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            Title Tucker v. Fischbein

 

            Date 2001

            By Alito

            Subject Misc

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





92 of 238 DOCUMENTS


C. DELORES TUCKER; WILLIAM TUCKER, her husband v. RICHARD FISCHBEIN; BELINDA LUSCOMBE; NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE; JOHNNIE L. ROBERTS; TIME INC.; C. Delores Tucker; William Tucker, Appellants


No. 99-1139


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



237 F.3d 275; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265; 29 Media L. Rep. 1161


October 1, 1999, Argued

January 9, 2001, Filed


SUBSEQUENT HISTORY:   **1    Certiorari  Denied

October 1,  2001,  Reported at:  2001 U.S. LEXIS 5521;

2001 U.S. LEXIS 5520. Writ of certiorari denied Tucker v. Fischbein, 534 U.S. 815, 151 L. Ed. 2d 15, 122 S. Ct.

42, 2001 U.S. LEXIS 5520 (2001)

Writ  of  certiorari  denied  Fischbein  v.  Tucker,  534  U.S.

816, 151 L. Ed. 2d 15, 122 S. Ct. 43, 2001 U.S. LEXIS

5521 (2001)

Summary judgment granted by Tucker v. Fischbein, 2005

U.S. Dist. LEXIS 410 (E.D. Pa., Jan. 11, 2005)


PRIOR  HISTORY:  APPEAL  FROM  THE  UNITED STATES  DISTRICT  COURT  FOR  THE  EASTERN DISTRICT  OF  PENNSYLVANIA.  (D.C.  No.  97-cv--

06150). District Judge: Honorable Ronald L. Buckwalter. Tucker v. Fischbein, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1781 (E.D. Pa., Feb. 9, 1999)


DISPOSITION: Affirmed the District Court's grant of summary  judgment  as  to  Time  and  Newsweek,  but  re- versed  in  part  as  to  Fischbein.  Affirmed  the  District Court's denial of the Tuckers' motion to compel the de- position of the in-house counsel at Time and Newsweek Case  remanded  in  part  for  proceedings  consistent  with this opinion.


CASE SUMMARY:



PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment entered in the United States District Court for  the  Eastern  District  of  Pennsylvania  for  defendants after defendants filed motions for summary judgment in an action for defamation of character.


OVERVIEW:   Plaintiff   was   a   well-known   crusader against "gangsta-rap" lyrics. In 1995, a record company sued her for inducing a breach of contract. That suit was dropped. Plaintiff and her husband then filed suit alleging


that lyrics by a deceased rapper had attacked her using sexually explicit messages. This spawned numerous arti- cles that focused on plaintiffs' loss of consortium claim. Plaintiffs  next  filed  a  suit  for  defamation.  Defendants' summary judgment motions were granted. Judgment was reversed insofar as it dismissed the claim against defen- dant attorney as to statements made to defendant reporter. A reasonable jury could find that defendant attorney had actual knowledge that plaintiffs were not seeking to re- cover damage to their sexual relationship. Judgment was affirmed  as  to  defendants  magazine  reporter  and  mag- azine,  since there was not sufficient evidence of actual malice to survive summary judgment. Judgment was af- firmed for defendants corporation and reporter, since there was no merit in the claim that those parties acted with ac- tual  malice.  However,  there  was  sufficient  evidence  of falsity to go to the jury. Plaintiffs' motions to depose in- house counsel were properly denied.


OUTCOME: The grant of summary judgment was af- firmed in part and reversed in part. The appellate court affirmed  the  lower  court's  grant  of  summary  judgment as  to  defendant  company  and  defendant  magazine,  but reversed in part as to defendant attorney. The appellate court also affirmed the lower court's denial of plaintiffs' motion to compel the deposition of in-house counsel for two of the defendants.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes


Torts > Damages > Consortium Damages

HN1  Loss of consortium means loss by one spouse of whatever  of  aid,  assistance,  comfort,  and  society  one spouse would be expected to render or to bestow upon the other.


Torts > Damages > Consortium Damages

HN2  Loss of consortium includes, but is not limited to, impairment of capacity for sexual intercourse.


237 F.3d 275, *; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **1;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 2


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN3   Although  a  defamation  suit  has  profound  U.S. Const. amend. I implications, it is fundamentally a state cause of action.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN4  In an appeal,  a court of appeals' first duty (in a defamation action) is to resolve a question of state law, i.e., whether the plaintiffs adduced sufficient evidence to show that the statements in question were defamatory un- der Pennsylvania law. If the plaintiffs satisfy that burden, the appellate court must then determine if the U.S. Const. amend. I precludes recovery.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN5   Under  Pennsylvania  law,  a  defamation  plaintiff bears the burden to show: (1) the defamatory character of the communication, (2) its publication by the defendant,

(3) its application to the plaintiff, (4) the understanding by the recipient of its defamatory meaning, and (5) the understanding by the recipient of it as intended to be ap- plied to the plaintiff. 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8343(a)

(1998). Under Pennsylvania law, the court must decide at the outset whether a statement is capable of defamatory meaning.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN6  If the court determines that a statement is capa- ble of a defamatory meaning, the jury must then decide whether the recipient actually understood the statement to be defamatory.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN7  A statement is defamatory 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.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN8  A court must examine the meaning of an allegedly defamatory statement in context,  and must evaluate the effect  it  is  fairly  calculated  to  produce,  the  impression it would naturally engender, in the minds of the average persons among whom it is intended to circulate. While it is not enough that a statement is embarrassing or an- noying, a court should not dismiss a complaint unless it is clear that the publication is incapable of a defamatory meaning.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions


HN9   When  a  public  official  or  public  figure  sues  for defamation, the U.S. Const. amend. I demands that the plaintiff prove both that the statement was false and that it was made with "actual malice."


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN10  Actual malice (for purposes of a defamation ac- tion)  means  knowledge  that  the  statement  was  false  or reckless disregard of whether it was false or not. A public figure must adduce sufficient evidence to permit the con- clusion that the defendant entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN11  A court ruling on a motion for summary judgment must be guided by the "clear and convincing" evidentiary standard in determining whether a genuine issue of actual malice exists (in a defamation action) -- that is, whether the evidence presented is such that a reasonable jury might find that actual malice has been shown with convincing clarity.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN12  The United States Supreme Court has made clear that  even  an  extreme  departure  from  professional  stan- dards,  without  more,  will  not  support  a  finding  of  ac- tual malice (in a defamation action). Likewise, a failure to investigate, standing alone, does not constitute actual malice.


Torts > Defamation & Invasion of Privacy > Defamation

Actions

HN13     Truth       is              an            affirmative              defense   under Pennsylvania law (in a defamation action), 42 Pa. Const. Stat. Ann. § 8343(b)(1), but the United States Supreme Court has held that a public figure must bear the burden of proving falsity.


Civil Procedure > Appeals > Standards of Review > De

Novo Review

HN14  A court of appeals exercises plenary review over a discovery order regarding claims of attorney-client priv- ilege.


Evidence > Privileges > Attorney-Client Privilege

HN15   That  reporters  regularly  consult  with  in-house counsel  to  discuss  potential  liability  for  libel  does  not thereby deprive those communications of the protection of the attorney-client privilege.


COUNSEL: Richard C. Angino, Esq. (Argued), Angino

& Rovner, Harrisburg, PA, Attorney for Appellants.


Alan J. Davis, Esq., Stephen J. Kastenberg, Esq., Ballard,


237 F.3d 275, *; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **1;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 3


Spahr,  Andrews  &  Ingersoll,  Philadelphia,  PA.  Donald N.  David,   Esq.  (Argued),   Beth  W.  Fischbein,   Esq., Fischbein, Badillo, Wagner & Harding, New York, NY, Attorneys for Appellee, Richard Fischbein.


