SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3448-97T1
ANA ROCCI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
ECOLE SECONDAIRE MACDONALD-
CARTIER and EDWARD TILLI,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
JAVIER MATIACCI RODRIGUEZ,
Defendant.
_________________________________________________
Submitted: February 22, 1999 - Decided: July 6, 1999
Before Judges Havey, P.G. Levy and Lesemann.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County.
Jacqueline R. Rocci, attorney for appellant.
Hoagland, Longo, Moran, Dunst & Doukas,
attorneys for respondents (Donald D. Davidson,
of counsel; Michael T. Kearns, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PAUL G. LEVY, J.A.D.
Plaintiff brought an action against defendant Edward
Tilli and his employer, defendant Ecole Secondaire Macdonald-Cartier,See footnote 1 alleging that Tilli maliciously published statements
about her that were defamatory in a letter he authored and sent to
the principal of the school where plaintiff was employed as a
teacher. Defendants moved for summary judgment, contending the
statements were not defamatory and there was no pecuniary loss, and
plaintiff cross-moved for partial summary judgement to the effect
that the statements were "libelous per se" and sought to compel
discovery. The trial judge granted defendants' motion, finding
that there was neither defamation nor damages; the cross-motions
were denied. To the extent that the trial judge decided there was
no proof of damages, we agree and affirm.
The opening paragraph of the letter sets out the thesis:
My name is Ed Tilli and I am a teacher at
Macdonald Cartier High School. This will be
my 25th year as a teacher. Over the past
years I have taken groups of students (as many
as 90 at a time) on various educational trips;
such as Washington, D.C., New York City,
Daytona Florida, Paris France, London England,
Belgium and a total of six times to Spain. In
all my years of experience as teacher and
counselor I have had to deal with very few
problems in comparison with this years Spain
experience.
As you may already know this years
adventure was a joint canadian-american school
trip. Our ten students of which eight girls
and two boys teamed up with your twenty-three
boys excluding the adults. As such, this
experience would have benefitted all students
if it were not for the unfortunate lack of
professionalism on the part of Mrs. A. Rocci.
If I may I would now like to relate to you
both ourSee footnote 2 personal experiences with her as
well as those of Javier Matiacci Rodriguez
(the E.F.Tour Guide during the Spain visit).
Tilli's letter continued for several pages, describing
plaintiff's actions on each day of the trip. The specific language
that plaintiff contends supports her claim of libel is as follows:
Thursday, April 13
As related to the Tour Guide and the students,
Mrs. Rocci had had seven bottles of wine on
the flight from J.F.K. to Amsterdam. This was
to set the tone for things to come. That very
same evening fully aware that the next day we
were to get up at 7:00 a.m. for the Madrid
guided tour, Mrs. Rocci kept her students,
with some of ours, out until 2:00 a.m. This
would make it very difficult for the students
to stay awake and remain focused that day.
Friday, April 14
On the way to Toledo, being overtired, the
students did very little listening if any at
all. ... Once again, that evening your
students were kept out until 2:30 a.m. while
being fully aware of the 7:00 a.m. wake-up
call and early departure to Segovia. ...
Monday, April 17
... In the evening your students were forced
out until 1:30 a.m. and were scheduled to get
up and leave for Tangiers, Morocco at 4:30
a.m. As usual the students were very tired
and had difficulties enjoying Tangiers.
(Information related by both students and Tour
Guide).
Plaintiff contends that the comments about her
consumption of seven bottles of wine during the flight and about
keeping students out at unreasonably late hours portrayed her as an
"unethical" teacher-chaperone and as "acting selfishly at the
expense of her students' wellbeing," thus clearly denigrating her
reputation. We concede that a jury may well find the letter to be
defamatory. However, it is the lack of any proof of damages that
causes us to affirm summary judgment for defendants.
As a chaperone of a school trip, plaintiff was not
involved in an undertaking "that one in [her] position would
reasonably expect implicates a legitimate public interest with an
attendant risk of publicity," so proof of publication with actual
malice is not required. Sisler v. Gannett Co., Inc.,
104 N.J. 256,
279 (1986). Instead, plaintiff is a private individual whose
assertions that her reputation was damaged are governed by a
negligence standard. Kass v. Great Coastal Express, Inc.,
152 N.J. 353 (1996). She was required to prove that Tilli knew the
statements were false when he wrote the letter, that the letter was
written with reckless disregard of its truth or falsity, or that
Tilli negligently failed to determine the falsity of the contents
of the letter before sending it. Id. at 356, n.1. The trial judge
did not accept as a fact that the contents of the letter were
defamatory, and the judge also said: "I see absolutely no proof
whatsoever of any damages." On appeal, plaintiff does not mention
any evidence in the record that would support a monetary award for
damages, and instead contends that "the absence of pecuniary loss
is inconsequential to the cause of action."
