Bindrim v. Mitchell

92 Cal. App. 3d 61, 155 Cal. Rptr. 29, 5 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1113, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1979
DocketCiv. 52133
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 92 Cal. App. 3d 61 (Bindrim v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bindrim v. Mitchell, 92 Cal. App. 3d 61, 155 Cal. Rptr. 29, 5 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1113, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

Opinion

KINGSLEY, J.

This is an appeal taken by Doubleday and Gwen Davis Mitchell from a judgment for damages in favor of plaintiff-respondent Paul Bindrim, Ph.D. The jury returned verdicts on the libel counts against Doubleday and Mitchell and on the contract count against Mitchell.

[69]*69The court denied defendants’ motion for judgment NOV and granted a new trial subject to the condition that new trial would be denied if plaintiff would consent to (1) a reduction of the libel verdict against Mitchell from $38,000 to $25,000; (2) a striking of the $25,000 punitive damage award against Doubleday on the libel count; and (3) a striking of the $12,000 damage .award on the contract count against Mitchell.

Plaintiff consented without prejudice on these issues in any appeal to be taken from the judgment. Defendants appealed and plaintiff cross-appealed from the judgment reducing the original jury verdict.

Plaintiff is a licensed clinical psychologist and defendant is an author. Plaintiff used the so-called “Nude Marathon” in group therapy as a means of helping people to shed their psychological inhibitions with the removal of their clothes.

Defendant Mitchell had written a successful best seller in 1969 and had set out to write a novel about women of the leisure class. Mitchell attempted to register in plaintiff’s nude therapy but he told her he would not permit her to do so if she was going to write about it in a novel. Plaintiff said she was attending the marathon solely for therapeutic reasons and had no intention of writing about the nude marathon. Plaintiff brought to Mitchell’s attention paragraph. B of the written contract which reads as follows: “The participant agrees that he will not take photographs, write articles, or in any manner disclose who has attended the workshop or what has transpired. If he fails to do so he releases all parties from this contract, but remains legally liable for damages sustained by the leaders and participants.”

Mitchell reassured plaintiff again she would not write about the session, she paid her money and the next day she executed the agreement and attended the nude marathon.

Mitchell entered into a contract with Doubleday two months later and was to receive $150,000 advance royalties for her novel.

Mitchell met Eleanor Hoover for lunch and said she was worried because she had signed a contract and painted a devastating portrait of Bindrim.

Mitchell told Doubleday executive McCormick that she had attended a marathon session and it was quite a psychological jolt. The novel was [70]*70published under the name “Touching” and it depicted a nude encounter session in Southern California led by “Dr. Simon Herford.”

Plaintiff first saw the book after its publication and his attorneys sent letters to Doubleday and Mitchell. Nine months later the New American Library published the book in paperback.

The parallel between the actual nude marathon sessions and the sessions in the book “Touching” was shown to the jury by means of the tape recordings Bindrim had taken of the actual sessions. Plaintiff complains in particular about a portrayed session in which he tried to encourage a minister to get his wife to attend the nude marathon. Plaintiff alleges he was libeled by the passage below:

Excerpts from “Touching”
Page
126-27
The minister was telling us how the experience had gotten him further back to God,
And all the time he was getting closer to God, he was being moved further away from his wife, who didn’t understand, she didn’t understand at all. She didn’t realize what was coming out of the sensitivity training sessions he was conducting in the church.
he felt, he, more than felt, he knew, that if she didn’t begin coming to the nude marathons and try to grasp what it was all about, the marriage would be over.
“You better bring her to the next marathon,” Simon said.
“I’ve been trying,” said the minister. “I only pray she comes.”
Transcript of Actual Session
“I’ve come a little way,”
“I’d like to know about your wife. She hasn’t been to a marathon?”
“No.”
“Isn’t interested? Has no need?”
“I don’t - she did finally say that she would like to go to a standard sensitivity training session somewhere. She would be - I can’t imagine her in a nude marathon. She can’t imagine it.”
“Why?”
“Neither could I when I first came.
“Yeh. She might. I don’t know.”
“It certainly would be a good idea for two reasons: one, the minor one is that you are involved here, and if she were in the same thing, and you could come to some of the couple ones, it would be helpful to
[71]*71“You better do better than pray,” said Simon. “You better grab her by the cunt and drag her here.”
“I can only try.”
“You can do more than try. You can grab her by the cunt, “A man with that kind of power, whether it comes from God or from his own manly strength, strength he doesn’t know he has, can drag his wife here by the fucking cunt.
“I know,” Alex said softly. “I know.”
you. But more than that, almost a definite recipe for breaking up a marriage is for one person to go into growth groups and sense change and grow ...”
“I know that.”
“Boy they sure don’t want that, and once they’re clear they don’t need that mate anymore, and they are not very patient.”
“But it is true, the more I get open the more the walls are built between us. And it’s becoming a fairly intelligent place, a fairly open place, doing moderate sensitivity eyeballing stuff with the kids. I use some of these techniques teaching out class work.”
“Becoming more involved?”
“Yeh, involved at the same time that I am more separated from. It’s a paradox again, isn’t it?”
“Mmm.”

Plaintiff asserts that he was libeled by the suggestion that he used obscene language which he did not in fact use. Plaintiff also alleges various other libels due to Mitchell’s inaccurate portrayal of what actually happened at the marathon. Plaintiff alleges that he was injured in his profession and expert testimony was introduced showing that Mitchell’s portrayal of plaintiff was injurious and that plaintiff was identified by certain colleagues as the character in the book, Simon Herford.

I

Defendants first allege that they were entitled- to judgment on the ground that there was no showing of “actual malice” by defendants. As a public figure,1 plaintiff is precluded from recovering [72]

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Bluebook (online)
92 Cal. App. 3d 61, 155 Cal. Rptr. 29, 5 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1113, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bindrim-v-mitchell-calctapp-1979.