Schafer v. Time, Inc.

142 F.3d 1361
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1998
Docket96-8730
StatusPublished

This text of 142 F.3d 1361 (Schafer v. Time, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schafer v. Time, Inc., 142 F.3d 1361 (11th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

PUBLISH

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT

_______________

No. 96-8730 _______________ D. C. Docket No. 1:93-CV-833-WBH

MICHAEL SCHAFER,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

versus

TIME, INC.,

Defendant-Appellee.

______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia ______________________________ (June 8, 1998)

Before TJOFLAT, BIRCH and MARCUS*, Circuit Judges.

BIRCH, Circuit Judge:

This diversity case requires us to parse the often conflicting and

confusing concepts of malice as they have evolved in Georgia's

* Honorable Stanley Marcus was a U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida sitting by designation as a member of this panel when this appeal was argued and taken under submission. On November 24, 1997, he took the oath of office as a United States Circuit Judge of the Eleventh Circuit. libel laws. After instructing the jury on the applicable law and

receiving a subsequent request to define “malicious defamation,”

the district court instructed the jury that before the plaintiff-

appellant could recover for libel he had to show that the

defendant-appellee made a “statement deliberately calculated to

injure.” We REVERSE the district court on this issue and

REMAND this case for a new trial.

This appeal also presents a number of evidentiary questions,

most notably whether specific instances of misconduct are

admissible to prove character under Federal Rule of Evidence

405(b) in an action for libel under Georgia law. The plaintiff-

appellant challenges the district court's decision to admit character

evidence pursuant to Rule 405(b), as well as its decision to exclude

evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 403 on the grounds that

its prejudicial effect substantially outweighed its relevance. Although

these evidentiary issues are not dispositive given our decision to

reverse the district court on the grounds mentioned above, they may

2 well arise at a second trial. Accordingly, we discuss these and a

number of additional questions raised in the parties' briefs in an

effort to guide the district court and the parties at retrial.

BACKGROUND

On December 21, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 exploded in mid-

flight over Lockerbie, Scotland, causing the death of everyone on

board. A terrorist's bomb was then, and is now, widely suspected to

be the source of that explosion. On April 20, 1992, defendant-

appellee, Time, Inc. (“Time”), published a cover story entitled “The

Untold Story of Pan Am 103.” The article purported to debunk the

then-prevailing theory that the government of Lybia had sponsored

the attack on Pan Am 103. Instead, the article posited that a

Palestinian group, with connections to Syrian drug traffickers, had

targeted Pan Am 103 to eliminate several of the passengers who

were members of a United States counter terrorism team attempting

to rescue United States hostages in Lebanon. The article claims

3 that these passengers had discovered an unsavory, covert

relationship between the Syrian drug traffickers and a unit of the

United States Central Intelligence Agency and intended to expose

it upon their return to the United States.

The article further stated that an American agent, David

Lovejoy, had become a double agent and had leaked information

regarding the team's travel plans to forces hostile to the United

States. The article included a photograph of a man identified by the

following caption:

David Lovejoy, a reported double agent for the U.S. and Iran, is alleged to have told Iranian officials that McKee [one of the U.S. agents] was booked on Flight 103.

See Schafer R. Excerpt 1, Exh. A at 31. The article went on to imply

that the information Lovejoy disclosed to hostile forces led to the

attack on Pan Am 103.

The photograph in question apparently became associated with

the Pam Am 103 bombing in connection with a civil case filed by the

4 families of the Pan Am 103 victims. The families' law suit claimed

that Pan Am had failed to take adequate security precautions to

prevent the bombing. One of Pan Am's lawyers in that case, James

Shaughnessy, filed a sworn affidavit that contained a variety of

assertions about the attack that he hoped to explore through

discovery in the Pan Am litigation. Shaughnessy's affidavit alleged

that unnamed sources had identified Lovejoy, the double agent

whose treachery facilitated the attack on Pan Am 103, as the man

in an attached photograph. The man in the photograph, however,

is Michael Schafer, the plaintiff-appellant in this case. Time's

article, therefore, erroneously identified Schafer, then working in his

family's janitorial business in Austell, Georgia, both as a traitor to the

United States government and a player in the bombing of Pan Am

103.1

1 The record in this case provides no definitive explanation of how Shaughnessy obtained Schafer's picture or how Schafer became identified as David Lovejoy. At trial, Schafer speculated that Lester Coleman, named as a source in the Time article, provided the picture to Pan Am's team of investigators and lawyers. Schafer worked with Coleman in Beirut, Lebanon in 1985, when they were both employed by the Christian Broadcast Network, and testified that he provided Coleman with a number of pictures of himself in the course

5 Upon discovering his picture in the magazine, Schafer

demanded and eventually received a retraction from Time. Schafer

filed suit against Time, making claims under Georgia's libel laws. A

jury returned a verdict in Time's favor, finding no liability for the error.

After filing a motion for a new trial, which the district court denied,

Schafer filed this timely appeal. Schafer challenges a number of the

district court's evidentiary rulings as well as the court's recharge to

the jury on the definition of “malicious” under Georgia's libel statute.

He also challenges both the district court's refusal to instruct the jury

that the republication of a libelous depiction constitutes libel under

Georgia law and the court's decision not to charge the jury on

Georgia's retraction statute.

DISCUSSION

I. Jury Instructions

A. The District Court's Recharge on the Issue of Malice

of his employment there.

6 After trial, the court instructed the jury on the elements of libel

under Georgia law. The instructions included a recitation of

Georgia's statutory definition of libel:

[A] libel is a false and malicious defamation of another expressed in print, writing, pictures or signs, tending to injure the reputation of the person and exposing him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule.

R26 at 1534 (quoting O.C.G.A. § 51-5-1(a)) (emphasis added). The

instructions proceeded to explain the various elements of libel and

correctly instructed the jury that it need find, by a preponderance of

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