Lead Opinion
Plaintiff Richard H. Williams and his brother, defendant Robert W. Williams, were two of the principals in the Universal Oven Company, Inc. Apparently plaintiff decided to end his association with the corporation, much to the displeasure of his brother and other members of the corporation. The Universal Oven Company, Inc., at the instigation of defendant, instituted ah action (hereinafter referred to as the Universal action) against plaintiff and filed the summons and complaint with the County Clerk of New York County. The complaint alleged that plaintiff herein conspired with others to misappropriate and misuse the company’s trade secrets and assets. Thereafter, defendant had copies of the summons and complaint in the Universal action printed and circulated to members of the trade. A covering letter signed by Mrs. Harry R. Williams, Chairman of the Board of Universal, was included with the copies and stated:. “We enclose for your information a copy of the summons and complaint on file in the office of the Clerk of The County of New York in our suit against former employees and consultants of the Universal Oven Company.”
Plaintiff, believing he had been unjustly maligned by defendant’s complaint and the use to which it had been put, brought the present suit.
Special Term denied a motion by the defendant to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint and the Appellate Division affirmed.
It should be noted at the outset that, since this is a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint under CPLR 3211, we must pre
Plaintiff allegеs two causes of action, one sounding in abuse of process and the other in libel. He claims that the Universal action was totally without basis in fact and was begun solely for the purpose of ruining his business reputation by widespread publication of the complaint.
The defendant contends that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute abuse of process, and he further asserts that neither cause of action may be upheld because section 74 of the Civil Rights Law prevents the maintenance of an action against any person for the publication of a fair and true report of a judicial proceeding.
We agree with defendant that the complaint does not state a cause of action for abuse of process. “ The gist of the action for abuse of process lies in the improper use of process after it is issued.” (Dean v. Kochendorfer,
However, we hold that plaintiff has set forth a cause of action in libel and that section 74 of the Civil Rights Law does not provide a defense. The legislative history of section 74 reveals that it was not intended to apply to the unusual faсtual pattern of this case.
Section 74 had its genesis in section 1907 of the former Code of Civil Procedure which originally provided that an action for libel could not be maintained against “ a reporter, editor, pub
This court, in Lee v. Brooklyn Union Pub. Co. (
This qualified privilege was re-enacted into our then new Civil Practice Act as section 337. (L. 1920, ch. 925.)
However, in 1930, the statute was amended by deleting the exception for actual malice and rendering to newspapers an absolute privilege in publishing fair and true reports of judicial proceedings. (L. 1930, ch. 619.) The apparent reason for removing the malice limitation was to afford the news media a greater freedom to publish news of public interest without fear of suit.
In 1940 section 337 (L. 1940, ch. 561) was expanded to apply to “any person, firm or corporation ”. The Judiciary Committee of the Assembly (1940 Assembly Journal, vol. 1, pp. 1020-1022) in reporting on this change said: “ This amendment confers upon all persons the same privilege now accorded to newspapers and radio broadcasters by sections 337 and 337-a of the civil practice act, which privilege, by decision of the court
In the above-mentioned Lewis case, the defendants were sued for libel when they sent out copies of newspaper reports of testimony in an examination before trial. The Trial Judge charged the jury that the communication was privileged because it contained a fair and accurate report of a judicial proceeding, and that the verdict must be for the defendants unless the plaintiff proved express malice on the part of the defendants in making the publication. We affirmed the trial court’s instruction. (
In 1962 the present statute, section 74 of the Civil Rights Law (L. 1962, ch. 310) replaced section 337 of the Civil Practice Act and provides in pertinent part that “ A civil action cannot be maintained against any person, firm or corporation, for the publication of a fair and true report of any judicial proceeding, legislative proceeding or other official proceeding, or for any heading of the report which is a fair and true headnote of the statement published.”
Defendant urges us to apply section 74 to the case before us and to hold it a complete defense to plaintiff’s cause of action.
In implementing a statute, the courts must of necessity examine the purpose of the statute and determine the intention of the Legislature. It has sometimes been said that if the words of a statute are clear on their face the statute must be administered on the basis of those words, and that only statutes of doubtful meaning are subject to judicial interpretation. However, this rule of construction suffers from the basic fallacy that words have meaning in and of themselves. A statute is “ clear and unambiguous ” because the court has considered the meaning of the statute and reached a conclusion on the question of legislative intention. (2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction, p. 316 [3d ed., 1943].)
While the facts of this сase may appear to fit within the wording of section 74, it would require us to attribute an extreme maliciousness to the Legislature to hold that the statute was intended to protect the defendant’s attempt at defamation. If no action were found to lie in this case, the courts would be sanctioning an ingenious means of defamation.
