PAN AM SYSTEMS INC et al v. HARDENBERGH et al
Filing
80
ORDER ON DEFENDANTS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT granting 65 Motion for Summary Judgment By JUDGE NANCY TORRESEN. (dfr)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MAINE
PAN AM SYSTEMS INC.,
SPRINGFIELD TERMINAL
RAILWAY COMPANY, and
DAVID ANDREW FINK,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CHARLES HARDENBERGH and
ATLANTIC NORTHEAST RAILS
AND PORTS,
Defendants.
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
) Civil No. 2:11-cv-00339-NT
)
)
)
)
)
)
ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The Plaintiffs, Pan Am Systems, Inc., Springfield Terminal Railway Company,
and David Andrew Fink, bring claims for defamation and false light against
Defendants Atlantic Northeast Rails & Ports and Charles Hardenbergh. The
Plaintiffs also seek punitive damages. Before the Court is the Defendants’ motion
(ECF No. 65) seeking summary judgment on all the Plaintiffs’ claims. For the reasons
that follow, the Court GRANTS the Defendants’ motion.
THE PARTIES
Pan Am Systems, Inc. (“Pan Am”) is a railroad company with substantial
operations in New England. David Andrew Fink1 served as Pan Am’s president and
Two individuals named David Fink appear in this decision. David Andrew Fink is the father
of David Armstrong Fink. For the sake of clarity, the Court generally refers to David Andrew Fink
(the father) by his last name alone and David Armstrong Fink (the son) by his full name.
1
CEO during most times relevant to this suit. Springfield Terminal Railway Company
(“Springfield Terminal” or “ST”) is Pan Am’s subsidiary.
Atlantic Northeast Rails & Ports (“ANR&P”) produces an eponymous trade
newsletter about the railroad industry. Charles Hardenbergh is ANR&P’s editor and
publisher.
The Plaintiffs claim that four articles written and published by the Defendants
defamed them and placed Fink in a false light. Because each article presents a
different factual background, the Court will present the facts in the Discussion
section of this opinion.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Plaintiffs initiated this suit in September of 2011 when they filed their
original complaint (ECF No. 1). There, the Plaintiffs alleged the Defendants had
defamed them in six different articles. Compl. 3-5. The Defendants moved to dismiss
the Complaint for failure to state a claim, arguing the Plaintiffs had failed to allege
falsity or fault and that five of the six statements in question were not capable of
conveying a defamatory meaning as a matter of law. Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (ECF No.
14). The Court granted the motion and dismissed the Plaintiffs’ claims without
prejudice. Order of May 14, 2012 (ECF No. 20). In its order, the Court determined
that, for First Amendment purposes, the Defendants should be treated as “media
defendants” and all the speech at issue implicated “matters of public concern.” Order
of May 14, 2012 at 7-10. The Court held that the issue of whether the Plaintiffs should
be treated as “public figures” was not yet ripe for decision. Id. at 10-11.
2
The Plaintiffs subsequently filed an expanded Amended Complaint (ECF No.
25) based on the same six articles. A standard scheduling order issued (ECF No. 27),
and the Defendants objected (ECF No. 31). Concerned that inquiry into the fault
element of defamation would require them to reveal confidential sources and threaten
First Amendment interests, the Defendants proposed bifurcating discovery according
to a procedure laid out by the First Circuit in Bruno & Stillman, Inc. v. Globe
Newspaper Co., 633 F.2d 583 (1st Cir. 1980). The Court referred the issue to
Magistrate Judge John H. Rich III, who issued an order (ECF No. 42) largely adopting
the Defendants’ proposal. The Magistrate Judge’s order contemplated that the
parties would proceed by engaging in discovery on all issues other than fault, followed
by summary judgment motion work on those issues, followed by further discovery if
necessary.
After the first phase of discovery, the Defendants filed the motion for summary
judgment (ECF No. 65) currently before the Court. In their opposition to the
Defendants’ motion (ECF No. 69), the Plaintiffs represented that they are no longer
pressing their claim with respect to two of the six statements identified in their
complaints, one from an article published on October 22, 2010 and the other from an
article published on November 3, 2010.2 They continue to assert their claims with
respect to the four remaining articles.
The Court grants summary judgment with respect to those two statements on the basis of the
Plaintiffs’ representation.
2
3
LEGAL STANDARD
The Court may grant a motion for summary judgment brought under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 56 where the movant shows that “there is no genuine dispute
as to any material fact” and that it "is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56(a). “ ‘A “genuine” issue is one that could be resolved in favor of either
party, and a “material fact” is one that has the potential of affecting the outcome of
the case.’ ” Jakobiec v. Merrill Lynch Life Ins. Co., 711 F.3d 217, 223 (1st Cir. 2013)
(quoting Calero-Cerezo v. U.S. Dep't of Justice, 355 F.3d 6, 19 (1st Cir. 2004).
In deciding a motion for summary judgment, the Court construes the record in
the light most favorable to the nonmovant and resolves all reasonable inferences in
its favor. See Jakobiec, 711 F.3d at 223. The Court may not weigh the evidence or
make credibility determinations and must set aside “conclusory allegations,
improbable inferences, and unsupported speculation.” Pina v. Children's Place, 740
F.3d 785, 788 (1st Cir. 2014) (quoting Medina-Rivera v. MVM, Inc., 713 F.3d 132, 134
(1st Cir. 2013)). The motion should be denied if the nonmoving party's evidence is
strong enough “to support a verdict in her favor.” Sensing v. Outback Steakhouse of
Fla., LLC, 575 F.3d 145, 153 (1st Cir. 2009) (quoting Calero-Cerezo, 355 F.3d at 19).
Procedures like summary judgment take on added urgency in suits that have
the “potential of . . . chilling constitutionally protected speech.” Guilford Transp.
Indus., Inc. v. Wilner, 760 A.2d 580, 582, 592 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (citing Washington Post
Co. v. Keogh, 385 F.2d 965, 968 (D.C. Cir. 1966). In such cases, “ ‘[t]he threat of being
put to the defense of a lawsuit . . . may be as chilling to the exercise of First
4
Amendment freedoms as fear of the outcome of the lawsuit itself.’ ” Guilford, 760 A.2d
at 592 (quoting and affirming oral order entered by lower court).
DISCUSSION
I.
Count I: Defamation
A. The Governing Law
1.
The Maine Common Law
Under Maine law, the tort of defamation consists of:
(1) a false and defamatory statement concerning another;
(2) an unprivileged publication to a third party;
(3) fault amounting at least to negligence on the part of the publisher;3
(4) either actionability of the statement irrespective of special harm or
the existence of special harm caused by the publication.
