Honorable Bruce W. Dodds v. American Broadcasting Company, Inc., a Delaware Corporation

145 F.3d 1053, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10459, 1998 WL 264837
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1998
Docket96-56300
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 145 F.3d 1053 (Honorable Bruce W. Dodds v. American Broadcasting Company, Inc., a Delaware Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honorable Bruce W. Dodds v. American Broadcasting Company, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, 145 F.3d 1053, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10459, 1998 WL 264837 (9th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

It has been said by supporters of the Honorable Bruce Dodds, a California state court judge, that he is “tough,” “short,” “abrupt,” “direct,” “rude,” “impatient,” and “gruff.” Dodds v. Commission on Judicial Performance, 12 Cal.4th 163, 48 Cal.Rptr.2d 4 106, 906 P.2d 1260, 1265 (1995). It has been ' said by others less sympathetic to his cause that he uses a crystal ball in deciding cases and that he is “anything but a respectable superior court judge.” Perhaps understandably, the latter remarks, broadcast nationwide on a news magazine program by the American Broadcasting Company (“ABC”), were the source of considerable consternation to Judge Dodds. In an effort to clear his name and unsully his reputation, he brought a defamation action against ABC, alleging that the network acted with actual malice in broadcasting numerous comments regarding his performance as a judge. He asserted that ABC’s broadcast portrayed him as a criminal and as someone who is unfit for judicial service. We consider in this appeal whether the district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of ABC as to the crystal ball comment and whether it properly dismissed the remainder of the claims Judge Dodds now appeals.

BACKGROUND

While Judge Bruce Dodds was being investigated by the California Commission on Judicial Performance (“the Commission”) on allegations of judicial misconduct, the ABC news magazine program “Prime Time Live” profiled him and two other judges in a segment entitled “Who’s Judging the Judges.” The program was broadcast on television stations across the country in October 1994. According to one of the show’s producers, the purpose of the segment was to examine critically the disciplinary processes for judges who have been accused of misconduct, using three individual judges as examples. Although it purported to focus on the disciplinary process, much of the segment was devoted to detailing the misconduct itself.

The basic format of this type of show is familiar to most TV viewers: a news reporter interviews various people about a certain topic, and then combines clips of interviews and narration in order to construct a newsworthy report. Usually there are several segments in each program. In the program at issue, ABC news anchor Diane Sawyer introduced the segment that gave rise to this case by explaining that fellow ABC news reporter Cynthia McFadden was going to report on “judges whose conduct seems downright scandalous.” Immediately following this introduction, the segment cut to clips of three individuals commenting on the behavior of unidentified judges; the first individual described a judge, shortly to be revealed as Judge Dodds, as “a court jester ... anything but a respectable superior court judge,” while the next two individuals explained that they had been victims of other judges’ sexual misconduct. McFadden elaborated on the theme of the show: “Last year, 12,000 complaints were filed against state court judges, yet more than 85 percent of these complaints were dismissed with little or no investigation ____ [W]e decided to take a closer look.”

McFadden introduced Professor Geoffrey Hazard, a highly regarded expert in the area of legal ethics, explaining that the professor “says there’s a troubling tension between having an independent judiciary and reviewing the judges’ behavior.” Professor Hazard then stated: “The problem of who judges the judges is, particularly in a democracy, perhaps as difficult a question as there can be.” McFadden noted that many complaints against judges are frivolous, and that “[t]he trick is to identify the serious ones.” The segment then featured stories on three' different judges from different parts of the country.

The segment first told the story of a judge in Indiana who had been accused of sexually molesting juveniles and was awaiting trial on *1057 other criminal charges. In that report, a young man explained how he had met the judge when he was in court as a juvenile offender and how the judge had taken an interest in him. Approximately two years later, the youth said, the judge began demanding sex from him. McFadden reported that although the judge had also been accused of similar conduct with other young men who had been in the juvenile justice system, nothing happened until the youth featured on the program helped police arrange a sting operation. She stated that at the time of the broadcast, the judge was facing trial on charges of solicitation of a prostitute and drug dealing.

Following this story, which concluded with shots of the judge being led off in handcuffs, the segment turned to Judge Dodds. McFadden introduced the story by asserting:

In the past four years, I’ve covered about 250 trials, most of them gavel to gavel. I’ve often been struck by the way that judges justify their decisions on thorny points, often with wisdom drawn from experience, or with a superior grasp of the law. But never the way a judge in California has been accused of.

This portion of the segment cut first to a newselip of Dodds denying any wrongdoing. Then McFadden explained that “[f]or the past several years, a stream of complaints” had been lodged against Judge Dodds concerning his lack of “judicial temperament.” The segment then featured clips of interviews with people who had dealt with Judge Dodds and reports by McFadden regarding the allegations of misconduct against the judge. McFadden stated, for example, that a former court clerk had declared in a sworn statement that Judge Dodds would read newspapers and magazines while he was on the bench, and that he had screamed and spit in court.

Two litigants who had appeared in Judge Dodds’s courtroom also recounted their negative experiences. Cindy Hart, whose divorce case was heard by the judge, stated that he had acted disrespectfully towards her and that when she took the witness stand to testify, he had said: “All I have to do is look at her to see she has psychological problems.”

The report then focused on another litigant, Christine Johnson, who had appeared in front of Judge Dodds during the preceding year. Johnson and her son had sued the Catholic church, alleging that a priest had sexually molested the son. She described how the judge belittled their claim during a settlement conference and how he told her that because there were only two incidents of sexual molestation, it was “no big deal, and juries don’t like to hear about things that aren’t very juicy.” McFadden then explained how Judge Dodds had pressured Johnson into accepting a low settlement offer: According to Johnson, Judge Dodds kept a crystal ball on the conference table in his chambers, where the parties engaged in settlement negotiations. After telling her what he thought her case was worth, Judge Dodds pressed a button on the crystal ball. The crystal ball responded “yes,” confirming Dodds’ settlement figure, and the judge then said to Johnson “There it is. That’s it. That’s what you get.” McFadden stated that “[l]awyers, litigants, and [Dodds’s] former clerk all say Dodds often used the crystal ball to support his decisions.”

McFadden unsuccessfully attempted to interview Judge Dodds about the allegations and the segment included footage of the judge refusing to talk with her.

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Bluebook (online)
145 F.3d 1053, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10459, 1998 WL 264837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honorable-bruce-w-dodds-v-american-broadcasting-company-inc-a-delaware-ca9-1998.