, alleging defamation per se, defamation per quod and false light invasion of privacy against all three defendants. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under section 2-615 of the Code for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted. The trial court granted the motion, finding that the phrase "reputed organized crime figure" was vague and capable of an innocent construction.
A dismissal under section 2-615 of the Code is reviewed de novo. Brandt v. Boston Scientific Corp.,
A statement is defamatory if it tends to cause such harm to the reputation of another that it lowers that person in the eyes of the community or deters third persons from associating with that person. Bryson,
The innocent construction rule is an exception to the actionable per se categories: where a statement falls within one of the recognized categories of words that are actionable per se, but is reasonably capable of an innocent construction, the statement will not be found actionable per se. Bryson,
Plaintiff first contends he stated a cause of action for defamation per se. He argues the headline Mob links hurt Rosemont casino bid and characterization of plaintiff in the article as a "reputed organized crime figure" impute the commission of a crime and plaintiffs inability to "adequately serve[] as an investor in the casino." Plaintiff also argues these characterizations are not subject to the innocent construction rule.
Defendants respond, arguing the headline, when read in conjunction with the text of the article, and in particular the phrase "reputed organized crime figure," is reasonably capable of an innocent construction. Defendants cite Antonelli v. Field Enterprises, Inc., 115, Ill.App.3d 432,
Plaintiff argues Antonelli is distinguishable because he does not have a criminal record that would support the veracity of defendant's characterization of plaintiff as a member of the mob and "reputed organized crime figure." But the court in Antonelli did not rely on the plaintiffs criminal history to support its holding that the word "mobster," when modified by the word "reputed," is reasonably capable of an innocent construction. Nor does plaintiff cite to authority for his argument that the lack of a criminal record would turn an otherwise nonactionable statement under the innocent construction rule into a statement that is actionable per se.
We conclude that Antonelli is close enough factually to control the case before us. Reading the headline in conjunction with the full text of the article, we believe that defendants characterized plaintiff not as a mobster, but as a person who is believed to be, possibly erroneously, an organized crime figure. There is nothing in the remainder of the article that would support an opposite conclusion.
Since we conclude that the statements pass an innocent construction test, we need not reach the constitutional question of whether the statements were, as the defendants argue, expressions of opinion protected under the first amendment to the United States Constitution. U.S. Const., amend. I. We note in passing that defendants do not argue the opinion is that of the Illinois Gaming Board, nor do they raise the "fair-reporting privilege." See Myers v. The Telegraph,
In reaching our conclusion that the words at issue in this case are reasonably capable of an innocent construction, we recognize that the analysis relies heavily on a benign reading of "reputed." While the modifier "reputed" is a slippery word to handle, we have not found a single case where its use has been held irrelevant to an analysis of the actionable words it modifies. For better or worse, the use of "reputed" in front of derisive characterizations of people appears to be a safe harbor for the media. The obvious question: "Reputed by whom?" is easily deflected by the statutory privilege that protects a journalist from revealing his sources. See 735 ILCS 5/8-901 et seq. (West 2002); People v. Slover,
Having concluded that plaintiff's defamation per se claims were properly dismissed, we turn to plaintiff's allegations of defamation per quod.
A defamatory statement that is not actionable per se must be accompanied by an allegation that the plaintiff suffered special damages. Bryson, 174 *1092 Ill.2d at 87-88,
Plaintiff alleged the following damages against each defendant in his counts for defamation per quod:
"As a direct and proximate result of [the] statement, [plaintiff] suffered humiliation, embarrassment and harm to his reputation in that members of his community who associated with him prior to the publication of the March 7, 2001 article ceased associating with him after the publication of the article and, on information and belief, repeat customers of his independent grocery store ceased patronizing his store after the publication of the article.
* * * [Plaintiff] has also suffered humiliation and embarrassment in that he has been subjected to repeated jokes and ridicule by members of his community based on his alleged status as an organized crime figure, e.g., suggestions made aloud before [plaintiff] and other members of his community that [plaintiff] would break a person's leg or otherwise cause them harm if they were to displease him.
* * * As a further direct and proximate result of [defendants'] statements, and the effect they have had on his treatment in his community, [plaintiff] has suffered from sleeplessness, depression and weight loss."
There is no precise definition for what will constitute special damages sufficient to sustain a cause of action for defamation per quod. See Kurczaba,
Plaintiff's allegations of special damages are no more specific than those contained in Kurczaba or the cases relied on by Kurczaba. Plaintiff alleged he "suffered humiliation, embarrassment and harm to his reputation" because members of his community who associated with plaintiff before the article was published ceased associating with him after the publication of the article. Plaintiff also alleged that, on information and belief, repeat customers of his grocery store ceased patronizing his store after the article was published. Plaintiff alleged humiliation and embarrassment from being the subject of repeated jokes and ridicule by members of his community. Finally, plaintiff alleged he has suffered from sleeplessness, depression and weight loss. Plaintiff failed to allege with particularity which members of the community have ceased associating with him and patronizing his store. Nor did plaintiff allege actual monetary loss from a lack of business. Plaintiff's allegations that he was ridiculed and suffered sleeplessness, depression and weight loss lack the same specificity.
Finally, we consider plaintiffs' false light invasion of privacy claims. To sustain a cause of action for false light invasion of privacy, a plaintiff must allege: (1) he was placed in a false light before the public as a result of the defendant's actions; (2) the false light would be highly offensive to a reasonable person; and (3) the defendant acted with actual malice. Kurczaba,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
WOLFSON, P.J., and BURKE, J., concur.
