Weiner v. Doubleday & Co.

142 A.D.2d 100, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2441, 535 N.Y.S.2d 597, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12986
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 8, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 142 A.D.2d 100 (Weiner v. Doubleday & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiner v. Doubleday & Co., 142 A.D.2d 100, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2441, 535 N.Y.S.2d 597, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12986 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ross, J.

We are presented, in this libel action, with the issue of whether unflattering references allegedly referring to the plaintiff, who is a practicing psychologist, which appear in a nonfiction book are defamatory or are constitutionally protected expressions of opinion.

Ms. Shana Alexander, in 1985, wrote a book entitled: Nutcracker: Money, Madness, Murder: A Family Album (book), which was published in hardcover by Doubleday & Company, Inc. (Doubleday), a New York corporation, with its principal office located in New York County.

The book purports to be a nonfiction account of the widely publicized slaying of multimillionaire Mr. Franklin Bradshaw (Mr. Bradshaw) in 1978, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Mr. Bradshaw was shot to death by his then 17-year-old grandson, Mr. Marc Schreuder, who claimed in a confession that he was following the orders of his then 40-year-old mother, Ms. Frances Bradshaw Schreuder (Ms. Schreuder), who was the daughter of the victim. Both Mr. Marc Schreuder and Ms. Schreuder were convicted of that murder.

Over the course of this 444-page book, Ms. Alexander explores the history of emotional disturbance in the late Mr. Bradshaw’s family, and the author particularly deals with the influences that contributed to the development of the personality of Ms. Schreuder. According to the book, Ms. Schreuder was a disturbed individual who, inter alia, alienated various members of the Bradshaw family, as a result of her life-style, which included alleged child neglect, promiscuous affairs, social climbing, attempted suicide, and addiction to sedatives.

[102]*102Discussed in the book are Ms. Schreuder’s two stormy marriages, which both ended in divorce. First, in 1959, she married Mr. Vittorio Gentile, with whom she had two sons, one of whom was Mr. Marc Schreuder, and then, after that marriage ended, Ms. Schreuder in 1969 married Mr. Frederick Schreuder, with whom she had a daughter.

Our examination of the book indicates that, during the acrimonious divorce proceeding between Ms. Schreuder and Mr. Gentile in the mid-1960’s, which, inter alia, involved the custody of their two sons, who were then pre-teen-agers, several members of the Bradshaw family believed that Ms. Schreuder was an unfit mother. However, at that divorce trial, Dr. Herman Weiner (Dr. Weiner), a licensed psychologist, who was then treating Ms. Schreuder as a patient, testified as her witness that she was a fit mother.

Although this book was published almost 20 years after the divorce proceedings, mentioned supra, the mother of Ms. Schreuder, Mrs. Berenice Bradshaw (Mrs. Bradshaw), who was the widow of the slain man, as well as Ms. Schreuder’s sister, Mrs. Marilyn Reagan (Mrs. Reagan) and Mrs. Reagan’s husband, Robert Reagan (Mr. Reagan), still expressed antagonism towards Dr. Weiner for his testimony on behalf of Ms. Schreuder.

The only references in the book to Dr. Weiner are contained in two paragraphs, which begin on page 110 and end on page 111. Those paragraphs read, as follows:

"In 1966 Frances put herself for two years under the care of a Park Avenue psychiatrist named Herman Weiner, who seems to have encouraged his patient to stand up to her overprotective mother. Berenice was attempting to infantilize her, Frances decided. She told Marc that Granny had a neurotic need for 'babies to smother,’ which could account for Berenice’s intense dislike of the man she began to habitually refer to as 'Weenie, the big, fat, ugly Jew.’

"Robert Reagan remembers Dr. Weiner arriving in court to testify for Frances, during the divorce proceedings, eccentrically costumed in bright red slacks and a loud plaid jacket. Marilyn Reagan remembers the size of one of his bills: Frances owed her psychiatrist $3,000. 'My understanding was that her problem was inability facing reality,’ says Marilyn. The huge unpaid bill made her sister think it might be the psychiatrist who had this problem, not his patient. Later, when Behrens claimed that 'Francis always slept with her [103]*103shrinks,’ the Reagans said they were not at all surprised. They’d suspected 'hanky panky,’ they confessed. Berenice has said the same.”

Based on those two paragraphs, in 1985 Dr. Weiner (plaintiff) commenced, in the Supreme Court, New York County, a libel action against Ms. Alexander and Doubleday (defendants), and in that action he sought to recover damages in the amount of one million dollars, since he claims his personal and professional reputation has been adversely affected. The complaint alleges, in substance, that "the defamatory words attributed [in the two subject paragraphs, set forth supra] to Berenice, Behrens and the Reagans were accepted by defendants as factual, without investigation, verification or validation, without affording plaintiff, whose name, address and telephone number appeared in available telephone and professional listings, a fair opportunity to respond to said accusations”.

When, in 1983, Ms. Alexander started to work on her book, she had almost 40 years’ experience as an investigative journalist and author. In the course of preparing to write this book, Ms. Alexander was assisted by Mr. Alex Dubro, who was a professional researcher and writer, who was recommended to her by the Center for Investigative Reporting in San Francisco, and who, at the time of his participation in this book project, had approximately 15 years’ experience as a journalist. Mr. Dubro, inter alia, had provided investigative services for the President’s Commission on Organized Crime and the United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.

Following the joinder of issue, the plaintiff moved and the defendants jointly cross-moved for summary judgment. The IAS court granted the plaintiff’s motion, denied the defendants’ cross motion, and set the matter down for an assessment of damages.

In an affidavit, dated November 3, 1987, which was submitted in support of defendants’ joint cross motion, Ms. Alexander stated: "Mr. Dubro and I spoke to approximately 250 different sources [in preparing the book]. All of the statements that plaintiff complains of in this action were based upon information that Mr. Dubro and I obtained during certain of these personal interviews”. Furthermore, in this affidavit, Ms. Alexander identified the person named "Behrens”, who was quoted in the second paragraph of the material complained of [104]*104by plaintiff, as "Richard Behrens [Mr. Behrens] * * * a close friend of Frances Schreuder”.

After review of the two paragraphs in issue, we find there are two types of allegedly libelous statements contained in them about plaintiff, which were made by persons who are named by the author and interviewed by Ms. Alexander and Mr. Dubro.

While the first type deals with belittling opinions of the plaintiff, such as that he was a "big, fat, ugly Jew”, and that, when he testified in the divorce trial, plaintiff was "eccentrically costumed in bright red slacks and a loud plaid jacket”, the second type deals with expressions of opinions, which might injure plaintiff’s personal and professional reputation, since they implied plaintiff overcharged his patients and slept with them.

The Court of Appeals held in Aronson v Wiersma (65 NY2d 592, 593-594 [1985]), "[w]hether particular words are defamatory presents a legal question to be resolved by the court in the first instance (Tracy v Newsday, Inc., 5 NY2d 134;

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Bluebook (online)
142 A.D.2d 100, 15 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2441, 535 N.Y.S.2d 597, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiner-v-doubleday-co-nyappdiv-1988.