Rippett v. Bemis, 672 A.2d 82, 86 (Me. 1996) (quoting Lester v. Powers, 596 A.2d 65,
69 (Me. 1991). Relevant here, the common law rule provides that “one who repeats or
otherwise republishes defamatory matter is subject to liability as if he had originally
published it.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 578 (1977).
As discussed above, Magistrate Judge Rich issued a bifurcated discovery order
in October of 2012, which postponed discovery on the fault element because it might
require the Defendants to reveal confidential sources. The Defendants now move for
summary judgment on the grounds that the Plaintiffs cannot establish that the
Under certain circumstances, the First Amendment requires the plaintiff to prove a higher
degree of fault to make out the third element—that the defendant made the statements at issue “with
knowledge of their falsity or with reckless disregard for their truth or falsity.” Ballard v. Wagner, 877
A.2d 1083, 1088 (Me. 2005).
3
5
statements at issue are defamatory or false and that two of the statements at issue
are protected by the fair report privilege.
If the fair report privilege does apply, as the Defendants contend, the Court
would still have to determine whether the Defendants abused the privilege, an
inquiry that requires examining the issue of fault. See Restatement (Second) of Torts
§§ 600, 611 (common law fair report privilege is conditional, and can be defeated by
showing the defendant knew the matter to be false or acted in reckless disregard as
to its truth or falsity); Yohe v. Nugent, 321 F.3d 35, 42-45 (1st Cir. 2003)
(Massachusetts’s fair report privilege is conditional, not absolute, and can be defeated
by showing at least some types of malice). Accordingly, the issues of whether Maine
law provides for a fair report privilege and whether any of the Defendants’ statements
are protected by it are not yet ripe for decision. The Court proceeds to the Defendants’
remaining arguments for summary judgment, which implicate the first element of
defamation and the publication component of the second element of defamation.
2.
Interaction of Maine Common Law and First Amendment
Law
As the Court explained in an earlier order in this case:
Over the last fifty years, the Supreme Court has imposed various
constitutional restrictions on common law defamation actions. The
Court, concerned about the chilling effect of defamation actions on free
speech, has sought to ensure robust public debate on areas of public
concern.
Pan Am. Sys., Inc. v. Hardenbergh, 871 F. Supp.2d 6, 11 (D. Me. 2012). Relevant to
this motion, the First Amendment limits how state courts may define what is
“defamatory,” see, e.g., Greenbelt Coop. Publ’g Ass’n, Inc. v. Bresler, 398 U.S. 6, 12-13
6
(1970), and requires a plaintiff bringing a defamation claim against a media
defendant (such as ANR&P and Hardenbergh) to prove the falsity of the defendant’s
statement. Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 347 (1974).
Given defamation’s common law roots and constitutional overlay, this Court
must adhere to both the holdings of the Law Court applying Maine law and the
holdings of the Supreme Court and the First Circuit applying First Amendment law.
See Veilleux v. Nat’l Broad. Co., 206 F.3d 92, 107-108 (1st Cir. 2000).
a.
“Defamatory”
Under Maine’s common law, a statement is “defamatory” only if “it tends so to
harm the reputation of another as to lower him in the estimation of the community
or to deter third persons from associating or dealing with him.” Schoff v. York Cnty.,
761 A.2d 869, 871 n.3 (Me. 2000) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 559 (1977))
(internal quotation marks omitted). Whether a statement “is capable of conveying a
defamatory message at all is a question of law,” to be determined by the Court. Bakal
v. Weare, 583 A.2d 1028, 1030 (Me. 1990)). However, “[i]f a court determines that the
statement is capable of bearing a defamatory meaning, the matter goes to the
factfinder to determine if the statement was understood by the recipient as
defamatory.” Schoff, 761 A.2d at 871 n.2.
In making these determinations, context matters. Chapman v. Gannett, 132
Me. 389, 398 (1934). As the Law Court has explained:
In determining whether a given publication is libelous, the language
thereof must be taken in its ordinary significance and must be construed
in the light of what might reasonably have been understood therefrom
by the persons who read it. The question is how would persons of
ordinary intelligence understand the language. The published article
7
alone must be construed, stripped of innuendo, insinuation, colloquium,
and explanatory circumstances. In interpreting the language, it is not a
question of the intent of the speaker, or author, or even of the
understanding of the plaintiff, but of the understanding of those to
whom the words are addressed and of the natural and probable effect of
the words upon them. A person is presumed to intend the natural
consequences of his acts and defamation consists solely in the effect
produced upon the minds of third parties.
Id. (quoting Cooley on Torts (4th Ed.) 503, § 146).
Additionally, “Maine's common law of defamation does not allow recovery for
statements of opinion alone,” though “[a] statement of opinion may be actionable . . .
if it implies the existence of undisclosed defamatory facts.” Lester, 596 A.2d at 71.
“Whether an allegedly defamatory statement is a statement of fact or opinion is a
question of law . . . but if the average reader could reasonably understand the
statement as either fact or opinion, the question of which it is will be submitted to
the fact-finder.” Ballard, 877 A.2d at 1087 (internal citations, quotation marks, and
bracketing omitted).
Under the First Amendment, a statement may not be held defamatory “unless
in a given context it reasonably can be understood as having an easily ascertainable
and objectively verifiable meaning.” Levinsky's, Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 127 F.3d
122, 129 (1st Cir. 1997). Whether a statement has an easily ascertainable and
objectively verifiable meaning is question of law, for the court. Gray v. St. Martin’s
Press, Inc., 221 F.3d 243, 248 (1st Cir. 2000).
Under this rule, only statements that can be proved true or false are
actionable. Id. Statements based on “loose, figurative, or hyperbolic language” cannot
support a claim. Phantom Touring, Inc. v. Affiliated Publ’ns, 953 F.2d 724, 727-8 (1st
8
Cir. 1992) (statement that production was “fake” and “phony” not actionable). Nor
can statements which lack a “precise meaning.” McCabe v. Rattiner, 814 F.2d 839,
842–43 (1st Cir. 1987) (statement that timeshare real estate development was a
“scam” not actionable).
Making the “easily ascertainable and objectively verifiable” determination
requires examining the various potential meanings the statement could have and the
context in which the statement was made. Levinsky's, 127 F.3d at 129. In Levinsky’s,
the First Circuit held that a statement that retail customers were left waiting on the
phone for twenty minutes was objectively verifiable, whereas a statement that a store
was “trashy” was not. Id. at 130. The court explained that “trashy” could have a
number of meanings and that, on the specific facts of the case, its “inherent
elusiveness” was “not pinned down by context.” Id. In Gray, the First Circuit held
that a statement in an article that a public relations firm had “failed” was not
defamatory where the writer stated in the same article that the company had sold for
$16 million. Id. at 249. In context, the court explained, it was clear that the author
was not claiming that the company went bankrupt or lost money, but was rather
expressing a subjective, unverifiable viewpoint that the company had not succeeded
in spreading its message. Id.
b.
