This is аn action claiming damages for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress against the Spokesman-Review newspaper for purportedly libelous statements and innuendo contained in an article reporting on Edgar Steele’s decision to represent the Aryan Nations in the Kootenai County District Court case of Keenan v. Aryan Nations. Because of the truth of the statements complained of by Steele, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the claims in thе action.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On July 19, 1999, Edgar Steele filed a notice of substitution of counsel to represent several of the defendants in
Keenan v. Aryan Nations,
an action in the Kootenai County District Court arising out of an assault alleg
edly
Bill Morlin of the Spokesman-Review reported in the article that the Aryans’ legal defense fund was using the same post office box at Sagle, Idaho, that had been used the previous year by the Bonner County Taxpayers Coalition. The article stated that the taxpayer group had published a newsletter that was mailed to residents of Bonner and Kootenai counties shortly after an anti-Semitic mailing by the 11th Hour Remnаnt Messenger, a white supremacist group founded by Carl E. Story and Vince Bertollini. The article further stated that it was unclear who had funded the newsletter. Finally, the article reported that Story, Bertollini, and Steele had moved to Idaho from Califоrnia at about the same time; that Story and Bertollini had ties to Richard Butler and the Aryan Nations; and that Steele was acquainted with the two men. According to Steele, the statements contained in the article were untrue or falsely depicted him as a white supremacist by insinuation and innuendo; and his efforts to obtain a retraction from the Spokesman-Review were rebuffed.
Steele filed this action against the Spokesman-Review and three named employees of the newspaper on August 25, 1999, asserting defamation, invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress. On March 7, 2000, the Spokesman-Review moved the district court for summary judgment on all of the plaintiffs claims. The defendants argued that plaintiff, who is a public figure for purposes of this action, cannot meet his heavy burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the Spokesman-Review article was published with actual malice, i.e., with knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard as to the truth of what was published.
The district court delayed the summary judgment hearing upon Steele’s motion to suspend activity in consideration of his role as defense counsel in the upcoming trial in Keenan v. Aryan Nations. On December 6, 2000, the district court ruled on the summary judgment motion and issued its order granting the defendants a dismissal of the action.
Steele filed a timely appeal. He challenges the district court’s conclusions that no genuine issues of material fact sufficient to overcome summary judgment were shown on his claims of defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Appellate review of a district court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment is the same as that required of the district judge when ruling on the motion.
Friel v. Boise City Housing Authority,
Whether summary judgment should be granted when First Amendment rights are involved is determined in the same manner as in all other cases in which it is claimed that a case should not go to the jury.
Bandelin v. Pietsch,
DISCUSSION
In ruling on the summary judgment motion, thе district court determined that Steele had voluntarily injected himself into two separate public controversies: (1) the free-speech rights of the white supremacist hate groups such as the Aryan Nations and (2) the administration of the governmеntal affairs of Bonner County. The district court then concluded that Steele was a limited-purpose public figure, which triggered the application of the
New York Times v. Sullivan,
Although the district court held that Steele did not meet his burden to show actual malice, summary judgment in favоr of the Spokesman-Review can be sustained on a ground other than one that requires this Court to determine Steele’s status as a public figure or as a private individual. “[Wjhere allegedly defamatory speech is of public concеrn, the First Amendment requires that the plaintiff, whether public official, public figure, or private individual, prove the statements at issue to be false.”
Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
The constitutiоnal question the district court considered in the framework of the summary judgment motion was whether the evidence sufficed to show that the Spokesman-Review acted with the requisite knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard as to truth or falsity. To that end, the district court examined each of the allegedly defamatory statements in turn. Relying on the testimony from Bill Morlin (the reporter) that the Aryan Nations’ Internet web site requested contributions to the legal defense fund be mailed to Post Office Box 1255, Sagle, Idaho, the district court confirmed that the post office box had been the same one previously used by the Bonner County Taxpayers Coalition, as stated in the article. Linkage of the two organizations to Box 1255 was a true statemеnt. With respect to the statement concerning the Bonner Examiner newsletter, the uneontradicted evidence showed that a mass mailing of the newsletter to residents of Bonner and Kootenai counties occurred within one month of а mass mailing of anti-Semitic propaganda in those same counties. Further, the district court accepted unrefuted affidavits submitted by the defendants showing that the source of funding of the Bonner Examiner was not readily available to Morlin when he сonducted his research for the article.
Finally, the district court determined that the statement that Steele had relocated from California to Idaho at “about the same time” as Carl Story and Vincent Bertollini was not a material deviаtion from
Steele has also failed to make a
prima facie
case on his claims of invasion of privacy. One of the elements of invasion of privacy by false light requires some “public disclosure of falsity or fiction concerning the plaintiff.”
Hoskins v. Howard,
Lastly, we review the district court’s award of summary judgment on Steele’s claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress. The basis for the district court’s ruling on this claim does not lie in the plaintiffs failure to establish a genuine issue of material fact with respect to any of the three elements of the claim.
2
Rather, the district court held that Steele, who is claiming intentional infliction of emotional distress by reason of a publication, failed to prove an additional element required of a “public figure.” A public figure plaintiff may not recover without showing, in addition, that the publication contains a false statement of fact which was mаde with “actual malice,
i.e.,
with knowledge that the statement was false or with reckless disregard as to whether or not it was true.”
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell,
Summary judgment in favor of the Spokesman-Review is hereby affirmed. Because we are not left with the abiding belief that the appeal was brought and pursued frivolously, unreasonably and without foundation we award no attorney fees on appeal.
Minich v. Gem State Developers, Inc.,
99 Idaho
Notes
. The Supreme Court rejected the common-law presumption that defamatory speech is false when a plaintiff seeks damages against a media defendant for speeсh of public concern, and announced a rule requiring the plaintiff to bear the burden of proof of falsity, in order to ensure that true speech on matters of public concern is not deterred in violation of the U.S. Constitution.
Id.
at 776-77,
. A claim of intеntional infliction of emotional distress requires proof of the following elements:
(1) the conduct must be intentional or reckless; (2) the conduct must be extreme and outrageous; (3) there must be a causal connection between the wrongful conduct and the emotional distress; and (4) the emotional distress must be severe.
Evans v. Twin Falls County,
