Words Like Swords: Defamation Claims at Colleges and Universities
September 17, 2002
Paul Lannon - Boston
Colleges and universities provide fertile soil for
defamation claims. The very principles and institutions designed to cultivate
freedom of thought and expression can also give rise to claims of libel and
slander. The scenarios seem endless: a faculty member criticizes another
faculty member in a scholarly publication; a student criticizes a faculty member
in a student journal or newspaper; a faculty member criticizes a student or a
class of students at a lecture; an administrator criticizes a faculty member
during tenure proceedings; an administrator publishes critical remarks about a
student in connection with disciplinary proceedings, and so on. Two
Massachusetts cases, involving very different circumstances, illustrate how
defamation claims can arise in academic communities and how the members of those
communities can defend themselves.
Qualified Privilege Defense
In McCracken v. Gordon College, a Massachusetts Superior
Court case, a varsity coach sued the college and its president for defamation
after the college terminated the coach’s employment. The coach was informed
that a restructuring of the athletic program led to his discharge. The college
subsequently received several letters from alumni inquiring about the coach’s
termination and threatening to withhold further contributions to the college.
The coach claimed that the college defamed him in its responses to these alumni
letters by permitting the innuendo that he had been discharged for cause.
The Court awarded summary judgment to the college on the
grounds that its statements to alumni were privileged, citing Goldhor v. New
Hampshire College, 25 Mass. App. Ct. 716 (1988). In Goldhor, the Massachusetts
Appeals Court held that academic institutions possess a conditional privilege to
publish statements concerning employment actions. To maintain the privilege,
publication must be limited; it must further a legitimate business interest, and
it cannot be made with malicious intent. In the Gordon College case, it was
critical to the college’s victory that the allegedly defamatory statements were
published in connection with legitimate fundraising and alumni support concerns,
and only to those alumni who specifically inquired about the employment action.
Substantial Truth Defense
In Martin v. Roy , 54 Mass. App. Ct. 642 (2002), a
Wellesley College professor sued an MIT student, claiming that the student’s
article in an undergraduate publication defamed the professor by asserting that
he had received tenure only after successfully suing Wellesley College for
racial discrimination. Even though the article was admittedly inaccurate in
some respects, the trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant
student, and the Appeals Court affirmed. The court reasoned that the allegedly
defamatory statements, when viewed in the context of the article as a whole,
were “substantially true” and therefore not defamatory. The professor had, in
fact, sued the college, and that fact supported the student’s conclusion that
the college, out of fear of being sued, was restrained in its reaction to an
incident involving the professor and an undergraduate student.
Absence of Malice
Public figures have an even harder time pursuing defamation
actions. Because the First Amendment provides such strong protection for speech
involving matters of public interest, public figures must prove that the false
statements were published with actual malice or with reckless disregard for the
truth.
Teachers and professors can be deemed public figures. In
Martin v. Roy, the court ruled that the professor was a public figure because
his scholarship, teaching methods and qualifications had become part of a public
controversy and because the professor had injected himself into the controversy
through his public lectures and writings. The court also found that the
professor had stipulated to being a public figure, and that the stipulation was
binding. Thus, the professor was required to prove that the student journalist
acted with actual malice or recklessness. He could not meet that elevated
standard. The student produced uncontradicted evidence that he genuinely
believed his confidential source of information as to the timing of the lawsuit
and the professor’s tenure decision.
Lessons Learned
These cases demonstrate that defamation claims can arise in
a wide variety of circumstances at colleges and universities. The cases also
provide important guidance on what can be done to avoid defamation claims.
First, academic institutions must insist that their students, faculty and
administrators diligently check all publications for truth and accuracy.
Substantial truth, as shown above, is an absolute defense to a defamation
claim. Demanding truth and accuracy also nurtures a spirit of trust and
credibility within the academic community. Secondly, academic institutions must
educate their community members about defamation. Everyone should know that it
is generally illegal to publish false statements, or statements that permit a
false innuendo and that would discredit or ridicule someone in front of a
considerable and respectable part of the community. Professors, in particular,
should be aware that they might be deemed public figures and thereby be required
to prove malice. Students should be aware that they too could be held liable
for defamation, especially if they acted with malicious intent or with reckless
disregard for the truth of their statements. Administrators should be warned to
craft carefully every notice of an employment action and to limit publication of
such notices only to those members of the community with a legitimate need for
the information.
These lessons and guidelines are by no means exhaustive on
the matter of defamation actions at colleges and universities.
For more information , contact Paul G. Lannon Jr., toll
free at 888-688-8500, or via e-mail at plannon@hklaw.com.