Anderson v. New York Telephone Co.
Anderson v. New York Telephone Co.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring). We concur in the result reinstating the judgment dismissing the complaints; but since it is abundantly clear that defendant did not “ publish ” the defamatory material complained of, we do not deem it necessary or prudent to rest our decision on grounds broader than that. In other words, if as we believe, there was no publication by defendant, then there is no need even to consider the further privilege and constitutional points also relied upon by the dissent below.
The facts may be quickly summarized. Plaintiff had been appointed Presiding Bishop of the Church of God in Christ in Western New York with 65 churches in his jurisdiction. In 1969 Donald L. Jackson, president of the Donald L. Jackson Foundation and sponsor of the organization “ Let Freedom Ring ”, broadcast every week over station WWOL in Buffalo. During the course of these programs Jackson urged his listeners to call two telephone numbers. A person calling these numbers would hear accusations against plaintiff involving him in all sorts of scurrilous activities not the least of which was illigitimately fathering children by women and girls in the church.
Jackson’s telephones were attached to equipment leased to Jackson by defendant. This equipment contained the recorded messages which would automatically play upon activation of the telephone by a caller.
When plaintiff heard the recording he went to the Department of Social Services in Erie County and received from authorities a letter stating that there was no record there of plaintiff as a putative father. Plaintiff thereupon went to defendant’s local office in Buffalo and conferred with the person
Plaintiff, unable to secure an injunction and unsuccessful after conferences with defendant’s attorneys, commenced this action in defamation. Defendant moved pursuant to CPLR 3211 (subd. [a], par. 7) for dismissal of the complaint on the ground the pleading failed to state a cause of action. Special Term, dealing only with the question of qualified privilege, ruled that a fact question existed. The case then went to trial at the conclusion of which the court granted judgment for defendant specifically on the ground “ [t]hat I find that the New York Telephone Company did not publish this scandalous material.”
The majority at the Appellate Division, in reversing and ordering a new trial, discussed the point involving whether defendant had a qualified privilege to allow the messages to continue after notice of their content and concluded that defendant’s nonaction amounted to reckless disregard of whether the messages were false or not so as to overcome any privilege that might otherwise be enjoyed. The dissenters could not locate the duty thus imposed by the majority and further found that any action taken by defendant summarily to stop the messages would violate the subscriber’s First and Fourteenth Amendment protections in that service would be curtailed in violation of the subscriber’s right to a hearing and review. Initially, the dissent takes up the point concerning publication and states that, unlike the telegraph company, the employees of which actively aid in the transmission of messages (Klein v. Western Union Tel. Co., 257 App. Div. 336, 339-340, appeal withdrawn 281 N. Y. 831; Smith, Liability of a Telegraph Company for Transmitting a Defamatory Message, 20 Col. L. Rev. 30, 33-50), the telephone company’s role is merely passive and no different from any company which leases equipment to another for the latter’s use (42 A D 2d 151, 162-163).
In sum, Jackson published the libel. That he used equipment leased from defendant does not render defendant a copublisher whether it had notice of the use to which the equipment was being put or not.
Order reversed, etc.
. As of this writing only one law review article discussing the decision below has come to our attention. (Note, Must the Telephone Company Censor to Avoid Liability For Libel: Anderson v. New York Telephone Company, 38 Albany
. See the discussion in Harper and James (The Law of Torts, vol. 1, § 5.18, pp. 404-406) concerning the predicates for liability of the telegraph company, none of which apply with respect to the telephone company the employees of which perform no active or affirmative function in the preparation or transfer of the message.
. In Matter of Figari v. New York Tel. Co. (32 A D 2d 434) it was even held that the telephone company could not require a lessee of its recording equipment to state his name and address on the recording. Such a restriction on the free use of the equipment violates free speech protections said the court and that the Public Service Commission should not have approved such a restriction since the State has no interest in uncovering authors of defamatory matter so as to aid potential plaintiffs.
Opinion of the Court
Order reversed, without costs, on the dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice G. Robert Wither at the Appellate Division and the judgment of Supreme Court, Erie County, reinstated.
Concur: Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Gabrielli, J ones, Wachtler, Rabin and Stevens. Judge Gabrielli concurs in the following opinion in which Judge Wachtler concurs. Taking no part: Judge Jasen.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Leroy Anderson, Respondent, v. New York Telephone Company, Appellant
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published