Laura  E.  Krabill,  Esq.,  Wolf,  Block,  Schorr  &  Solis- Cohen,   Philadelphia,   PA.   Paul   G.   Gardephe,   Esq.

(Argued),  Milton  L.  Williams,  Jr.,  Time,  Inc.,  Legal

Department,  New  York,  NY,  Attorneys  for  Appellee












**3


ghetto.  Encyclopedia  Britannica,  "Gangsta  Rap"

<http://www.britannica.com/bcom/eb/article/3/0,5716,128693+1,00.html>. Prominent  gangsta  rap  groups  are  described  as

"presenting tales of gangs and violence," "offering hard-hitting  depictions  of  crack-cocaine  related crime," and featuring "a marriage of languid beats and murderous gang mentality." Id.

Belinda Luscombe and Time, Inc.


Kevin  T.  Baine,  Esq.  (Argued),  Williams  &  Connolly, Washington,   DC,   Attorney   for   Appellee   Newsweek Magazine and Johnnie **2   L. Roberts.


JUDGES:               BEFORE:                NYGAARD,           ALITO,   and ROSENN, Circuit Judges. NYGAARD, Concurring and Dissenting.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:   *279


OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


This case marks the third round of litigation between C.  Delores  Tucker,  a  former  state  official  and  a  com- munity leader, and the record companies and performers responsible for what is known as "gangsta rap." n1 Since

1993, C. Delores Tucker has crusaded against gangsta-rap lyrics, which, she asserts, "grossly malign black women, degrade  the  unthinking  young  black  artists  who  create

gansta rap , pander pornography to our innocent young children, hold black people universally up to ridicule and contempt, and corrupt its vast audience of listeners, white and  black,  throughout  the  world."  App.  at  2322.  Mrs. Tucker has taken her message to shareholder meetings of major corporations to pressure them to divest their hold- ings in record companies that produce gangsta rap;  she has also addressed Congress to urge that steps be taken to  "curb  and  control  the   *280    proliferation  of  vile, demeaning pornographic and misogynistic music." Id.


n1   "Gansta   rap"   has   been   described   as

"a   form   of   hip   hop   music   that   became   the genre's  dominant  style  in  the  1990s,  a  reflection and   product   of   the   often   violent   lifestyle   of American  inner  cities  afflicted  with  poverty  and the  dangers  of  drug  use  and  drug  dealing.  The romanticization  of  the  outlaw  at  the  centre  of much   of   gangsta   rap   appealed   to   rebellious suburbanites as well as to those who had firsthand experience   of   the   the   harsh   realities   of   the


Mrs. Tucker's efforts caught the attention of the rap industry, and in August 1995, Interscope Records, Inc., filed suit against her in the United States District Court for the Central District of California (Tucker I), alleging that she had induced a breach of contract between Death Row Records, Inc., and Interscope. Interscope and Death Row voluntarily withdrew that suit. Then, in July 1997, Mrs. Tucker and  her  husband,  William  Tucker,  filed  a  com- plaint in the United States District Court for the Eastern District  of  Pennsylvania  (Tucker  II),  alleging  that  the lyrics in two songs by deceased rapper Tupac Shakur on an album called All Eyez On Me had attacked Mrs. Tucker using "sexually explicit messages, offensively coarse lan- guage  and  lewd  and  indecent  words"  and  that  she  had received death threats because of her activities. Named as defendants were Shakur's estate;  Interscope, which had produced Shakur's album; and four other companies, in- cluding Time-Warner, Inc., which allegedly maintained a financial interest in Interscope. Asserting claims for inten- tional infliction of emotional distress, slander, and inva- sion of privacy, Mrs. Tucker sought damages for medical expenses and **4    mental injury. In paragraph 50, the Complaint alleged that her "husband, William Tucker has as a result of his wife's injuries, suffered a loss of advice, companionship and consortium." Tucker II Compl. P 50

(emphasis added), App. at 23. HN1  Loss of consortium means loss by one spouse of "whatever of aid, assistance, comfort, and society one spouse  would be expected to render or to bestow upon the other ." Hopkins v. Blanco,

224 Pa. Super. 116, 302 A.2d 855, 856 (Pa. Super. 1973), aff'd, 457 Pa. 90, 320 A.2d 139 (Pa. 1974). HN2  Loss of consortium includes, but is not limited to, "impairment of capacity for sexual intercourse." Restatement (Second) of Torts § 693(1) (1977); see also W. Page Keeton, Prosser and Keeton on Torts 931 (5th ed. 1984).


The filing of the Tuckers' lawsuit spawned numerous articles that focused on the "loss of consortium" claim. Among them was an article printed by the Philadelphia Daily News on August 2, 1997, in which the lawyer rep- resenting Shakur's estate, Richard Fischbein, was quoted as saying: "It is hard for me to conceive how these lyrics could destroy her sex life . . . but we can only wait for the  proof  to  be  revealed  in   **5    court."  App.  at  30. Following the Philadelphia Daily News article, wire and


237 F.3d 275, *280; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **5;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 4


news services throughout the country picked up the story, and many of them quoted or paraphrased Fischbein's com- ment interpreting the Tuckers' claim as seeking compen- sation for damage to their sex life.


On  August  20,  1997,  Newsweek  reporter  Johnnie L. Roberts telephoned the Tuckers' attorney, Richard C. Angino, regarding an upcoming Newsweek story about the lawsuit. According to Angino, he informed Roberts that, although loss of consortium could mean loss of sex in some cases, it did not mean that in this case. See App. at 645. Roberts disputes Angino's account of this conver- sation.


On August 26, 1997, Roberts interviewed Fischbein in connection with the story. Roberts's notes show that Fischbein told him that one of the claims in the Tuckers' complaint involved interference with sexual relations. In addition to speaking with Fischbein and Angino, Roberts read the complaint and looked up the definition of con- sortium before writing his article. On September 1, 1997, Newsweek printed an article written by Roberts and enti- tled "Grabbing at a Dead Star." The article stated: "Even C.  Delores  Tucker,  the  gangsta   **6     rap  foe,  wants a  chunk   of  Tupac  Shakur's  estate .  She  and  her  hus- band claim that a lyrical attack by Tupac iced their sex life." App. at 90. Although the article did not mention the conversation between Roberts and Angino, it did quote Fischbein  as  commenting  as  follows  regarding   *281  the loss-of--consortium claim:  "I can't wait to hear the testimony on that subject." Id.


The  next  day,  the  Tuckers  filed  an  amended  com- plaint  in  Tucker  II  (the  "First  Amended  Complaint"), which  included  an  additional  claim  against  Fischbein for  making  "false  and  misleading  statements  regarding the  claim  herein,  through  published  statements  that  C. Delores  Tucker  filed  suit  because  of  a  'loss  of  her  sex life.' " App. at 1711. The amended complaint was served on Fischbein and the other defendants, including Time- Warner, Inc.


On September 12, after he was served with the First Amended  Complaint,  Fischbein  gave  an  interview  to Time reporter Belinda Luscombe concerning the Tuckers' case. Luscombe stated in deposition that Fischbein had told  her  that  "this  was  a  lawsuit  about  emotional  dis- tress and one of the things affected were sic  her sex- ual  relationship  with  her  husband."  See  App.  at  2197. Time printed **7   Luscombe's article, entitled "Shakur Booty," on September 15, 1997. See App. at 34. Although the article did not quote Fischbein, Luscombe admitted in her deposition that she based the article solely on her interview with Fischbein and on other articles,  most of which appear to be derived from Fischbein's initial com- ments to the press in early August.


