Heimbecker v. Drudge

22 Pa. D. & C.5th 129
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJanuary 31, 2011
Docketno. 2464
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C.5th 129 (Heimbecker v. Drudge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heimbecker v. Drudge, 22 Pa. D. & C.5th 129 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

RAU, J.,

I. INTRODUCTION

During Justice Samuel Alito’s1 Supreme Court confirmation hearings, appellant Mr. H. Gerard Heimbecker wrote to President George W. Bush, the entire Senate Judiciary Committee and appellee Matt Drudge of The Drudge Report that Mr. Heimbecker had requested the entire Third Circuit, including then-Judge Alito, to recuse from hearing his appeal and that Justice Alito had not disclosed this general recusal request on his judicial questionnaire for the Supreme Court. Appellant Mr. Heimbecker requested that appellee Mr. [131]*131Drudge help him publicize the matter and also posted the information on his own website. After Mr. Heimbecker’s repeated contacts, the Drudge Report released an article in an online news outlet, entitled “Teddy’s Last Gasp on Alito”, reporting that Senator Kennedy’s aide criticized Justice Alito about the alleged omission and that Mr. Heimbecker’s later complaint of judicial misconduct. The article quoted a Capitol aide who said, “The individual who filed this complaint is clearly a serial litigant. It will be interesting to see how far the Democrats will push this and what the mainstream media will make of it.”

Upon learning of the error, Justice Alito promptly amended his judicial questionnaire. The Third Circuit judicial council dismissed the judicial misconduct complaint finding that the omission was not intentional but caused by the clerk’s office providing Justice Alito with an incomplete list of cases involving recusal motions brought against him. Judicial council of the Third Circuit, mem. op., J.C. No. 06-04, Jan. 26, 2006, 5-6 (attached to def.’s mot. for summ. J. as Exhibit I). The general nature of Mr. Heimbecker’s recusal motion being against every judge on the entire Third Circuit rather than against Justice Alito individually, resulted in the case being omitted from the computer generated listing of recusal cases. Id. Justice Alito was subsequently confirmed as a United States Supreme Court Justice by a Senate majority on January 31,2006.

Appellant Heimbecker then sued appellee Matt Drudge claiming that the article’s “serial litigant” quote was defamatory and that the article implied he was a “political tool” of Senator Kennedy. Significantly, shortly after the article’s publication and prior to his defamation claim, Mr. Heimbecker published a press release directing the public [132]*132to the very article that he now claims was defamatory.

This court granted summary judgment in favor of Mr. Drudge because Mr. Heimbecker failed to produce evidence that the statements in The Drudge Report were false, written with actual malice, defamatory, or damaging to Mr. Heimbecker. Mr. Heimbecker appeals here that grant of summary judgment.

Constitutional law requires that a limited-purpose public figure in a defamation action prove falsity and “actual malice” by clear and convincing evidence in order to prevail. Mr. Heimbecker became a public figure by creating a controversy over Justice Alito’s alleged omission of his recusal request and by publicizing the fact that he filed a judicial misconduct complaint against Justice Alito. In addition, Mr. Drudge is a media defendant who was reporting on one of the most important issues to the public at the time: the confirmation of a justice to a lifetime appointment on our nation’s highest court. Mr. Heimbecker failed to produce any evidence, much less the required clear and convincing evidence, that the statements at issue are false or that they were published with “actual malice.” Mr. Gerard Heimbecker admits that he has been involved in litigation for over 40 years and that the alleged defamatory statements were only published after he contacted the defendant, Mr. Drudge, to ask for his help in making the subject matter of the article public.

Summaiy judgment is also appropriate because the quote by the Capitol staffer that Mr. Heimbecker is a “serial litigant” is not susceptible to a defamatory meaning, and the article does not state or imply that Mr. Heimbecker is a “political tool” of Senator Kennedy. Finally, Mr. [133]*133Heimbecker’s own evidence shows that he has not been harmed by the publication, barring his recovery of punitive damages.

Since Mr. Heimbecker failed to meet the minimum burden of evidence to prove defamation, this court was legally required to grant Mr. Drudge’s motion for summary judgment. The appeal should be denied and the grant of summary judgment affirmed.

II. FACTS2

A. The Drudge Report Article

Mr. Heimbecker commenced this action for libel and defamation based on an article published on the internet by defendant Matt Drudge on January 20, 2006 (Def.’s mot. for summ. J. and pi’s response, ¶¶ 3-7). The complete article, entitled “Drudge Exclusive: Teddy’s Last Gasp On Alito” read as follows:

The Drudge Report has learned Sen. Ted Kennedy’s (D-MA) office is behind a last ditch effort to stop Judge Samuel A. Alito’s confirmation before next week’s vote using a 2004 recusal request.
The Drudge Report has obtained a complaint filed by H. Gerard Heimbecker of Upper Darby, PA accusing Alito of not properly listing the Heimbecker v. 555 Associates case in his Senate questionnaire.
[134]*134Kennedy legal aide James Flug is behind the efforts to push this latest attack. -The veteran aide has been criticized for Sen. Kennedy’s misfires during the Alito hearing last week. Flug was reportedly behind the attacks Kennedy used against Alito related to the Concerned Alumni of Princeton (CAP) and Vanguard recusal case.
In the 2004 case, Mr. Heimbecker not only filed a request for Alito to recuse himself but also the entire Third Circuit as well.
One Capitol Aide aware the [sic] situation challenged Mr. Heimbecker’s credibility. “The individual who filed this complaint is clearly a serial litigant. It will be interesting to see how far the Democrats will push this and what the mainstream media will make of it.”
Developing... (Pl.’s third am. compl., August 17,2009, ex. four; def.’s mot. for summ. J. and pl.’s resp., ¶6) (emphasis added).

It is undisputed that the article “reported on a complaint filed by Mr. Heimbecker with the Judicial Council of the Third Circuit alleging that The Honorable Samuel A. Alito, then a United States Circuit Judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit who had been nominated to be an Associate Justice of the Unites States Supreme Court, was guilty of judicial misconduct” (Def.’s mot. for summ. J. and pl.’s resp., ¶5.).

Mr. Heimbecker admits that Mr. Drudge is a media defendant: “The defendant Drudge, at all times herein mentioned, was the author and publisher of an online news report known as the Drudge Report,” and that at [135]*135all times, Drudge “identified himself as a news reporter”3 (Pl.’s third am. compl., ¶¶ 6, 7, 9; def.’s answer to pl.’s third am. compl. ¶7.).

B. Mr. Heimbecker’s Litigation History

Mr.

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22 Pa. D. & C.5th 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heimbecker-v-drudge-pactcomplphilad-2011.