“Materially False”
At common law, a defendant pressing the affirmative defense of truth could
not be held liable if he proved that his statement was “substantially true,” even if not
“technically accurate.” McCullough v. Visiting Nurse Serv. of S. Me., Inc., 691 A.2d
1201, 1204 (Me. 1997). It was not necessary for the defendant “to establish the literal
9
truth of the precise statement made.” Id. (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 581A
cmt. f (1977)). “Slight inaccuracies of expression” were “immaterial provided that the
defamatory charge” was “true in substance.” Id. (statement that nurse was fired due
to “several” incidents of misconduct deemed “substantially true” even though in fact
nurse was fired due to only two incidents of misconduct). Where, as here, the plaintiff
bears the burden of proving falsity, the doctrine of substantial truth remains in force
but is flipped on its head; the plaintiff must establish not only that the statement in
question was false, but that it was “materially false.” Vellieux, 206 F.3d at 105.
B.
Presentation of Facts and Application of Facts to Law
1.
The Bridge Street Derailment
a.
Presentation of Facts
In November 2009, several rail cars derailed while traveling along train tracks
owned by Springfield Terminal. Pls.’ Statement of Additional Material Facts ¶¶ 10,
11 (“PSMF”) (ECF No. 75).4 Citing to and liberally borrowing from articles which
appeared in the Nashua Telegraph and Manchester Union Leader, ANR&P published
its own story about the derailment on December 2, 2009. PSMF ¶¶ 1, 3; see also Defs.’
Ex. 3 (copy of November 18, 2009 article in Nashua Telegraph by David Brooks). The
Court reproduces the entire ANR&P article below, preserving all original spacing and
punctuation. The allegedly defamatory portion consists of quotations from Peter
Burling, the chair of the New Hampshire Rail Authority, which appear under the
Citations to paragraphs of the Plaintiffs’ Statement of Material Facts refer to specific facts
proposed by the Plaintiffs at pages 7-18 of ECF No. 75 and the Defendants’ responses to those facts at
pages 11-29 of ECF No. 79.
4
10
header, “Shows need for track investment?” Am Compl. ¶ 10; Pls.’ Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot.
for Summ. J. 14-16 (ECF No. 69).
ST: COAL DERAILMENT
17 November, Nashua. THE LOADED ST BOW COAL TRAIN
DERAILED SEVEN CARS of an 87-car train near Bridge Street at
about 11 AM. Three turned over, with coal spilling out.
David Fink, ST president, arrived on the scene in the afternoon.
He said preliminary investigation showed that one of the truck sides (a
truck contains axels, springs, and other equipment for suspension) had
fallen off one of the cars. That caused a chain reaction among several
subsequent cars. Asked whether he thought there was a problem with
the tracks, Fink said, “We’re looking at everything, but we don’t think
so” because of the evidence with the truck. An investigation into the
cause of the derailment would likely go on for about a month because of
metal that needs to be tested and other factors.
Crews were expected to realign the four upright cars and move
them that same day. Most of the train – an estimated 74 cars – continued
on to the Merrimack Station power plant in Bow without a problem.
{Karen Lovett in Nashua Telegraph 18.Nov.09}
Shows need for track investment?
Peter Burling, chair of the New Hampshire Rail Transit Authority,
blamed ST for the accident. “What has happened here is a perfectly
predictable accident – but it’s hard to describe it as an accident, since
the probabilities were so clear it was going to take place. The only thing
we didn’t know is when and where.”
Burling said the accident, occurring on a stretch of line with a
speed limit of under 10 miles per hour for large freight trains, made a
track upgrade which might have been provided had the state won
funding for passenger service to Concord [see 09#10A] more important.
“A horrendously dilapidated railroad system has caused a slow-moving
coal trail to fall off the tracks.”
“The point is not to say ‘I told you so,’ but to say this is why we
feel it is so important to get this line upgraded, and to maintain it for
passenger and freight operations. We believe there are institutions of
the federal government that can move to carry this along. I’m going to
Washington in [the] next couple of weeks to have further discussions
about the issue.” {David Brooks in Nashua Telegraph 18.Nov.09}
Fink Response
Any number of reasons could explain why the cars jumped the track,
including equipment failure, Fink said on 19 November, responding to
11
Burling’s remarks. “I don’t know what (Burling) is basing that on. I don’t
think he has any knowledge on it.”
Specialists from Pan Am’s mechanical, engineering and
operations departments will comb the wreckage and analyze the train’s
“black box” in the days ahead, Fink said. Piecing together what
happened will take time. Fink drew comparisons to an airplane crash
investigation, saying multiple factors had to be considered before
reaching a conclusion.
As for the tracks, an automated dynamics car had recently
inspected the line and found no problems. “I guess Mr. Burling is more
knowledgeable than the automated dynamics car,” Fink said. “I don’t
know where he gets his information.”
Pan Am’s investigation team is working with two Federal
Railroad Administration inspectors. Spokesperson Robert Kulat said it
could take up to a year before the FRA releases their findings. {Derrick
Perkins in Manchester Union Leader 20.Nov.09}
Defs.’ Statement of Material Facts ¶ 2 (“DSMF”) (ECF No. 66);5 Defs.’ Ex. 2 at 1, 1314.6
As it turned out, a faulty rail car owned by a different rail company was the
cause of the derailment. PSMF ¶¶ 5-11. The car was severely corroded and had
insufficient side bearing clearance, restricting the truck swivel and thereby
preventing the railcar from travelling properly along the rail. PSMF ¶¶ 6-10. The
accident was not caused by the state of Springfield Terminal’s tracks. PSMF ¶¶ 5-11.
Citations to paragraphs of Defendants’ Statement of Material Facts refer to specific facts
proposed by the Defendants in ECF No. 66, the Plaintiffs’ responses to those facts at pages 1-7 of ECF
No. 75, and the Defendants’ replies to the Plaintiffs’ evidentiary objections concerning those facts at
pages 1-11 of ECF No. 79.
5
6
Pin cites for the Defendants’ exhibits refer to original page numbers in the source documents.
12
b.
Application of Law to Facts
The Plaintiffs assert that the Burling statements republished in the above
article are false and defamatory because the derailment was not a “perfectly
predictable accident,” the Plaintiffs’ railroad system was not “horrendously
dilapidated,” and the state of the Plaintiffs’ rail line did not “cause” the accident. Am.