On October 1, 1997, the Tuckers filed the complaint that is the subject of this action (Tucker III). The com- plaint  alleges  that  Fischbein,  Time,  Inc.  ("Time"),  and Newsweek, Inc. ("Newsweek") defamed the Tuckers by characterizing their loss of consortium claim in Tucker II as a claim for loss of sexual relations. Specifically, the Tuckers maintain that Mrs. Tucker's reputation as a moral leader  was  compromised  when  Time  and  Newsweek printed Fischbein's characterization of her suit as one to recover for the lyrics' effect on her sex life.


Time, Newsweek, and Fischbein each moved for sum- mary judgment, and the District Court granted their mo- tions, holding that the statements in question were not ca- pable of a defamatory meaning and, alternatively, that the Tuckers, who conceded that they were "public figures," could  not  adequately  prove   **8    that  the  defendants acted with "actual malice." Although the defendants had also contended that the Tuckers could not prove that the statements were false, the Court made no explicit holding on that question. This appeal followed.


I.


HN3  "Although a defamation suit has profound First Amendment implications, it is fundamentally a state cause of action." McDowell v. Paiewonsky, 769 F.2d 942, 945

(3d Cir. 1985). HN4  In this appeal, our first duty is to resolve a question of state law, i.e., whether the Tuckers adduced sufficient evidence to show that the statements in question were defamatory under Pennsylvania law. If the plaintiffs satisfied that burden,  we must then determine if the First Amendment precludes recovery. See Steaks Unlimited,  Inc.  v.  Deaner,  623  F.2d  264,  270  (3d  Cir.

1980).


HN5  Under Pennsylvania law, a defamation plaintiff bears the burden to show:


(1) The defamatory character of the com- munication.


(2) Its publication by the defendant.


(3) Its application to the plaintiff.


(4) The understanding by the recipient of its defamatory meaning.


(5) The understanding by the recipient of it as intended to be applied to the plaintiff.


42 Pa.   **9   Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8343(a) (1998). Under Pennsylvania  law,  the  court  must  decide  at  the  outset whether a statement is capable of defamatory meaning. See Thomas Merton Ctr. v. Rockwell Int'l Corp., 497 Pa.

460, 442 A.2d 213, 215-16 (Pa. 1981). HN6  If the court determines that the statement is capable of a defamatory


237 F.3d 275, *281; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **9;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 5


meaning, the jury must then decide whether the recipient actually understood   *282    the statement to be defam- atory. See Corabi v. Curtis Publ'g Co., 441 Pa. 432, 273

A.2d 899, 904 (Pa. 1971).


HN7   A  statement  is  defamatory  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." Id. (citing Birl v. Philadelphia Elec. Co., 402 Pa. 297, 167 A.2d 472, 476

(Pa. 1960)). Accord Restatement (Second) of Torts § 559.

HN8  A court must examine the meaning of the allegedly defamatory statement in context, see Beckman v. Dunn,

276 Pa. Super. 527, 419 A.2d 583, 586 (Pa. Super. 1981), and must evaluate "the effect it  is fairly calculated to produce, the impression it would naturally engender, in the minds of the average persons among whom it **10  is intended to circulate." Corabi, 273 A.2d at 907. While it is not enough that a statement is embarrassing or an- noying, see Bogash v. Elkins, 405 Pa. 437, 176 A.2d 677,

678 (Pa. 1962), a court should not dismiss a complaint unless it is "clear that the publication is incapable of a defamatory meaning." Vitteck v. Washington Broad. Co.,

256 Pa. Super. 427, 389 A.2d 1197, 1200-01 (Pa. Super.

1978).


The statements at issue here were the following:


(1)  The  statement  in  Time's  September

22, 1997, article, "Shakur Booty," that "the prize for the most bizarre suit . . . goes to anti- rap warrior C. Delores Tucker,  who claims that  remarks  made  about  her  on  Shakur's Album All Eyez on Me caused her so much distress  that  she  and  her  husband  have  not been able to have sex. She wants $10 mil- lion." App. at 1634.


(2)            The          statement               in             Newsweek's September 1,  1997,  article,  "Grabbing at a Dead Star," that " Mrs. Tucker  and her hus- band claim that a lyrical attack by Tupac iced their sex life." App. at 90.


(3)  Fischbein's  comment,  quoted  in  an August 2, 1997, Philadelphia Daily News ar- ticle, that "it's hard for me to conceive how these lyrics could destroy **11   her sex life

. . . but we can only wait for the proof to be revealed at trial." App. at 29.


(4)  Fischbein's  August  20,  1997,  state- ment  to  Newsweek  columnist  Johnnie  L. Roberts that Mrs. Tucker was bringing suit, in part, to recover for damage to her sex life, and his statement, quoted in the Newsweek article, that "I can't wait to hear her testimony


on that subject." App. at 31.


(5)   Fischbein's   statement   to   Belinda Luscombe  of  Time  that  Tucker  II  "was brought for emotional distress and that part of that was that . . . her sexual relationship with her husband was affected." App. at 2197.


The District Court held that none of these statements could have a defamatory meaning. The Court concluded that, al- though the statements might be annoying or embarrassing, they could not support a cause of action for defamation. The  Court  stated:   "There  is  a  vast  difference  between being annoyed and/or embarrassed on the one hand, and being disgraced and ridiculed to the extent that one's rep- utation  is  harmed  and  lowered  in  the  estimation  of  the community, on the other." Dist. Ct. Op. at 6.


We  cannot  agree  with  the  District  Court's  analy- sis. Statements considerably milder than or comparable

**12      to  those  at  issue  here  have  been  held  by  the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to be capable of a defam- atory  meaning.  For  example,  in  Birl  v.  Philadelphia Elec.  Co.,  402  Pa.  297,  167  A.2d  472  (Pa.  1960),  the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that a statement that an employee quit without notice was capable of a defamatory meaning because recipients could conclude that the em- ployee lacked honor and integrity "and was not a person to be relied upon insofar as his business dealings were con- cerned." 167 A.2d at 476. In Cosgrove Studio & Camera Shop v. Pane, 408 Pa. 314, 182 A.2d 751 (Pa. 1962), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court   *283   held that an adver- tisement was capable of a defamatory meaning because it  implied  that  a competitor  had  bad business  practices and  might  lead  a  recipient  to  question  the  competitor's integrity.  182 A.2d at 754.


Reading the statements at issue in this case in context and looking at the impression that they were likely to en- gender in the minds of the average reader, we conclude that each is capable of a defamatory meaning. Mrs. Tucker has led a campaign against the immorality of gangsta rap and  those  who  profit  from  it.  The  statements  made  by the  defendants--to   **13    the  effect  that  Mrs.  Tucker and her husband brought a $10 million lawsuit because Shakur's lyrics damaged their sex life--carry numerous disparaging implications. Because of the inherent implau- sibility of the idea that lyrics alone could cause millions of  dollars  of  damage  to  a  couple's  sexual  relationship, the statements were capable of making the Tuckers look insincere,  excessively litigious,  avaricious,  and perhaps unstable. Furthermore, the statements tended to suggest that the Tuckers are hypocritical, that after condemning the gangsta rap industry for profiting from pornography, the Tuckers were only too willing to open up their own


237 F.3d 275, *283; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **13;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 6


sex  life  for  public  inspection  in  order  to  reap  a  pecu- niary gain. In the more colloquial language used by the defendants themselves, the statements suggested that the Tuckers were "grabbing at a dead star 's " "booty" and were willing to take the witness stand at trial and publicly provide the testimony about their sex lives that Fischbein

" couldn't  wait to hear." Such statements were capable of lowering the Tuckers' reputation in the eyes of the com- munity and of causing others to avoid associating with them.


