Foote v. Sarafyan

432 So. 2d 877, 11 Educ. L. Rep. 1140
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1982
Docket12288
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 432 So. 2d 877 (Foote v. Sarafyan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foote v. Sarafyan, 432 So. 2d 877, 11 Educ. L. Rep. 1140 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

432 So.2d 877 (1982)

Joe R. FOOTE, et al.
v.
Diran SARAFYAN.

No. 12288.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

December 1, 1982.
Rehearings Denied June 24, 1983.

*878 Charles E. McHale, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiffs.

Pres Kabacoff, Jack Quarles, New Orleans, for defendant.

Michael D. Hunt, Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, Baton Rouge, for third party defendant.

Felix R. Weill, Watson, Blanche, Wilson & Posner, Baton Rouge, for defendants in reconvention.

Before REDMANN, C.J., and BARRY and GULOTTA, JJ.

REDMANN, Chief Judge.

Defendant mathematics professor appeals from a judgment on a Commissioner's recommendation for a total of $20,000 damages from defendant's defaming the chairman and two fellow professors of mathematics at a state university. The judgment also dismissed defendant's reconventional demand for damages for defamation of himself, as well as his third-party demand against the university's insurer for indemnification and cost of defense.

The essential (but oversimplified) facts are that defendant pursued allegations of academic improprieties against appellees through university administration channels to conclusions unsatisfactory to defendant (notwithstanding defendant's partial success, in respect to one claim, to the extent that the administration did both remove one professor—a successful plaintiff in this case—from a summer payroll and require him to refund $127.93 of the one check he had already received). Unsatisfied, defendant communicated his version of the alleged improprieties not only to the Attorney General's office and to the state Commission on Governmental Ethics (which declined jurisdiction) but also to the university newspaper (apparently at the request of a reporter), which published articles reporting the controversies from defendant's point of view. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, similarly and unsuccessfully sought through academic channels to have defendant removed from the mathematics faculty (or graduate faculty) on allegations of his harassment and disruptiveness (as well as certain other academic impropriety). These reciprocal allegations of impropriety constitute the defamation alleged in the main and reconventional demands.

*879 The trial court viewed the accusations within administrative channels as qualifiedly privileged but awarded damages for defendant's publishing his charges through the university newspaper. Defendant alone appeals.

We reverse the judgments against defendant as irreconcileable with constitutional guarantees of free speech, U.S. Const. Amend. 1 and La. Const. art. 1 § 7, and as unsupported by ordinary law of defamation, see Restatement Torts 2d § 566.

In respect to the chairman and another plaintiff who was then an assistant professor, some added factual circumstances of the impropriety published were that, although the professor had been invited on May 10 to participate in a July 3-28 New York conference (itself an honor), the chairman and that professor continued with plans to assign classes to him for the summer term beginning in mid-June and consequently to pay him a salary for that summer term. Furthermore, there had to be some foreknowledge and previous consent that that professor might not return at the end of the conference, because he simply so informed the chairman by letter (when his parents joined him, his wife and children in New York). That professor had arranged for another to take over his classes (and thus to exceed 100% normal workload while other professors were allowed and paid for only a two-thirds workload) and intended to pay the other, so that the students were not abandoned and suffered no more than a change in professor less than halfway through the term to a professor who had an overload of work. But the proof of the fiscal aspect of the impropriety was that, immediately on hearing of it from defendant, the university administration removed that professor from the payroll and obliged him to return $127.93 in already-received pay. Defendant originally characterized this arrangement as a payroll irregularity but after consulting with the attorney general's office changed his characterization to "payroll fraud," a term presumably derived from "public pay roll fraud," condemned by a criminal statute, La.R.S. 14:138.[1]

That characterization was given prominence in the school newspaper articles, which otherwise reasonably adequately reported the facts (although from a somewhat sensational point of view—e.g., not until towards the end of the article did it report that the classes were in fact conducted although by another professor—a circumstance surely attributable not to defendant but to the newspaper).

In respect to the other successful plaintiff, a then associate professor, some added circumstances are that that professor, when applying for employment in December 1966, in a "biographical data sheet" provided by the university, in the space for "Publications," listed "Research papers," citing 14, and then:

Books:

1. Principles of Computational Mathematics, vol. 1 (coauthorship with C.R. Marathe).
2. Numerical analysis for Engineers.
3. FORTRAN: Theory and Practice.
*880 All these books are under publication by Manaktalas, Bombay, and are scheduled to be out in 1967.

Defendant described this book listing as "deceit" of the university and "false pretenses" and those descriptions were published by the newspaper. The evidence, especially the contracts between that professor and the publisher that were dated March 1967 and that obliged the delivery of two book manuscripts to the publisher by June and July of 1967, fairly establishes that (notwithstanding that professor's testimony to the contrary) the manuscripts had not been delivered to the publisher in December 1966.

Hutchinson v. Proxmire, 443 U.S. 111, 99 S.Ct. 2675, 61 L.Ed.2d 411 (1979), held that a state university adjunct professor who was also director of research at a state hospital and who had received $500,000 in federal research grants was not, not even in respect to his federally-supported research, a public official within New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 84 S.Ct. 710, 11 L.Ed.2d 686 (1964), nor a public figure within Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts, 388 U.S. 130, 87 S.Ct. 1975, 18 L.Ed.2d 1094 (1967). We therefore conclude that our plaintiffs are not limited by the actual malice test of Sullivan or Butts but by the lesser requirements of Gertz v. Robert Welch Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 94 S.Ct. 2997, 41 L.Ed. 789 (1974), in respect to liability. But even under Gertz, on First Amendment grounds, 418 U.S. at 349, 94 S.Ct. at 3011,

the States may not permit recovery of presumed or punitive damages, at least when liability is not based on a showing of knowledge of falsity or a reckless disregard for the truth.

The case before us is not a case of knowing falsity or reckless disregard for the truth. It is at best a case of harsh opinion on truth, and mere harsh opinion does not result in liability for defamation;

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432 So. 2d 877, 11 Educ. L. Rep. 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foote-v-sarafyan-lactapp-1982.