Compl. ¶ 11; Pls.’ Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 14-16 (ECF No. 69).
With respect to the Plaintiffs’ first two contentions, the Defendants argue that
Burling’s statements that the derailment was “perfectly predictable” and that the
railroad system was “horrendously dilapidated” are protected by the First
Amendment because they constitute loose, figurative language and are not objectively
verifiable. The Court agrees.
Both of these phrases are hyperbole. Neither can be reduced to anything
approaching a precise, testable fact. The Court cannot objectively verify whether a
risk of derailment has crossed the line from “hard to predict” to “predictable” to
“perfectly predictable,” nor whether a railroad system has fallen from “ship-shape” to
“could use some work” to “horrendously dilapidated.” These are the kind of loose,
subjective judgments necessary for the vigorous, freewheeling debate that the First
Amendment protects.
The statement about a dilapidated railway system causing the accident
presents a closer question. Whether a general set of conditions (the state of repair of
the “railroad system”) caused a particular accident (the Bridge Street derailment) is
verifiably testable. If it was shown that something else was the true cause—an
13
earthquake, for instance—then the statement could be proved definitively, materially
false.
To this, the Defendants respond that the Burling statement was not materially
false. Again, the Court agrees. Nowhere in the quotations ANR&P published did
Burling claim that the state of Pan Am’s tracks caused the accident. His statement
was significantly broader—that the state of the railroad system caused the crash. The
phrase “railroad system” fairly encompasses not just train tracks, but also the trains
and rail cars that run on them. It is unclear from the record whether Pan Am rightly
bears any responsibility for allowing poorly maintained, corroded rail cars to run on
its tracks. But under the undisputed facts, the Plaintiffs cannot show that the
objectively verifiable portion of Burling’s statement—that the state of repair of the
railroad system caused the derailment—was materially false. Based on the above, the
Defendants are entitled to summary judgment with respect to the December 2, 2009
article about the Bridge Street derailment.
Although the Court has determined that the republication of Burling’s
statements do not support defamation liability, an additional First Amendment
doctrine – the neutral reporting privilege – might well bar application of the common
law rule that a statement’s republisher is subject to liability as if he had originally
made the statement. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 578 (1977). The Defendants
colorably point toward that possibility in their motion.7
The Defendants seek summary judgment in part based on an argument that “Hardenbergh’s
quotation of another newspaper’s quotation of Burling was clearly not intended to report on the
inherent truth of the statement, but on the fact that a government official expressed this opinion after
7
14
The neutral reporting privilege was first discussed by the Second Circuit in
Edwards v. National Audubon Society, Inc., 556 F.2d 113 (2d Cir. 1977). There, the
National Audubon Society published a letter broadly accusing DDT-industry
scientists of “being paid to lie.” Edwards, 556 F.2d at 117. A New York Times reporter
called the letter’s author and convinced him to name the scientists. Id. The reporter
then wrote a story identifying the individuals, titled “Pesticide Spokesmen Accused
of ‘Lying’ on Higher Bird Count.” Id. at 118. Under these facts, the Second Circuit
held that a privilege imposed by the First Amendment barred libel liability:
[W]hen a responsible, prominent organization like the National Audubon
Society makes serious charges against a public figure, the First Amendment
protects the accurate and disinterested reporting of those charges, regardless
of the reporter’s private views regarding their validity. What is newsworthy
about such accusations is that they were made.
Id. at 120 (internal citations omitted). Neutrality is key to the privilege the Second
Circuit announced; it has no force where the publisher distorts statements to support
a personal attack of its own on a public figure. Id.; see also Cianci v. New Times Pub.
Co., 639 F.2d 54, 69 (2d Cir. 1980) (declining to apply the neutral reporting privilege
where an article not only described a rape charge, but also concurred in the charge
and omitted all statements refuting it). The Eighth Circuit has joined the Second
Circuit in holding that the First Amendment provides a neutral reporting privilege,
Price v. Viking Penguin, Inc., 881 F.2d 1426, 1434 (8th Cir. 1989), while the Third
an accident had occurred.” Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 7 (ECF No. 65). However, they do not identify the
neutral reporting privilege by name or cite to the cases where it has been applied.
15
Circuit has held that it does not. Dickey v. CBS Inc., 583 F.2d 1221, 1226 (3d Cir.
1978).
Although the Court need not decide whether to adopt the neutral reporting
privilege, it fits well to the facts presented by this case. ANR&P’s December 2, 2009
article leads with a lengthy description of Fink’s on-site investigation of the
derailment and reports on Fink’s preliminary assessment that a problem with a rail
car likely caused the accident. Only then does the article recount the critical
statements made by Burling,8 which it follows with Fink’s response to those
statements. Like the journalist in Edwards, Hardenbergh reports on a contentious
issue of public concern and presents multiple viewpoints without adopting one of his
own. As the Second Circuit stated, “[t]he public interest in being fully informed about
controversies that often rage around sensitive issues demands that the press be
afforded the freedom to report such charges without assuming responsibility for
them.” Edwards, 536 F.2d at 120.
The present case involves the same Plaintiffs as Guilford Transportation, supra p. 4-5. The
Guilford court noted parenthetically that Fink and Pan Am’s predecessor-in-interest had sued only
the author of the article at issue there, “who might be expected to have limited resources,” rather than
the deep-pocketed trade publication that published his piece. Guilford Transp., 760 A.2d at 592 n.10.
A similar dynamic is at play here. ANR&P has approximately 350 subscribers. Aug. 3, 2012 Aff. of
Charles Hardenbergh ¶ 20 (ECF No. 31-2). Fink and Pan Am are suing a small trade publication and
its publisher but not the railroad executive and larger newspapers who were responsible for the
original publication of the statements at issue.
8
16
2.
The Concord “Promise”
a.
Presentation of Facts
The Plaintiffs allege that an article the Defendants published on December 21,
2010, defamed them because it incorrectly stated that they had promised to offer
certain services to its customers and then falsely characterized the failure to provide
those services as a broken promise. The Court first lays out the events leading up to
the publication of the December 21, 2010 article and then describes the article itself.
i.
Background
In 1985, New England South Railroad Company, Inc. (“New England
Southern” or “NES”) entered into a lease to operate a section of railroad tracks
owned by Pan Am between Manchester, New Hampshire and Concord, New
Hampshire (the “Subject Line”). Ex. A to Culliford Aff. 3-4 (“Pan Am Application”)
(ECF No. 72-1); Ex. C to Culliford Aff. 2 (“Surface Transportation Board
Decision”) (ECF No. 72-3). On the Concord side, the Subject Line connects with the
White Mountain Line, a section of track extending north to Lincoln, New Hampshire.