It is worth noting that, not only **14   were the de- fendants'  statements  capable  of  a  defamatory  meaning, but the Tuckers adduced evidence that their reputations were  in  fact  adversely  affected.  See  42  Pa.  Cons.  Stat. Ann.  §  8343(a)(4)  (requiring  plaintiff  to  prove  that  the recipient understood the statement as defamatory). In a Philadelphia  Daily  News  article  dated  August  6,  1997, the author stated: "I also appreciate how some people felt betrayed when she filed a $10 million suit that has trivial- ized her and her movement. For a week now, even some of her most consistent supporters have been questioning her motives and snickering over the suit's allegation that her sex life has been ruined by a couple of Tupac Shakur raps." App. at 2143. An August 17, 1997, Chicago Sun- Times article noted:  "In my eyes Tucker has suffered a self-inflicted blow to her credibility. . . . Seems to me the real humiliation comes when a woman who has fought hard against gangsta rap makes the very personal and em- barrassing claim that a couple of those very songs ruined her love life." App. at 265-66.


In short, the District Court erred when it held that the defendants' statements were not capable of a defamatory meaning under Pennsylvania law.   **15   The statements had the tendency to lower the Tuckers in the estimation of the community and to deter third persons from associ- ating with them. We must therefore examine whether the First Amendment poses a bar to the Tuckers' claim.


II.


HN9   When  a  public  official  or  public  figure  sues for defamation,  the First Amendment demands that the plaintiff prove both that the statement was false and that it was made with "actual malice." Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46, 52, 99 L. Ed. 2d 41, 108 S. Ct. 876

(1988) (emphasis in original omitted);  New York Times

Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 279-80, 11 L. Ed. 2d 686,

84 S. Ct. 710 (1964); Curtis Publ'g Co. v. Butts, 388 U.S.

130, 162-65, 18 L. Ed. 2d 1094, 87 S. Ct. 1975 (1967)

(Warren, C.J., concurring) (applying the New York Times standard to public figures); U.S. Healthcare v. Blue Cross of Greater Philadelphia, 898 F.2d 914, 931 (3d Cir. 1990).

*284


A. Actual malice


Under New York Times v. Sullivan and its progeny,

HN10  actual malice means "knowledge that the state- ment  was false or . . . reckless disregard of whether it was false or not." New York Times, 376 U.S. at 279-80.

**16   A public figure must adduce "sufficient evidence to permit the conclusion that the defendant entertained se- rious doubts as to the truth of his publication." St. Amant v. Thompson,  390 U.S. 727,  731,  20 L. Ed. 2d 262,  88

S. Ct. 1323 (1967). HN11  " A  court ruling on a mo- tion for summary judgment must be guided by the New York  Times  'clear  and  convincing'  evidentiary  standard in determining whether a genuine issue of actual malice exists--that  is,  whether  the  evidence  presented  is  such that a reasonable jury might find that actual malice has been shown with convincing clarity." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, 477 U.S. 242, 257, 91 L. Ed. 2d 202, 106 S. Ct.

2505 (1986).


1. Fischbein


The  Tuckers  assert  two  grounds  for  holding  that Fischbein acted with actual malice. First, the Tuckers ar- gue that Fischbein, as a lawyer, should have known that a claim for loss of consortium may not have anything to do with damage to sexual relations. It follows, the Tuckers contend, that Fischbein was at least reckless when he told the press that Mrs. Tucker was trying to recover for injury to her sex life.


We reject this argument. A claim for loss of consor- tium  may  concern  damage  to   **17    sexual  relations and, with respect to the period prior to the service of the Tuckers' First Amended Complaint, there is no evidence that  Fischbein  was  informed  that  Mr.  Tucker's  consor- tium claim did not refer to damage to sexual relations. Nor is there evidence from which a jury could find that Fischbein entertained serious doubts about the truthful- ness  of  his  statements  at  any  time  before  the  filing  of the First Amended Complaint. Consequently, the record is insufficient to show by clear and convincing evidence that Fischbein was guilty during this period of anything more than negligence in jumping to the conclusion that Mr.  Tucker's  loss-of--consortium  claim  related,  at  least in  part,  to  sex.  See  St.  Amant,  390  U.S.  at  731;  Time, Inc. v. Pape, 401 U.S. 279, 290, 28 L. Ed. 2d 45, 91 S. Ct.  633  (1971)  ("The  deliberate  choice  of  an  interpre- tation, though arguably reflecting a misconception, was not enough to create a jury issue of 'malice' under New York Times."). The Tuckers point out that Fischbein, as the  representative  of  Shakur's  estate,  had  a  motive  for discrediting Mrs. Tucker, but circumstantial evidence of Fischbein's motive alone cannot satisfy the **18   actual malice standard.


237 F.3d 275, *284; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **18;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 7


The Tuckers' second argument regarding Fischbein, however,   does  have  merit.  As  previously  noted,   on August 27, 1997, the Tuckers filed their First Amended Complaint,  which  added  Fischbein  as  a  defendant  and sought  millions  of  dollars  in  damages.  The  basis  for adding  Fischbein  was  set  out  in  Paragraph  46,  which averred  that Fischbein had "made  false and misleading statements regarding the claim herein, through published statements that C. Delores Tucker filed suit because of a  'loss  of  her  sex  life.'"  App.  at  1711-12  (emphasis added).  It  is  undisputed  that  Fischbein  was  personally served with this complaint before his interview with Time magazine reporter Belinda Luscombe on September 12,

1997.  n2  Nevertheless,  according  to  Luscombe's  depo- sition,  Fischbein told her during this interview that the Tuckers were attempting to recover for damage to their sexual relationship.


n2 This argument does not apply to any state- ments  made  by  Fischbein  prior  to  August  27,

1997,  including  the  comments  published  by  the Philadelphia Daily News and the August 26 inter- view with Roberts of Newsweek.


**19


Based on this sequence of events, we are convinced that a reasonable jury could find by clear and convincing evidence that, at least as of the date of the service of the

*285   First Amended Complaint, Fischbein had actual knowledge that the Tuckers were not seeking to recover for  damage  to  their  sexual  relationship.  Since  the  First Amended Complaint alleged that Fischbein had defamed the Tuckers by stating that they were attempting to re- cover for damage to their sexual relations, a reasonable jury could certainly conclude that an attorney who read the complaint would understand that the Tuckers were not going to attempt to recover for such damage. (Indeed, it would be hard to interpret the First Amended Complaint any other way.)  Fischbein states that he did not read the First Amended Complaint before speaking to Luscombe, but a reasonable jury could believe that a person who is added as a defendant in a multi-million dollar lawsuit is very likely to read the complaint shortly after receiving it in order to see why he or she has been sued. A reason- able jury could disbelieve Fischbein's story and find by clear and convincing evidence that Fischbein did read the First Amended Complaint before **20    the interview. W e must therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court insofar as it dismissed the Tuckers' claim against Fischbein with regard to the statements to Luscombe.


