Chapman v. Journal Concepts, Inc.

528 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2007 WL 3331766
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedNovember 7, 2007
DocketCivil No. 07-00002 JMS/LEK
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 528 F. Supp. 2d 1081 (Chapman v. Journal Concepts, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Journal Concepts, Inc., 528 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2007 WL 3331766 (D. Haw. 2007).

Opinion

528 F.Supp.2d 1081 (2007)

Craig Elmer ("Owl") CHAPMAN, Plaintiff,
v.
JOURNAL CONCEPTS, INC., a California Corporation, d.b.a, The Surfer's Journal; Jeff Johnson; Steve Pezman; Debbee Pezman; Dan Milnor; Scott Hulet; and Jeff Divine, Defendants.

Civil No. 07-00002 JMS/LEK.

United States District Court, D. Hawai`i.

November 7, 2007.

*1082 *1083 *1084 Arthur, E. Ross, Law Office of Arthur E. Ross, Honolulu, HI, for Plaintiff.

Elijah Yip, Jeffrey S. Portnoy, Cades Schutte LLP, Honolulu, HI, for Defendants.

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

J. MICHAEL SEABRIGHT, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Craig "Owl" Chapman ("Plaintiff'), a surfer and surfboard craftsman, sued The Surfer's Journal, author Jeff Johnson ("Johnson"), photographer Dan Milnor ("Milnor"), editor Scott Hulet, photo editor Jeff Divine, and publishers Steve and Debbee Pezman (collectively, "Defendants") over an August/September 2006 magazine issue in which Defendants published an *1085 article recounting Johnson's pursuit of a custom-shaped single-fin surfboard, photographs, and other surfers' recollections of Plaintiff. The court finds that Plaintiff is a general public figure within the surfing community and that his defamation and defamation-based claims are governed by the actual malice standard set forth in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 84 S.Ct. 710, 11 L.Ed.2d 686 (1964) and its progeny. The court also finds that Plaintiffs claims for invasion of privacy and misappropriation/unauthorized use of his name and photograph in an unfavorable publication are not viable. Finally, the court declines to grant summary judgment on Plaintiff's false light claim.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Plaintiff is a surfer and surfboard shaper living on Oahu's North Shore. As described in The Encyclopedia of Surfing, Plaintiff became

famous in the early and mid-70's for his tuberiding at Sunset Beach and Maalaea, and for his flamboyant "hood ornament stance" at Pipeline, where he'd race through the tube with arms spread and his right knee dropped to the deck of his board. . . . Craig—nicknamed "Owl" as, a play on his woeful nearsightedness — soon became one of the most dedicated surfers on the North Shore. . . . Chapman remained a part of the North Shore surf scene long after most all his contemporaries moved on, and became known for his zoned-out but epigrammatic phrasing. "When I was 22," he said in 1985, "I had a Cadillac, ten surfboards, and ten girlfriends, Man, I thought it would be like that forever." As journalist Mike Latronic later described it, Chapman "walks the fine line between profound philosopher and space-cadet."

Defs.' Ex. A at D00498-99. Plaintiff dominated the surf breaks for many years. As a 1985 article in Surfing Magazine observed,

[o]f all the . . . surf cats who were early pioneers of performance surfing at big Sunset Beach and Waimea Bay, only Owl Chapman has persevered. You could never take an ounce of respect away from legends like Jeff Hakman or Sam Hawk or any of those brave souls of fifteen years ago, venturing out to second reef Sunset, testing their equipment and state of mind; all of these men are brave heroes. But who still lives there and surfs Sunset like an anxious zealot? Craig "Owl" Chapman, the man time forgot.
. . .
Here is a man who has been invited to seven or eight Duke Classics, surfed in the Smirnoff, Masters, Coke, Stubbies and Gunston contests and proven himself as one of the greatest big-wave riders in history, and at thirty-five still possesses the drive and initiative to rush into dribbling Laniakea to compete with some of the world's best small-wave competitors.

Defs.' Ex. C at D00517.

Revered as a daring and elite athlete who routinely surfed the island's biggest and most dangerous wave breaks, Plaintiff was considered to be one of the

North Shore's most committed surfers— not the touring professionals or visiting superstars, but an elite group within that realm, the ones who live in Hawaii and base their entire existence around riding mountainous, terrifying surf . . . [and who] share the same qualities of presence and bravado in life-threatening conditions, and . . . possess a brand of intelligence that can only be drawn from the ocean.

*1086 Defs.' Ex. D at D00521; see also Defs.' Ex. H. A "key figure" in surfing, Plaintiff was

fully legit in the water. He's been out in more big swells than anyone his age . . . dodging, scratching, diving, styling and sensing waves before most. . . .
Owl made his mark with a style born of originality. . . . [H]e came away with some of the more memorable photos, and his signature move had as much panache as a goofyfoot's barrel.

Defs.' Ex. E at D00527-28. Plaintiff's unique surfing style, innovative surfing moves, and colorful personality have made him well-known. Recalling some of Plaintiffs "classic, anti-hero antics," an author for Surfer magazine writes, "I knew Owl before I met him. It seemed like all the best tales my mentor . . . used to tell involved [Owl] in some bizarre manner." Id. at D00527. In short, Plaintiff is exalted as "a living legend on the North Shore, a man who surfed second-reef Pipeline backside when it was considered beyond the limits of good sense; a man who has surfed big Sunset as much as anyone," and a surfer who "knew no fear." Defs.' Ex. D at D00522, D00524.

Plaintiff turned his surfing talent into a business: surfboard shaping. Surfboard designs may be customized by length, width, material, shape, rails, fins, rocker, and lift to account for a surfer's height, weight, and surfing ability and to maximize speed or stability in waves of a certain size and break. See, e.g., Surfboard Design, available at http://360guide.info/surfing/surfboard-design.html?Itemid = 75 (last visited Oct. 20, 2007) (describing design elements taken into consideration for custom surfboards). When Johnson, a surfer himself, was looking for a custom surfboard to use at Waimea, he was pointed in Plaintiff's direction. As Johnson recounts in "El Hombre Invisible (With Apologies to William S. Burroughs): An Owl Chapman Story," published in the August/September 2006 edition of The Surfer's Journal, a bi-monthly magazine,

[a] good single-fin gun is hard to find. And the guys who know how to shape them are either dead, too drunk, or living in some dusty trailer on the outskirts of Cabo. I wanted one but was at a loss for names. I talked to shaper Jeff Busman about it and without hesitation he mentioned Owl.
"Owl," Jeff said, "has never strayed from what he believes. His boards are the same now as they were 20 years ago: flat decks, box rails, flat rocker with that beak nose. They really work. He's Brewer '71 to '73, but it's not a retro thing with him. It was and is what he does. You know, the wave at Sunset has never changed, so why should he? The guy is one, of my biggest heroes."

Defs.' Ex. 0 at D00107. Thus began the story of Johnson's experience purchasing a custom surfboard from Plaintiff, and the impetus for Plaintiff's present suit.

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Bluebook (online)
528 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2007 WL 3331766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-journal-concepts-inc-hid-2007.