Demystifying the law on opinion and embracing Milkovich

Milkovich sued for libel, alleging that the statements accused him of committing the crime of perjury. The trial court granted summary judgment to the newspaper on grounds that the statements were protected opinion. After a long and winding road, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari "to co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications Lawyer : Publication of the Forum Committee on Communications Law, American Bar Association American Bar Association, 2016-01, Vol.32 (1), p.15
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description Milkovich sued for libel, alleging that the statements accused him of committing the crime of perjury. The trial court granted summary judgment to the newspaper on grounds that the statements were protected opinion. After a long and winding road, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari "to consider the important questions raised by the Ohio courts' recognition of a constitutionally required 'opinion' exception to the application of its defamation laws."16 The Supreme Court reversed, declining to embrace a constitutionally mandated opinion exception to the application of state libel laws.17 Explaining that there are limits to the First Amendment protections for wholly private persons and that anything that could be labeled as a statement of opinion was not automatically protected, the Supreme Court stated: "we think the 'breathing space' which 'freedoms of expression require in order to survive,' is adequately secured by existing constitutional doctrine without the creation of an artificial dichotomy between 'opinion' and fact."18 The problem with Justice [Brennan]'s view is the sports writer goes too far when he says anyone there, even an unbiased observer, "knows in his heart" that Milkovich and Scott lied at that hearing. By invoking the support of the "unbiased observer," the columnist does seem to imply knowledge with a strong degree of certainty that both the superintendent and coach were guilty of perjury. It is highly questionable that Justice Brennan's assertion that [Theodore Diadiun]'s "knows in his heart" statement was obvious hyperbole. Diadiun's assertion takes on a powerful connotation that there is no ambiguity as to what was observed at the meet and that any witness would know Milkovich and Scott had lied under oath. To the reader, it certainly "could" imply that Diadiun had additional personal knowledge of an unambiguous event. The column noted, in fact, that he had been the only uninvolved person at both the controversial meet and the administrative hearing, a fact that could have suggested to readers that he was uniquely situated with personal knowledge of additional facts that are not disclosed to the reader. Moreover, Diadiun did not offer a response from Milkovich, but instead quoted a commissioner who said that what the pair had said before the judge "sounded different" than what they had said to the board. 32. Id. at 19 (citations omitted). Of course, unlike the Court's hypothetical, the words "in my opinion" do not appear in Milk
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The trial court granted summary judgment to the newspaper on grounds that the statements were protected opinion. After a long and winding road, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari "to consider the important questions raised by the Ohio courts' recognition of a constitutionally required 'opinion' exception to the application of its defamation laws."16 The Supreme Court reversed, declining to embrace a constitutionally mandated opinion exception to the application of state libel laws.17 Explaining that there are limits to the First Amendment protections for wholly private persons and that anything that could be labeled as a statement of opinion was not automatically protected, the Supreme Court stated: "we think the 'breathing space' which 'freedoms of expression require in order to survive,' is adequately secured by existing constitutional doctrine without the creation of an artificial dichotomy between 'opinion' and fact."18 The problem with Justice [Brennan]'s view is the sports writer goes too far when he says anyone there, even an unbiased observer, "knows in his heart" that Milkovich and Scott lied at that hearing. By invoking the support of the "unbiased observer," the columnist does seem to imply knowledge with a strong degree of certainty that both the superintendent and coach were guilty of perjury. It is highly questionable that Justice Brennan's assertion that [Theodore Diadiun]'s "knows in his heart" statement was obvious hyperbole. Diadiun's assertion takes on a powerful connotation that there is no ambiguity as to what was observed at the meet and that any witness would know Milkovich and Scott had lied under oath. To the reader, it certainly "could" imply that Diadiun had additional personal knowledge of an unambiguous event. The column noted, in fact, that he had been the only uninvolved person at both the controversial meet and the administrative hearing, a fact that could have suggested to readers that he was uniquely situated with personal knowledge of additional facts that are not disclosed to the reader. Moreover, Diadiun did not offer a response from Milkovich, but instead quoted a commissioner who said that what the pair had said before the judge "sounded different" than what they had said to the board. 