Jackson v. Hartig

645 S.E.2d 303, 35 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1944, 274 Va. 219, 2007 Va. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 2007
DocketRecord 061505.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 645 S.E.2d 303 (Jackson v. Hartig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Hartig, 645 S.E.2d 303, 35 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1944, 274 Va. 219, 2007 Va. LEXIS 96 (Va. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY Justice CYNTHIA D. KINSER.

This appeal involves an action for defamation brought by an unsuccessful candidate for election to the Virginia House of Delegates against the author and publisher of a newspaper editorial endorsing the candidate's opponent. Because we conclude that there are no material facts genuinely in dispute and that the evidence in the record would not permit a reasonable fact finder to conclude, by clear and convincing evidence, that the defendants acted with actual malice, we will affirm the judgment of the circuit court granting summary judgment for the defendants and dismissing the defamation action with prejudice.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Timmy Jackson was elected to a four-year term on the City of Virginia Beach School Board (the School Board) that began in July 1994. At that time, the outgoing School Board had already approved a budget for the 1994-1995 school year. In 1995, the School Board was notified that it was operating at a deficit, prompting several members of the School Board to resign. A special grand jury convened to investigate the causes of the budget deficit, and on February 26, 1996, it issued a report recommending that the remaining members of the School Board who had served during the 1994-1995 school year resign or face criminal prosecution for violating Code § 22.1-91. 1 All School Board members except Jackson and Ferdinand V. Tolentino resigned. Jackson and Tolentino were each subsequently indicted for the misdemeanor charge of malfeasance related to the School Board budget deficit during the 1994-1995 school year, but a jury acquitted both on August 14, 1996. Jackson continued to serve on the School Board until the end of his term.

In 1998, Jackson ran for election to a seat on the Virginia Beach City Council. On May 3, 1998, the Virginian-Pilot, a newspaper published by Landmark Communications, Inc. (Landmark), printed an editorial endorsing Jackson's candidacy for city council, stating:

Jackson has achieved much on the School Board and promises to be a strong voice for education on council. This former police sergeant has shown himself to be a man of integrity who refused to allow himself to be bullied off the School Board by the commonwealth's attorney two years ago. Jackson insisted he was blameless in the matter of the school system's $12 million deficit - caused by the then-school superintendent and his deputies. A jury agreed, and Jackson was exonerated.

Despite the Virginian-Pilot's endorsement, Jackson lost the election for city council.

Jackson made another bid for public office in 2003, this time seeking to represent the twenty-first House of Delegates district. 2 On November 1, 2003, three days prior to the election, the Virginian-Pilot published an editorial written by Dennis A. Hartig that contained the following statements:

[W]e have deep misgivings about Jackson's qualifications. . . .

Jackson, a former police officer and Republican, was honored to be among the first citizens elected to the Virginia Beach School Board. It turned out badly.

It was on his watch that the schools went millions of dollars in the red, a disaster that took years to overcome. Jackson was indicted for malfeasance, but was exonerated, then resigned.

Jackson has given us no reason why voters should forgive this blot on his record.

Now he wants voters to trust him to oversee a state budget 200 times as large as the School Board's. That's asking too much.

On the morning of the election, the Virginian-Pilot, at Jackson's request, printed a correction of its misstatement that Jackson had resigned his seat on the School Board. Jackson lost the election.

Jackson subsequently filed a motion for judgment against Hartig and Landmark in the Circuit Court of the City of Portsmouth, alleging that Hartig and Landmark published false and defamatory statements about him in the Virginian-Pilot's November 1, 2003 editorial. Jackson claimed that Hartig and Landmark either knew that these statements were false at the time of their publication or printed them with reckless disregard for whether they were true or false. Jackson premised this allegation, in part, on their variance from the supposedly "factually accurate" statements appearing in the Virginian-Pilot's May 3, 1998 editorial. Jackson further alleged that Hartig and Landmark knew that the portion of the November 1, 2003 editorial stating, "It was on his watch that the schools went millions of dollars in the red" was false because the defendants knew not only that the 1994-1995 School Board budget had already been approved when Jackson began his tenure on the School Board, but also that the School Board did not operate at a deficit during any of the years in which Jackson voted to approve the budget. Jackson relied on these same alleged facts to assert that Hartig and Landmark knew their statement characterizing the deficit as "a disaster that took years to overcome" was false. Jackson also claimed that Hartig and Landmark knew that Jackson had not resigned from the School Board, but had publicly refused to do so. Finally, the November 1, 2003 editorial, according to Jackson, accused him of criminal activity even though Hartig and Landmark knew that a jury had found Jackson not guilty of the malfeasance charge.

Along with a demurrer and grounds of defense, Hartig and Landmark filed a motion to transfer venue to the Circuit Court of the City of Virginia Beach. The Circuit Court of the City of Portsmouth granted the defendants' motion, but it gave Jackson the option of having the case transferred to either the Circuit Court of the City of Virginia Beach or the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk, where Landmark's corporate offices were located. Without waiving his objection to the circuit court's decision granting the motion to transfer venue, Jackson chose the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk. Following the transfer of the case, that circuit court overruled the defendants' demurrer, and the parties proceeded with discovery.

Hartig and Landmark filed a motion for summary judgment, along with several exhibits, including a copy of the special grand jury's report and certain discovery responses. In particular, the circuit court had before it Jackson's answer to an interrogatory propounded to him by Hartig and Landmark, asking Jackson to "[i]dentify and describe in detail and with particularity any evidence you contend establishes that Mr. Hartig published the alleged defamatory statements with constitutional actual malice." Jackson responded:

The editorial board failed to even review their own newspaper files concerning . . . my record, the trial and my exoneration, my continued service until the end of term (1994-1998), and their very own endorsement of me in May 1998, publishing factually accurate information stating the direct opposite of content in the November 1, 2003 editorial. Such reckless disregard for the truth or the Defendants' knowledge of the falsity of the defamatory content in the November 1, 2003 article constitutes actual malice. Moreover Mr. Hartig told me in a phone conversation on November 4, 2003 that I had to pay for the deficit.

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Bluebook (online)
645 S.E.2d 303, 35 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1944, 274 Va. 219, 2007 Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-hartig-va-2007.