Memorandum and Order
This is an action for defamation growing out of a T.V. news program in which the T.V. news reporter allegedly made false or misleading statements relating to the manner and method in which the plaintiff conducted his towing business. Defendants have moved for summary judgment, claiming qualified privilege.
The plaintiff is a private party within the meaning of
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
Under present law, each state may establish the standard for liability in a private defamation suit as long as the standard is not liability without fault, Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., supra.
In
Jacron Sales Co., Inc. v. Sindorf,
“One who publishes a false and defamatory statement concerning a private individual is subject to liability if (1) he knows that the statement is false and *93 that it defames the other person; or (2) he acts in reckless disregard of whether it is false or defames the other person; or (3) he acts negligently in failing to ascertain whether the statement is false or defames the other person.”
In defamation actions brought by private plaintiffs, The
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
While the doctrine of a conditional or qualified privilege has been retained by the Maryland Court of Appeals in the post Gertz law of defamation in Maryland, the degree of malice required to defeat the defense of a conditional or qualified privilege in cases of private defamation is measured by The New York Times Co. “constitutional malice” standard of “ ‘knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for truth,’ ” Marchesi v. Franchino, supra.
To summarize, therefore, in Maryland at the present time, in a defamation suit brought by a private plaintiff against a media defendant, the measure of liability is the negligence standard unless the circumstances have given rise to a conditional or qualified privilege in which event The New York Times Co. test must be met by the plaintiff in order to defeat the defense of privilege.
Judge Levine for the Maryland Court of Appeals in
Jacron Sales Co., supra,
went to great length to explain that the very essence of the
Gertz
decision . was the shift in focus from the protection of free expression ... to the state interest in protecting private persons who have been defamed.”
The question of whether a defamatory communication enjoys a conditional privilege is one of law for the court.
Jacron Sales Co.
v.
Sindorf, supra,
600,
The common law recognized at least three types of conditional or qualified privilege: (1) conditional privilege arising from an occasion; (2) privileged criticism or “fair comment”; and (3) special privilege including reports of special proceedings or public meetings.
Reports of an official proceeding or of a meeting open to the public which deals with a matter of public concern are privileged if substantially accurate and fair and impartial.
See
for instance
Restatement (Second) of Torts,
Section 611;
Brush-Moore Newspapers Inc. v. Pollitt,
The common law qualified privilege of “fair comment” is probably no longer needed. The
Second Restatement of Torts
omits this privilege stating “A statement of opinion which does not imply a defamatory statement of fact is no longer actionable, and no privilege is needed.” This view seems in accord with the Maryland law. While Maryland cases have recognized the “fair comment” privilege, they have held that it does not extend to. repetition of false statements,
Pulvermann v. A. S. Abell Co.,
No Maryland case has been found which applies the qualified or conditional privilege arising from an occasion to the media.
See e. g. Marchesi v. Franchino, supra; Jacron Sales Co. v. Sindorf, supra; Hollander v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
This court is of the view that under Maryland law, a qualified privilege does not exist for the media simply because the alleged defamatory material relates to a subject of general or public interest. If the media were to have such a qualified privilege, the practical result would be to place the law of defamation in Maryland relating to the media to the condition argued for by the plurality in
Rosenbloom v. Metromedia,
The defendants’ motion will be denied.
It is SO ORDERED this 9th day of April, 1979.