The use of the terms "inferred damages," "actual
damages," and "special damages" in the context of a defamation
action causes some confusion, but a closer reading of Sisler
convinces us that the trial judge was correct. The Court held that
a plaintiff must submit proof of damage to reputation. First,
Justice Handler quoted from Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S.
323, 349-50,
94 S.Ct. 2997, 3012,
41 L.Ed.2d 789, 811 (1974), to
introduce the concept of actual injury:
Suffice it to say that actual injury is not
limited to out-of-pocket loss. Indeed the
more customary types of actual harm inflicted
by defamatory falsehood include impairment of
reputation and standing in the community,
personal humiliation, and mental anguish and
suffering. Of course juries must be limited
by appropriate instructions and all awards
must be supported by competent evidence
concerning the injury, although there need be
no evidence which assigns an actual dollar
value to the injury.
[104 N.J. at 280.]
He continued, with special reference to injury to reputation, as
follows:
Injury to reputation, even more so than
personal injury or mental anguish, which are
both amenable to expert testimony, defies
exact measurement. The type of direct
testimony lacking here has traditionally been
hard to produce; in fact, it was this
difficulty that engendered the "presumed
damages" doctrine. However, the inherently
amorphous quantification of libel damages
potentially enables juries to vary damages
awards in accordance with the popularity or
unpopularity of the speaker or the view
expressed. Accordingly, a plaintiff should
offer some concrete proof that his reputation
has been injured. One form of proof is that
an existing relationship has been seriously
disrupted, reflecting the idea that a
reputation may be valued in terms of
relationships with others. Testimony of third
parties as to a diminished reputation will
also suffice to prove "actual injury." Awards
based on a plaintiff's testimony alone or on
"inferred" damages are unacceptable.
[Id. at 291 (citations omitted).
The Court then addressed the obligation of an appellate court to
review a jury's award of damages in a defamation action.
Because of the elusive nature of such
evidence, courts must scrutinize jury damages
awards and weigh carefully the type and
substance of reputation-injury evidence
presented. Courts reviewing jury awards based
on lesser evidential showings should be more
scrupulous, and less hesitant about reducing
the verdicts to conform with the evidence.
While this practice might reduce libel awards,
plaintiffs still retain the satisfaction of
having their reputation vindicated publicly by
a jury verdict.
[Ibid. ]
The last sentence means that a plaintiff's verdict may be reduced
if the evidence does not merit a damage award as large as the jury
gave, but it does not mean that a plaintiff may seek only a verdict
that the published statement was defamatory without regard to any
actual injury.
The need for proof of damages to establish a defamation
claim was also explained by Judge Skillman in his dissent in Ward
v. Zelikovsky,
263 N.J. Super. 497, 525 (App. Div. 1993), rev'dSee footnote 3
136 N.J. 516 (1994)(citations omitted):
Most significantly, the Supreme Court of New
Jersey has criticized the "presumed damages"
doctrine and suggested that proof of actual
damages may be required in all defamation
actions. ... Although the discussion in Sisler
is constructed around the limitations imposed
by Gertz upon damage awards in defamation
actions involving issues of public concern,
the Court's comments do not appear limited to
that kind of case. Thus, Sisler suggests that
the Court may now require proof of actual
damages in all defamation cases.
We adopted the same position in Feggans v. Billington,
291 N.J.
Super. 382, 390-91 (App. Div. 1996)("In order to prove defamation,
a plaintiff must establish, in addition to damages, [that the
defendant was liable]."). Similar to an ordinary negligence
matter, to resist a motion for summary judgment, a plaintiff must
present proof of a material question of fact as to both liability
and damages. Norwood Easthill Assoc. v. Norwood Easthill Watch,
222 N.J. Super. 378, 384 (App. Div. 1988).
Plaintiff did not present evidence of an actual injury by
way of damage to reputation or emotional distress or loss of wages
or change in position. In her trial brief, plaintiff admitted she
had not been suspended, terminated or reprimanded in any way by her
employer as a result of the letter, and she chaperoned subsequent
trips to Spain and other countries. She also admitted she had not
sustained any mental or physical injury. Most importantly, there
is no mention in the discovery process or in the briefs submitted
on appeal that any single person came forward to state that
plaintiff's reputation had been besmirched by the information
contained in the Tilli letter.