32. Id. at 19 (citations omitted). Of course, unlike the Court's hypothetical, the words "in my opinion" do not appear in Milkovich's Diadiun column. Thus, this appears to be the majority's rebuttal to the dissent's reliance upon the cautionary language of "apparently" and why such a phrase is not dispositive to the question of whether an opinion implies defamatory fact. Of course, as two prominent media law scholars recently noted: "This is not to say that phrases like 'in my opinion' or 'I believe' are without significance. To the contrary, in certain contexts they can provide important clarity regarding the certainty with which speaker purports to be speaking." Len Niehoff &amp; Ashley Messenger, Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Twenty-Five Years Later: The Slow, Quiet, and Troubled Demise of Liar Libel, 49 U. Mich. J. L. Reform 467, 473 (2016). 63. Compare Omnicare, 135 S.Ct. at 1330 (distinguishing the heightened expectations reasonable readers would have about an opinion in a formal registration statement filed with the SEC from the expectations an individual might have for communications in "daily life," i.e., "baseless, off-the-cuff-judgments"), and Mathis v. Cannon, 276 Ga. 16, 24 (2002) ("Although the messages "accused [plaintiff] of being a crook and a thief . ... any person reading the postings on the message board - written entirely in lower case replete with question marks, exclamation points, misspellings, abbreviations, and dashes - . . .[would know that defendant did not state] actual facts about Cannon"), and Sandals Resorts Int'l Ltd. v. Google, Inc., 86 A.D. 3d 32, 43-44 (N.Y. App. Div. 2011) ("[T]he anonymity of the [publication] makes it more likely that a reasonable reader would view its assertions with some skepticism and tend to treat its contents as opinion rather than as fact."), with Bennett v. Hendrix, 325 F. App'x 727, 740-41 (11th Cir. 2009) (recognizing that the statement of the defendant, a law enforcement officer, that the plaintiff was a "convicted criminal" was libelous because reasonable readers could assume that the defendant, by nature of his position, had special knowledge about the plaintiff's criminal history), and Weinstein v. Bullick, 827 F. Supp. 1193, 1198 (E.D. Pa 1993) (holding that a police officer's expressions of skepticism concerning plaintiff's rape charges were not protected opinion because a reasonable viewer could infer that the officer knew more facts than were revealed in the broadcast).</description><identifier>ISSN: 0737-7622</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Chicago: American Bar Association</publisher><subject>Attorneys ; Burden of proof ; Defamation ; Evidence ; First Amendment-US ; Freedom of the press ; Heart ; Journalists ; Law ; Laws, regulations and rules ; Libel &amp; slander ; Libel and slander ; Newsprint ; Perjury ; Secondary schools ; State court decisions ; Supreme Court decisions ; Trials ; Wrestling</subject><ispartof>Communications Lawyer : Publication of the Forum Committee on Communications Law, American Bar Association, 2016-01, Vol.32 (1), p.15</ispartof><rights>COPYRIGHT 2016 American Bar Association</rights><rights>Copyright American Bar Association Winter 2016</rights><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>312,314,776,780,787</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Counts, Cynthia L</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Argentieri, Kenneth M</creatorcontrib><title>Demystifying the law on opinion and embracing Milkovich</title><title>Communications Lawyer : Publication of the Forum Committee on Communications Law, American Bar Association</title><description>Milkovich sued for libel, alleging that the statements accused him of committing the crime of perjury. The trial court granted summary judgment to the newspaper on grounds that the statements were protected opinion. After a long and winding road, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari "to consider the important questions raised by the Ohio courts' recognition of a constitutionally required 'opinion' exception to the application of its defamation laws."16 The Supreme Court reversed, declining to embrace a constitutionally mandated opinion exception to the application of state libel laws.17 Explaining that there are limits to the First Amendment protections for wholly private persons and that anything that could be labeled as a statement of opinion was not automatically protected, the Supreme Court stated: "we think the 'breathing space' which 'freedoms of expression require in order to survive,' is adequately secured by existing constitutional doctrine without the creation of an artificial dichotomy between 'opinion' and fact."18 The problem with Justice [Brennan]'s view is the sports writer goes too far when he says anyone there, even an unbiased observer, "knows in his heart" that Milkovich and Scott lied at that hearing. By invoking the support of the "unbiased observer," the columnist does seem to imply knowledge with a strong degree of certainty that both the superintendent and coach were guilty of perjury. It is highly questionable that Justice Brennan's assertion that [Theodore Diadiun]'s "knows in his heart" statement was obvious hyperbole. Diadiun's assertion takes on a powerful connotation that there is no ambiguity as to what was observed at the meet and that any witness would know Milkovich and Scott had lied under oath. To the reader, it certainly "could" imply that Diadiun had additional personal knowledge of an unambiguous event. The column noted, in fact, that he had been the only uninvolved person at both the controversial meet and the administrative hearing, a fact that could have suggested to readers that he was uniquely situated with personal knowledge of additional facts that are not disclosed to the reader. Moreover, Diadiun did not offer a response from Milkovich, but instead quoted a commissioner who said that what the pair had said before the judge "sounded different" than what they had said to the board. 32. Id. at 19 (citations omitted). Of course, unlike the Court's hypothetical, the words "in my opinion" do not appear in Milkovich's Diadiun column. Thus, this appears to be the majority's rebuttal to the dissent's reliance upon the cautionary language of "apparently" and why such a phrase is not dispositive to the question of whether an opinion implies defamatory fact. Of course, as two prominent media law scholars recently noted: "This is not to say that phrases like 'in my opinion' or 'I believe' are without significance. To the contrary, in certain contexts they can provide important clarity regarding the certainty with which speaker purports to be speaking." Len Niehoff &amp; Ashley Messenger, Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Twenty-Five Years Later: The Slow, Quiet, and Troubled Demise of Liar Libel, 49 U. Mich. J. L. Reform 467, 473 (2016). 63. Compare Omnicare, 135 S.Ct. at 1330 (distinguishing the heightened expectations reasonable readers would have about an opinion in a formal registration statement filed with the SEC from the expectations an individual might have for communications in "daily life," i.e., "baseless, off-the-cuff-judgments"), and Mathis v. Cannon, 276 Ga. 16, 24 (2002) ("Although the messages "accused [plaintiff] of being a crook and a thief . ... any person reading the postings on the message board - written entirely in lower case replete with question marks, exclamation points, misspellings, abbreviations, and dashes - . . .[would know that defendant did not state] actual facts about Cannon"), and Sandals Resorts Int'l Ltd. v. Google, Inc., 86 A.D. 3d 32, 43-44 (N.Y. App. Div. 2011) ("[T]he anonymity of the [publication] makes it more likely that a reasonable reader would view its assertions with some skepticism and tend to treat its contents as opinion rather than as fact."), with Bennett v. Hendrix, 325 F. App'x 727, 740-41 (11th Cir. 2009) (recognizing that the statement of the defendant, a law enforcement officer, that the plaintiff was a "convicted criminal" was libelous because reasonable readers could assume that the defendant, by nature of his position, had special knowledge about the plaintiff's criminal history), and Weinstein v. Bullick, 827 F. Supp. 1193, 1198 (E.D. Pa 1993) (holding that a police officer's expressions of skepticism concerning plaintiff's rape charges were not protected opinion because a reasonable viewer could infer that the officer knew more facts than were revealed in the broadcast).</description><subject>Attorneys</subject><subject>Burden of proof</subject><subject>Defamation</subject><subject>Evidence</subject><subject>First Amendment-US</subject><subject>Freedom of the press</subject><subject>Heart</subject><subject>Journalists</subject><subject>Law</subject><subject>Laws, regulations and rules</subject><subject>Libel &amp; slander</subject><subject>Libel and slander</subject><subject>Newsprint</subject><subject>Perjury</subject><subject>Secondary schools</subject><subject>State court decisions</subject><subject>Supreme Court decisions</subject><subject>Trials</subject><subject>Wrestling</subject><issn>0737-7622</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2016</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>BENPR</sourceid><recordid>eNptzj1PwzAQBmAPILWU_ocI5iDHH7E9VuVTKmLpHjn2OTUkdogDqP8eozIwoBte6fTc6T1DSyyoKEVNyAJdpPSKMVGqEkskbmE4ptm7ow9dMR-g6PVXEUMRRx98Th1sAUM7afMDnn3_Fj-9OVyic6f7BOvfXKH9_d1--1juXh6etptd2SlGS6kwVtaC4ZywljNWC4UlsVgAsIobRwCASiaxa4VmuZ-0rVCME6xqSlu6Qlent-MU3z8gzc0EY5zm1FRCEaoqwmlG1yfU6R4aH1ycc93BJ9NsGBcVlrjmWd38o_JYGLyJAZzP-z8H38TwWpU</recordid><startdate>20160101</startdate><enddate>20160101</enddate><creator>Counts, Cynthia L</creator><creator>Argentieri, Kenneth M</creator><general>American Bar Association</general><scope>ILT</scope><scope>3V.</scope><scope>7WY</scope><scope>7XB</scope><scope>883</scope><scope>8FK</scope><scope>8FL</scope><scope>ABUWG</scope><scope>AFKRA</scope><scope>AZQEC</scope><scope>BENPR</scope><scope>BEZIV</scope><scope>CCPQU</scope><scope>DWQXO</scope><scope>FRNLG</scope><scope>K60</scope><scope>K6~</scope><scope>L.