Defamation

FSSP client David Krikorian prevails in two cases

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

The Enquirer has the story.  David Krikorian, who is represented by FSSP shareholder Chris Finney, has learned that the Federal Election Commission will not act on a complaint filed by Congresswoman Jean Schmidt.  Krikorian has also prevailed on a motion in a lawsuit filed by Schmidt in the Clermont County Court of Common Pleas.  That court ruled that some of the allegations raised by Schmidt were “immaterial, impertinent or scandalous matters” and struck those matters from the pleadings.


Ohio Supreme Court: yes to personal jurisdiction over out-of-state internet defamation

Friday, June 11th, 2010

In Kauffman Racing Equipment, LLC v. Roberts, 2010-Ohio-2251 [PDF], the Court examined whether Ohio had personal jurisdiction over an alleged defamer who made internet postings from his home in Virginia.

Personal jurisdiction, of course, is a two-part analysis. A court first must examine whether the Ohio long-arm statute and Civil Rule regarding service, R.C. 2307.382 and Rule 4.3, respectively, permit the exercise of jurisdiction. Analogizing to the technology of yesteryear–letter writing–the Court explained the allegedly defamatory statemetns were “published” in Ohio by virtue of their actual receipt by several individuals in Ohio. That fact brings the case within R.C. 2307.382(A)(3) and Rule 4.3(A)(3), which confer jurisdiction over allegedly tortious acts committed in Ohio.

This, of course, is something of a legal fiction, as the postings were certainly not created within Ohio. As a fall-back position, the Court cites R.C. 2307.382(A)(9) and Rule 4.3(A)(6), which create jurisdiction over allegedly tortious acts committed outside Ohio where the alleged tortfeasor might reasonably expect that someone in Ohio would be injured by the acts. The Court’s fall-back seems to be the stronger position and probably should have been the primary holding. It will be interesting to see whether the Court’s holding that the publication actually occurred in Ohio by virtue of its receipt in Ohio has any unexpected consequences in the future. (Though to be fair, this is simply an extension of existing precedent, not new doctrine, so perhaps the concern is misplaced.)

Having established that the long-arm statute and Civil Rule are satisfied, the second part of the personal-jurisdiction analysis comes under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. As relevant here, due process requires that the exercise of jurisdiction arise out of the defendant’s contacts with Ohio. The defendant must have purposely availed itself of the privilege of acting in Ohio, and must have reasonably anticipated that it may be haled into court in Ohio; the defendant’s contacts with Ohio must not be random, fortuitous, or attenuated.

Employing the well-known Calder “effects test,” the Court held that the defendant’s allegedly tortious conduct was not simply “untargeted negligence,” but rather purposeful activity directed at a resident of Ohio. The defendant therefore should have assumed that the effects of his actions should be felt in Ohio, and as a result he could reasonably anticipate being haled into court in Ohio.

Kauffman is not a landmark decision. It is well-supported by existing law on both personal jurisdiction and defamation. But it is another example of courts’ willingness to engage with technology and to fit current doctrine into the new world order. Let’s hope that Ohio continues down its path of reasonableness in this regard.

As a side note, Kauffman is now officially my favorite opinion of 2010, thanks to the explanatory parenthetical in ¶13 of “(emoticons omitted).”


Wilson v. Harvey, 2005-Ohio-5722

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Wilson v. Harvey, 2005-Ohio-5722 – being depicted as homosexual not libel per se

In March of 2004, the defendants placed flyers on the campus of Case Western Reserve University depicting Wilson as a homosexual in search of a companion.  The flyers contained Wilson’s name, photograph, phone number, and email address, and he received several inquiries for the “personal ad.”  The Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas directed a verdict for the defendants, and Wilson appealed.  The Eighth District affirmed.  In holding that distributing flyers depicting Wilson as a homosexual was not libel per se, the Eighth District rejected the notion that being falsely labeled a homosexual would tend to injure a person in his trade or occupation.  While the court agreed that falsely publicizing someone as a homosexual may be libel per quod, it held that special damages must be pled and proven, and that Wilson failed to demonstrate that he was subject to offensive or derogatory treatment as a result of the defendants’ actions.  The court also affirmed the directed verdict on issues of invasion of privacy and civil conspiracy.