The  dissent  disagrees  with  our  conclusion  on  this point  because,  in  the  dissent's  view,  "the  language  of the Amended Complaint, in the context of the Tuckers'


previous statements and actions, was insufficient to indi- cate a change in their attitude toward alleging a loss of sexual relations." Dissent at 24. But even if we agreed with  the dissent's  characterization  of  the Tuckers' prior statements, n3 the following stark facts remain:  (a) the Amended Complaint added Fischbein as a defendant and was  served  upon him;  (b) the  Amended  Complaint  as- serted that Fischbein had defamed the Tuckers by stating that"  C.  Delores  Tucker  filed  suit  because  of  a 'loss  of her sex life' " (App. at 1711-12);  and (c) the Amended Complaint sought millions of dollars in damages. Surely a reasonable jury could find, by clear and convincing ev- idence, that Fischbein knew, after reading the Amended Complaint,  that,  whether or not the Tuckers had previ- ously been seeking to recover for damage to their sexual relationship, they were no **21   longer doing so. n4


n3 The dissent seems at times to make findings of fact. For example,  the dissent opines that "the statements made by the Tuckers and their attorney were deliberately cagey and equivocal so that they could,  if  they  wished,  introduce  evidence  of  im- potence and sexual disfunction at trial." Dissent at

22. This amounts to a finding of fact regarding the intent of the Tuckers and their attorney, and it is the province of the trier of fact, to make such a finding. n4  The  dissent  "finds  it  ironic  that   we   be- lieve  there could be actual malice in a statement so similar to the following statement  attributed to Mr. Tucker in The Philadelphia Tribune" (Dissent

at 27):


Pointedly  asked  how  the  lyrics could   affect   his   sex   life,   he   said,

"That's  just  a  brief  reference   in  the lawsuit  -- a small part of it. We have to represent the situation as accurately as we can and the only way to experi- ence it is to have it happen to you."


App. at 1631 (brackets in original).


At most,  however,  this statement may show Mr . Tucker's intent at the time of the article, in August

1997. It hardly  establishes  that the Tuckers were seeking to recover for damage to their sexual rela- tions after they later filed the Amended Complaint.


Moreover, the dissent's interpretation of the state- ment attributed to Mr. Tucker in the article, while certainly  reasonable,  is  not  compelled.  Without knowing the exact question posed by the reporter

(and the question is merely paraphrased in the ar- ticle), it is not possible to rule out the possibility


237 F.3d 275, *285; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **21;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 8


that Mr. Tucker was simply referring to his claim for loss of consortium, which need not necessarily have pertained to sex. In other words, he may have said that the loss of consortium claim was "just a brief reference in the lawsuit --a small part of it." If evidence of this statement is admitted at trial, it will be for the trier of fact to interpret it.


**22


2. Roberts and Newsweek


The Tuckers' case against Roberts and Newsweek in- cludes some evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer actual malice, but not the clear and convincing ev- idence  needed  to  survive  summary   *286    judgment. Accordingly, we must affirm the District Court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Roberts and Newsweek. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Tuckers, their attorney,  Richard C. Angino,  spoke with Roberts  on  August  20,  1997,  six  days  before  Roberts wrote "Grabbing at a Dead Star." According to Angino, he told Roberts in the course of this phone call that "con- sortium can mean, in some cases, sex. I said most of the time it doesn't and it doesn't in this case." Angino Dep., App. at 636.


Other  statements  in  Angino's  deposition  severely weaken the Tuckers' position, however, and make it im- possible for them to satisfy the clear and convincing stan- dard. For instance,  when asked exactly what he said to put Roberts on notice that the Tuckers' claim did not in- volve impairment of sexual relations, Angino replied:  "I said only in the rarest of cases would you have a count that  actually  involves  sex.  I'm  under  oath,  so  I  cannot say to you that **23   I said specifically, this case does not involve sex ." App. at 431 (emphasis added). Actual malice requires a plaintiff to establish that the defendant had a subjective belief that the statement was false when made, and Angino's equivocation about the exact words he used defeats any hope the Tuckers might have of prov- ing actual malice on the part of Roberts or Newsweek by clear and convincing evidence. Therefore, we affirm the District Court's entry of summary judgment in favor of those parties.


3. Luscombe and Time


The Tuckers set forth 24 theories under which, they assert, it could be found that Belinda Luscombe and Time acted with actual malice in connection with the "Shakur Booty"  article  of  September  15,  1997.  Many  of  these theories are grounded on allegations of poor journalistic practices--e.g., that Luscombe had a preconceived story- line; that she did not follow Time's editorial guidelines; that she failed to conduct a thorough investigation;  and


that she copied from other stories but changed their lan- guage without a factual basis. As the District Court found, these theories of actual malice are without support in the case law. While we will discuss only a few of these the- ories   **24    below,  we  have  carefully  considered  and rejected all of them.


HN12  The Supreme Court has made clear that even an extreme departure from professional standards, with- out more, will not support a finding of actual malice. See Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton, 491

U.S. 657, 665, 105 L. Ed. 2d 562, 109 S. Ct. 2678 (1989). Likewise, a failure to investigate, standing alone, does not constitute actual malice. See St. Anant v. Thompson, 390

U.S. at 730-31; Marcone v. Penthouse Int'l Magazine for

Men, 754 F.2d 1072, 1089 (3d Cir. 1985).


The Tuckers assert that Luscombe avoided the truth by relying on biased sources while ignoring the Tuckers' news   release,   which   explained   the   import   of   their Complaint.  Although  the  Supreme  Court  has  held  that purposeful  avoidance  of  the  truth  may  support  a  claim of actual malice, the evidence here falls short. In Harte- Hanks, the Court held that there was sufficient evidence of actual malice where, among other things, a reporter failed to interview a key witness to events being reported in a story, and the circumstances suggested that this was done for fear that the witnesses' statement might contradict the

**25    story the paper was committed to running. See

491 U.S. at 682-83. Likewise, in Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts, 388 U.S. 130, 18 L. Ed. 2d 1094, 87 S. Ct. 1975

(1967), the Court found actual malice when the Saturday Evening Post failed to make adequate investigative efforts in the face of notification that the report they were about to print was false.  388 U.S. at 169-70. The element present in  Harte-Hanks  and  Butts  but  lacking  here  is  evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer that Luscombe doubted  the  veracity   *287    of  her  story.  See  Harte- Hanks, 491 U.S. at 692.


The  Tuckers  assert  that  the  service  of  the  First Amended  Complaint  on  Time-Warner,  Inc.,  the  parent corporation of Time, Inc., which publishes Time maga- zine and employs Luscombe, should have put Luscombe on notice that the Tuckers did not seek recovery for in- jury to their sex life. This argument is far-fetched. Time- Warner, Inc., a huge media and entertainment conglom- erate, was served because it was one of the original de- fendants  due  to  its  alleged  connection  with  Interscope Records. There is no evidence that Luscombe or anyone else actually involved with the "Shakur Booty"   **26  article was given or read the First Amended Complaint, and unlike Fischbein, neither Luscombe nor anyone else employed  by  Time  magazine  was  named  as  a  defen- dant in that complaint. The Tuckers have simply adduced


237 F.3d 275, *287; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **26;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 9


no  evidence  (let  alone  clear  and  convincing  evidence) that Luscombe or anyone else involved with the "Shakur Booty" article was aware that the Tuckers did not intend to include injury to their sex life as a component of the loss of consortium claim.


We  likewise  see  no  merit  in  the  Tuckers'  argument that Luscombe and Time acted with actual malice because they copied other stories but then changed their language without a factual basis. Although the circumstances under which an article is changed may sometimes be enough to show  actual  malice,  the  present  case  does  not  fall into that category. This case is readily distinguishable from St. Surin v. Virgin Islands Daily News, Inc., 21 F.3d 1309 (3d Cir. 1994). In St. Surin, a newspaper reporter interviewed an Assistant United States Attorney who confirmed that St. Surin was being investigated but refused to comment on whether charges would be brought. An editor, however,

"changed it to read that the government expected **27  to file charges against St. Surin the following week." Id. at 1318. We held that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to St. Surin, showed that the editor was aware of facts showing that her changes to the article in question made it false. See id.


