MESSENGER BY MESSENGER v. Gruner+ Jahr USA Pub.

994 F. Supp. 525, 1998 WL 81591
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 13, 1998
Docket97 Civ. 0136(LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 994 F. Supp. 525 (MESSENGER BY MESSENGER v. Gruner+ Jahr USA Pub.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MESSENGER BY MESSENGER v. Gruner+ Jahr USA Pub., 994 F. Supp. 525, 1998 WL 81591 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Jamie Messenger is a Florida teenager and aspiring fashion model who posed for photographs for use in one of defendant’s magazines, YM, Young and Modem. The photographs were used to illustrate a love and sexual advice column that is a regular feature of the magazine. The column in question contained what was presented as a letter from a teenager, identified only as “Mortified,” which sought adyice in consequence of her having had sex with three boys and then having been ostracized by her peers. The purported letter was followed by the editor’s advice to “Mortified.” The column was illustrated with three photographs of Messenger in various stages of undress and in poses suggestive of events related in the purported letter. The page prominently featured a headline, or “pull quote,” that read “I got trashed and had sex with three guys.” The gravamen of the case is plaintiffs contention that the defendants falsely created the impression that Jamie Messenger was the author of the letter and had had sex with three guys. Plaintiff complains also that defendants tricked Messenger as to the use that would be made of the photographs *527 for which she posed and that the purported letter in fact is a work of fiction.

Plaintiffs remaining claim 1 is that the use of her photograph violated Sections 50 and 51 of the New York Civil Rights Law, which forbids the use of one’s name, portrait or picture for trade or advertising purposes absent a signed release and creates a private cause of action for damages for violations. In order to place the defendants’ summary judgment motion in perspective, it is usefid to trace the history of the statute.

In Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co., 2 the New York Court of Appeals broadly declared that there is no common law right of privacy in the State of New York and denied recovery to an infant plaintiff whose photograph had been widely distributed by the defendant in order to advertise its baking flour. The Legislature promptly adopted the statute here in question to overturn the holding of Roberson by creating a cause of action for the commercial or trade use of one’s name or picture without one’s consent. 3

The state courts’ subsequent application of the statute has been sensitive to the risk that too broad a construction could interfere with free and open discussion of matters of public concern. 4 They have held that publications concerning matters of public interest — a concept applied most expansively 5 — are not trade or advertising uses. More specifically, the state courts repeatedly have said that the use of a photograph to illustrate an article on a topic of public interest is not actionable “unless [the photograph] has no real relationship to the article ... or unless the article is an advertisement in disguise.” 6 Indeed, as recently as 1990, the New York Court of Appeals held in Finger v. Omni Publications Int’l, Ltd., 7 that the use of a photograph of a large family to illustrate a story on fertility and new fertilization techniques was not actionable despite the fact that the children in the photograph were not conceived by such methods.

On the other hand, the New York courts have not disregarded the interests of persons victimized by falsehood. In the leading case of Spahn v. Julian Messner, Inc., 8 the New York Court of Appeals held that a star professional athlete would be entitled to recover for the use of his name in an unauthorized biography to the extent that the defendant culpably falsified or fictionalized aspects of his life. More recently, the Appellate Term of the New York Supreme Court in Fils- *528 Aime v. Enlightenment Press, Inc., 9 applied the Spahn rale to affirm the denial of a motion for summary judgment dismissing a claim based on the allegedly misleading use of a photograph to illustrate an article on a topic of conceded public interest — the use of a teenager’s photograph, taken for other purposes, with an article on child pornography in circumstances that arguably implied that the teenager had been involved in such activities.

These somewhat divergent lines of authority frame the dispute now before the Court. Defendants argue that teenage sex is a matter of public interest and that Messenger’s photographs — which, they contend, would have been understood by readers to be photographs of a model rather than of the author of the purported letter from “Mortified” — were reasonably related to their column. Their position therefore is that their actions are protected by the newsworthiness privilege because there was no falsification and, in any case,' because Spahn and Fils-Aime no longer reflect the law of New York. The latter contention rests on the fact that Finger and other cases have summarized the newsworthiness exception to Sections 50 and 51 without referring to any limitation based on falsification. Plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that the article in question would have been understood by the relevant audience — allegedly teenagers — as implying that Messenger was “Mortified” and that such false and misleading suggestions are actionable, assuming the requisite culpability is established, in view of Spahn and its progeny.

One matter is readily disposed of. Plaintiff does not, and in any case could not, seriously dispute that the subject of the column at issue — teenage sex and its consequences — falls within the broad reach of the newsworthiness exception to the statute. 10 Nor does- she deny that the use of photographs of a teenager of suitable age and gender is appropriate to illustrate such a column provided that the individual so depicted in fact had the experiences described or, if not, that the photograph is presented with a disclaimer or other clear indication that the individual is a model and not personally the subject of the column. Hence, this Court holds that the subject of the column was a matter of public interest and that the use of the photographs was reasonably related to it. Defendants’ motion therefore turns on whether the column was false or fictionalized — that is, whether it implied that “Mortified’s” purported letter described Messenger’s personal experiences — and, if so, whether defendants are correct in arguing that the fictionalization exception to the newsworthiness privilege does not survive in New York law. ■

The first question is not troublesome. The fundamental issue is whether the publication created the impression that Messenger had had the experiences that were the subject of the column, a matter than turns on the interpretation that would, be given to the column by readers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
994 F. Supp. 525, 1998 WL 81591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messenger-by-messenger-v-gruner-jahr-usa-pub-nysd-1998.