The purpоse of section 74 of the Civil Rights Law, as discussed above, is the protection of reports of judicial proceedings which are made in the public interest. In light of this purpose, it is impossible to conceive of the Legislature’s intending to protect the defendant’s perversion of judicial proceedings. It would be contrary to reason to say that the Legislature considered it necessary to protect such defamation in order to implement the salutary aims of the statute.
The defendant and the dissenters below assert that finding any cause of action in this case will weaken the fundamental policy of free access to our courts. We disagree. Our holding today in no way infringes upon the right of a person to bring an action or to say or write material pertinent to a suit within the confines of that action. In addition, this decision is not intended to restrict in any manner the reporting of news stories and other reports which are made in the public interest.
We conclude that it was never the intention of the Legislature in enacting section 74 to allow “ any person ” to maliciously institute a judicial proceeding alleging false and defamatory charges, and to then circulate a press release or other communication based thereon and escape liability by invoking the statute. ‘‘ Society has a pervasive and strong interest in preventing and redressing attacks upon reputation ”, and the courts are delegated with the responsibility of protecting that right. (Rosenblatt v. Baer,
For the reasons stated above, the order of the Appellate Division as to abuse of process should be reversed; and as to libel should be aErmed. Further, we deem it advisable that the trial of the libel action be held in abeyance until the disposition of the Universal action and any attempt to join the two actions be
Notes
. Dean Prosser describes abuse of process 'as a “form of extortion” and enumerates the types of writs which can create such a cause of action as follows (Prosser, Torts [3d ed.], pp. 877-878): “ attachment, execution, garnishment, or sequestration proceedings, or arrest of the person, or criminal prosecution, or even such infrequent eases as the use of a subpoena for the collection of a debt.”
. Additionally, it might be noted that an action for malicious prosecution will not lie in this situation because there has been no interference with plaintiff’s person or property. (Burt v. Smith,
Concurrence Opinion
While I agree entirely with the result reached by the majority in this case, and concur in their conclusion that the statutory phrase “ any person ” must necessarily be interpreted to exclude plaintiff (defendant herein), I do so for reasons other than those set forth in the majority opinion.
As we have held so recently in another situation, the purpose and applicability of a statutе cannot be considered without first discussing its legislative history. (French v. Banco Nacional de Cuba, 23 N Y 2d 46.) I would also add that the statute must be viewed in light of the law existing at the time of its enactment. I, therefore, begin with a discussion of that law.
As early as 1850, this court unanimously adopted the common-law rule that words spoken or written in a judicial proceeding by a party to that proceeding could not provide the basis of a cause of action for libel (Garr v. Selden,
Subsequent to that amendment, this court had before it the case of Lewis v. Chemical Foundation (
Seven years after this memorandum decision was published, the Legislature enacted the predecessor of section 74 of the Civil Bights Law, which provides that ‘ ‘ A civil action cannot be maintained against any person, firm or corporation, for the publication of a fair and true report of any judicial proceeding The bill jacket accompanying this amendment, stated that it “ confers upon all persons the same privilege now accorded to newspapers and radio broadcasters by sections 337 and 337-a of the civil practice act, which privilege, by decision of the court of appeals is aсcorded to all persons (see Lewis v. The Chemical Foundation Incorporated, et al.,
To understand this amendment, we are thus required to analyze the authority for it. It is undisputed that the Lewis decision dealt merely with the question of actual malice where the defendant had republished a newspaper article. Seelman, commenting on the statute’s predecessor in paragraph 213 of his work, declares that, although “ the statute refers only to news
It is in this setting that we are asked to determine the intent of the Legislature when they enacted the predecessor of section 74 of the Civil Eights Law. Our duty is apparent. We must determine whether the amendment enlarges the right of a litigant in a judicial proceeding or the right of a person who publishes a “fair and true report ” of that proceeding. As indicated above, the litigant was under no restraint insofar as he could write or say anything he desired, so long as it related to litigation. The reporters, on the other hand, were required to
Were the Legislature planning to expand the rights of the litigants to the point where they could both commence a suit with impunity and then publish a true and fair report of that suit — albeit with actual malice — and escape liability, I feel some mention of this would have been made. Certainly, they were aware of the paragraph in Seelman (¶ 191) which discusses the rights of parties to be free from actions for libel as that paragraph precedes the paragraph cited in the bill jacket. I, therefore, conclude that it was never the intention of the Legislature in the 1940 amendment to allow “ any person” to institute a judicial proceeding alleging false, malicious and defamatory charges, and then tо circulate a press release or other communication based thereon and escape liability by invoking the statute. The purpose of the 1940 amendment, I submit, was to extend to all disinterested persons the privilege then possessed by the press — to publish true and fair reports of judicial proceedings without fear of liability. Such an interpretation gives this statute a meaningful purpose. The alternative construction, suggested by defendent, cannot claim any such purpose. Indeed, it is clearly sufficient that parties — particularly plaintiffs — be protected from anything that they say or write which is germane to a lawsuit, without clothing them also with an absolute right to distribute whatever malicious matter they may author. Moreover, the construction I propose is in accord with the Supreme Court’s statement in Rosenblatt v. Baer (
It is also noteworthy that charges such as those contained in the initial complaint could have been made if true in an open letter to the persons who, as in this case, are in a particular industry and might have dealings with the plaintiff. Such notice would then make these competitors liable for any damages suffered by Universal as a result of their use of trade secrets. This rule of liability is well settled and was recognized prior to the 1940 amendment to the Civil Practice Act. (See, e.g., Colgate-Palmolive Co. v. Carter Prods.,
The interpretation of section 74 proposed by the defendant and accepted by the dissenters would extend the right of the employer from the above-mentioned rule where the charges are true to the present situation where, according to the allegations of the complaint, the charges are false and malicious. Again I note that the Legislature did not indicate any intention to achieve such a result when they enactеd the 1940 amendment. I can perceive of no reason which would justify such an unwarranted expansion.