Acknowledging that she had suffered no pecuniary loss
from defendant's actions, plaintiff testified at her deposition
that as a result of defendant's letter, and her students' knowledge
of that letter, she had been "upset" with their joking comments
about the incident. She said she had heard student comments on the
matter "so many times" and, "it was so embarrassing". She repeated
that she had suffered from "embarrassment" and said she had
continued to feel "anxiety". She testified that, "I just remember
that letter and it's like a ghost for me; it's there."
That testimony is insufficient to support a claim for
emotional distress. Damages for emotional distress must be "so
severe that no reasonable man could be expected to endure it."
Buckley v. Trenton Saving Fund Soc.,
111 N.J. 355, 366-67
(1988)(citation omitted). Determination of whether emotional
distress can be found in a particular case is a question of law for
a court to decide, leaving the jury to decide if it had been proved
in fact. Id. at 367. Here, plaintiff's upset, embarrassment and
anxiety are no more severe than was Buckley's loss of sleep,
aggravation, headaches, nervous tension and embarrassment which the
Supreme Court held was not severe. As in Buckley, because there is
no severe emotional distress, further examination into the intent
of the tortfeasor is not warranted.
Accordingly, we affirm the order granting summary
judgment to defendants.
Affirmed.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3448-97T1
ANA ROCCI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
ECOLE SECONDAIRE MACDONALD-
CARTIER and EDWARD TILLI,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
JAVIER MATIACCI RODRIGUEZ,
Defendant.
LESEMANN, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned), dissenting.
I believe the majority opinion misapplies some well
established principles governing the law of defamation, and
therefore I dissent.
First, nothing in our current law of defamation indicates that
this State has abandoned the age old distinction between libel and
slander, a distinction which the majority ignores. Libel consists
of a written defamation; slander is generally unwritten. One who
is libeled need not demonstrate "special" or "pecuniary" damages in
order to maintain a suit. One who suffers a slander (unless the
slander constitutes one of four special kinds of slander) does have
to show such damages.See footnote 4
These principles, clear and settled, are set out in such
standard works as, for example, the Restatement of Torts. Section
568 of the Restatement defines the difference between libel and
slander:
(1) Libel consists of the publication of
defamatory matter by written or printed
words . . . .
(2) Slander consists of the publication of
defamatory matter by spoken words, . . . .
[Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 568 (1989).]
Section 569 of the Restatement then describes why it is significant
to distinguish libel from slander:
One who falsely publishes matter defamatory of
another in such a manner as to make the
publication a libel is subject to liability to
the other although no special harm results
from the publication.
[Id. at § 569.]
That is the law in this State, as it is in most, if not all,
states. One who has been libeled is not limited to recovering for
pecuniary losses--to what are sometimes called "special damages."
He or she may recover general damages as well--damages to one's
reputation as well as damages for personal "humiliation and mental
anguish and suffering" without proof of specific dollar loss. Our
Supreme Court made that particularly clear in Sisler v. Gannett
Co., Inc.,
104 N.J. 256, 280 (1986) where, in dealing with a
plaintiff's right to recover such non-pecuniary losses, the Court
set out the rule:
[S]uffice it to say that actual injury is not
limited to out-of-pocket loss. Indeed, the
more customary types of actual harm inflicted
by defamatory falsehood include impairment of
reputation and standing in the community,
personal humiliation, and mental anguish and
suffering. Of course, juries must be limited
by appropriate instructions, and all awards
must be supported by competent evidence
concerning the injury, although there need be
no evidence which assigns an actual dollar
value to the injury.
Indeed, it is often said that such general damages--damages to
one's reputation, as well as personal "humiliation and mental
anguish and suffering" are "presumed" from a libel. See, Leers v.
Green,
24 N.J. 239, 251 (1957):
[E]very man has a right to his good name,
unimpaired; and false defamatory words,
written and published, injurious to the
reputation of another or exposing to hatred,
contempt or ridicule or subjecting him to a
loss of the good will and confidence
entertained toward him by others, constitutes
a libel, actionable per se without proof of
any consequential special damage where the
imputation of the words on their face is such
as to raise the presumption of damage in the
natural course, as a matter of law.
See also, Stickle v. Trimmer,
50 N.J. Super. 518, 522 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
28 N.J. 57 (1958):
[U]nder the law of this State all libel is
actionable, without proof of special damages.
Damage is presumed in the case of all
defamatory libels, as distinguished from
slanders.
Thus, there was probably no need for plaintiff even to assert
in her complaint that she suffered general damages such as
humiliation, mental anguish and suffering, since those consequences
are presumed to flow from a libel. In fact, however, plaintiff's
complaint does assert such damages and her testimony in pretrial
depositions supports that claim.