Surface Transp. Bd. Dec. 2. The White Mountain Line is owned by the New
Hampshire Department of Transportation (“NHDOT”) and operated by New England
Southern. Surface Transp. Bd. Dec. 1-2. The White Mountain Line’s only connection
with the interstate rail system is through the Subject Line. Surface Transp. Bd. Dec.
2; Ex. D. to Culliford Aff. 8 (“New England Southern Response”) (ECF 72-4). On
the Manchester side, the Subject Line connects with Pan Am’s integrated network of
rail lines. Ex. B. to Culliford Aff. 2 (“Pan Am Reply”) (ECF No. 72-2).
17
In April of 2007, Pan Am sent New England Southern notice that it intended
to terminate the lease and begin operating the Subject Line itself. PSMF ¶¶ 59, 60;
Surface Transp. Bd. Dec. 2. Pan Am applied to the Surface Transportation Board, a
federal agency with jurisdiction over railroad operation rights, for an “adverse
discontinuance.” PSMF ¶¶ 57, 59; Surface Transp. Bd. Dec. 2-3. An adverse
discontinuance is an administrative determination that removes a dispute between
two railroad operators from the Surface Transportation Board’s jurisdiction and
allows the party seeking the determination to pursue other legal remedies, such as
eviction. PSMF ¶¶ 57, 59; Surface Transp. Bd. Dec. 3; 49 U.S.C §§ 701-727. Under
federal law, the Surface Transportation Board may grant an adverse discontinuance
“only if the Board finds that the present or future public convenience and necessity
require or permit the . . . discontinuance.” 49 U.S.C. § 10903(d); see also Pan Am
Application at 8-9.
With its application, Pan Am submitted a verified statement made under oath
on Pan Am’s behalf by Richard Miller, the assistant to Pan Am’s vice president of
transportation. DSMF ¶ 40; Pan Am Application at 87-89. In the statement, Miller
explained how Pan Am would service the 1,700 cars per year that interchange
between Pan Am’s tracks and New England Southern’s tracks:
In order to provide service to these customers on a consistent basis one
crew will be required on a five day per week basis. . . . It is planned to
headquarter a crew in Concord, New Hampshire.
Pan Am Application 87-88; see also DSMF ¶ 40.
18
The main body of Pan Am’s application cited to Miller’s statement to bolster
its argument that an adverse discontinuance would support the public convenience
and necessity, but added language, not found in Miller’s statement, which suggested
that any increase in service would be contingent on traffic levels:
Once Pan Am service is restored to the Subject Line, Pan Am will assign
a crew in Concord, New Hampshire to work a five day per week schedule
providing service to the four major customers and a few smaller
customers on the Subject line as long as traffic levels support such
service, which is an increase from the approximately two day per week
service currently provided to Manchester, New Hampshire, with the
increased revenue earned by Pan Am justifying the increased service to
transfer cars to and from NES. Miller VS at Paragraphs 6, 7.
PSMF ¶ 61; Pan Am Application 9-10 (emphasis added).
In its formal response to Pan Am’s application, New England Southern
recognized that Pan Am had the legal right to terminate New England Southern’s
lease and therefore did not oppose the grant of an adverse continuance. New England
Southern Resp. at 3. However, New England Southern expressed concerns about
whether Pan Am would provide adequate service along the Subject Line and at its
connection with the White Mountain Line:
Over the years . . . NES and its shippers have witnessed a distressing
decline in the frequency and reliability of ST’s service to and from the
current NES-ST interchange at Manchester. Recently, ST’s service
to/from the Manchester interchange—which was five times a week—has
dwindled to twice weekly or less.
Pan Am has represented that ST will base a switching crew at Concord,
and that is encouraging as far as it goes coming from Pan Am, which
appears to have been experiencing problems with motive power and
crew shortages as it is. But the proof will be in ST’s actual delivery on
its promise of five days per week service.* NES has attempted for some
time to make do with ST’s unreliable and infrequent interchange at
Manchester. But it is clear that the status quo is unacceptable, and that
shippers on both [the Subject Line] and on the NES-served White
19
Mountain Line will require at least three times per week service not only
to maintain their continued use of rail service, but also so that both
carriers—ST and NES alike—may attract additional business to their
lines.
* See Application, Verified Statement of Richard Miller at unnumbered
page two, paragraph 6.
New England Southern Resp. 8-9 (one footnote omitted from original; remaining
footnote in original designated by asterisk).
NHDOT filed a response as well, requesting the Surface Transportation Board
condition any grant of an adverse discontinuance on a binding requirement that Pan
Am interchange with New England Southern at a site known as Concord Yard. See
Pan Am Reply 4; PSMF ¶ 67. NHDOT argued Concord Yard was the most convenient
location for an interchange. Pan Am Reply 4; PSMF ¶ 67.
In a subsequent reply, Pan Am took issue with both New England Southern’s
and NHDOT’s filings. With respect to the concerns New England Southern raised
about how often Pan Am would interchange with the White Mountain Line, Pan Am
wrote:
[Pan Am] has proposed an operating plan that will provide better service
than currently exists on the Line because of the removal of the need to
interchange traffic for the Line by basing a crew at Concord, New
Hampshire. [Pan Am] is committed to this operating plan, but notes that
it must be contingent upon adequate service levels to support it. To
mandate a minimum level of service as suggested by NES would be
inequitable and inefficient, because if [Pan Am] were required to
continue to provide minimum service levels on the Line that may be
unprofitable due to a lack of demand [it] would inevitably lead to
abandonment of the Line. Therefore, [Pan Am] requests that the Board
decline to impose minimal service requirements as a condition of
granting the Application.
Pan Am Reply 4-5.
20
With respect to NHDOT’s request that the Surface Transportation Board
require Pan Am to interchange at the Concord Yard site, Pan Am noted that NHDOT
had “never consulted” with Pan Am and asked that Pan Am “be permitted to negotiate
in good faith with NES to determine an appropriate interchange point.” Pan Am
Reply 5; see PSMF ¶¶ 5, 6.
The Surface Transportation Board issued a decision on May 10, 2010 granting
Pan Am’s adverse discontinuance application and denying NHDOT’s request for a
condition requiring Pan Am to provide interchange at Concord Yard. Surface Transp.
Bd. Dec. at 6; PSMF ¶¶ 65, 68. Responding to New England Southern’s concerns, the
Board stated:
Pan Am claims that it is committed to working with NES to achieve a
smooth transition of operations once the Lease is terminated, and that
it is intent on providing service on a consistent basis that will meet and
exceed the service needs and demands of this growing region of New
Hampshire. To this end, Pan Am states that: (1) it will operate one crew
on a 5-day-a-week basis; [and] (2) the crew will be headquartered in
Concord, where approximately 1,700 cars were interchanged with NES
in 2006. . . .
