Rosner v. Field Enterprises, Inc.

564 N.E.2d 131, 205 Ill. App. 3d 769, 151 Ill. Dec. 154
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 24, 1990
Docket1-87-1137
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 564 N.E.2d 131 (Rosner v. Field Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosner v. Field Enterprises, Inc., 564 N.E.2d 131, 205 Ill. App. 3d 769, 151 Ill. Dec. 154 (Ill. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinions

JUSTICE MANNING

delivered the opinion of the court:

The present matter comes before this court as a permissive interlocutory appeal filed by defendants, Field Enterprises, Inc., former publisher of the Chicago Sun-Times, and several of its employees: Pamela Zekman, Larry Cose, Gilbert Jimenez,1 Gene Mustain, Pat Smith, Norma Sosa, John H. White and Chris Bockelmann (defendants), pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 308 (107 Ill. 2d R. 308). The appeal primarily concerns the issue of whether or not the actual malice standard applies to the underlying libel action. In the libel suit, plaintiff, Mitchell M. Rosner, a podiatrist, seeks damages against defendants, maintaining that he has been defamed in his profession as a result of a series of newspaper articles and photographs which were published by defendants in February 1980. The relevant facts are as follows.

Commencing in 1979, the defendants, Chicago Sun-Times, along with WLS-TV,2 conducted an eight-month investigation on automobile accident insurance fraud. Reporters and investigators from the two news organizations, with the cooperation of the Chicago police department and Allstate Insurance Company, posed as noninjured or only slightly injured accident victims and sought the treatment and services of various “accident chasers,” doctors, lawyers, clinics, chiropractors and hospitals.

On October 25, 1979, as part of the investigation, defendants Pat Smith and Larry Cose, posing as victims of an automobile accident, went to the law offices of Harold Pope. Mr. Pope referred them to Dr. B. E. Graham, who was located at 71st and Crandon — The Holy Name Medical Center.

Later that day, Cose and Smith visited the Holy Name Medical Center. The receptionist gave them some medical forms to complete and then led the reporters to the clinic’s waiting area. Next, they went one at a time into Dr. Rosner’s office, who reviewed the forms, tested their reflexes and inquired if they had any foot problems. Rosner then told the reporters that another doctor would see them shortly. The reporters were thereafter called individually into a separate examination room by Dr. Betty Graham, where she examined and sent them to the office of Dr. Patrick Maloney. Allegedly, Dr. Maloney examined the reporters, instructed them to take time off from work and prescribed heat treatments for them.

On December 3, 1979, Gilbert Jimenez accompanied Willie Chriesman and Gene Mustain, who was using the pseudonym “John White,” to the law offices of Basil Elias to see John Rusniak. Mr. Rusniak interviewed the reporters and then purportedly telephoned Dr. Graham and told her that Chriesman, Mustain and two other persons had been involved in a car accident.

Later that afternoon, Chriesman went to the Holy Name Medical Center. First, he completed a medical form. After a brief wait, Dr. Rosner called him into an examination room, reviewed his chart and tested his reflexes. Then, Dr. Graham examined Chriesman and advised him to come in every day for treatments. Dr. Maloney then called Chriesman into his office and told him to come in every day for treatments.

The next day, December 4, 1979, Mustain and Pat Smith, who had altered her appearance and used the pseudonym “Ann Connor,” visited Holy Name Medical Center. After a few minutes, Dr. Rosner called Mustain into his examination room. Rosner asked Mustain about the accident and his injuries, tested his reflexes and told him that Dr. Graham would see him next.

Then, Dr. Rosner called Smith into his examination room. He inquired if she had hurt her feet or legs and tested her reflexes. Allegedly, “Dr. Rosner felt Pat Smith’s foot through her boot during this ‘examination.’ ” He then told Smith that she would see Dr. Graham next. Dr. Graham and Dr. Maloney conducted the examinations on Smith and prescribed treatments.

Following the investigation, the defendants published a series of their findings on automobile accident insurance fraud in the newspaper between February 10, 1980, and February 27, 1980. The entire series of text and photographs, along with additional material, was then published by the Chicago Sun-Times as a special reprint booklet on March 11, 1980.

The newspaper articles and photograph upon which the complaint was based appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times newspapers on February 15 and 19, 1980. The February 15, 1980, article described the result of “an eight-month investigation of automobile insurance fraud, part of a series known as ‘The Accident Swindlers.’ ” Although there was no specific mention of plaintiff in this article, next to the article was published a photograph in which a portion of the plaintiff’s name and specialty were prominently displayed on a building in the background. The photograph itself pictures two men standing next to the building and the caption thereunder reads:

“SHOP TALK? Jack Curtin (right) talks with Lloyd Washington outside Holy Name Medical Center, 7101 S. Crandon. Curtin runs a lawyer’s accident office on the South Side and this series has already reported how he coaches accident ‘victims’ to exaggerate injuries in order to inflate insurance settlements. Washington is a known ambulance chaser.”

The February 19, 1980, article, inter alia, made the following references to plaintiff:

(1) “Things weren’t any more professional at Holy Name Medical Center, 71st and Crandon, where a podiatrist ‘examined’ one reporter’s feet by feeling through her boots.”
(2) “All were either examined or asked about foot problems by a podiatrist, Dr. Mitchell M. Rossner [sic]. He sent each along to chiropractor Betty E. Graham, a 30-year-old Haitian who performs the actual examinations.”
(3) “The Rossner [sie]-Graham-Maloney triple threat went into action again when Chriesman, Smith and Mustain returned to Holy Name more than a month later.”
(4) “When Sun-Times and WLS reporters visited Holy Name several weeks later, Maloney refused to see them. Graham, Dekens, and Rossner [sic] were said to be unavailable.”

Plaintiff filed an original and first amended complaint. After motions to strike and dismiss were sustained, plaintiff filed his second amended complaint, which is currently pending before the court below. In response thereto, defendants filed an answer, affirmative defenses, and thereafter, a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Both parties filed memoranda in support of and in response to the motion for judgment on the pleadings.

After the briefings, Judge O’Brien in a December 1982 opinion, denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings as to all publications, excepting the February 15, 1980, publication, as of the date of its original publication.

In August 1986, after the close of discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment. In support of their motion, they filed a memorandum of law, affidavits of six reporters and portions of deposition transcripts. Defendants argued that this case is governed by the actual malice standard and that the record disclosed that plaintiff could not, as a matter of law, prove actual malice. In January 1987, plaintiff filed his memorandum of law in response to the summary judgment motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
564 N.E.2d 131, 205 Ill. App. 3d 769, 151 Ill. Dec. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosner-v-field-enterprises-inc-illappct-1990.