Embrey v. Holly

442 A.2d 966, 293 Md. 128, 8 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1409, 1982 Md. LEXIS 231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 23, 1982
Docket[No. 71, September Term, 1981.]
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 442 A.2d 966 (Embrey v. Holly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Embrey v. Holly, 442 A.2d 966, 293 Md. 128, 8 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1409, 1982 Md. LEXIS 231 (Md. 1982).

Opinions

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Murphy, C. J., and Eldridge and Davidson, JJ., dissent. Murphy, C. J., filed a dissenting opinion at page 143 infra, in which Eldridge and Davidson, JJ., join.

Ever since the United States Supreme Court in the case of New York Times v. Sullivan *1 declared in 1964 that laws of libel and slander are incompatible with the concepts underlying the first amendment of the federal constitution, courts have struggled to strike a proper balance between the [130]*130interest of an individual in guarding his reputation 2 and the federally protected free speech values that in many ways represent the essence of our democratic society. With this case, we shall join the fray and determine whether an employer may be held liable for punitive damages imposed for the defamatory utterances of an employee. We shall also decide whether it was appropriate for the trial court to have permitted the jury in this case to award separate and varying amounts of punitive damages against multiple defendants. But first, we introduce the parties and set forth the factual background of this litigation.

Respondent Dennis Holly, a television news commentator in Baltimore, instituted this defamation action against petitioners James Embrey, Jr., a local radio show host known professionally as Johnny Walker, and Walker’s employer, Baltimore Radio Show, Incorporated, the operator of radio station WFBR. By the suit, Holly seeks recompense for damage to his reputation resulting from a purported joke about the newsman which Walker related during his morning radio program in February, 1979. It seems that Walker specializes in what one listener and witness characterized as "a zany, whacky, crazy, fanciful morning discjockey show with some added features, such as the Little News in the Morning where Johnny writes crazy and wild things about current events and makes up a whole lot of things that haven’t [131]*131happened, but sound like they are news items....” As another regular part of Walker’s show, Ron Matz, a WFBR newsman, would call Walker from another telephone in the station and impersonate the character of "Harry Horni,” a gossip columnist calling from a phone booth in Hollywood, California, with "tidbits” of information concerning Hollywood, national, and on occasion, local personalities. Testimony indicates that the "tidbits” represented a mix of fact with fiction, and that Walker and Matz would engage in an ad lib dialogue in which Walker would attempt to fashion humorous responses to "Horni’s” revelations. The "Horni Report,” like all of Walker’s material, was punctuated with various sounds of laughter, cheering, applause, and the like which the broadcaster actuated by playing numerous pre-recorded cartridges.3

Walker’s comment which spawned this defamation litigation occurred during the "Harry Horni” segment of his show on the morning of February 28, 1979, about a week after Baltimore had been paralyzed by a blizzard which left the city buried under two feet of snow. During the "Horni Report” taped at 6:15 a.m., the fictitious columnist truthfully related that Dennis Holly was about to undergo knee surgery. Apparently believing that the "Horni” section of his show, which was re-broadcast at 8:15 a.m., lacked sufficient "humor,” Walker, as the subsequent airing of the "tidbits” was ending, added an additional comment about Holly: "Too bad about Dennis Holly, though. Hope that comes out okay. Wonder how he hurt his knee? Probably fell down carrying that TV during the blizzard last week, right?” 4 It was the unique context of Walker’s comment that transformed this seemingly innocuous statement into one the jury determined to be libelous, for during the [132]*132blizzard, groups of so-called looters, taking advantage of immobilized police vehicles, broke into scores of commercial establishments in the Pennsylvania Avenue area of Baltimore and virtually stripped them of all merchandise.5 Certain of Walker’s listeners did not recognize the "humor” in the radio host’s words about Holly, for the switchboard operator at WMAR-TV, where Holly was employed, told the jury that she received numerous inquiries concerning the truth of Walker’s remark. Similarly, Holly, who is black, began receiving anonymous, harassing phone calls. One caller is quoted by the newscaster as having said: "You pushed George Rogers out of his job and now you have stolen a television set and you are getting what you deserve.... All you niggers are thieves.” Thus, failing to appreciate Walker’s "humorous” aside, Holly sued the radio host and his employer for defamation. A jury in the Baltimore City Court found that the disc jockey’s comments were libelous and awarded Holly $25,000 in compensatory damages against both defendants; in addition, the jury awarded punitive damages of $5,000 against Walker and $35,000 against his employer, Baltimore Radio Show, Inc. The Court of Special Appeals, while affirming the judgment, vacated it as to the punitive award and ordered a new trial on the issue of exemplary damages after determining on its own motion that it was improper to permit the jury to grant such damages in differing amounts against the two defendants.

The petitioners in this Court, Walker and Baltimore Radio Show, Inc., being limited by the terms of our grant of certiorari to the punitive damages aspect of this case, present two [133]*133issues. They claim first that allowing such damages against the radio station’s corporate owner on the sole basis of respondeat superior violates the first amendment, as interpreted by recent United States Supreme Court decisions, by impermissibly imposing a form of liability without fault in a defamation case. Next, the petitioners assert that the trial court correctly permitted the jury to apportion punitive damages between Walker and his employer, and therefore the intermediate appellate court erred when it reversed the trial judge in this regard. As we find no infirmity with the punitive award against the employer, and we determine that it is proper for a trial court to allow the jury to apportion punitive damages between multiple wrongdoers, the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals will be partially reversed. We first address the respondeat superior issue.

Following a lengthy analysis of federal first amendment free speech values, in contradistinction to the states’ interest in protecting their citizens from defamatory utterances, the United States Supreme Court in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 347, 94 S.Ct. 2997, 3010, 41 L.Ed.2d 789 (1974), held that "so long as they do not impose liability without fault, the States may define for themselves the appropriate standard of liability for a publisher or broadcaster of defamatory falsehood injurious to a private individual.” Seizing upon this language, the petitioners assert that "[vjicarious liability of a principal for punitive damages in a defamation case based solely on the existence of an employer-employee relationship is a form of strict liability that violates the constitutional principles established in Gertz.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
442 A.2d 966, 293 Md. 128, 8 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1409, 1982 Md. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/embrey-v-holly-md-1982.