Fry v. Lee

2013 COA 100, 408 P.3d 843, 41 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2397, 2013 WL 3441546, 2013 Colo. App. LEXIS 1099
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 2013
DocketCourt of Appeals No. 12CA1575
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 2013 COA 100 (Fry v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. Lee, 2013 COA 100, 408 P.3d 843, 41 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2397, 2013 WL 3441546, 2013 Colo. App. LEXIS 1099 (Colo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion by

JUDGE LOEB

¶ 1 Plaintiff, -Michele Fry, appeals the district court’s judgment dismissing her complaint, which alleged defamation and related claims against defendants, Kurtis Lee and The Denver Post, LLC (the Post), pursuant [846]*846to C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5). We affirm and remand with directions.

I. Procedural History and Background

¶ 2 In 2011, Fry ran as a candidate for the District 5 seat on the Denver City Council. As part of her campaign, Fry responded to a questionnaire that the Downtown Denver Partnership (DDP) provided to the District 5 candidates. The candidates’ responses were made public.

¶ 3 In March 2011, Lee, a reporter for the Post, contacted Fry by telephone regarding one of her answers on the DDP questionnaire, which appeared to have been copied verbatim from an on-line publication authored by the National League of Cities (NLC). During that phone convei’sation, Fry denied that she had copied any text without attribution in her responses to the DDP questionnaire. Immediately afterward, Lee sent Fry an e-mail in which he presented, side-by-side, Fry’s questionnaire answer and the text from the NLC publication. They were identical.

¶ 4 As relevant here, Fry responded to Lee’s e-mail as follows:

Thanks for sending and pointing this out. I now see what you mean and it’s my fault. I’ve read hundreds of pages while preparing to run for city council. I inadvertently used information in a National League of Cities research document while preparing my own position papers.
I would never intentionally lift from another source and should have been more careful.
I regret not having cited the NLC, and for that I apologize. I have called ... onp of the authors of the document; I apologized to her directly.... I have now made the appropriate citation in the DDP questionnaire.

¶ 5 That same day, Lee -wrote, and the Post published, an article regarding his interaction with Fry. The article’s headline stated, “Denver city council candidate caught up in plagiarism charge.” The body of the article reported, as pertinent here,

Michele Fry ... plagiarized answers on a candidate questionnaire....
In outlining what she would do to foster economic activity and employment, over half of Fry’s response was ripped verbatim from a National League of Cities Economic Development pamphlet....
On a separate question ... Fry’s entire response was lifted from the National League of Cities pamphlet.
When first contacted by The Denver Post, Fry denied ever plagiarizing her response to the questionnaire.
“I do research, I’m just now finishing my MBA at Regis Jesuit,” said Fry. “I’m not dumb. I would never plagiarize anything.” However, after seeing a side-by-side comparison that showed her responses were not her original work, and did not cite the proper source, she recanted.
“I would never intentionally lift from another source and should have been more careful,” said Fry. “I’ve definitely learned something about research and the scrutiny of political races and will work even harder.”

¶ 6 The next day, the Post republished a substantially similar version of the article on its website, with the new headline, “Denver council candidate plagiarized answers on questionnaire.” The body of the article was essentially the same as. the original article, except for one additional sentence explaining that the DDP had allowed Fry to attribute her answers to the NLC after the Post had pointed out the “discrepancy.”

¶ 7 Subsequently, Fry wrote a letter to the Post’s editor challenging the accuracy of the articles and claiming that they “grossly misrepresented the situation.” The Sunday editor of the Post responded to Fry by letter, articulating the Post’s position that the articles accurately reflected what had transpired. The Post refused to publish a correction to the articles.

¶ 8 Fry then filed this action against Lee and the Post. In her First Amended Complaint (amended complaint), she alleged seven claims for relief, including defamation per se, defamation per quod, respondeat superi- or, negligence, negligence per se, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and deceptive trade practices. All the claims were prem-[847]*847feed on the contention that defendants had published materially false and defamatory statements.

¶ 9 In the amended complaint, Fry alleged facts regarding her exchanges with Lee, NLC, and DDP, as well the particulars of the Post’s articles. She then alleged that defendants had “knowingly or with reckless disregard for its truth or falsity published the false statement that Ms. Fry had been ‘caught up in [a] plagiarism charge,’ ” as well as “false and misrepresentative statements that misled people to believe that [she] had admitted to intentionally or deceitfully failing to cite the NLC.” The thrust of her amended complaint was that the Post’s use of the words “plagiarize,” “charge,” “caught up,” and “recant” had falsely communicated that Fry (1) had intentionally copied the NLC text, (2) had been formally charged with the commission of a crime for doing so, and (3) had admitted to intentionally copying the NLC text. She further asserted that the alleged defamatory statements had caused her reputational, economic, and noneconomic damages “similar to what she would have suffered had she actually committed a crime or been arrested, indicted, or convicted.”

¶ 10 Fry also alleged that the on-line version of the Merriam Webster Third New International Dictionary defined the word “charge” as “a formal assertion of illegality” or “a statement of complaint or hostile criticism,” and defined the phrase “caught up” as “to bring about arrest for illicit activities.” With respect to the word “plagiarize,” she alleged, “At least a substantial and respectable minority of The Post’s millions of readers interpret ‘plagiarism’ as describing an act of intentionally or deceitfully passing off another’s writings or ideas as one’s own.” However, Fry did not refer to any dictionary definition of the word “plagiarize” in the amended complaint.

¶ 11 Fry also attached various exhibits to her amended complaint, including, as relevant here, print-outs of the Post’s articles, her e-mail response to Lee’s inquiry, and the Sunday editor’s letter to her explaining the Post’s position that the articles were “factual, unembellished accounts of [Fry’s] response to the questionnaire, and [her] acknowledgement that it was copied from previously published work of others without attribution— the definition of plagiarism.”

¶ 12 Defendants filed a motion to dismiss Fry’s amended complaint pursuant to C.R.C.P, 12(b)(5) on the ground that the challenged statements were substantially true, and thus not actionable, under the heightened standard of review applicable to defamation claims implicating constitutional rights under the First Amendment. Fry timely filed a response to the motion, and defendants filed a joint reply.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 COA 100, 408 P.3d 843, 41 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2397, 2013 WL 3441546, 2013 Colo. App. LEXIS 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-lee-coloctapp-2013.