Fuchs v. Scripps Howard Broadcasting Co.

868 N.E.2d 1024, 170 Ohio App. 3d 679, 2006 Ohio 5349
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 2006
DocketNo. C-050166.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 868 N.E.2d 1024 (Fuchs v. Scripps Howard Broadcasting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuchs v. Scripps Howard Broadcasting Co., 868 N.E.2d 1024, 170 Ohio App. 3d 679, 2006 Ohio 5349 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*686 Mark P. Painter, Judge.

{¶ 1} The media has great freedom in this country because we value its watchdog role. Yet the public’s right to know must be balanced by an individual’s privacy interests — and it is where these intersect that the courts must be careful to balance both interests.

{¶ 2} Here, a TV station did investigative reporting. It was sued for defamation. We hold that the trial court was correct in granting summary judgment to the station because it acted reasonably.

I. The Investigation

{¶ 3} Plaintiff-appellant J. Michael Fuchs, D.D.S., Inc., d.b.a. Family Dental Care Associates (“FDCA”), has one of the largest dental practices in the Cincinnati area. FDCA has approximately 200,000 patient records in 125,000 separate accounts and generates 60,000 patient visits per year at five locations. J. Michael Fuchs is the president, CEO, sole shareholder, and sole officer of FDCA. Fuchs controls all aspects of FDCA’s business, including billing practices, patient care, customer service, hiring and firing, employee training, and compliance with state and federal regulations.

{¶ 4} Defendant-appellee Hagit Limor is a reporter for defendant-appellee Scripps Howard Broadcasting Company, d.b.a. WCPO-TV’s (“WCPO”), in its consumer and citizen advocacy investigational series, the I-Team. WCPO’s consumer reporter, John Matarese, forwarded to Limor complaints from defendants-appellees Steve Francis and Rebecca Benoit about FDCA. Matarese also forwarded to Limor a videotaped interview with Francis. Limor began to investigate the complaints — which concerned billing problems and the inability of Francis and Benoit to reach FDCA to resolve the problems because of busy signals and full voice-mail boxes at FDCA’s corporate headquarters. Limor followed up on the complaints by contacting Francis and viewing his videotaped interview.

{¶ 5} Following these preliminary steps, in December 2002, Limor tried to contact Fuchs for comment, but she was also met with unanswered phone calls and full voice-mail boxes. Limor contacted the Ohio State Dental Board, but she was told that the board dealt only with clinical issues and did not keep open public records. The board directed Limor to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office (“AG”), which dealt with billing complaints. Limor spoke by phone with the AG’s public-relations representative, Peter Gribbon. Later, Limor conducted a videotaped interview with Gribbon, who stated that the AG had received an “unusual” number of complaints about FDCA but was unable to say how many of the *687 complaints were valid. Gribbon also stated that the AG was not currently-investigating FDCA’s billing practices.

{¶ 6} Limor contacted the Cincinnati Better Business Bureau (“BBB”) and spoke to its president, Jocile Ehrlich. The BBB had well over 100 unresolved complaints against FDCA, which had an unsatisfactory rating. Ehrlich later stated that the complaints were mainly about billing issues. Limor videotaped interviews with Ehrlich, Francis, Benoit, and the Kutcheras, a married couple who had complained to the BBB about FDCA’s billing practices.

{¶ 7} Limor continued to investigate FDCA. She discovered that FDCA was involved in more than 180 lawsuits in Hamilton County. When Limor spoke to some of the people involved in the lawsuits, she heard more complaints about FDCA’s billing practices and customer service. Limor also spoke to two dentists not affiliated with FDCA about their own billing practices.

{¶ 8} Limor tried to contact Fuchs for his response. Fuchs telephoned Limor on February 4, 2003, and stated that he did not “double-bill” his patients. Fuchs told Limor that neither she nor the complaining patients understood dental insurance. Fuchs stated that when he told Limor to speak to insurance companies about dental billing, Limor told him that she “didn’t have to.” Limor denied making that statement. Fuchs directed Limor to obtain releases from the patients if she wanted to inspect the relevant patient records.

{¶ 9} Limor obtained releases from Francis, Benoit, and the Kutcheras and took them to FDCA’s corporate office. Hoping to get an on-camera interview with Fuchs, Limor brought her videographer, Rod Griola. Fuchs refused to appear on camera. Fuchs also refused to release the relevant patient records, even though Limor had obtained the requested releases.

{¶ 10} Fuchs wrote a series of letters to Limor and WCPO, stating that the “charges” they were making were false, threatening legal action, and requesting the opportunity to respond to the “allegations” in a list of written interrogatories. Limor refused to send written questions to Fuchs on the advice of defendantsappellees Robert Morford, WCPO’s news director, and William Fee, WCPO’s general manager. Morford and Fee denied Fuchs’s request for written questions because they preferred face-to-face interviews for the visual medium of television and because they could not be sure of the identity of the person who would actually answer the written questions.

{¶ 11} Limor made two more attempts to interview Fuchs or a representative of FDCA. The first attempt was early one morning when Limor and Griola showed up uninvited at Fuchs’s home. Fuchs would not appear on camera. The second attempt resulted in a meeting between Fuchs’s attorney and representatives of WCPO. Fuchs did not attend the meeting. Fuchs’s attorney refused to *688 speak on the record. And rather than addressing the issues raised by WCPO, he merely related his own experiences with dentists and the basic standards of dental-billing practices.

II. The First Broadcast

{¶ 12} After about three months of investigation, WCPO aired its first I-Team report about FDCA on WCPO’s February 24, 2003,11 p.m. newscast.

{¶ 13} In the broadcast report, Francis, Benoit, and the Kutcheras complained that they did not understand the amounts that FDCA had billed them, because the bills did not match the patient portions that their insurance companies had specified and because the bills did not reflect the dental treatment that they had requested. The patients also talked about the substantial difficulty they had met in trying to contact FDCA to resolve the billing issues. Benoit stated that her account had been turned over to a collection agency by FDCA for an amount that she did not owe. Limor reported that FDCA had an unsatisfactory rating with the BBB, with 125 complaints, “the vast majority over billing disputes.” Jocile Ehrlich stated that the 125 BBB complaints represented an “extremely high number” and that the average number of complaints about a dental firm was “none, one maybe.” Limor reported that Fuchs had stated that the problem was that “patients don’t necessarily understand their insurance.”

III. The Second Broadcast — and the Response

{¶ 14} Following the first FDCA broadcast, WCPO received more than 90 telephone calls and e-mails from patients and former employees of FDCA supporting the claims made in the broadcast. As a result, WCPO aired a second FDCA report on February 25, 2003. The second broadcast was a short update reporting the more than 90 calls and e-mails that WCPO had received in support of the first broadcast.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
868 N.E.2d 1024, 170 Ohio App. 3d 679, 2006 Ohio 5349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuchs-v-scripps-howard-broadcasting-co-ohioctapp-2006.