-</scope><scope>M0F</scope><scope>PQBIZ</scope><scope>PQBZA</scope><scope>PQEST</scope><scope>PQQKQ</scope><scope>PQUKI</scope><scope>Q9U</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20160101</creationdate><title>Demystifying the law on opinion and embracing Milkovich</title><author>Counts, Cynthia L ; 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The trial court granted summary judgment to the newspaper on grounds that the statements were protected opinion. After a long and winding road, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari "to consider the important questions raised by the Ohio courts' recognition of a constitutionally required 'opinion' exception to the application of its defamation laws."16 The Supreme Court reversed, declining to embrace a constitutionally mandated opinion exception to the application of state libel laws.17 Explaining that there are limits to the First Amendment protections for wholly private persons and that anything that could be labeled as a statement of opinion was not automatically protected, the Supreme Court stated: "we think the 'breathing space' which 'freedoms of expression require in order to survive,' is adequately secured by existing constitutional doctrine without the creation of an artificial dichotomy between 'opinion' and fact."18 The problem with Justice [Brennan]'s view is the sports writer goes too far when he says anyone there, even an unbiased observer, "knows in his heart" that Milkovich and Scott lied at that hearing. By invoking the support of the "unbiased observer," the columnist does seem to imply knowledge with a strong degree of certainty that both the superintendent and coach were guilty of perjury. It is highly questionable that Justice Brennan's assertion that [Theodore Diadiun]'s "knows in his heart" statement was obvious hyperbole. Diadiun's assertion takes on a powerful connotation that there is no ambiguity as to what was observed at the meet and that any witness would know Milkovich and Scott had lied under oath. To the reader, it certainly "could" imply that Diadiun had additional personal knowledge of an unambiguous event. The column noted, in fact, that he had been the only uninvolved person at both the controversial meet and the administrative hearing, a fact that could have suggested to readers that he was uniquely situated with personal knowledge of additional facts that are not disclosed to the reader. Moreover, Diadiun did not offer a response from Milkovich, but instead quoted a commissioner who said that what the pair had said before the judge "sounded different" than what they had said to the board. 32. Id. at 19 (citations omitted). Of course, unlike the Court's hypothetical, the words "in my opinion" do not appear in Milkovich's Diadiun column. Thus, this appears to be the majority's rebuttal to the dissent's reliance upon the cautionary language of "apparently" and why such a phrase is not dispositive to the question of whether an opinion implies defamatory fact. Of course, as two prominent media law scholars recently noted: "This is not to say that phrases like 'in my opinion' or 'I believe' are without significance. To the contrary, in certain contexts they can provide important clarity regarding the certainty with which speaker purports to be speaking." Len Niehoff &amp; Ashley Messenger, Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Twenty-Five Years Later: The Slow, Quiet, and Troubled Demise of Liar Libel, 49 U. Mich. J. L. Reform 467, 473 (2016). 63. Compare Omnicare, 135 S.Ct. at 1330 (distinguishing the heightened expectations reasonable readers would have about an opinion in a formal registration statement filed with the SEC from the expectations an individual might have for communications in "daily life," i.e., "baseless, off-the-cuff-judgments"), and Mathis v. Cannon, 276 Ga. 16, 24 (2002) ("Although the messages "accused [plaintiff] of being a crook and a thief . ... any person reading the postings on the message board - written entirely in lower case replete with question marks, exclamation points, misspellings, abbreviations, and dashes - . . .[would know that defendant did not state] actual facts about Cannon"), and Sandals Resorts Int'l Ltd. v. Google, Inc., 86 A.D. 3d 32, 43-44 (N.Y. App. Div. 2011) ("[T]he anonymity of the [publication] makes it more likely that a reasonable reader would view its assertions with some skepticism and tend to treat its contents as opinion rather than as fact."), with Bennett v. Hendrix, 325 F. App'x 727, 740-41 (11th Cir. 2009) (recognizing that the statement of the defendant, a law enforcement officer, that the plaintiff was a "convicted criminal" was libelous because reasonable readers could assume that the defendant, by nature of his position, had special knowledge about the plaintiff's criminal history), and Weinstein v. Bullick, 827 F. Supp. 1193, 1198 (E.D. Pa 1993) (holding that a police officer's expressions of skepticism concerning plaintiff's rape charges were not protected opinion because a reasonable viewer could infer that the officer knew more facts than were revealed in the broadcast).</abstract><cop>Chicago</cop><pub>American Bar Association</pub></addata></record>
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subjects Attorneys
Burden of proof
Defamation
Evidence
First Amendment-US
Freedom of the press
Heart
Journalists
Law
Laws, regulations and rules
Libel & slander
Libel and slander
Newsprint
Perjury
Secondary schools
State court decisions
Supreme Court decisions
Trials
Wrestling
title Demystifying the law on opinion and embracing Milkovich
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