.
.
.
Pan Am has a statutory obligation to provide adequate service and
states that it is intent on providing service on a consistent basis that
will meet and exceed the service needs and demands of the affected area.
We will hold Pan Am to its assurances. In the event it fails to live up to
its statutory obligation to provide adequate service, we will promptly
consider requests for appropriate corrective action.
DSMF ¶ 38; Defs.’ Ex. 17 at 2; Defs.’ Ex. 18A at 4.
On May 13, 2010, ANR&P published an article reporting on the Board’s
decision and describing the reaction of New England Southern’s owner, Peter
21
Dearness. DSMF ¶¶ 36-37. The Court reproduces the beginning of the article below,
except that it omits a part of the ANR&P’s direct quotation of the Board’s decision.
NEGS/ST: ST MAY KICK OUT NEGS*
29 April, DC. THE BOARD GRANTED ST’S ADVERSE
DISCONTINUANCE WITHOUT CONDITIONS. ST filed on 19 June
2009 [see 09#07B]; NEGS9 said it would not oppose the filing but asked
for a condition; NHDOT did the same [see 09#09A].
Pan Am promises
The Board’s decision noted: ‘Pan Am claims that it is committed to
working with NES to achieve a smooth transition of operations once the
Lease is terminated, and that it is intent on providing service on a
consistent basis that will meet and exceed the service needs and
demands of this growing region of New Hampshire. To this end, Pan Am
states that: (1) it will operate one crew on a 5-day-a-week basis; (2) the
crew will be headquartered in Concord, where approximately 1,700 cars
were interchanged with NES in 2006; . . . ’
NEGS request for condition
Peter Dearness’ railroad asserted that once ST begins to operate its line,
the Board said, it will not provide adequate service. The current
exchange has declined from five days a week to ‘two days a week or less’
[in fact, sources familiar with the operation said ST interchanges at
most once a week {ANR&P discussions}] and is needed at least three
times a week.
NEGS wanted ST to agree to a new interchange point [currently
they interchange in Manchester―editor] in ST’s Concord Yard ‘before
there is a change in operators.’ NEGS will continue to serve customers
on the NHDOT-owned, NEGS-operated White Mountain branch which
runs north of Concord to Plymouth.
‘NES notes that discussions on an interchange have yet to take
place and asks the Board to watch over the execution of Pan Am’s plan
to remove NES and install ST in NES’s place, and to be mindful of Pan
Am’s service level representations.’
NHDOT request for condition
The department requested the Board to condition the discontinuance ‘on
requiring Pan Am to provide regular interchange at . . . Concord Yard.’
ANR&P uses the abbreviation “NEGS” to refer to New England Southern. When ANR&P
quotes the Surface Transportation Board, it uses the abbreviation “NES” to refer to New England
Southern.
9
22
Pan Am (ST) argued that since only two cars a month were
interchanged for the White Mountain branch in 2008, concerns of NEGS
and NHDOT were unfounded. It should be permitted to negotiate with
NEGS about the interchange.
Board decision
The STB10 declined to condition the discontinuance. Instead, it said: ‘We
will hold Pan Am to its assurances. In the event it fails to live up to its
statutory obligation to provide adequate service, we will promptly
consider requests for appropriate corrective action.’ {STB website,
decisions page, Docket No. AB 32 (Sub-No. 100)}
Defs.’ Ex. 17 at 10.
ii.
Allegedly Defamatory Article
On December 21, 2010, ANR&P published the allegedly defamatory statement
in a follow-up article titled “NEGS: UPDATE*.” The pertinent part of the story is
reproduced below. Under ANR&P’s editorial style, the citation to “10#05A” refers to
the issue of ANR&P which contained the above May 13, 2010 article:
Better interchange would mean more customers.
Despite ST’s promise to locate a crew in Concord and switch customers
five days a week [see 10#05A], Dearness reported that ST has done
neither. It is now providing a switch one day a week. He believed that
to serve major customers Blue Seal and Ciment Quebec, ST had to
switch at least three times a week, which is “what I provided before I
left.”
If ST would provide the service it promised, Dearness believes he
could land two more customers. One is ‘very frustrated because it would
like to start now, and can’t due to the level of service and is familiar’
with ST’s lack of service. The other one would like to start in May or
June.
PSMF ¶ 53; Defs.’ Ex. 16 at 11.
10
ANR&P uses the abbreviation “STB” to refer to the Surface Transportation Board.
23
b.
Application of Law to Facts
The Plaintiffs do not claim the December 21, 2010 article was false and
defamatory because Pan Am actually did have a team working in Concord or actually
was switching customers between the Subject Line and the White Mountain Line
more than one day a week. Am Compl. ¶ 27-28; PSMF ¶ 55. Rather, they contend
that they never made a promise to provide those services, so the article’s premise that
they broke a promise was false. Am Compl. ¶ 27-28; PSMF ¶ 55. The Defendants
counter that nothing in the article is materially false.
As an initial matter, the Plaintiffs’ briefing assumes that the word “promise”
always has a specific, legal meaning: to enter into a binding agreement to take a
particular action. That may be the technical meaning given to the word promise in
certain areas of the law, but the word promise can also take on a softer meaning. The
first two entries for the noun “promise” in Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary are: (1) “a declaration that one will do or refrain from doing something
specified”; and (2) “an undertaking however expressed that something will happen or
that something will not happen in the future.” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary
1980 (1988). As a verb, Webster’s Third instructs, the term promise can mean “to
engage to do or bring about (as something desired or pleasing)” or to “give assurance
. . . of.” Id.
Which meaning applies depends on the context in which the statement
appeared. See, e.g., Bakal, 583 A.2d at 1030; Levinsky's, 127 F.3d at 129. Here, that
context includes ANR&P’s May 13, 2010 article, cited for background in the allegedly
offending December 21, 2010 article. The May 13, 2010 article refers to Pan Am’s
24
stated intention to headquarter a crew in Concord and interchange with the White
Mountain Line five days a week as “promises,” but also accurately explains that the
Board declined to require Pan Am to do either. This background renders the Plaintiffs’
legalistic interpretation of the word promise unsupportable. The May 2010 article
does not imply that Pan Am agreed to be legally bound to its representations; rather,
it makes clear the opposite. Accordingly, ANR&P’s use of the term “promise”
necessarily takes on the more forgiving meaning discussed above, of an assurance or
a statement of intention to take future action. It is in light of this meaning that the
Court must consider whether the implication in ANR&P’s December 21, 2010 issue
that Pan Am failed to live up to a “promise” was materially false.
