Sperry Rand Corporation v. William R. Hill, Jr.

356 F.2d 181, 23 A.L.R. 3d 853, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 7491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1966
Docket6556_1
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 356 F.2d 181 (Sperry Rand Corporation v. William R. Hill, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sperry Rand Corporation v. William R. Hill, Jr., 356 F.2d 181, 23 A.L.R. 3d 853, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 7491 (1st Cir. 1966).

Opinion

ALDRICH, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, a citizen of Massachusetts, is a physician specializing in dermatology. Defendant is a Delaware corporation with principal offices in New York and Connecticut. Plaintiff brought this action in the district court for the District of Massachusetts, seeking damages for libel and for violation of New York’s so-called right of privacy statute, N.Y. Civil Rights Law, McKinney’s Consol.Laws, c. 6, § 51. 1 Although the publications complained of were made throughout the country, the case was submitted on the basis of damages suffered in Massachusetts and New York, only. At the conclusion of the trial the jury answered a number of special questions. It awarded $50,000 actual damages, based upon libel in Massachusetts and New York and invasion of privacy under the New York statute, combined, and also awarded $200,000 punitive damages for libel and the right of privacy combined, limited to New York. 2 The court refused to direct a judgment n. o. v., or to grant a new trial, and defendant appeals.

The facts must be stated in some detail. Defendant manufactures an electric shaver known as the Remington, which is supposedly unique in having adjustable roller combs. In June 1958 defendant was approached by one Paul Murphy, who operated under the name of Medical Research Association, hereinafter MRA, and specialized in “medical public relations.” Murphy reported upon a pilot study which indicated that the Remington was better for the skin than ordinary razors and other electric shavers. He proposed a more elaborate pilot study, and suggested that if it worked out, he would arrange for a medical research project to be financed by the defendant. If the project resulted in a paper published in a recognized medical journal, it would be used as the theme for a national advertising campaign. After an investigation of Murphy and his associates, which showed them to be apparently reliable, defendant agreed. Informed of the successful outcome of the second study, defendant entered into a written contract with MRA by means of two letters. We accept the following summary from plaintiff’s brief.

“The first letter was dated November 10, 1958. It provided that a ‘protracted medical research study’ was to be performed by a team of three dermatologists on the staffs of leading institutions and the dermatologists selected had to be ‘agreeable’ to defendant. 3 The subjects of the study were to be approximately 240 males and 60 females. The study was to be conducted according to protocol previously established and agreed upon by MRA and defendant. 4 MRA agreed to make progress reports to defendant every 30-45 days and to keep confidential any unfavorable findings. After completion of the study, a medical report bearing the by-lines of the three doctors was to be pre *184 pared for publication in a mutually agreed upon national medical or scientific journal. However, the report was not to be submitted for publication without being reviewed and approved in writing by defendant. MRA, subject to the approval and control of defendant, was to obtain newspaper and magazine publicity throughout the United States and Canada.
“The second letter was dated November 11, 1958. It provided that defendant would be permitted to use the research as a basis for advertising claims, provided the names of the physicians and their institutions were not used. This proviso was agreed to be necessary under the established rules of ethics of the American Medical Association. Nevertheless, defendant would be permitted to make mailings of the medical journal report to members of the general public, as well as to doctors and medical institutions. It was agreed that nothing would be published without first being reviewed and approved in writing by the physicians. It was further agreed that MRA would receive $35,000 to cover the research, the three dermatologists, the medical journal report and the reading of the report before a medical convention. MRA would receive an additional $50,000 for placing a story in 500 newspapers quoting one or more of the dermatologists and mentioning the trade name of defendant’s electric shaver. Finally, if defendant wanted MRA to place magazine publicity, it would pay for the same according to a schedule of rates.”

Pursuant to this contract Murphy entered into an agreement with a Dr. Fin-nerty, a dermatologist, under which Dr. Finnerty would arrange to collaborate with two other dermatologists to conduct the research and prepare a paper. At some point Dr. Finnerty proposed and Murphy agreed that the other doctors were to be the plaintiff and a Dr. Mes-sina, now deceased. Murphy so informed the defendant, who approved the doctors without seeing them or having any communication with them. Periodically thereafter as often as every two or three weeks, Murphy informed the defendant of the progress allegedly being made by the doctors. In fact the plaintiff, and possibly Dr. Messina as well, never participated in any study. What, if anything, Dr. Finnerty himself did, unquestionably fell notably short of the contract requirements. 5

Whether plaintiff consented to the use of his name in connection with the study, or as a co-author of the article allegedly resulting therefrom, even though he did not in fact participate, was a matter of dispute at the trial. Dr. Finnerty testified that he met the plaintiff and Dr. Messina at a sidewalk cafe during the summer of 1958, that he told them he was conducting a study on shaving and would like to use their names as coauthors, that he would pay them $500 each when the paper was published, and that they both agreed. Dr. Messina, having died in December 1959, could not corroborate or deny this testimony. Plaintiff denied it. The jury, in answer to a special question, credited the plaintiff. While much of plaintiff’s conduct makes it difficult to believe his denial, defendant did not contend, even on the motion for a new trial, that the evidence did not warrant the jury’s finding. We, too, must accept it. However, on un-contradicted evidence introduced by the plaintiff, defendant’s officers had no doubt, or reason to doubt, that the study was fully and properly carried out. Murphy’s knowledge is another matter, and one question in the case is whether his knowledge is legally imputable to the defendant.

*185 In due course the alleged results of the purported study were set out in a so-called long report which, if not written mainly by Murphy rather than Dr. Fin-nerty, at least contained many of Murphy’s suggestions or improvements. This report was furnished to the defendant and gone over by its representatives together with Murphy and some of his associates. Various parties made suggestions, and eventually the report was rewritten into an article, primarily by an employee of Murphy. It has not been argued, and we find no basis for contending, that the article departed from the report in any basic manner, but it did, no doubt, give special prominence to alleged findings pleasing to the de-defendant, and defendant’s shaver was the only one mentioned by name.

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Bluebook (online)
356 F.2d 181, 23 A.L.R. 3d 853, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 7491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sperry-rand-corporation-v-william-r-hill-jr-ca1-1966.