In  this  case,  there  is  no  comparable  evidence.  The

"Shakur Booty" article was clearly derived in large part from previously published articles and did not change the import of those articles in any material way. Moreover, as discussed above, there is no evidence here from which a reasonable jury could find that Luscombe was on notice that the facts related in her story were false. Accordingly, we affirm the District Court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Time and Luscombe.


B.


Although the District Court based its judgment only on  defamatory  meaning  and  actual  malice,  it  stated:

"Counsel for all defendants have made various other ar- guments, not the least of which is that the statements were true. By not commenting on them, I have not necessarily rejected them." Dist. Ct. Op. at 13. On appeal, the defen- dants argue that the decision of the District Court may be affirmed on the alternative ground that the Tuckers **28  have not adduced sufficient evidence that any of the chal- lenged statements were false when made. Although we may affirm a decision on an alternative ground, see, e.g., Erie Telecomms., Inc. v. City of Erie, 853 F.2d 1084, 1089 n.10 (3d Cir. 1988), we decline to do so here.


HN13    Truth   is   an   affirmative   defense   under

Pennsylvania   law,   see   42   Pa.   Const.   Stat.   Ann.   §

8343(b)(1),  but  the  United  States  Supreme  Court  has held that a public figure must bear the burden of prov- ing falsity. See Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,


475  U.S.  767,  776,  89  L.  Ed.  2d  783,  106  S.  Ct.  1558

(1985)  (holding  that  "the  common  law's  rule  of  fal- sity--that the defendant must bear the burden or proving truth--must similarly fall here to a constitutional require- ment  that  the  plaintiff  bear  the  burden  of  showing  fal- sity"); see also Steaks Unlimited,   *288   Inc. v. Deaner,

623 F.2d 264,  274 n.49 (3d Cir. 1980) (suggesting that Pennsylvania's  practice  of  placing  the  burden  of  prov- ing truth on the defendant is probably unconstitutional); Dunlap v. Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc., 301 Pa. Super.

475, 448 A.2d 6, 13-14 (Pa. Super. 1982) (same). Thus, even though Fischbein's **29   comments to Luscombe are capable of a defamatory meaning,  and even though he may have uttered them with actual malice, Fischbein cannot be held liable unless the Tuckers can prove that the comments were false.


We conclude that the Tuckers have pointed to proof that is sufficient to show, either by a preponderance or by clear and convincing evidence, n5 that Fischbein's state- ments to Luscombe after the filing of the First Amended Complaint were false. n6 The First Amended Complaint alleged that Fischbein had defamed the Tuckers when he said that they were trying to recover for damage to their sexual relations. In light of that allegation, it seems clear-- and a reasonable jury could certainly find--that the First Amended  Complaint  itself  did  not  seek  to  recover  for such damage. (Surely a reasonable jury could find that, if the Tuckers' case had gone to trial under the Amended Complaint, the Tuckers did not intend to seek to recover both on the theory that Mr. Tucker suffered a loss of con- sortium  and  that  Fischbein  defamed  them  by  asserting that they intended to recover for a loss of consortium.) Fischbein, however, supposedly told Luscombe that "this was a lawsuit about emotional distress **30   and one of things affected were sic  her sexual relationship with her husband." App. 2197. We hold that there was sufficient evidence of falsity to go to the jury.


n5 The Supreme Court has explicitly declined to decide whether the plaintiff must prove falsity by a preponderance of the evidence or by clear and convincing evidence. See Harte-Hanks, 491 U.S. at

661 n.2 (declining to resolve the issue, but acknowl- edging disagreement among the circuits). Compare Firestone v. Time, Inc., 460 F.2d 712, 722-23 (5th Cir.  1972)  (Bell,  C.J.,  concurring)  (arguing  for  a clear and convincing standard) with Goldwater v. Ginzburg, 414 F.2d 324, 341 (2nd Cir. 1969) (sug- gesting a preponderance of the evidence standard) and Rattray v. National City, 51 F.3d 793, 801 (9th Cir. 1995) (adopting Goldwater).


n6 Because we have held that there is not suf- ficient  evidence  that  Fischbein  acted  with  actual


237 F.3d 275, *288; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **30;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 10


malice prior to that date, we need not and do not decide whether there was enough evidence to show that the statements he made during that period were false.


**31  III.


Finally, we hold that the District Court correctly de- nied the Tuckers' motions to depose in-house counsel at Time and Newsweek. HN14  This Court exercises ple- nary review over a discovery order regarding claims of attorney-client privilege. See Livingstone v. North Belle Vernon Borough,  91 F.3d 515,  524 (3d Cir. 1996). The communications  with  in-house  counsel  involved  here were  clearly  for  the  purpose  of  rendering  legal  advice and therefore are privileged. The Tuckers argue that the privilege was waived because in-house counsel reviewed stories  "in  the  regular  course  of  business."  This  argu- ment is frivolous. HN15  That reporters regularly con- sult with in-house counsel to discuss potential liability for libel does not thereby deprive those communications of the protection of the attorney-client privilege. See, e.g., Upjohn Co. v. United States,  449 U.S. 383,  394,  66 L. Ed. 2d 584, 101 S. Ct. 677 (1981) (holding that commu- nications between corporate counsel and a corporation's employees made for the purpose of rendering legal advice are  protected  by  the  attorney-client  privilege);  Liberty Lobby,  Inc.  v.  Dow  Jones  &  Co.,  267  U.S.  App.  D.C.

337, 838 F.2d 1287, 1302 (D.C. Cir. 1988) **32   ("Pre- publication  discussions  between  libel  counsel  and  edi- tors or reporters would seem to come squarely within the scope of the privilege as defined in Upjohn.").


IV.


In sum, we affirm the District Court's grant of sum- mary judgment as to Time   *289    and Newsweek, but reverse in part as to Fischbein. We also affirm the District Court's denial of the Tuckers' motion to compel the de- position of the in-house counsel at Time and Newsweek

. The case is remanded in part for proceedings consistent with this opinion.


CONCURBY: NYGAARD


DISSENTBY: NYGAARD


DISSENT: NYGAARD, Concurring and Dissenting.


I  agree  with  much  of  what  the  Majority  says  in  its well-reasoned opinion for the court. I disagree, however, with  its  conclusion  with  respect  to  defendant  Richard Fischbein and therefore respectfully dissent. I conclude that  the  District  Court  did  not  err;  that  a  reasonable


jury could not find that Fischbein acted with actual mal- ice  when  speaking  to  Time  magazine  reporter  Belinda Luscombe;  and,  that  summary  judgment  should  be  af- firmed in its entirety.


I begin with the Majority's conclusion that "prior to the service of the Tucker's first Amended Complaint, there is no evidence that Fischbein was informed that **33  Mr. Tucker's consortium claim did not refer to damages to sexual relations." I agree, but I believe that the Majority dramatically understates the point. There is a substantial amount of uncontradicted evidence suggesting that, prior to the filing of their Amended Complaint, the Tuckers did intend to include sexual damages within their loss of con- sortium claim. For clarity, I will summarize this evidence in list form below:


I.  In  his  deposition,  the  Tuckers'  attorney, Mr.  Angino,  stipulated  that  at  the  time  the suit was commenced, the original complaint itself provided no indication that a claim for interference with sexual relations was not be- ing  pursued,  and  that  someone  reading  the Tuckers' complaint might assume that it al- leged damage to sexual relations. (App. 566-

70). In my opinion, unless otherwise stated, it is axiomatic that a loss of consortium claim includes a claim for loss of sexual relations.