In Miller’s verified statement, he declared, without qualification, that Pan Am
“planned to headquarter a crew in Concord” and that “one crew will be required on a
five day per week basis.” Pan Am Application 87-89 (emphasis added). Miller’s
statement does not mention the possibility that Pan Am might decide to provide a
lower level of service and forego a Concord crew.
Based on Miller’s statement, it is fair to say that an authorized Pan Am
representative told the Surface Transportation Board under oath and without
equivocation that Pan Am planned to locate a crew in Concord and switch customers
to the White Mountain Line five times a week and that this constituted a promise.
The fact that Pan Am’s lawyer later conditioned Miller’s assertion does not alter what
Miller attested to under oath. It is also fair to say that the board considered Miller’s
statement when it said that Pan Am is:
25
committed to working with NES . . . and that it is intent on providing
service . . . that will meet and exceed the service needs and demands of
this growing region of New Hampshire. To this end, Pan Am states that:
(1) it will operate one crew on a 5-day-a-week basis; [and] (2) the crew
will be headquartered in Concord, where approximately 1,700 cars were
interchanged with NES in 2006. . . . We will hold Pan Am to its
assurances.
DSMF ¶ 38; Defs.’ Ex. 17 at 2; Defs.’ Ex. 18A at 4.
Because Miller indisputably declared in his verified statement that Pan Am
planned to locate a crew in Concord and provide interchange service five days a week,
and because the Board relied on that statement as a commitment made by Pan Am,
and because the term “promise” in the full context of the ANR&P articles was not
used in the sense of a legally binding agreement, the Plaintiffs cannot establish that
the December 21, 2010 article was materially false. The Court grants the Defendants’
motion with respect to the December 21, 2010 article.
3.
“Lost” Rail Cars
a.
Presentation of Facts
Jones Chemical Incorporated (“Jones Chemical”) is a chemical company.
DSMF ¶ 41.11 Springfield Terminal delivers cars carrying chlorine and sulfur dioxide
to a Jones Chemical facility in Merrimack, New Hampshire. DSMF ¶¶ 42, 41. Jones
Chemical repackages the chemicals and delivers them throughout New England by
truck. DSMF ¶ 42.
The Court relies on a number of disputed facts about Jones Chemical’s operations for the
limited purpose of providing context. See DSMF ¶¶ 41-43.
11
26
In May of 2007, Springfield Terminal raised the prices it charged to deliver
chlorine and implemented costly new restrictions on trains carrying the chemical.
DSMF ¶ 43.
In July of 2007, Jones Chemical’s president, Jeff Jones, publicly
complained about the changes and announced that Jones Chemical was considering
closing its Merrimack facility. DSMF ¶ 44.12
On March 10, 2011, ANR&P published an article about the dispute between
Jones Chemical and Pan Am. PSMF ¶ 25. Below, the Court reproduces the entire
article. The ellipses and bracketing are in the original:
PAN AM: HAZ-MAT SERVICE*
2 March, Merrimack. ST IS OPERATING SPECIAL TRAINS TO
MOVE CHLORINE TO JONES CHEMICAL. In 2007 [see 08#06B],
ST raised prices significantly, and embargoed the move of chlorine to ‘by
permit only.’ This continues.
Need for chlorine
Only JCI Merrimack repackages chlorine for drinking water and waste
treatment in the region from northern Connecticut to New Brunswick.
The facility also repackages caustic soda (50 & 25%) and sodium
bisulfite. {company website} JCI supplies New York customers from a
plant in Warwick, New York. {Town of Bethlehem NY website}
Price and method of service
One source said that when ST instituted the embargo, it also required
that all TIH (toxic inhalation hazard) moves would require a special
train with priority over all. ‘That way, ST could get them to their
destination and into the care of the consignee ASAP (along with the
$25,000 special train surcharge).’
Only Jones Chemical and PSNH Merrimack station in Bow
(anhydrous ammonia) receive TIH product. ‘That’s why there have been
RJBO, RJJC and DJJC symbols over the last few years.’
The ST ‘special train’ tariff permits the railroad to include up to
25 cars not part of the move requiring the special train, at the railroad’s
discretion.
The Court accepts this fact over the Plaintiffs’ hearsay objection to the extent it is not offered
for the truth of the matter asserted.
12
27
Quality of rail service
In addition to price and the need for special trains, JCI has had difficulty
with consistency of service, according to another source. It requires
switching of at least four cars a week.
The railroad “loses” cars on a consistent ongoing basis, including
one car “lost” for over 60 days. . . . even though certain DHS and DOT
statutes require carriers to release [TIH] cars within 48 hours. {e-mails
to ANR&P 2.Mar.11}
PSMF ¶ 25; Defs.’ Ex. 21 at 15-16 (original quotation marks, bracketing and ellipses
preserved). The last paragraph, which is the offending portion of the article, is a
quotation from an unnamed source.13
b.
Application of Law to Facts
The Plaintiffs now contend that ANR&P and Hardenbergh defamed them by
publishing the March 10, 2011 article. PSMF ¶¶ 27, 31. They claim they do not lose
rail cars on a consistent and ongoing basis and have never lost a rail car for more
than 60 days. PSMF ¶¶ 27, 31. The Defendants respond that the statement does not
have an easily ascertainable and objectively verifiable meaning and therefore cannot
support liability.
The Court agrees with the Defendants. Read in context, the sentence in
question is irreducibly vague. Though the bulk of the sentence is not in quotation
marks, its ellipses and bracketing make it apparent to a reader familiar with
ANR&P’s house style that Hardenbergh is either quoting or paraphrasing emails he
The Defendants claim that a trusted source provided this information to Hardenbergh on
March 2, 2011, and they provide the content of the e-mail. DSMF ¶ 45. The Plaintiffs move to strike
this fact on the basis that it relies on evidence from confidential sources that it has not yet been able
to obtain discovery on because of the bifurcation order by Judge Rich. The Court does not consider the
underlying email.
13
28
received on March 2, 2011. As to what Hardenbergh or the emails intended to convey,
any reasonable reader would be stuck—the sentence allows for many different
interpretations, none of which can be “pinned down” by the context provided in the
article. See Levinsky's, 127 F.3d at 129.
For instance, the quotation marks around the words “loses” and “lost” could
suggest Hardenbergh is quoting his source exactly here, but they could equally
suggest that readers should not interpret the words “lose” and “lost” literally. Even if
the reader concluded that the sentence was intended to convey something specific, it
is unclear exactly what that would be. The sentence is too cryptic and oddly
structured to communicate anything concrete enough to be considered easily
ascertainable and objectively verifiable. Id. The Court therefore grants the
Defendants’ motion with respect to the March 10, 2011 article.
