Lynette Harris v. Betty Ewens Quadracci, James Romenesko, Dennis M. Casey, Quad/creative, Incorporated, and David A. Fryxell

48 F.3d 247, 23 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1296, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2892, 1995 WL 60794
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 1995
Docket94-2834
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 48 F.3d 247 (Lynette Harris v. Betty Ewens Quadracci, James Romenesko, Dennis M. Casey, Quad/creative, Incorporated, and David A. Fryxell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynette Harris v. Betty Ewens Quadracci, James Romenesko, Dennis M. Casey, Quad/creative, Incorporated, and David A. Fryxell, 48 F.3d 247, 23 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1296, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2892, 1995 WL 60794 (7th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

I. Introduction

In this defamation action, Lynette Harris sought damages from James Romenesko, Dennis M. Casey, Betty Ewens Quadracci and Quad/Creative, Inc. for statements made in a Milwaukee Magazine article, entitled “Runaway Twin: Lynette Harris takes her biographer on a frightening journey.” The district court 1 granted summary judgment, dismissing Harris’ defamation claim. Harris appeals.

Harris raises three issues on appeal: (1) the district court erred in concluding that as a matter of law she was a limited purpose public figure under the New York Times “actual malice” standard; (2) even assuming the district court had properly characterized Harris as a “public figure,” it erred in finding no genuine issue of “actual malice”; and (3) the district court misapplied Wisconsin defamation law in holding her claims against Dennis Casey to be nonactionable. We affirm.

II. Background

In 1990, a jury in federal district court convicted Lynette Harris of income tax evasion. Harris had failed to report as income thousands of dollars received from David Kritzik, a wealthy widower, now deceased, who was partial to the company of young women. The court sentenced Harris to ten months in prison.

In 1991, this court reversed Harris’ conviction and ordered that the indictment against Harris be dismissed. The court observed that based on current law the payments such as those made to Harris may qualify either as a gift, taxable under gift tax law to the donor, or as income, taxable to the recipient. As a result of this uncertainty, Harris had no fair warning that her conduct was criminal. See United States v. Harris, 942 F.2d 1125 (7th Cir.1991).

Harris’ trial generated a considerable amount of publicity in the Milwaukee area, and to some extent nationally. Prior to her indictment, Harris had become, in her own words, “pretty well-known” in Milwaukee as a model and actress. She had appeared in several Milwaukee newspaper advertisements, on local television, and in Playboy magazine on four different occasions. After her indictment and as the trial approached, Harris’ media exposure increased. She began granting numerous interviews and appeared on several nationally-syndicated television shows, including “Larry King Live,” “Oprah Winfrey,” “Inside Edition” and “Entertainment Tonight.”

After her conviction and during the pen-dency of her appeal, Harris was imprisoned in West Virginia. There she met Dennis Casey, a Pittsburgh journalist. Casey befriended Harris and offered to write a book *249 about her and her twin sister, Leigh Ann Conley. Ms. Conley was separately prosecuted and convicted for the same crimes for which Ms. Harris was prosecuted and convicted. This court reversed her conviction as well.

When this court overturned Harris’ conviction, she relocated to Pittsburgh and moved into an apartment rented for her by Casey. During the ensuing months, as Casey purportedly worked on a book about Harris, 2 his relationship with Harris soured. Although very sketchy, the record suggests that because Harris wanted a percentage of the proposed book’s expected profits and Casey refused, Harris told several individuals, including Casey’s wife, that Casey had made sexual demands of Harris. Additional evidence suggests that Harris had called Casey on several different occasions, apparently threatening to ruin Casey’s reputation if he did not pay her. The parties disagree as to whether Casey had made any sexual demands of Harris and to whether they had had a sexual relationship, but Harris has acknowledged under oath that she made the threatening phone calls and that these calls could be interpreted as extortionary in nature.

In February 1992, Milwaukee Magazine, a general circulation magazine published in the Milwaukee area, printed an article entitled “Runaway Twin: Lynette Harris takes her biographer on a frightening journey.” The article was penned by James Romenesko, a journalist who had been employed at Milwaukee Magazine since 1982. Mr. Romenes-ko’s article begins with background information on the “tax evasion” prosecution of Lynette Harris and her sister, and then proceeds to describe Casey’s book idea and, more extensively, his various “experiences” with Harris. Romenesko principally based his article upon several telephone interviews with Casey. Casey had originally contacted Romen-esko because Romenesko was familiar with Harris, having already written an article about her in July 1990.

After the “Runaway Twin” article appeared in print, Harris brought this action for defamation against the named defendants, identifying seven passages from the article that Harris contends are false and defamatory. These passages include:

(1) But by the end, says Casey, á Pittsburgh writer and television political analyst, Harris transformed from a cooperative source into a frightening extortionist.
(2) Playboy models Harris and her twin sister, Leigh Ann Conley, were convicted in federal court in 1990 of failing to pay taxes on millions of dollars from Kritzik. A federal appeals court overturned the verdict last year, accepting the twins’ argument that money from the octogenarian was a gift and thus not taxable.
(3) Casey was tipped off to the story by a
friend who knew he was interested in tax law. ■ ■
(4) But soon-after moving in, the writer says, she [Ms. Harris] demanded 40 percent of the book’s profits. When he refused, she spread word around Pittsburgh that the well-known Casey — a married father of three — -was making sexual demands of her.
(5) Then, in August, the owner of-a restaurant where Casey is a regular customer told him about a new waitress. “Oh,” said Casey, “where is she?” The writer looked down the bar and saw Harris, who knew her biographer frequented the eatery. “She was standing there, polishing a knife with a cloth and looking hate at me,” he recalls. “I-thought, ‘This is nuts.’ I actually fell into a booth. My knees got weak.”
(6) Finally, in October, Harris left town and Casey finished writing the 350-page opus. The book, For Love or Money ?-, is expected to include transcripts of secret tape recordings of phone conversations between Kritzik and several prominent Mil-waukeeans. Casey says the tapes include “possibly incriminating evidence” against the local notables. At press time, four publishers were about to bid on the book. *250 (7) Of Harris, he says: “She’s a victim of society and a victim of herself_■ She can be one of the nicest people on earth and she can suddenly transform into one of the worst. I think Lynnette [sic] Harris is the sum total of what men do to beautiful women in our society, and she allowed it to happen because it was her way of dealing with the world.”

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48 F.3d 247, 23 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1296, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2892, 1995 WL 60794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynette-harris-v-betty-ewens-quadracci-james-romenesko-dennis-m-casey-ca7-1995.