Duc Tan v. Le

161 Wash. App. 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 19, 2011
DocketNo. 39447-2-II
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 Wash. App. 340 (Duc Tan v. Le) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duc Tan v. Le, 161 Wash. App. 340 (Wash. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

¶1 — In 2004, members of the Committee against the Viet Cong Flag disseminated an e-mail message and several newsletter articles throughout the Olympia Vietnamese community accusing Due Tan and the Vietnamese Community of Thurston County (VCTC), a nonprofit corporation, of being Communists or Communist supporters. Tan and the VCTC sued the committee members for defamation. A jury found the defendants liable for defamation and awarded Tan and the VCTC $310,000 in damages. [345]*345On appeal, the defendants argue, in part, that (1) the statements in the letter are opinions and therefore not actionable and (2) even if some of the supporting factual statements are false, the plaintiffs failed to prove that the defendants published the defamatory statements with actual malice. We agree that the statements in the e-mail and newsletters are not actionable and that Tan and the VCTC failed to show that the defendants published the statements with actual malice. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for dismissal.

FACTS

A. Parties

¶2 Tan was a teacher in Vietnam when the Southern Vietnamese Army drafted him for military training in 1968. After training, he returned to teaching, retaining his military ranking. The Vietnamese Communist Army captured Saigon in April of 1975, and sent Tan to a Communist reeducation camp. They released him after six months to resume his teaching position. His release was contingent upon signing a loyalty pledge to the Communist Party. Tan maintains that he signed the pledge to secure his release, not because he believed in what he was signing.

¶3 Tan worked for the Communist Party as a teacher until September 1978, when, fearing for his safety, he fled Vietnam with his family. After spending time in a Malaysian refugee camp, the family settled near Olympia where Tan became active in the Vietnamese community as the principal of a Vietnamese language school and member of the VCTC.

¶4 The VCTC was started in the 1970s and became a nonprofit corporation in 1997. Due Hua was elected its president in 1995. Tan is its director of education and is recognized as one of the organization’s leaders. The VCTC engages in political activities, stating its purpose as developing the cultural, economic, and political potential of the Vietnamese community in Thurston County. In recent [346]*346years, however, its membership has dwindled and the organization’s focus tends to be less political. Although the organization is in good standing today, there have been issues concerning filings with the State of Washington: for example, Tan filed a document stating that the organization had no members with voting rights.

¶5 Norman Le, Dat Ho, Phiet Nguyen, Nhan Tran, and Nga Pham, five of the defendants,1 were all born in Vietnam. Tran and Ho escaped Vietnam when Saigon fell in 1975. Le was imprisoned in a labor camp for nine years and seven months. Nguyen was imprisoned in a labor camp for six-and-a-half years.

¶6 Like Tan, the defendants are politically active in the Vietnamese community. Le was the VCTC’s secretary for several years. The defendants are all members of the Committee against the Viet Cong Flag, which was formed in 2003 to seek removal of the Socialist Republic Vietnamese flag from the lobby of South Puget Sound Community College. Many Vietnamese refugees view Vietnam’s current flag as the “Communist flag,” eliciting painful memories and emotions. VII Report of Proceedings (RP) at 1252. The activities surrounding the flag issues have divided the Vietnamese community.

B. Background

¶7 Several incidents form the basis of the allegedly defamatory statements, culminating in the “apron incident.” We discuss them in chronological order.

1. Name Change of the VCTC

¶8 The VCTC was formed in 1975 as the Vietnamese Mutual Assistance Association. In 1995, the organization voted to change its name. Le, one of the defendants, suggested that the new name include the word “national” or “nationalist” to signal a clear anticommunist agenda. Le’s [347]*347proposal was defeated, ostensibly because the title was too long. The organization was renamed the ‘Vietnamese Community Association of Thurston County,” which was later shortened to VCTC.

2. VCTC Allegedly Receiving Money from the Viet Cong

¶9 Following the name change, Le raised concerns about a local market owner’s monetary contribution to the VCTC. Le believed the market owner to be a Communist because he had previously distributed free calendars that had been printed by the Communist Party in Ho Chi Minh City. The VCTC called a meeting to ask the owner why he had the calendars printed in Ho Chi Minh City. Satisfied that the owner printed the calendars in Vietnam because it was cheaper, the VCTC accepted his monetary donation. Le testified that at the meeting, Hua, president of the VCTC, stated, “[W] hat’s wrong with receiving Viet Cong’s [sic] money as long as we don’t listen to them.” VII RP at 1398. Hua denies saying this, testifying that he said only that the VCTC accepts any donation as long as no conditions are attached.

3. Playing of National Anthem

¶10 In 1997, the VCTC organized an event to honor a Vietnamese poet. At the start of the event, the hired band began to play Vietnam’s current national anthem. After the first few notes, the band apologized for playing the wrong anthem and proceeded with the national anthem of the Republic of South Vietnam. Witnesses gave conflicting testimony about the crowd’s reaction: some claimed the crowd barely noticed while others claimed there was a negative reaction. Two local Vietnamese papers wrote about the incident. The VCTC held a press conference to apologize for the mistake.

4. Scheduling Events on Communist Holidays

¶11 In the fall of 1999, the VCTC newsletter suggested scheduling a cultural event on September 2. The event, Armed Forces Day, commemorates the establishment of the [348]*348Southern Vietnamese Army and is typically held on June 19. The Vietnamese community knows September 2 as the date of the “Fall Revolution,” when the Communist Party declared independence against the French. Later, in the fall of 2002, the VCTC organized an annual meeting. Additionally, one of the defendants testified that events sponsored by the VCTC sometimes occurred on April 30, the anniversary of the fall of Saigon. Community members testified that these dates were inappropriate for any Vietnamese celebration or event.

5. Flag Display at Language School

¶12 Tan ran a Vietnamese language school for children of Vietnamese refugees. Lacking its own facility, the language school borrowed classrooms from a private high school. Before every class, the students gathered in the hallway to salute the flag of the Republic of South Vietnam and sing its national anthem. One of the classrooms displayed flags from around the world, including the current flag of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. Tan testified that because the classroom was on loan, the language school’s policy was not to touch or modify the display. One student’s parent asked, however, that the flag be removed. One of the defendants subsequently became involved and asked Tan to replace the current flag with the nationalist flag.

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Related

Duc Tan v. Le
300 P.3d 356 (Washington Supreme Court, 2013)
Duc Tan v. Le
254 P.3d 904 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)

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161 Wash. App. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duc-tan-v-le-washctapp-2011.