II. Mr. Angino also admitted in his deposition that when the suit was initiated, he was not sure whether the Tuckers sought recovery for damage to their sexual relations. (App. 576). He  stated  that  "the  purpose  of  the  consor- tium count was to cover everything . . . every

**34    way  in  which  Mr.  Tucker  was  af- fected, every way." (App. 575). The record does not contain any facts to the contrary.


III.  The  Tuckers  themselves  have  failed  to state,  either  in  their  depositions  or  in  affi- davits,  that they had ruled out any facet of their consortium claim at the time they orig- inally filed it.


IV.  The  report  of  Dr.  Harold  Mignott,  Mr. Tucker's physician,  reveals that Mr. Tucker had "a significant amount of difficulty with impotence" at the same time that he suffered a

"significant amount of stress" resulting from the "harassment" and "investigation" of both himself and his wife. The report was dated approximately one month before the Tuckers filed their claim for loss of consortium. (App.


237 F.3d 275, *289; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **34;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 11


583).


V.  On  July  31,  1997,  the  Tuckers issued  a news release about the Tucker II lawsuit. n7

Nothing  in  the  press   *290    release  dis- claimed damages for interference with sex- ual relations. (App. 2072-73).

A

VI. After observing the media's reaction to the  consortium  claim,  Mr.  Tucker  had  the opportunity  in  at  least  three  separate  inter- views to clarify that he and his wife were not seeking compensation for injury to their sex- ual relations. Instead, Mr. Tucker confirmed in all **35    three interviews that interfer- ence with sexual relations was indeed an ele- ment of their claims. (App. 1630-31; 2142-

43; 2145).


VII.  On  August  13,  1997,  in  an  interview with Philadelphia Weekly,  Mr. Angino had a similar opportunity to clearly state for the public record that the Tuckers were forego- ing any claims stemming from interference with sexual relations. However, Mr. Angino failed  to  do  so.  Instead,  he  stated  that  loss of consortium "is a standard addition to law- suits of this type and refers to all aspects of the marital relationship, not necessarily sex."

(App. 2148-49) (my emphasis).


VIII. On August 21, 1997, the Tuckers issued yet another press release. It again failed to disavow any claim arising out of Mr. Tucker's impotency  or  injury  to  the  Tuckers'  sexual relationship.  Instead,  the  release  confirmed the existence of such a claim and expressed the Tuckers' frustration that too much of the media's  attention  was  focused  on  that  as- pect of the case:  " 'All the media gleefully jumped on the so-called sex part in the suit that  called  attention  to  loss  of  consortium, which was put in there by my husband Bill, not by me,' Mrs. Tucker  added, obviously nettled." (App.   **36   464).


IX. The Tuckers have admitted that neither they,  nor  Mr.  Angino,  nor  anyone  on  their behalf, ever called Fischbein, at any time, to correct his misunderstanding of the Tuckers' loss of consortium claim. (App. 571, 1968).


The Tuckers have failed to provide any evidence, other than the language in their Amended Complaint, to suggest


that they did not intend to claim loss of sexual relations. Instead, it is obvious to me that the statements made by the  Tuckers  and  their  attorney  were  deliberately  cagey and equivocal so that they could,  if they wished,  intro- duce  evidence  of  impotence  and  sexual  dysfunction  at trial. n8


n7 The complaint in Tucker II is itself a confus- ing farrago of missteps and errors. Appellants' at- torney never discussed the loss of consortium claim with the Tuckers. (App. 518). The complaint was drafted by a law student. It misrepresented one song by  taking  "snippets  of  words  from  actual  lyrics, words that are separated by many, many verses and running them together as if they are a continuous statement," creating what appellants' attorney now admits was "a gross and deliberate misrepresenta- tion." (App. 534). The appellant's attorney neither listened to nor read the lyrics of the song that he alleges was defamatory. He never conducted a fact check of any of the critical allegations in the com- plaint. Indeed, he did not even sign it, nor is it clear from the record that he even read the final draft. His wife (who is not an attorney) signed it for him.

**37



n8  Another  way  of  approaching  this  issue  is to  ask  whether  at  trial,  given  the  general  loss  of consortium that the Tuckers originally alleged,  it would have been proper for the District Court to al- low introduction of evidence of Mr. Tucker's sexual dysfunction. The answer clearly is yes.



In  spite  of  substantial  evidence  to  the  contrary,  the Tuckers still claim that all of Fischbein's statements were made with actual malice; that is, with the "knowledge that

they were  false or with reckless disregard of whether

they were  false or not." New York Times v. Sullivan, 376

U.S. at 279-80. According to the Majority, the Tuckers present two independent arguments in support of their po- sition. Although I remain unconvinced that they clearly articulate  even  one,  I  will,  for  the  sake  of  discussion, address both arguments in turn.


First, the Tuckers seem to suggest that Fischbein's le- gal training put him on notice that loss of consortium does not always imply harm to sexual relations. According to their brief:


Fischbein,  who is a lawyer who knows the definition  of  consortium,   **38          knew  at the  time  that  he  talked to  the  Los  Angeles Times  and  the  Philadelphia  News  and  all


237 F.3d 275, *290; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **38;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 12


of the other newspapers,  including   *291  Time and Newsweek,  that Mrs. Tucker did not claim in the Tucker I complaint that her sex life had been destroyed by the lewd lyrics of Tupac Shakur . . . Certainly a jury could find that Mr. Fischbein's uttering his sexual spin throughout this period constituted mal- ice as defined by the Supreme Court.


(Appellants'  Br.  at  46-47).  The  Majority  quickly  dis- misses  this  argument,  and  there  is  no  need  to  consider it further, except that I question the Majority's suggestion that Fischbein may have been negligent during the period prior to the filing of the Amended Complaint. Again, I emphasize that all of the evidence before the court indi- cates that the Tuckers,  at least originally,  did intend to pursue damages for loss of sexual relations. It is hard for me to imagine how Fischbein may have been negligent in any way.


Until this point, my concerns with the Majority's opin- ion have been fairly minor. I strongly disagree, however, with  its  disposition  of  the  Tuckers'  second  main  argu- ment. According to the Majority, the Amended Complaint clearly disavowed any intent **39   to pursue damages for  loss  of  sexual  relations.  As  such,  a  jury  could  find that Fischbein had read the complaint, and that his sub- sequent comments to Time magazine constituted actual malice. n9 Although I readily admit that this position is more compelling than the Tuckers' first argument, I still cannot agree. The language of the Amended Complaint, by itself, is simply insufficient to convince a reasonable jury, under a clear and convincing evidence standard, that Fischbein had actual knowledge that the Tuckers were not seeking to recover damages for loss of sexual relations


n9  I  agree  with  the  Majority  that  a  reason- able  jury  could  find,  in  light  of  the  high  stakes surrounding the law suit, that Fischbein had read the Amended Complaint prior to his interview with Time. I disagree, however, with the Majority's con- clusory statement that "it would be hard to inter- pret the First Amended Complaint any other way." In  light  of  the  Tucker's  previous  statements,  and their penchant for ambiguity, I do not believe that a reasonable jury could establish actual malice based solely upon the Tuckers' five line paragraph.


**40


Before explaining my position, I want to be absolutely clear about two points. First,  I agree with the Majority that, other than the Amended Complaint, "there is no evi- dence" that Fischbein acted with actual malice. n10 Thus, even  under  the  Majority's  decision,  the  Tuckers'  entire


claim  rests  solely  upon  the  language  in  the  Amended Complaint. As the Tuckers admit in their brief, only two paragraphs, out of the seventy-one contained in the com- plaint, address the question of sexual relations:


45. Defendant Fischbein  has continued to defame and harass plaintiff by holding her up in a false light   *292    even after the com- plaint  in  this  matter  was  filed  on  June  21,

1997.


