Sommer v. Gabor

40 Cal. App. 4th 1455, 48 Cal. Rptr. 2d 235, 95 Daily Journal DAR 16327, 24 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1225, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9514, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 1210
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1995
DocketB082456
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 40 Cal. App. 4th 1455 (Sommer v. Gabor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sommer v. Gabor, 40 Cal. App. 4th 1455, 48 Cal. Rptr. 2d 235, 95 Daily Journal DAR 16327, 24 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1225, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9514, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 1210 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Opinion

LILLIE, P. J.

Defendant Zsa Zsa Gabor and her husband, defendant Frederic Von Anhalt, appeal from a judgment on a special verdict in favor of plaintiff Bike Sommer in her action for defamation. On appeal, defendants contend the court erred in (1) applying California, rather than German, defamation law; (2) instructing the jury; and (3) admitting evidence the defamation caused distress to Sommer’s mother. Defendants also contend that the statements attributed to them are opinions and are not actionable as a matter of law, and that the damages are excessive.

Facts

Sommer, who was bom in Germany in November 1940, began playing the romantic lead in films in Europe in 1958; in 1962, she made an American *1461 movie filmed in London; in 1963 she made her first Hollywood movie and played the lead with Paul Newman. From 1958 to 1991, Sommer made about 67 films; in the early 1970’s, she began television work and live theater; although Sommer made no movies in Hollywood from 1983 to 1990, she appeared in stage productions and television series. According to her publicist in the 1960’s, Richard Guttman, press coverage affects the reputation of a celebrity. Sommer’s reputation as an actress is international and is of someone “attractive, charming, pleasant. Someone you are going to have in your house.” Such a reputation must be maintained by positive publicity, not through negative publicity.

In the February 22, 1990, issue of the German language weekly magazine, Freizeit Revue, a “women’s publication” with a worldwide circulation of about 1,300,000, including 310 in Southern California, writer Anna Amlong reported that Zsa Zsa Gabor (Gabor) said that Sommer is broke, had to sell her house in Hollywood, now lives in the worst section, hangs out in sleazy bars, lives from selling her handknit sweaters for $150, and nobody wants to have anything to do with her anymore. The article also attributed to Gabor a statement that she (Gabor) found “offending,” a statement Sommer allegedly had made six years earlier after one of Gabor’s performances on a horse, that “Zsa Zsa has such a big behind that she could not even manage to get on the horse by herself.” The article in Freizeit Revue also reported that Sommer was upset by Gabor’s statements and Sommer said that knitting was a hobby and that she had assets worth 30 million German marks.

According to Anna Amlong, a journalist for Freizeit Revue, she was in the lobby of a hotel in Germany where Gabor was also staying during rehearsals for a show; Amlong and a free-lance photographer sat down at a breakfast table with Gabor and Von Anhalt; the photographer took pictures of Gabor; Von Anhalt, who had known Amlong for a long time, introduced Amlong to Gabor as a journalist; Amlong spoke to Von Anhalt and Gabor in German; Gabor spoke fluent German; Amlong brought up the subject of Sommer, and Gabor kept talking about her; Amlong told Gabor that “it was extremely interesting and that would make a good story.” Gabor told Amlong that it would not matter, that “Sommer was so ruined that it would not matter." Von Anhalt also said the whole thing “was even worse, that Ms. Sommer was completely ruined and broke and also that. . . she hardly had any hair on her head. And she would be at least 60 years old.” Amlong spoke to Sommer by telephone before the article was published; Sommer told her that all the information given by Gabor was incorrect and provided true details of her financial situation.

Sommer’s business manager testified that in February 1990, and in 1992, Sommer was not broke and her bills were being paid on time. Sommer *1462 admitted, however, that she was suing her former United States business manager for mismanagement; in July 1992 she did not have enough ready cash in the United States to make a large purchase, but she still had a house and cash in Germany, and a condo in Spain.

According to Sommer, when a woman reporter telephoned her at her home in California and told her about Gabor’s statements in February 1990, she hung up the phone and started crying; she was in terrible shock, “like I got stuck between two trucks,’’ and “did not want to believe that somebody could just say something like that about another human being.” Sommer told the reporter that there was no truth to the statements. According to Sommer, the statements were “demeaning, taking all your little bit of dignity away.” Sommer suffered sleeplessness, headaches, and was sick to her stomach; she saw a psychiatrist twice.

According to Von Anhalt, he was the one who spoke to Amlong about Sommer; Gabor did not talk to Amlong about Sommer and Gabor was not familiar with the German dialect spoken by Amlong. Von Anhalt made statements about Sommer, but “not the way it was written, no”; he denied saying anything except that he never sees Sommer in their group of friends or society in America and she was not doing very much lately.

Gabor denied saying anything about Sommer “in my life in the press,” and denied being interviewed by any reporter from Freizeit Revue. Gabor testified that she did not learn about the statements attributed to her until Sommer sued her. Gabor admitted that in 1990, she did not know whether Sommer was broke, whether she goes to bars, where she lived, whether she sold her house, whether she knits, and whether or not anyone in Hollywood wants to have anything to do with her.

In April 1990, a German language daily newspaper, Bild, with a daily circulation in Germany of about 3,900,000, asked a foreign correspondent, Carolin Dendler, in Los Angeles, to talk to Von Anhalt to get both sides of the story about Gabor and Sommer; Dendler talked to Von Anhalt by telephone and sent a memo of her interview to Bild. According to Dendler, Von Anhalt told her that Sommer could not buy a $500 ticket for a charity benefit, Sommer’s bills were not being paid, in Hollywood no one recognizes her on the street anymore, Sommer was lying about her age in that she was not 48 but 62, and that Sommer looks like a 100-year-old grandmother. Articles in the German daily newspaper Bild on April 28 and 30, 1990, reported the foregoing statements by Von Anhalt, in addition to attributing *1463 the statement to him that he saw Sommer recently and she has almost no hair left on her head. 1

Von Anhalt, who subscribed to Bild and talked to them every day, admitted giving interviews to Dendler in April 1990. He admitted telling Bild that Sommer was 62 years old, and that Sommer looked like a 100-year-old grandmother; he denied making all other statements which Bild attributed to him. He also testified that his statement about the 100-year-old grandmother came from a picture of Sommer in either the Star or National Enquirer magazine; he did not know Sommer’s real age.

Sommer testified that she was devastated by the Bild articles, which intensified her earlier distress, insomnia and “incredible uneasiness”; at trial, she still suffered from the same symptoms; but “sometimes if I get lucky they are gone a week or ten days that [I] don’t think about it constantly.”

Sommer’s mother testified that she keeps fan mail for Elke at her home in Germany; after publication of the articles with defendants’ statements, Elke got about 200 fan letters, some offering to help her.

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40 Cal. App. 4th 1455, 48 Cal. Rptr. 2d 235, 95 Daily Journal DAR 16327, 24 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1225, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9514, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 1210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sommer-v-gabor-calctapp-1995.