The dissenters, acknowledging their opposition to malicious lawsuits, suggest that the plaintiff may have a remedy in an action for malicious prosecution. In proposing such an alternative, they ignore the clear admonition of the statute that ‘ ‘ A civil action cannot be maihtained * * * for the publication of a fair and true report of a judicial proceeding ’ ’. If the alleged acts do not constitute a libel, it should logically follow that the same acts do not constitute a basis for an action alleging malicious prosecution. Additionally, it should be noted that plaintiff has not pleaded the essential elements of a cause of action for malicious prosecution. It is well settled that the mere bringing of a civil action, even if groundless, ill motivated and damaging to the defendant, does not provide a sufficient basis for such an action unless the person or property of the plaintiff was interferred with by some incidental remedy such as attachment, arrest or injunction. (See, e.g., Munoz v. City of New York, 18 N Y 2d 6; Burt v. Smith,
In conclusion, I am of the opinion that to interpret the words “ any person ” to include the parties to the litigation not only fails to conform to the reasoning behind the common-law rules relating to the commencement of an action and the need fоr truly
Dissenting Opinion
The complaint should be dismissed in its entirety. In my view, the count alleging libel is just as lacking in merit as that—which the court is holding insufficient — charging abuse of process.
As I see it, an unreasoned and unreasonable fear of abuse — a fear that people will deliberately file complaints containing maliciously false, defamatory and unsupportable allegations for the purpose of publishing and circulating copies of those complaints — has led my brothers of the majority to sustain the libel cause of action despitе the absolute privilege granted by section 74 of the Civil Rights Law. Indeed, I suggest, the court implicitly recognizes that no cause of action is stated for libel by providing that the trial is to be held in abeyance until the other case, in which the present plaintiff is a defendant, has been disposed of in his favor and shown to be without foundation or merit. The strained and incongruous result thus achieved not only is at odds with the language and with the legislative history of section 74 but is completely unnecessary to protect against the sort of abuse envisioned by the court.
In September of 1965, the Universal Oven Company — of which the defendant Robert Williams and his mother were the principal officers — served and filed, in the Supreme Court, New York County, the сomplaint charging the plaintiff herein, his brother Richard, with conspiring to misappropriate and misuse the company’s trade secrets and assets.
The plaintiff, as well as the court, recognizes that a newspaper or other stranger to the Universal Oven litigation could have, with complete impunity, published the complaint in that case or described its contents. But, it is said, circulation of that absolutely privileged pleading by this defendant to interested parties, engaged in the same trade as the Universal Oven Company, subject him to an action for libel. The contention flies in the face of both the language and the legislative history of the Civil Rights Law. In the plainest of terms, section 74 of that statute declares:
‘ ‘ A civil action cannot be maintained against any person * * # for the publication of a fair and true report of a judicial proceeding ”.
The provision contains no exception or qualification, either express or implied, for persons who initiated or were parties to the judicial proceeding, and no such exception or qualification is indicated in the legislative history. In fact, there is basis for the conclusion that the Legislature had in mind, when it adopted the present statutory language, situations very like the one in the case now before us.
