55th Management Corp. v. Goldman

1 Misc. 3d 239, 768 N.Y.S.2d 747, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 309
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Misc. 3d 239 (55th Management Corp. v. Goldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
55th Management Corp. v. Goldman, 1 Misc. 3d 239, 768 N.Y.S.2d 747, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 309 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

[240]*240OPINION OF THE COURT

Diane A. Lebedeff, J.

This motion presents a question of significance in many guardianship proceedings commenced under article 81 of the Mental Hygiene Law (article 81), to wit: If a person believes he or she was defamed in an out-of-court statement made to a court evaluator in the context of a guardianship proceeding commenced under article 81, will a defamation action lie or, alternatively, will the defamation claim be defeated by the longstanding common-law rule that a statement made in the course of judicial proceedings is absolutely privileged so long as pertinent to the controversy? This issue is directly posed by defendant’s motion to dismiss this defamation action based upon the defendant’s remarks to a court evaluator during the evaluator’s investigation (CPLR 3211 [a] [7]).

To the extent relevant, in 1999, a guardianship proceeding was commenced and a court evaluator appointed to investigate the article 81 petition seeking appointment of a guardian for an alleged incapacitated person (AIP). During the course of the court evaluator’s investigation, the defendant, then 74 years old and a tenant of the same building in which the AIP resided, telephoned the court evaluator. The complaint alleges defendant stated his view that the landlord was engaged in a “terrorist conspiracy” to harass elderly tenants into vacating their apartments, and secretly entered into such tenants’ apartments through their windows. The court evaluator characterized these remarks as a “soap opera script,” “questioned] their basis in reality,” and viewed them as instigated by another party who also made “accusations of the murderous intentions of the landlord.”1 The proceeding concluded with the appointment of a guardian.

[241]*241The defendant advances a claim of absolute privilege, which has been characterized as “a veritable immunity” in relation to the publication of a given defamatory statement claim (Stukuls v State of New York, 42 NY2d 272, 275 [1977]). Where the facts are undisputed, as in this case, it is a pure question of law whether an absolute privilege applies and stands as a complete defense to a defamation claim (People ex rel. Bensky v Warden of City Prison, 258 NY 55, 60 [1932]). Because of the novelty of the issue raised, reaching an answer requires consideration of the following interrelated factors: (1) whether the speaker’s remarks were of a character permitting the assertion of the privilege; (2) whether addressing such remarks to a court evaluator is a statement made in the course of a judicial proceeding; and (3) whether the speaker has standing to claim the privilege.

I

The first issue is whether the nature of the alleged defamatory statement is one for which an absolute privilege may be claimed. Defendant seeks the protection of the general rule that statements made by parties, attorneys and witnesses in the course of a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding are absolutely privileged, notwithstanding the motive with which they are made, so long as they are material and pertinent to the issues to be resolved in the proceeding (Mosesson v Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Firm, 257 AD2d 381 [1st Dept 1999], lv denied 93 NY2d 808 [1999]; see also, Herzfeld & Stern v Beck, 175 AD2d 689, 691 [1st Dept 1991], appeal dismissed 79 NY2d 914 [1992], 89 NY2d 1064 [1997]; Wiener v Weintraub, 22 NY2d 330, 331-332 [1968]; Allan & Allan Arts v Rosenblum, 201 AD2d 136, 139 [2d Dept 1994], lv denied 85 NY2d 921 [1995], cert denied 516 US 914 [1995]).

The well-settled test for a statement to which absolute privilege extends is that it is “possibly pertinent” to the litigation which means it “may possibly bear on the issues in litigation now or at some future time” even if only by “the barest rationality, divorced from any palpable or pragmatic degree of probability” (Seltzer v Fields, 20 AD2d 60, 62 [1st Dept 1963], affd 14 NY2d 624 [1964]). When considering “whether the alleged [242]*242defamatory statements are pertinent to the judicial proceeding, [the statements] should be liberally construed,” with all doubts “resolved in favor of its relevancy or pertinency” (Baratta v Hubbard, 136 AD2d 467, 469 [1st Dept 1988] [internal quotation marks omitted]).

These quoted formulations of the governing concepts are fully consistent with, but give more guidance than, the older characterization that an absolute privilege does not extend to “language used [which] goes beyond the bounds of reason and is so clearly impertinent and needlessly defamatory as not to admit of discussion” (People ex rel. Bensky v Warden of City Prison, supra, 258 NY at 59). It is noted that the pertinency standard is entirely different from the test for striking scandalous matter from a pleading (Kahane v Murdoch, 218 App Div 591, 593-594 [1st Dept 1926]).

A most useful test “[t]o appreciate . . . pertinency, [is to] ask . . . what the duty of [the participants] would have been, had [the statement] been true” (Andrews v Gardiner, 224 NY 440, 446 [1918]). This question gives ready guidance as to whether “the statement [is] so outrageously out of [the litigation] context as to permit one to conclude, from the mere fact that the statement was uttered, that it was motivated by no other desire than to defame” (Martirano v Frost, 25 NY2d 505, 508 [1969]).

Here, had defendant’s alleged statement been true and if the landlord of the alleged incapacitated person were harassing elderly tenants and breaking into their apartments, such information would have been highly relevant to the guardianship proceeding. A mandated consideration in such proceedings is housing conditions and, if a guardian is to be appointed, whether an alleged incapacitated person may be maintained in his or her current housing in the community (Mental Hygiene Law § 81.22 [a] [9] [requires, in relevant part: “the choice of abode must be consistent with . . . the care, comfort and maintenance, and where appropriate, rehabilitation of the incapacitated person”]; see also, Matter of Gambuti [Bowser], 242 AD2d 431, 434 [1st Dept 1997] [housing in community must remain an active consideration even if ward placed in nursing home]; Matter of Linden-Rath, 188 Misc 2d 537, 542 [Sup Ct, NY County 2001] [obligation of article 81 guardian to preserve ward’s housing]).

Accordingly, the remarks were entirely relevant to the guardianship proceeding and, as a matter of law, pertinent to the proceedings.

[243]*243II

The second issue is whether addressing such an out-of-court statement to a court evaluator is a statement made in the course of a judicial proceeding (Seltzer v Fields, supra, 20 AD2d at 63 [“A corollary of the pertinency rule is that the absolute privilege is afforded only to those publications made ‘during the course of or, stated differently, ‘as part of, the judicial proceeding” for “communications unconnected with the judicial proceeding are not cloaked with the absolute privilege”]). Given that the extension of the absolute privilege to a statement made to a court evaluator is a matter of first impression, the extension of this privilege must be considered with due care for “New York has been reluctant to extend the applicability of absolute privilege to cases that would represent a departure from the policies which originally brought the doctrine into being”

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1 Misc. 3d 239, 768 N.Y.S.2d 747, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/55th-management-corp-v-goldman-nysupct-2003.