May 31st, 2012

Being Called Gay Is No Longer Defamatory: Appellate Court

I don’t use this blog to cover gay rights — there are plenty of others out there that do — but there is a landmark ruling out of a New York appellate court today that reverses precedent, and says being called homosexual is no longer per se defamatory. Yonaty v. Mincolla.   Since I do cover defamation on occasion, the decision is worth noting. (This comes on the same day that the First Circuit Court of Appeals found the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional.)

The reason for the decision? Growing acceptance of gays in society. The Appellate Division (Third Department) was clear:

Given this state’s well-defined public policy of protection and respect for the civil rights of people who are lesbian, gay or bisexual, we now overrule our prior case to the contrary and hold that such statements are not defamatory per se.

The overruling of prior case law represents a gay rights victory. And the court made that clear when it cited to the amicus briefs filed in support of this decision by the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc. and Empire State Pride Agenda.

The ruling comes about because the prior rulings were “inconsistent with current public policy,” another way of saying that society no longer views such a branding as per se shameful. This is the heart and soul of the decision:

That premise is inconsistent with the reasoning underlying the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Lawrence v Texas (539 US 558 [2003]), in which the Court held that laws criminalizing homosexual conduct violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution (id. at 578). The Court stated that people who are homosexual “are entitled to respect for their private lives” (id. [emphasis added]), but “[w]hen homosexual conduct is made criminal by the law of the State, that declaration in and of itself is an invitation to subject homosexual persons to discrimination in both the public and in the private spheres” (id. at 575). These statements of the Supreme Court simply cannot be reconciled with the prior line of Appellate Division cases concluding that being described as lesbian, gay or bisexual is so self-evidently injurious that the law will presume that pecuniary damages have resulted.

This goes hand-in-hand with New York’s recent passage of the Marriage Equality Act that legalized same-sex unions.

Cultural reference worth noting: An old Seinfeld episode had a running gag about gays and the defensive response when discussing the issue of “Not that there’s anything wrong with that.” Now an appellate court agrees.

A few extra legal notes: This was a unanimous ruling by one of this state’s four intermediate appellate courts. There is no right to appeal to the highest court. For this the plaintiff would need to make a motion for leave to appeal. If such a motion is made, I think there is a chance it will be granted with the intent of our highest court affirming the opinion to make sure this is a state-wide decision.

Also worth noting, this is the first time in almost 30 years that any in depth analysis of the subject was entertained by one of our appellate courts. From the decision:

We note that the most recent Appellate Division decision considering the issue in depth was decided nearly 30 years ago (Matherson v Marchello, 100 AD2d 233, 241-242 [2d Dept 1984], supra). In that case, the Second Department concluded that it was “constrained . . . at this point in time” to hold that a statement imputing homosexuality was defamatory per se in light of the then-existing “social opprobrium of homosexuality” and “[l]egal sanctions imposed upon homosexuals in areas ranging from immigration to military service” (id. at 241 [emphasis added])

There remain four categories of defamation per se, now that falsely imputing homosexuality has been knocked down:

(i) charging [a] plaintiff with a serious crime;

(ii) that tend to injure another in his or her trade, business or profession;

(iii) that [a] plaintiff has a loathsome disease; or

(iv) imputing unchastity to a woman”

Regarding this, the court wrote:

Defendant and amici argue – correctly, in our view – that the prior cases categorizing statements that falsely impute homosexuality as defamatory per se are based upon the flawed premise that it is shameful and disgraceful to be described as lesbian, gay or bisexual. In fact, such a rule necessarily equates individuals who are lesbian, gay or bisexual with those who have committed a “serious crime” – one of the four established per se categories.

And that, the court ruled, is not appropriate, no matter what past generations have held.

All together now: For the times, they are a changin’.

hat tip: NYLJ with more coverage

 

November 25th, 2009

New York Attorney Sues Internet Poster for Defamation After Impersonation (Psych Hospital Sued)


A partner at a leading New York law firm has brought a defamation suit against a local mental hospital, claiming that it defamed him by impersonation in an internet forum, and creating video that asserted he supported “pedophile rapists.” The defamation was, according to the suit, retaliation for comments the attorney had made about the hospital.

Glen Feinberg, a partner at Wilson Elser Moskowitz, Edeleman & Dicker (which does a lot of medical malpractice defense among its other lawyering) has been a long-running critic of SLS Residential. According to this story in Courthouse News, Feinberg claimed that the psychiatric hospital was fined “$110,000 for numerous violations, including illegally restraining and medicating patients against their will, depriving patients of the right to their own clothing and money, and preventing them from communicating with the outside world or leaving the facility.”

According to Feinberg’s suit, comments that were falsely attributed to him started to appear on the web in 2008 followed by videos that appeared on YouTube that called him a “saviour to pedophiles” and a “slime ball who should be disbarred.” Feinberg says that the videos were prepared by Andrew Rath of A. Rath Productions, who is also a defendant in the suit.

One lawyer I spoke with that tried a medical malpractice case with him to verdict some years ago had this to say: “Glen was a gentleman and a very capable trial lawyer. He was easy to get along with and trustworthy, both of which are important qualities when standing up in court.”

In preparing this blog post, I noticed that a number of other blog postings had referenced Feinberg but have now been taken down.

Feinberg is a long-time critic of SLS, having apparently claimed that they traumatized his son back in 2001 and 2002. He has picketed the hospital in the past and been engaged in First Amendment litigation over it.

In other words, this battle is deeply personal. And one thing I’ve learned over the years is that there are few people on this planet more motivated than an angry parent.

(hat tip to Hochfelder)

Much more here:

 

June 12th, 2007

Doctors Sue Personal Injury Lawyers For Defamation

Not all suits are good ones, as we’ve seen with some of the claims of Judge Robert Bork (as well as the $67M pants story, now on trial), and here is another fine example:

A couple of doctors, including Dr. Michael Zeide pictured at right, who do a lot of work examining claimants for an insurance company, were called P.I.M.P.S., as in Professional Independent Medical Practitioners. So they sued the personal injury attorneys who made the comments.

The full report is in the Palm Beach Post (via Kevin.M.D.).

A bizarre part of the suit is that they sued as “John Does,” a tactic attorneys usually reserve for sexual assault types of cases.

I’m betting the First Amendment will make very swift work of this matter. I would also note that people who routinely bend over backwards to make claims as an expert are often referred to as, ahem, the employee of the pimp.

 

March 15th, 2007

Anonymous New York Blogger To Be Sued For Defamation

From today’s New York Sun:

An Orthodox Jewish blogger is asking a judge to protect her anonymity from a Long Island elected official who has gone to court to identity the blogger.

The elected official, Pamela Greenbaum, a member of the school board for Lawrence, L.I., asked a state judge last month to force Google to identify the writer behind a popular Web log for the orthodox community in the Five Towns area.

The blog, orthomom.blogspot.com, featured a posting in January critical of Ms. Greenbaum’s position regarding the use by yeshiva students of public school facilities. In guest comments to the postings, Ms. Greenbaum has been called a “bigot.” [link via Judicial Reports]

This seems to be a suit that goes nowhere, if being called a “bigot” is the sole issue, since that seems to be an opinion. Additional facts were not available at the New York Sun site (but are at links below).

It is worth pointing out here that anonymous speech is well protected under the First Amendment in accordance with the Supreme Court’s ruling in McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission. The country has a long history of anonymous speech in the form of books and pamphlets, including the Federalist Papers first published as “Publius.” Check out footnotes 4 and 6 of the Stevens majority opinion for some anonymous writings later attributed to historic figures.

Additional links: