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Damages Do Not Prove Defamation

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damaged man

Damages do not prove defamation.

A quick but very important aspect of defamation law.

If someone defames you, and that defamation results in a gazillion dollars in damages, then of course those damages will be highly relevant to the action.

But if someone says something about you that is not defamatory, and you suffer the same gazillion in damages, then those damages are irrelevant.

This seems self-evident, but I find myself in this conversation on a regular basis (with varying fact patterns):

Caller: “I was in a restaurant, and I yelled at the waiter when he got my order wrong. I didn’t realize that one of the other customers was recording the exchange with his cell phone. He posted the video on YouTube, and as a result I lost my job and I’m receiving death threats. I want to sue for defamation. I’ve suffered a minimum of $100,000 in lost wages, and another ten million in emotional distress damages.”

Me: “Well, we first need to establish if what was posted is defamatory. When you sue for defamation, you must list the exact statement that you are contending is defamatory. In your case, what would that statement be?”

Caller: “Of course it was defamatory. People are threatening to kill me! Did you hear the part about the $100,000 in lost wages?”

Me: “I did. But the quantum of harm is only important if we first establish the statement was defamatory. If I tell the truth about you, and that truth somehow damages you, that would not be actionable just because you were damaged. What is the statement you are contending was false and defamatory?”

Caller: “I just don’t understand what you are asking. The video put me in fear of my life. That is the defamation.”

Me: “I hear you. But I want you to envision me sitting at my keyboard, preparing the complaint I will be filing to sue for the damages you sustained. I have to list the statement that is defamatory. It will start with a quotation mark, then the statement, followed by punctuation and then another quotation mark. What am I going to type between those two quotation marks? In the case of a video, that statement may simply not exist. By definition, a video of you that accurately portrays what occurred cannot be false. The only possible basis for an action in such a case would be if the video has been selectively edited to put you in a false light. Is it that kind of situation?”

Caller: “There is no ‘statement’ from the person who posted it. He just put up the raw video.”

Me. “Then what is it about the video that has people so upset?”

Caller: “I told the waiter he should go back to his country. That made me look really bad, and the guy who posted it knew it would make people hate me. That’s why he posted it. He is responsible for all the damages I have suffered.”

Do you see the absurdity of this position?

Let’s take Bernie Madoff as an example. As you may recall, it was his sons, Mark and Andrew, who announced that Madoff’s investment company was nothing but a $64 billion Ponzi scheme. As a result of that disclosure, Madoff was arrested, convicted, and sentenced to 150 years in prison, where he died.

Thus, Madoff suffered incredible harm as a result of what his sons reported, but would anyone seriously contend that Madoff could have sued to recover those damages? What they said was true. Damages do not prove defamation.

To use another high-profile example, some 26 years later Monica Lewinsky is still suffering harm resulting from the disclosure of her tête-à-tête with Bill Clinton by someone she viewed as a confidant. Again, the quantum of harm is immense, but that does not make the factually correct disclosure somehow actionable.

Now, as is always the case, context is everything. There are situations where stating a true fact can still lead to liability, but only where there is some independent basis for that liability. “Honestly” posting all the contact information about your arch nemesis won’t save you from an anti-doxing law. Posting “accurate” naked photos of your ex won’t protect you from California’s revenge porn statute. But even these examples would not support a defamation action, since there is no false statement.

One unique aspect of defamation law.

It is not necessary to prove damages, in order to prevail on a defamation claim. If the plaintiff proves all the elements of defamation, the jury is instructed that it “must” award damages. The law recognizes that one’s reputation has value, and the damage to that reputation might not be quantifiable. These are called the assumed (or presumed) damages. The plaintiff can also recover “actual” damages, which are precisely what the name implies. These are the measurable damages that flowed from the defamation, such as lost wages, lost profits, etc.

But none of this changes the fact that the quantum of harm suffered is of no importance unless and until it has been established that the defendant defamed the plaintiff.

And be sure to read, A Statement is Not Defamatory Just Because it is False and Don’t Sue for Defamation Unless the Statements Really are False.

The post Damages Do Not Prove Defamation appeared first on Internet Defamation Blog.


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