46. Defendant Fischbein made false and mis- leading statements regarding the claim as- serted  in  the  original  complaint ,  through published statements that C. Delores Tucker filed suit because of a "loss of her sex life." The  statement  was  untrue,  and  defendant Attorney Fischbein should have known it was untrue.



(App. 1711-12). Second, the Tuckers filed the Amended Complaint on August 27, 1997. The only statements made by Fischbein after that date, and thus the only potentially actionable comments,   **41   were those to Time maga- zine reporter Belinda Luscombe. I agree with the Majority that all other comments were made without actual mal- ice.  Thus,  the  question  over  which  the  Majority  and  I disagree is a fairly narrow one, and I would characterize it in the following manner:  After all of the Tuckers' ac- tions and comments to the contrary, did the language in the Amended Complaint sufficiently clarify the parame- ters of the loss of consortium claim so that a reasonable jury could find that Fischbein's comments to Time maga- zine were made with a reckless disregard for the truth?  I strongly believe the answer is no.


n10 The Tuckers contend that they indicated, through  personal  interviews  and  statements  by their  attorney,  that  they  did  not  intend  to  allege loss  of  sexual  relations.  This  is  simply  not  sup- ported by the record. For example, in their Second Amended  Complaint,  they  claim  that  their  attor- ney told a Newsweek Reporter "unequivocally that the complaint did not allege . . . that the actions of  Defendants  related  in  the   original   complaint had anything to do with their sex life." (App. 24). Their  attorney's  signature  appears  on  this  com- plaint. During his deposition, however, Mr. Angino admitted  that,  "I  said  only  in  the  rarest  of  cases would you have a count that actually involves sex. I'm under oath, so I cannot say to you that I said specifically, this case does not involve sex." (App.

646). This is but one of many examples where The


237 F.3d 275, *292; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **41;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 13


Tuckers were vague and ambiguous in their public statements and in their declarations to this Court. The Tuckers also argue that the Webster's dictionary definition of consortium supports their case. (App.

25). I did a quick check to verify this claim. Using the  Internet  (see  www.dictionary.com,  accessible via www.websters.com), I obtained the following definition of consortium:


3. Law. The right of a spouse to the company of, help of, affection of, and sexual relations with his or her mate.


Unless this definition has changed radically in the past three years, Webster's cuts strongly against the Tuckers. In sum, none of this "evidence" is suf- ficient to persuade a reasonable jury that any of the defendants acted with actual malice in "misinter- preting" the Tuckers' claims.


**42


The language of the Amended Complaint, in the con- text of the Tuckers' previous statements and actions, was insufficient to indicate a change in their attitude toward alleging a loss of sexual relations. In spite of all the media attention, and all the harm that it supposedly caused, the complaint  failed  to  contain  a  simple,  categorical  state- ment that the Tuckers were foregoing any claim for in- terference with sexual relations. Instead, it continued to allege that Mr. Tucker had "suffered a loss of . . . consor- tium," using the very same language that was contained in the original Tucker II complaint. (App. 1713). The only addition was a short paragraph stating that Mrs. Tucker did not file the original suit because of a loss of sexual relations. It said nothing about Mr. Tucker, who had orig- inally  filed  the  loss  of  consortium  claim.  And,  as  their own  attorney  testified,  "when  you  damage  one  spouse, you  damage  the  other  spouse  in  each  and  every  way."

(App.  566).  My  conclusion  is  underscored  by  the  fact that one month later, and simultaneous with the filing of the complaint at issue in this appeal, the Tuckers filed a Second Amended Complaint to Tucker II, in which they unequivocally **43   stated, for the first time, that they were  not  seeking  damages  for  interference  with  sexual relations. This came far too late to serve as an effective form of notice to Fischbein. n11


n11 With regard to the gravamen of this Second Amended Complaint, plaintiffs' attorney responded as follows in his deposition:


Q.  And  why  did  you  feel  there was a need to have -- to file a Second Amended Complaint?


A. I couldn't believe how dense the defense were.


Q.  And  in  the  Second  Amended Complaint,  you  placed  a  dictionary definition  of  consortium;  is  that  cor- rect?


A. That was a joke. It was really a joke.


Q.  Well,  wait  a  minute,  sir.  Are you saying that you were perpetrating a joke in a Federal Court Complaint; is that what you are telling me?


A.  That's  what  I'm  telling  you.  I said if I had to actually give you a dic- tionary definition. . .


Q. So you were -- you were play- ing around a little bit in a Federal Court Complaint; is that correct?


A.  I  was  saying  look  consortium means this.


Q. So you were playing around a little bit.


A. You -- you might say that.


App. 829-30.


**44


Even if the language of the complaint did clearly com- municate the Tuckers' position, as the Majority so holds, it is not clear to me that this evidence by itself is enough to support a jury's finding of actual malice. I am deeply troubled by the fact that, in spite of intense media scrutiny and its concomitant pressures, the Tuckers never publicly clarified  the  nature  of  their  suit  or  contacted  Fischbein directly,  until  they  filed  the  complaint  in  this  case.  In

*293    short,  they  did  nothing  to  curb  public  scrutiny other than amend their original complaint to include new claims. After the numerous public comments and accu- sations by the Tuckers,  it is simply unreasonable to re- quire Fischbein to infer solely from the language of the Amended Complaint that the Tuckers had changed their position.


Finally,  even  if  the  Amended  Complaint  by  itself was  enough  to  support  a  jury  finding  of  actual  mal- ice,  I  do  not  believe  that  Fischbein's  comments  were reckless.  As  previously  discussed,  the  only  comments made subsequent to the filing of the Amended Complaint were  those  to  Time  magazine  on  September  12,  1997. According to Luscombe's uncontradicted notes and testi-


237 F.3d 275, *293; 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 265, **44;

29 Media L. Rep. 1161

Page 14


mony, Fischbein stated only that Tucker **45   II "was brought for emotional distress and that part of that was that her sexual relationship with her husband was affected."

(App. 2197). Time magazine did not quote Fischbein, and Luscombe's article relied heavily upon seven previous ar- ticles,  all  published  in  respected  sources  from  Rolling Stone to The Washington Post prior to the filing of the Amended Complaint. I find it ironic that the Majority be- lieves there could be actual malice in a statement so sim- ilar to one attributed to Mr. Tucker in The Philadelphia Tribune (my emphasis):


Pointedly asked how the lyrics could affect his sex life, he said, 'That's just a brief refer- ence in the lawsuit  -  a small part of it. We have to represent the situation as accurately as we can and the only way to experience it is to have it happen to you.'



As  previously  discussed,  in  addition  to  this  statement, there is a substantial amount of evidence that indicates that the Tuckers originally did bring their suit, at least in part, to recover for loss of sexual relations. Regardless of whether they later changed their position, a literal read- ing of Fischbein's statement to Time reveals no "reckless disregard for the truth." The **46   record demonstrates that Fischbein, at the time of his conversation with Time magazine,  (1) was not aware that the Tuckers intended to relinquish their claims for interference with sexual re- lations, and (2) even if he was, his comments were not reckless.  As  a  result,  I  conclude  that  the  Tuckers  can- not  meet  their  burden  of  demonstrating  facts  sufficient to show that Fischbein made any statements that he sus- pected were false. As such, I would affirm the grant of summary judgment in its entirety.



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