Mallory v. Ohio University

2002 Ohio 7406, 782 N.E.2d 173, 121 Ohio Misc. 2d 64
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 17, 2002
DocketNo. 99-04593
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2002 Ohio 7406 (Mallory v. Ohio University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mallory v. Ohio University, 2002 Ohio 7406, 782 N.E.2d 173, 121 Ohio Misc. 2d 64 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

Fred J. Shoemaker, Judge.

{¶ 1} This case was tried to the court on the issue of damages on plaintiffs claim for defamation. In a prior decision on the issue of liability the court found in favor of defendant. However, the Tenth District Court of Appeals reversed this court’s decision, finding that a statement by defendant’s employee, Jeanine Woodruff, constituted slander per se. (Dec. 20, 2001), Franklin App. No. 01AP-278, 2001 WL 1631329.

{¶ 2} In 1996, plaintiff enrolled as a student at Ohio University (“OU”). On November 19, 1997, during plaintiffs sophomore year, plaintiff and another student, Audrey Delong, were at a local bar; both students were drinking alcohol that evening in celebration of Delong’s 21st birthday. According to plaintiff, both he and Delong were intoxicated when they left the bar and walked to Delong’s sorority house. Shortly after arriving at the sorority house, Delong engaged in a brief argument with her “housemother” concerning the house policy forbidding male guests at night.

[66]*66{¶ 3} Plaintiff and Delong then left the sorority house and walked across the campus to plaintiffs dormitory room, where they began engaging in sexual conduct. Delong vomited during this time, and she and plaintiff both went to the dormitory showers to clean up. While in the showers, plaintiff and Delong engaged in further sexual conduct; during this time, other dormitory residents observed the two in the shower area, and a resident advisor asked plaintiff and Delong to leave. Delong was still visibly intoxicated as she left the shower area.

{¶ 4} The next morning, campus police questioned Delong regarding the events, and she was also counseled by Woodruff, the assistant director of the OU Department of Health, Education, and Wellness (“HEW”). According to Delong, she could not remember any of the events of the previous evening.

{¶ 5} Plaintiff was subsequently charged with sexual assault under the university’s code of student conduct and appeared at a “Judiciaries Hearing.” As a result of the hearing, plaintiff was found “responsible” on the sexual assault charge and expelled from the university.

{¶ 6} Plaintiff was also indicted by an Athens County Grand Jury for the crime of sexual battery. The case came before a jury in October 1998, and the trial ended in a hung jury, with 11 jurors voting for acquittal and one juror voting for conviction. The prosecutor for Athens County elected not to retry plaintiff, and all of the charges against him were dismissed with prejudice.

{¶ 7} Plaintiffs criminal trial was the subject of extensive coverage by local Athens newspapers. In addition to reporting the facts of the case, the newspapers also published editorials, press releases, and letters expressing various viewpoints about the case. Among the publications was a letter written by plaintiffs parents characterizing the actions taken by OU in plaintiffs case as “appalling.” The letter specifically criticized HEW for providing Delong counseling and support while denying such assistance to plaintiff. Jim Phillips, an associate editor for The Athens News, contacted Woodruff and asked her to respond to the letter. Woodruff orally answered some of Phillips’s questions, and subsequently provided a written statement in response to the parents’ letter.

{¶ 8} On November 12, 1998, The Athens News published an article entitled “After sexual battery charges are dismissed Mallory’s parents lash out at OU, media.” Included in the article were statements by plaintiffs parents, plaintiffs defense attorney, prosecuting attorneys, a member of a feminist student group, and OU employees, including Woodruff. The section of the article containing Woodruffs statements included the following paragraph:

{¶ 9} “ ‘The information generated by the [university] police definitely met the definition of sexual battery, and certainly was a violation of the student code of conduct,’ Woodruff said. ‘It’s not like some people want to make out, that this [67]*67was two drunk people having a good time, and one of them felt bad about it the next day. For them to say [Mallory] was treated unfairly just seems kind of ridiculous, from my perspective. He definitely committed a sexual battery, from the information that was gathered.’ ”

{¶ 10} On February 24, 1999, plaintiff filed a complaint in this court alleging in part that Woodruff had uttered defamatory statements against plaintiff. Following the liability phase of the trial, the court found in favor of OU, concluding that the ordinary reader would view Woodruffs statements as opinion and not fact. On appeal, the Tenth District Court of Appeals reversed, finding that Woodruffs statement “implied that her assertion had a factual basis, and the average reader or listener could have concluded that Woodruff was in a position to have been privy to the information gathered by the university police, thereby viewing her statement as fact rather than opinion.” Mallory v. Ohio Univ. (Dec. 20, 2001), Franklin App. No. 01AP-278, 2001 WL 1631329. The court held that “the statement involves a direct accusation of criminal activity involving moral turpitude on the part of the plaintiff, and we therefore conclude, as a matter of law, that the statement constituted slander per se.”

{¶ 11} During the damages trial, plaintiffs witnesses included his parents, Ruth and Chuck Mallory, and Dr. Richard Freeland, a psychiatrist who had treated plaintiff for anxiety and depression. Ruth Mallory’s testimony is summarized as follows. As a child, plaintiff excelled in school despite having a mild attention deficit disorder. Plaintiff graduated from high school in 1996 and began classes at OU in September of that year. In 1997, plaintiff suffered a panic attack at school, during which he complained that he was having trouble breathing. Some roommates took him to a local hospital, where he was eventually able to calm down. While plaintiff had suffered anxiety before, this was the first time he experienced a panic attack.

{¶ 12} After plaintiff was expelled from OU in the spring of 1998, he lived at home with his parents in Canal Winchester and began attending classes at Ohio State University (“OSU”) during the fall of 1998. Plaintiffs criminal trial commenced in October 1998 and, as noted above, resulted in a hung jury. On November 9, 1998, the prosecutor announced that the charge against plaintiff would be dropped. According to Ruth Mallory, her son was elated at the news, but when the Athens newspaper article containing Woodruffs statements was released on November 12, 1998, plaintiff “was devastated” and an “emotional wreck.”

{¶ 13} At trial, plaintiff introduced a Columbus Dispatch article, dated May 3, 2002, reporting that the Supreme Court of Ohio had “ruled 4-3 without comment, upholding a lower-court ruling that said former Ohio University student Benjamin Mallory was slandered by an administrator’s comment to a newspaper that [68]

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Ohio 7406, 782 N.E.2d 173, 121 Ohio Misc. 2d 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mallory-v-ohio-university-ohioctcl-2002.