defamation Flashcards

1
Q

general defamatory statement must

A

o be one that can be believed as truthful and reputation harming.
o Hyperbole and opinion are not defamatory.

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2
Q

libel

A

Defamatory message embodied in any relative permanent form. Reputational harm is presumed, but the damages have to be proven.

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3
Q

slander

A

Defamation in spoken rather than written in form.
To recover, P must prove special damages (specific economic losses that flow from the slander). P can also receive reputational damages.

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4
Q

slander per se reasons

A
  • job-related statements that are incompatible
  • moral turpitude crime or crime with large penalties
  • loathsome disease
  • imputing lack of chastity on women
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5
Q

common law privileges exception to truth

A

P is a private, not public figure, and the matter is a private concern.

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6
Q

absolute privileges

A

● Communications between spouses.
● Statements made on the floor of the legislature.
● Communications between high ranking executive officials.
● Statements made in conduct of judicial proceedings.

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7
Q

Qualified/Conditional Privilege

A

● Comments are made in a communication that appears reasonably necessary to protect or advance the D’s own legitimate interests;
● Comments were communicated on a matter of interest to the recipient of the communication or a third person;
● Comments were communicated concerning a matter of public interest to one empowered to protect that interest.

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8
Q

lose privilege when

A

● D has a bad intent, acts out of malice, or is reckless as to the statement’s truth/falsity.
● D does not believe the truth of the defamatory communication.

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9
Q

four ?s for constitutional defamation

A

▪ What is the status of P (public official, public figure, private figure)?
▪ What is the subject matter of the statement (public or private concern)?
▪ What damages does P seek?
▪ What is the status of D?

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10
Q

public official standard

A

If defamation is related to capacity as a public official, P must prove actual malice by clear and convincing evidence. (i.e. D knew it was false or recklessly disregarded the truth or falsity.)

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11
Q

Private Figure and public concern

A

If the subject matter of the defamation is a matter of public concern, D must be shown to have exhibited some degree of fault higher than strict liability, which presumably means negligence.

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12
Q

private figure and public concern

A

P does not have to prove actual malice to get presumed or punitive damages (note - not settled; not tested)

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13
Q

defense to defamation

A

If the speaker believes the statement to be true and is communicating a matter of interest, he has qualified immunity from defamation

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14
Q

defamation when

A

published a statement with knowledge of its falsity or reckless disregard for its truth or falsity

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15
Q

small group defamation effect on unnamed indvs.

A

If the group that is the subject of a defendant’s defamatory message is small enough, each member of the group is generally regarded as sufficiently identified to sue for defamation.

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16
Q

A person who distributes the original defamatory message as a commodity is liable when

A

they knew or should have known the info was false