A statutory privilege for reports of judicial proceedings has existed in this State since at least 1854 (L. 1854, ch. 130, §§ 1, 2). Up until relatively recently, it is true, that privilege was a qualified one — which could be defeated by a showing of actual malice — and applied only to “ a reporter, editor, publisher * * * of a newspaper.” (See former Civ. Prac. Act, § 337, as enacted by L. 1920, ch. 925.) However, the more recent developments in this arеa, both legislative and judicial, have removed any reasonable ground for the conclusion that a showing of malice.can
“ This amendment confers upon all persons the same privilege now accorded to newspapers and radio broadcasters by sections 337 and 337-a of the civil practice act, which privilege, by decision of the court of appeals is accorded to all persons (see Lewis v. The Chemical Foundation Incorporated, et al.,262 N. Y. 489 (1933); Seelman, Libel and Slander in the State of New York, Sec. 213.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In the Lewis case (
Viewing the clear and unambiguous language оf the statute in the light of these decisions and of the history of the privilege in general, the conclusion is clear that the absolute protection previously granted newspapers was, indeed, intended to be conferred upon and inure to the benefit of “ any person ”, whether or not he participated, or was involved, in the original proceeding.
Although the result of applying the statute as it was written may, perhaps, be to allow an occasional libel to go uncompensated, this does not require us, to cull from the court’s opinion (p. 598), to attribute “ extreme maliciousness to the Legislature ”, The simple fact is, as Judge Burke very appropriately observes — quoting from Seelman’s work on Libel and Slаnder — “ ‘ The good of all must prevail over the incidental harm to the individual ’ ” (concurring opn., p. 600). And, continuing to quote, Judge Burke adds, “ ‘ thé law offers a shield to the one who in a legal proceeding [or, I would interpolate, in a report of such proceeding] publishes a libel, not because it wishes to encourage libel, but because if men were afraid to set forth their rights in legal proceedings [or to inform other interested persons thereof] for fear of liability to libel suits greater harm would result, in the suppression of the truth ’ ”.
Vehemently opposed though I am to a maliciously false and baseless lawsuit — whether or not it was instituted by the plaintiff to afford him a predicate for thereafter publishing the complaint — I do not bеlieve that we should seek to discourage such conduct by misreading the applicable statute or rewriting its
Nor may such a cause of action be ruled out on the ground, advanced by the court, that there must be ‘ ‘ interference with plaintiff’s person or property” (opn., p. 596, n. 2; also concurring opn., p. 604). Although language in lower court cases may be found to such effect, the Court of Appeals has never so decided. On the contrary, in Burt v. Smith (
The conclusion, therefore, is clear; the fear felt by the majority —• to which I alluded above — that according an absolute privilege to one who publishes a report of a maliciously activated judicial proceeding “ would be sanctioning an ingenious means of defamation ” (opn., p. 598) is without foundation.
Statements which appear in the opinions that the statute was not intended to allow “ 1 any person ’ to maliciously institute a judicial proceeding” (opn., p. 599) or “to permit persons to institute false and malicious actions ” (concurring opn.. p. 605) persuasively establish that the court is truly concerned not with the alleged defamation, relevant though it may bе on the issues of motive and damages, but to the allegedly malicious institution of the earlier proceeding. This is, indeed, borne out by the court’s determination that the libel action is not to be tried until, and if, Universal Oven’s conspiracy action has been terminated and disposed of adversely to Universal. Thus revealed is the majority’s recognition that the present plaintiff’s action depends solely upon whether the defendant was guilty of malicious prosecution of the original litigation — whether, in other words, he caused Universal Oven’s suit to be brought in bad faith and without probable cause — and not upon the subsequent publication and circulation of the complaint.
The order appealed from should be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
Opinion by Judge Jasen. All concur, Judgе Burke in a separate opinion in which Judges Scileppi, Keating and Breitel also concur, except Chief Judge Fuld, who dissents in part and votes to reverse and dismiss the complaint in an opinion in which Judge Bergan concurs.
Order modified, with costs, in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed. Question certified answered in the negative.
. As Judge Burke acknowledges in Ms concurring opinion (p. 600) —and, of course, it is indisputable — the filing of that complaint initiated a judicial proceeding and nothing set forth in the pleading could be made the subject of an action for libel, no matter how false or malicious the pleader or .the allegations may have been. (See, e.g., Wiener v. Weintraub, 22 N Y 2d 330, 332; Garr v. Selden, 4 N Y 91.)
. The defendant Robert explains that the motivation for doing this was to give notice to others in the industry because of .the rule that they could be held liable to Universal Oven for damages or loss of profits only if they were chargeable with knowledge that Richard and the other defendants in .the Universal Oven case were using its trade secrets and violating their contracts with it. (See, e.g., Colgate-Palmolive Co. v. Carter Prods.,
. The plaintiff, in order to bring such an action, would, of course, have to show certain additional facts not here alleged — facts such as that the original proceeding was instituted without probable cause and that it was terminated in a manner favorable to him. (See, e.g., Munoz v. City of New York, 18 N Y 2d 6, 10; Mauser v. Bartow,