The events that led to this suit began with plaintiff, a
teacher, serving as chaperone for two high school classes, from two
different schools, on a European trip. One of the schools was the
one in which she was employed, St. Joseph's High School. The other
was the MacDonald-Cartier School, in which Edward Tilli was a
teacher. Mr. Tilli also accompanied the classes to Europe.
After the trip, Tilli wrote to plaintiff's employer
complaining of plaintiff's conduct on the trip. He said she drank
to excess during the airplane trip to Europe and showed bad
judgment by keeping the students up too late every night, and thus
reducing the benefits they received from the trip. Plaintiff
denied those allegations. Although, she does not claim to have
suffered any tangible, pecuniary damage as a result of the charges,
she does maintain that she suffered emotional distress and was
exposed to ridicule and humiliation in her employment. In her
deposition she said she had been upset by the students' joking
comments about the incident; that she found it "so embarrassing;"
that she had heard student comments on the matter "many times," and
that the incident continued to cause her anxiety. She said, "I
just remember that letter, and it's like a ghost for me; it's
there." She attached no pecuniary value to those feelings but, for
the reasons already noted, she was not required to do so. The
damages may have been non-pecuniary, but they were no less real,
and they have long been recognized as damages recoverable in a
libel action.See footnote 5
The principles just referred to do not suggest, nor do I
suggest, that recovery for such nonfinancial damages should be
unlimited, any more than damages for physical pain and suffering in
a personal injury case are unrestricted. As the court noted in
Sisler, while damages in a libel case are not limited to out-of-pocket losses, the recovery of substantial nonpecuniary damages
requires proof of those damages.
The cases cited by the majority do not support a dismissal of
plaintiff's complaint. Ward v. Zelikovsky,
136 N.J. 516 (1994)
involved a slander, not a libel. As noted, the rules governing the
two are different. And Norwood Easthill Assoc. v. Norwood Easthill
Watch,
222 N.J. Super. 378 (App. Div. 1988) is not a defamation
case at all and involves a totally different field of law.See footnote 6
Whether, following trial, plaintiff is able to demonstrate any
substantial damages, or whether she may be relegated to nominal
damages, or even perhaps recover no damages at all if the trier of
fact concludes that the statements in question were not libelous,
is a matter not now before us. All is that is before us is whether
plaintiff has demonstrated a right to go forward with her
complaint, and I believe she has.
I would reverse.
Footnote: 1Javier Matiacci Rodriguez was also named as a defendant. Plaintiff has not provided any pleading that explains the disposition of the action against him. Footnote: 2The letter was signed by Mr. Tilli and David Gross. Mr. Gross is apparently another teacher at Mr. Tilli's school, but he is not a defendant in this action. Footnote: 3The Court reversed on the basis that the statements were not actionable as defamation, and it did not reach the issue of proof of damages. Footnote: 4 See Gnapinsky v. Goldyn, 23 N.J. 243, 250 (1957), where the Court notes that "[t]he law of defamation is burdened with quaint distinctions of historical genesis." I do not understand the majority's opinion to be an attempt to shed those historical distinctions and create a new body of defamation law for this State--an undertaking which might be useful but is probably inappropriate for an intermediate appellate court. Footnote: 5 I understand the majority opinion to be based on the damage issue, and I do not understand it to deny that a jury question was presented as to defendant's alleged negligence and the defamatory nature of Tilli's letter. The latter would seem particularly clear since the claims of misconduct are aimed directly at plaintiff's professional ability and performance. Thus, they fall within one of the four areas of slander per se, where, even if the defamation had been oral rather than written, the victim could have recovered general, non-pecuniary damages to the same extent as if the statement had been in writing. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 570 (1989). The four categories of slander per se are those which impute to another, (1) a criminal offense; (2) a "loathsome" disease; (3) "conduct, characteristics or a condition" that "would adversely affect" one's "fitness for . . . [her] trade or profession . . ."; and, (4) serious sexual misconduct. Id. at §§ 570 and 573. See also, e.g., Gnapinsky v. Goldyn, supra, 23 N.J. at 250-51. Footnote: 6 The majority also cites Feggans v. Billington, 291 N.J. Super. 382, 390-91 (App. Div. 1996). However, Feggans does not involve a damage issue at all. The question there was whether defendants in a defamation case had lost their qualified privilege to comment on plaintiff's conduct because their actions had been in "reckless disregard" of plaintiff's interests. The court's discussion was on that issue and its parenthetical reference to damages was a passing comment, not directed to anything before it at the time. Not only was the remark not a "holding," it was not even a considered dictum. It certainly could not be viewed as overruling or changing the well developed principles discussed above.