Lyons v. Globe Newspaper Co.

612 N.E.2d 1158, 415 Mass. 258
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 13, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 612 N.E.2d 1158 (Lyons v. Globe Newspaper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyons v. Globe Newspaper Co., 612 N.E.2d 1158, 415 Mass. 258 (Mass. 1993).

Opinion

Liacos, C.J.

This report comes to us on a stipulation of agreed facts, together with the pleadings and certain memo- *259 randa of law submitted to the trial judge. The underlying action is a defamation suit brought against Globe Newspaper Company, the publisher of The Boston Globe and The Boston Sunday Globe, and three of its reporters. The plaintiffs are the National Association of Government Employees, Inc. (NAGE), by its member union International Brotherhood of Police Officers, and the national president of NAGE (Lyons).

The facts are as follows. On June 2, 1990, the Massachusetts Democratic party held a political convention in Springfield to nominate candidates for State-wide office. Picketing organized by the Springfield police union precluded the convention from beginning at its scheduled time. For several hours, the picket line barred most delegates and candidates from the convention hall. The deadlock was broken in the early afternoon when a judge of the Superior Court ruled the picketing illegal and enjoined the police union from further demonstrating.

Following the judge’s order, the convention was allowed to proceed. Four candidates competed for the gubernatorial nomination: Francis X. Bellotti, John H. Flood, Evelyn Murphy, and John Silber. Convention rules required that each individual candidate obtain at least 15% of the delegates’ vote in order to qualify for the Democratic party’s primary ballot. Francis X. Bellotti won the gubernatorial nomination. Both Evelyn Murphy and John Silber qualified for the party’s primary ballot.

On the next day, the Boston Globe published an article on the convention and its disruption. See Appendix. The article stated that the picketing held the convention “hostage,” and advanced three alternative explanations for the picketers’ motives. First, the article referred to a labor dispute. Next, the article cited Democratic leaders’ suspicion that members of the Republican party had “engineered the picketing as a political dirty trick.” The Springfield police union, the article stated, had endorsed George Bush in the 1988 presidential elections. Thirdly, the article stated that “[cjritics of Silber also voiced suspicions that his supporters promoted the picket *260 line to undercut the convention. The Springfield police union is a member of the National Association of Government Employees which is headed by Silber supporter Kenneth Lyons.” The article added that supporters of John Silber had doubted his ability to garner 15% of the vote, and had “tried to exploit the confusion caused by the police picket to do away with the 15 percent rule.”

The article reported the statements of various individuals who denounced the picketing. Comments attributed to Luis Prado, the executive director of La Alianza Hispana of Roxbury and a former United Nations monitor in Nicaragua, were reported to state that Prado thought “the situation was far worse than the February elections in Nicaragua.” The article also quoted him as saying that the “Sandinistas never dared to do anything like that. This is like using brute force in politics.”

On June 14, 1990, the plaintiffs commenced the present action in the Superior Court. In their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged that the article defamed them by conveying to the readers that the plaintiffs had conspired with the Springfield police union, with John Silber, and with Republican leaders, to disrupt the convention and to attempt to cause its cancellation. The plaintiffs also alleged that the article implied that they had engaged in criminal behavior, namely, conspiring to deprive the Democratic delegates of their civil rights peaceably to assemble to nominate candidates for elections. 3

*261 On October 9, 1990, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (6), 365 Mass. 754 (1974). A judge of the Superior Court held a hearing and, with the agreement of the parties, treated the defendants’ motion as one for summary judgment pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 56, 365 Mass. 824 (1974). The judge denied the motion and reported the “case” as well as ten questions of law with stipulated facts to the Appeals Court. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 64, 365 Mass. 831 (1974). 4 We transferred the case to this court on our own motion.

The defendants urge us to hold that the denial of their summary judgment motion was error because the challenged portions of the article constitute expressions of opinion protected by the First Amendment to the United States Consti *262 tution, art. 16 of our Declaration of Rights, and the common law of this Commonwealth.

The plaintiffs argue in response that the challenged article implies that “NAGE and Lyons used their influence, brute force, and the police apparatus, and resorted to violence and intimidation in order to subvert the rules in an effort to prohibit the Democratic State Convention from taking place, all with the ultimate goal of illegally getting Silber on the ballot; not unlike the infamous ‘Reichstag Fire.’ ” The plaintiffs also claim that the article accuses them of “subversive conduct” and of criminal acts exceeding “the level of atrocities committed by the Sandinistas.” Such accusations, they contend, constitute actionable statements of defamatory facts. Relying in part on the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 497 U.S. 1 (1990), the plaintiffs contend that they have a cause of action for defamation even if we characterized the challenged statements as expressions of opinion.

In National Ass’n of Gov’t Employees, Inc. v. Central Broadcasting Corp., 379 Mass. 220, 227 (1979), cert. denied, 446 U.S. 935 (1980), we adopted the principles governing expressions of opinion set forth in § 566 of Restatement (Second) of Torts (1977). We held that “[a] defamatory communication may consist of a statement in the form of an opinion, but a statement of this nature is actionable only if it implies the allegation of undisclosed defamatory facts as the basis for the opinion.” We explained that, under this rule, “‘[a] simple expression of opinion based on disclosed or assumed nondefamatory facts is not itself sufficient for an action of defamation, no matter how unjustified and unreasonable the opinion may be or how derogatory it is. But an expression of opinion that is not based on disclosed or assumed facts and therefore implies that there are undisclosed facts on which the opinion is based, is treated differently.’ Thus if I write, without more, that a person is an alcoholic, I may well have committed a libel prima facie; but it is otherwise if I write that I saw the person take a martini at lunch and accordingly state that he is an alcoholic.” Id. at 227-228, *263 quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 566 comment c, second par. (1977). See Myers v. Boston Magazine Co, 380 Mass. 336, 339 (1980). 5

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612 N.E.2d 1158, 415 Mass. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-v-globe-newspaper-co-mass-1993.