Zaidi v. United Bank Ltd.

194 Misc. 2d 1, 747 N.Y.S.2d 268, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1020
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 Misc. 2d 1 (Zaidi v. United Bank Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zaidi v. United Bank Ltd., 194 Misc. 2d 1, 747 N.Y.S.2d 268, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1020 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Norman C. Ryp, J.

I. Issue(s):

In a defamatory action by a private individual concerning a private matter: (a) What is the burden of proving both constitutional and common-law “malice” to overcome a qualified common interest privilege and obtain compensatory and/or punitive damages? (b) What degree, if any, of fault applies?

Novel and unsettled issues before New York’s Court of Appeals.

II. Facts:

Plaintiff, Shahla Zaidi (Zaidi), was employed by defendant, United Bank Ltd. (UBL), from May 1975 until at least November 12, 1996 when she was relieved of her duties at the defendant bank’s New York branch (30 Wall Street, New York, New York) and transferred back to UBL’s head office in Karachi, Pakistan.

By her own admission and choice, plaintiff did not then return. Nor did she ever perform any duties or services at UBL’s request, after November 12, 1996 in New York or Pakistan.

Instead, on December 27, 1996, plaintiff wrote a letter to Mr. Sardar Haq Nawaz, UBL’s main branch’s senior executive vice-president, international division.

In response, Mr. Nawaz instructed defendant, Khan, then UBL’s New York branch senior executive vice-president/general manager, and Mr. Ghias Malik, then its New York branch assistant vice-president/manager of operations, to reply. This they did in a nine page letter to Mr. Nawaz, dated January 9, 1997, which included the following three statements:

1. Attempt to Defraud Government by Claiming Unemployment Benefits: “She did not inform us that she has claimed [3]*3unemployment benefits (effective date of claim Dec 30, 1996) from the New York State Department of Labor (copy of their notice to the bank dated January 03, 1997 enclosed). The matter was followed through her telephone and written reminders. In our opinion she is not eligible for any payment from United Bank after December 31, 1996. This shows that she has claimed double benefits for 15 days from United Bank, as well as, from New York State which amounts to make an attempt to defraud either, and she is liable to disciplinary action. It is apparent that she might have claimed similar double payment in the past.” At trial, Mr. Malik testified he so attested at the New York State Division of Unemployment appeal hearing.

2. Misreporting Security Position to Federal Reserve Bank: “She also mis-reported the whole security position to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York [FSB] and New York State Banking Department [NYSBD] and to Head Office. The bank is likely to suffer total loss since the borrowers have refused to execute the mortgage and have left New York in order to hinder the legal proceeding initiated by the Branch.”

3. Leaking Information to Borrowers (continued from above but separate potential defamatory statement): “As a precaution, Mr. Shahab Ayub VP and Ms. Shahla Zaidi were specifically requested not to divulge the information [about the Branch’s security with respect to the above mortgage position] but somehow, the information was leaked to them.”

All other references were clear expressions of opinions.

Plaintiff, Zaidi, followed up a July 28, 1997 response letter to UBL’s president Zubyr Soomru referring to defendant, Khan, as “a complete failure” and an August 11, 1997 letter also to UBL’s president Soomru with additional accusations against defendant, Khan, and Mr. Malik including that Khan “reduced the New York branch to a sorry state of affairs.” There was no further response to either of these letters by defendants.

In July 1997, Ms. Zaidi took position with American Express Bank which became a permanent position in October 1997 at a salary of $45,000-$52,000 (without any additional allowances). III. Procedural and Trial History:

Plaintiff, Shahla Zaidi, commenced this action on May 8, 1998 asserting six causes of action. All of these actions were dismissed on the grounds of forum non conveniens, except count VI, the defamation action, by then Justice Franklin R. Weiss-berg’s March 13, 2000 order. The defendants then moved for summary judgment, under CPLR 3212, to dismiss the sole [4]*4remaining defamation claim against UBL, Khan and Sardar Haq Nawaz (Nawaz) on November 3, 2000. Plaintiff, Zaidi, based her defamation claim entirely on the above defendants’ January 9, 1997 response letter.

Justice Weissberg determined that only the above-quoted (at 2-3, supra) three statements in the January 9, 1997 letter were not opinions but, actionable expressions of fact, subject to a qualified privilege.

During trial after completion of plaintiff’s prima facie case, defendants moved for a CPLR 4401 judgment as a matter of law, and in their posttrial papers moved for a CPLR 4404 judgment as a matter of law and dismissal of the jury’s award of compensatory damages, with plaintiff opposing all defendants’ motions.

By a unanimous verdict (6-0), the jury found that the defendants maliciously defamed the plaintiff in the January 9, 1997 letter and awarded her $6 in compensatory and undetermined punitive damages.

IV. Parties’ Contentions:

V. Legal Analysis:

A. Defamation Generally
B. Legal Elements of Defamation

The three basic elements a plaintiff must prove, by a “fair preponderance of the evidence” (Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v Greenmoss Bldrs., Inc., 472 US 749 [1985]), to succeed in a defamation case with a private person and a private concern are that the statement: (1) is of a defamatory nature; (2) refers to the plaintiff; and (3) was published to someone other than the plaintiff. (Cuevas v Harvard Univ. Press, 269 AD2d 328; Aronson v Wiersma, 65 NY2d 592, 594; Golub v Enquirer/Star Group, 89 NY2d 1074.) Three additional common-law elements: (4) falsity; (5) some degree of fault; and (6) injury or harm to plaintiff were presumed as a matter of law, depending on the matter and manner of defamation. Four, falsity, did not have to be alleged or proved unless plaintiff was a public official, figure or a matter of public concern. (Gertz v Robert Welch, Inc., 418 US 323.)

iv. Fault

At common law and until 1964 (New York Times Co. v Sullivan, 376 US 254 [1964]) defamation, injury to reputation, was a strict liability tort. (Prosser and Keeton, Torts § 111 [5th ed]; Restatement [Second] of Torts § 568, Comment b.)

In Gertz (supra at 339) in 1974, 10 years after the landmark New York Times Co. case, the United States Supreme Court [5]*5held the First Amendment limited the states’ ability to impose liability for defamation, including media defamation of a private person involved in an issue of public concern, by requiring proof of some degree of fault. The New York State fault standard required of such a private person by media defamation was proof “by a preponderance of the evidence, that the publisher acted in a grossly irresponsible manner without due consideration for the standards of information gathering and dissemination ordinarily followed by responsible parties.” (Cha-padeau v Utica Observer-Dispatch, 38 NY2d 196, 199 [1975] [emphasis added].)

A 1985 case, involving a private plaintiff (Gertz, supra

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194 Misc. 2d 1, 747 N.Y.S.2d 268, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaidi-v-united-bank-ltd-nysupct-2002.