4.
Fink’s Resignation
a.
Presentation of Facts
Prior to 2006, Fink served as both the president and CEO of Pan Am and the
president and CEO of the Pan Am group of railroad entities (the “Pan Am Group”).
PSMF ¶¶ 36, 37. That year, at Fink’s urging, his son was installed as the Pan Am
Group’s president. PSMF ¶ 36. Fink remained the president and CEO of Pan Am and
the CEO of the Pan Am Group. PSMF ¶¶ 36, 37.
As time passed, differences of operational philosophy emerged between father
and son. PSMF ¶ 38. In early 2011, principal owner Tim Mellon decided that a change
needed to be made. PSMF ¶ 39. Mellon directed Fink either to take back total control
29
of Pan Am’s railroad operations or relinquish power to his son. PSMF ¶ 39. Fink opted
for the latter and retired. PSMF ¶ 41.
On March 7, 2011, Fink wrote the following in a letter to Mellon:
Subject to your acceptance of the conditions proposed below regarding
severance, this letter is submitted to confirm the resignation of my
employment, effective at the close of business today, from all positions
held with Pan Am Systems, Inc., and its subsidiary companies, including
my positions as an officer and director of those companies. With regard
to severance compensation I would agree to resign under the following
conditions: [conditions redacted]
DSMF ¶ 58; Defs.’ Ex. 29 at 1.
On March 21, 2011, ANR&P published an article on Fink’s departure. PSMF
¶ 34. The Court reproduces a portion of the article below:
PAN AM: A NEW DAWN?*
9 March, Nashua, NH-North Billerica MA. PAN AM OWNER TIM
MELLON REMOVED DAVE FINK PERE14 from management of the
company, according to four separate sources: one MBTA, one union, one
Maine source, and one from other railroad management in New
England. Sources differ on what precipitated the action, whether Fink
is formally removed or is only on a ‘leave of absence’, and whether Mellon
came to New England to administer the coup de grace or did it by
telephone, but all agree that David Andrew Fink, the head of Pam Am
Systems, is no longer in charge. . . .
What effect will this have?
Opinions on the effect differ. One source said, “The old man will still run
things.” Another source said that Fink fils is now the head of both the
railroad and the holding company.
If Fink pere has definitely left, then perhaps, as one source said,
“The holy wars, such as those against Peter Leisham, will cease.” Others
thought that young Fink might have more freedom either to spend more
money on railroading, or put the existing money into different [and one
would hope more productive] places. {ANR&P discussions 10.Mar.11}
ANR&P uses the designation “Fink pere” to refer to David Andrew Fink (the father) and the
designation “Fink fils” to refer David Armstrong Fink (the son).
14
30
PSMF ¶ 34; Defs.’ Ex. 28 at 2.
b.
Application of Law to Facts
The Amended Complaint alleges that Plaintiffs defamed them by publishing
the March 21, 2011 article about Fink’s departure from Pan Am. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 3940; PSMF ¶¶ 34-51. In its Order of May 14, 2012, dismissing the original complaint,
which contained most of the above quotation, the Court noted “[o]ne can infer from
this quote that Mr. Fink’s removal was not his choice” and that “[t]he hyperbolic term
‘coup de grace’ carries with it a sense that Mr. Fink was fired.” Pan Am Sys., Inc.,
871 F. Supp. 2d at 16 n.4. The Court nonetheless held that the statement was not
capable of conveying a defamatory meaning as a matter of law:
Maine law provides that a statement that an individual is fired, without
providing defamatory reasons for the firing, is not defamatory. “An
employee may be discharged for any one of a multitude of reasons
unrelated to his honesty, integrity or occupational skill, or indeed for no
reason at all. . . . [I]t is the reason for discharge rather than the
discharge alone which can render the statement slanderous per se.”
Picard v. Brennan, 307 A.2d 833, 835 (Me. 1973). Since the statement
provides no reason for Mr. Fink’s removal from Pan Am, it does not bear
a defamatory meaning under Maine law.
Id. at 16.
The Plaintiffs nonetheless reasserted this claim in their Amended Complaint
under the apparent theory that the following two sentences, which were not included
in their original Complaint, cast it in a different light:
If Fink pere has definitely left, then perhaps, as one source said, ‘The
holy wars, such as those against Peter Leisham, will cease.’ Others
thought that young Fink might have more freedom either to spend more
money on railroading, or put the existing money into different [and one
would hope more productive] places.
Am. Compl. ¶ 39; see also Compl. ¶ 12.
31
The Plaintiffs continue to press the claim in the face of the Defendants’ motion
for summary judgment. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 39-46; PSMF ¶¶ 34-51. They contend that
Picard v. Brennan does not apply, because, read in context, the article claims that
Fink was removed for specific reasons—because he was a bad manager who misused
company resources. Am. Compl. ¶ 40; Pls.’ Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 5-8 (ECF
No. 69).
This claim was a pretty mealy apple when the Court first dismissed it, and it
has not aged well with further discovery. Only by torturing the full text of the article
beyond recognition can it be read to assert that Fink was removed for any particular
reason that could give rise to defamation liability. The Plaintiffs are therefore entitled
to summary judgment as to this claim as well.
II.
Count II: False Light
The Plaintiffs allege that the statements discussed above invade Fink’s privacy
by portraying him in a false light. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 54-57.
Maine common law provides that:
One who gives publicity to a matter concerning another that places the
other before the public in a false light is subject to liability to the other
for invasion of his privacy, if (a) the false light in which the other was
placed would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, and (b) the actor
had knowledge of or acted in reckless disregard as to the falsity of the
publicized matter and the false light in which the other would be placed.
Cole v. Chandler, 752 A.2d 1189, 1197 (Me. 2000) (citing Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 652E (1977). A false light cause of action lies only when “there is such a major
misrepresentation of [the plaintiff’s] character, history, activities or beliefs that
32
serious offense may reasonably be expected to be taken by a reasonable man in his
position.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652E cmt. c (1977).
The only statement identified by the Plaintiffs that discusses Fink in a
personal capacity is the March 21, 2011 article about his departure from Pan Am. For
the same reason that none of the statements in that article are capable of conveying
a defamatory meaning, none of them are capable of an interpretation that would be
highly offensive to a reasonable person. See Veilleux, 206 F.3d at 134-35.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Court GRANTS the Defendants’ motion as
to all the Plaintiffs’ claims.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ Nancy Torresen
United States District Judge
Dated this 30th day of September, 2014.
33
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?