Featured Publications

Construction: Alert - January 30, 2012

For almost 50 years, lessors have had the ability to limit their liability for liens that arose from improvements to the leasehold made by a lessee. However, in the most recent legislative session, the Florida Legislature enacted revisions to Florida Statute ยง 713.10 that provide a potential pitfall for lessors by inserting a provision that may allow a contractor to lien the lessor's interest even where there is a recorded document advising of the limitation of liens.

More

Financial Institutions: Alert - January 31, 2012

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act impacted many investment advisers who previously were not registered.

More

Search Our Library

Search

  • Printer friendly
  • Email this page to a friend
  • Generate a PDF version of this page

Articles & White Papers

Online and Off-Line Publisher Liability and the Independent Contractor Defense
 

Communications Lawyer, Volume 26, Number 2

March 1, 2009
 
Drew E. Shenkman- Washington
Charles D. "Chuck" Tobin- Washington

An increased reliance on freelancers may provide new opportunities for media defense counsel and their corporate clients to shorten litigation and curtail exposure for tort claims. While employer-employee relationships bring with them respondeat superior liability for publishing torts such as defamation, masters traditionally have not been held vicariously liable for the torts of their independent contractor servants. Although a handful of reported decisions—most of them favorable to the defense—reflect some pursuit of the independent contractor defense, its use in the media and entertainment industries remains, from all outward appearances, confined to the field of book publishing.

Ethical and practical considerations may make it difficult to mount this type of defense in a given case. But the strength and continued vitality of the doctrine suggest that media defense lawyers ought to consider it seriously. And, in fact, counsel assisting in the engagement of a freelancer would benefit from considering this defense at the onset of the independent contractor’s engagement. One need look no further than a recent federal court’s application of the doctrine to an actual malice claim against an on-demand book publisher to see the power of the independent contractor arrangement. Please click on the link below to view this article.

READ: Online and Off-Line Publisher Liability and the Independent Contractor Defense

This information or any portion thereof may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or downloaded or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.

Related Practices