Defamation Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four elements of defamation?

A
  1. Defamatory language
  2. Of or concerning a living plaintiff (P need NOT be ID’d by name) with
  3. Publication (by the D, to a 3rd party), AND
  4. Damage to P’s reputation
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2
Q

What are the constitutional elements when defamation involves public concern?

A
  1. Falsity of the defamatory language
  2. Fault on the part of the defendant

(Elements - P must prove)

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3
Q

What level of fault is required for defamation when target is a public figure?

A

Defamation of a PUBLIC figure requires ACTUAL MALICE

(Actual Malice: D had knowledge that the statement was false, or made the statement with reckless disregard as to whether it is false)

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4
Q

What level of fault is required for defamation of private figures?

A

Defamation of a PRIVATE figure requires NEGLIGENCE

(Negligence: D did not act reasonably to verify the truth)

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5
Q

What types of statements are generally not defamatory? (2)

A
  1. Insults (not factual allegation)
  2. Statements of opinion (unless implicating factual basis)
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6
Q

When are opinions defamatory?

A

When they implicate a factual basis

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7
Q

What is the requisite intent for publication?

A

Intent to publish, not defame.

(N.B. Can be intentional, reckless, or negligent)

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8
Q

At common law, when do you have to prove special damages for defamation?

A

Slander not per se

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9
Q

What are special damages for defamation?

A

Actual (economic) damages to reputation

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10
Q

What is the core difference between slander and libel?

A

Slander is spoken; Libel is fixed permanently in a medium (e.g., written/recorded)

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11
Q

What is the NY RULE on when you have to prove special damages for defamation? (2 situations)

A
  1. Slander not per se
  2. Libel when (1) the statement does not fall into a slander per se category; AND (2) the statement requires additional evidence to make out defamatory impact
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12
Q

What are the three defenses to defamation?

A
  1. Consent
  2. Truth
  3. Privilege
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13
Q

What are the slander per se categories? (4)

A

Slanderous statements regarding P and:

  1. His business or profession;
  2. Crimes of moral turpitude;
  3. HER sexual activity (i.e., “Unchastity of a woman” category = stmt re: ANY sexual activity!); OR
  4. A loathsome disease (e.g., leprosy, venerial)
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14
Q

What are the two categories of privileges available as affirmative defenses to defamation?

A
  1. Absolute privilege
  2. Conditional/Qualified
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15
Q

What is absolute privilege against defamation?

(3 examples?)

A

Absolute privilege stems from the status of the defendant, e.g.,

  1. Spousal privilege
  2. Attorney-client privilege
  3. Officers of the three branches of government (interpreted broadly)
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16
Q

What is conditional privilege against defamation?

A

Conditional privilege exists where there is a public interest in encouraging candor

17
Q

What are the conditions needed for conditional privileges for defamation to apply?

A

The speaker must:

  1. make statement in good faith (reasonable belief the statement is factually correct), AND
  2. confine the statement to relative material
18
Q

What is a matter of public concern to implicate the constitutional requirements for defamation?

A

Something newsworthy (e.g., athlete taking drugs, adequate security at a nuclear power plant, politician taking bribes, etc.)