Castellani & Cocoran v. The Scranton Times

161 A.3d 285, 2017 Pa. Super. 127, 45 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2039, 2017 WL 1489042, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 26, 2017
DocketCastellani & Cocoran v. The Scranton Times No. 1145 MDA 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 A.3d 285 (Castellani & Cocoran v. The Scranton Times) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castellani & Cocoran v. The Scranton Times, 161 A.3d 285, 2017 Pa. Super. 127, 45 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2039, 2017 WL 1489042, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BOWES, J.:

This case is on remand from our Supreme Court. 1 In the prior panel decision, we set forth the procedural and factual *287 history of this matter. 2 In order to avoid duplication of judicial resources while maintaining a cogent narrative, we repeat the salient facts.

The present appeal by permission is from two interlocutory pretrial orders entered in this consolidated defamation action. On January 7, 2005, Randall A. Cas-tellani and Joseph J. Corcoran (collectively the “Commissioners”) filed this defamation lawsuit against Appellants, The Scranton Times, L.P. and one of its reporters, Jennifer Henn (collectively the “Scranton Times”). The action was based upon the January 12, 2004 publication by the Scranton Times of an article in both the Scranton Times and the Times-Tribune newspapers. The subject of the story involved an investigation by the Office of the Attorney General of Pennsylvania (“Attorney General”) into corruption that purportedly had occurred at the Lackawanna County Prison. In 2003, the Attorney General convened a statewide investigating grand jury in connection with its probe. At that time, Mr. Castellani and Mr. Corcoran were Lackawanna County Commissioners as well as members of the Lackawanna County Prison Board, and, by virtue of those offices, had oversight of the Lackawanna County Prison. They were called to testify before the grand jury, and the article reported on their testimony before that body.

The January 12, 2004 newspaper story consisted of eighteen paragraphs, and paragraphs two, three, and four of the article were the basis for the Commissioners’ present defamation suit, commenced at docket number 2005-CV-69. The paragraphs, in numerical order as they appeared, outlined that: 1) the Commissioners testified before the statewide grand jury; 2) a source that was.close to :the investigation informed the. Scranton Times that' the Commissioners-were considerably less than cooperative with the-jurors and often responded to questions with vague and evasive statements; for example,-'the Commissioners could not-trecall or were unaware of the answer; 3) the jurors became irritated - with the Commissioners since they were accustomed - to hearing detailed information during the proceedings; 4) the jurors wanted to send the Commissioners from- the courtroom; 5) when first questioned about his grand jury appearance, Mr. Castellani, while in the presence of his attorney,' denied1 that he testified before the grand jury; 6) Mr. Castellani told the newspaper that the reporter had “the wrong guy;” 7) after the newspaper confirmed that Mr. Castellani had appeared before the grand jury, Mr. Castellani was questioned' again and, in the presence of the lawyer, .refused- to comment on anything about the grand jury investigation, including his previous statement that he had not appeared before- that body; 8) even though grand jury proceedings are closed to the public and prosecutors cannot discuss grand jury proceedings, witnesses are free to speak .about their testimony; 9) Mr. Castellani was reminded that he was permitted to discuss his testimony, but he still refused to -talk; 10) Mr. Corcoran could not be reached for comment; 11) the Attorney General was investigating the county prison due to the fact that it received information about alleged corruption there in a drug trafficking case, but the grand jury investigation had expanded into a probe of allegations as to improper use of inmate labor, sex for drugs schemes, financial mismanagement, and improper political activity; 12) as’the *288 majority commissioners for Lackawanna County, the Commissioners were largely responsible for running the prison, and the county’s prison board acted only in an advisory capacity; 13) the prison board included the three county commissioners, the district attorney, the sheriff, the county controller, and president judge; 14) the grand jury recently subpoenaed additional witnesses and more prison financial records, and county officials were told to send a list of all vehicles owned or operated by the prison since 1995, as well as repair and maintenance records for those vehicles, including invoices for purchased parts; 15) the Times-Tribune was conducting its own investigation into prison operations and found that the prison administration was running an automobile body shop at the jail and that the administration had used inmate labor to work on vehicles, including those owned privately by prison guards and prison staff; 16) an interim warden was interviewed and stated that he had timely complied with the latest grand jury subpoena; 17) a previous grand jury subpoena secured information about the prison’s canteen fund and the inmates’ individual accounts from 1998; and 18) the Times-Tribune’s investigation revealed that inmates, including felons convicted of charges such as embezzlement and fraud, were helping to administer the canteen and prison inmate accounts.

The January 12, 2004 article immediately generated litigation before the statewide investigating grand jury. Judge Isaac S. Garb was the supervising judge of that body at the time. The Commissioners asked Judge Garb to sanction the newspaper because it violated the secrecy laws governing grand jury proceedings. That request was denied based upon the reasoning that the Commissioners lacked standing. The Commissioners then demanded that the Attorney General be sanctioned for revealing details of the Commissioners’ appearance before the grand jury.

After this second request was directed to him, Judge Garb appointed a special prosecutor, Terence P. Houck, Esquire, to determine whether the Attorney General improperly revealed information to the Scranton Times. The special prosecutor prepared a confidential report for Judge Garb. Judge Garb, in turn, authored a September 14, 2004 memorandum regarding the matter before him. In that document, Judge Garb stated that Mr. Houck “determined that there was no breach of secrecy by any Agent of the Attorney General’s Office.” Memorandum, Isaac S. Garb, 9/14/04, at 2. In his September 14, 2004 decision, Judge Garb copcurred with Mr. Houck’s assessment. Id. He also expressed his personal opinion regarding the veracity of the January 12, 2004 article. After he had reviewed Mr. Houck’s report, the documents accompanying the report, and the transcript of the testimony of the Commissioners, Judge Garb opined:

The reports published in these newspapers are completely at variance with the transcript of the testimony of these witnesses. The newspaper reports provide that the witnesses were evasive in their answers, were non-cooperative, essentially “stonewalled” the Grand Jury in its inquiry and that the Grand Jurors became irate as a result of that demean- or on the witnesses [sic] part, and demanded that they be “thrown out” of the Grand Jury courtroom. None of those things happened. Obviously, if someone wished to leak the testimony of a witness to the Grand Jury that information relayed to the media would have reflected the testimony that actually occurred. The report of the testimony of the witnesses was totally at variance and not borne out by the record of the witnesses’ testimony. Obviously, the source of the reporter’s information was some *289

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161 A.3d 285, 2017 Pa. Super. 127, 45 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2039, 2017 WL 1489042, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castellani-cocoran-v-the-scranton-times-pasuperct-2017.