Costlow v. Cusimano

34 A.D.2d 196, 311 N.Y.S.2d 92, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4849
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 14, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 34 A.D.2d 196 (Costlow v. Cusimano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Costlow v. Cusimano, 34 A.D.2d 196, 311 N.Y.S.2d 92, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4849 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendants appeal from an order which denied their motions to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action.

Because of the procedural context of the case, the facts alleged in the complaint must be taken as established. Plaintiffs, residents of Jamestown, were the parents of two children. On June 2, 1964, these children, Robert age three, and Marion age two, died by suffocation when they trapped themselves in a refrigerator located at the family’s residence. Defendant Cusimano, employed by defendant Trend Radio, Inc., arrived at the scene and photographed the premises and the deceased children. Cusimano then took steps to write an article illustrated by these photographs. He then showed the photographs to “ many persons ” in the State of New York and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, apparently in an attempt to secure a publisher for his article. The complaint and briefs suggest, but do no explicitly state, that the article was published and distributed within New York and Pennsylvania. Plaintiffs allege that Cusimano acted without their consent, with the intent to exploit the plaintiffs for financial profit and to enhance his reputation as a photographer, maliciously with knowledge of the existing grief of the plaintiffs, and intentionally to hold the plaintiffs up to public shame and to cause jnental anguish and emotional shock. Finally, it is alleged that by reason of the publication and exhibition of said photographs plaintiffs received uncomplimentary comments from persons to whom the publications were made; became sick, nervous, unable to sleep, unable to eat, suffered severe mental anguish and emotional disturbance; and plaintiff G-eraldine E. Costlow was required to obtain medical and psychiatric care at a cost of upwards of $250.

Respondents admit that Cusimano’s publication identified the plaintiffs only by the context of the description of the family’s tragedy; the names were not used. It is alleged that the use of pictures of the plaintiffs’ children with the description of the tragedy identified the plaintiffs.

[198]*198Plaintiffs seek to maintain their action on four theories: (1) invasion of their right of privacy secured by sections 50 and 51 of the Civil Eights Law; (2) intentional infliction of mental distress; (3) prima facie tort; and (4) trespass.

The cause of action based on the statutory right to privacy (Civil Eights Law, § 51) is insufficient because the subject matter is within the area of legitimate public interest and publication and exhibition of the story and photographs of the incident accurately portrayed the events. The applicable principles of law are based upon the decisions in Time, Inc. v. Hill (385 U. S. 374); Spahn v. Julian Messner, Inc. (21 N Y 2d 124); Matter of Hemingway v. Random House (23 N Y 2d 341). In commenting upon the Hill and Spahn cases the Court of Appeals has said in Matter of Hemingway v. Random House (supra, p. 352) : "Both of these cases established that, in the light of constitutional guarantees of free speech, section 51 may not be applied to afford recovery to a public figure or in matters of the public interest — to quote from Hill (385 U. S., at p. 388)—£ in the absence of proof that the defendant published the [item] with knowledge of its falsity or in reckless disregard of the truth. ’5 ’

An article about two children suffocating by trapping themselves within a refrigerator, while necessarily unpleasant to the children’s parents, is a matter of legitimate public concern. The governing law leaves unspecified the proper scope of public concern, and it has been argued that the definition is necessarily circular because an action for invasion of privacy arises only after some publication has made the plaintiff a subject of public concern. The prevailing opinion of the court in Time, Inc. v. Hill (supra) found newsworthy an article about the genesis of a Broadway play. The episode around which the play was written, three escaped convicts holding a family captive for 19 hours, had been the news of the day at the time of its occurrence. Three years later the play and an article in Life magazine thrust the Hill family back into the news. In the instant case, the underlying tragedy is a legitimate subject of public concern because the death of two children becomes a matter of public record and the cause of these deaths, a trap created by a common household appliance, should be brought to the attention of the public so that similar deaths will not occur. Accordingly, while the proper limits of newsworthy matters must of necessity be undefined, the article in the instant case falls within these limits.

The manner in which the article develops its topic is not relevant to whether the article is protected by constitutional [199]*199guarantees of free speech. Mr. Justice Hablan, concurring in part and dissenting in part in the Hill case, proposed a standard of reasonable investigation and fair comment (Time, Inc. v. Hill, supra, p. 409). The court implicitly rejected Ms standard, perhaps because it would force the courts to act as wide-ranging critics of the manner of exposition used by the press. Consequently, there is no merit in respondents’ contention that the article written by Cusimano is not newsworthy because of the sensational manner in which it treats its subject matter. Nor does it matter that the article was not prepared for publication by a regular newspaper, since any such rule would unduly restrict the channels of free expression of matters of public concern. In fact, once the subject matter is found suitable for public concern,, the constitutional guarantees attach, and liability may be premised only on falsification resulting from actual malice.

The complaint contains no allegation that the publication falsely represented the actual occurrence. Therefore, on the basis of the doctrine announced in the Hill case, there can be no cause of action based on the theory that the publication of an article about the suffocation of the Oostlow children invaded the statutory right of privacy of the Costlows. Nor can there be a cause of action for damages caused by Cusimano’s exhibition of his article or photographs in an attempt to secure a publisher.-- The Court of Appeals in Matter of Hemingway v. Random House (23 N Y 2d 341, supra) after holding that an action under section 51 of the Civil Eights Law could not be based on the publication of a book of memoirs, in the absence of a showing of falsity and actual malice, stated (p. 353): The same reasons which support the author’s freedom to write and publish books require a similar freedom for their circulation, before publication, for comment by reviewers. ’ ’ The principle there stated, the protection of the necessary steps in the process of publishing the author’s work, precludes liability for the exhibition of Cusimano’s photographs, prior to their actual publication, in the normal course of publishing his work.

The second and fourth causes of action may be treated together since both allege intentional infliction of harm to a legally recognized interest, without excuse or justification.

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Bluebook (online)
34 A.D.2d 196, 311 N.Y.S.2d 92, 1970 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/costlow-v-cusimano-nyappdiv-1970.