J.H. Desnick, M.D. v. American Broadcastin ( 2000 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 99-3715
    J.H. Desnick, M.D., Eye Services, Ltd.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.,
    Jon Entine, and Sam Donaldson,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 93 C 6534--John A. Nordberg, Judge.
    Argued September 12, 2000--Decided October 27, 2000
    Before Posner, Coffey, and Manion, Circuit Judges.
    Posner, Circuit Judge. Seven years ago the
    Desnick eye clinic, joined by two of the clinic’s
    surgeons (who are no longer parties), brought
    this diversity suit against the ABC television
    network, a producer of ABC’s program "PrimeTime
    Live," and the program’s star reporter, Sam
    Donaldson, seeking damages for a variety of torts
    allegedly committed by the defendants in
    connection with a 15-minute program segment that
    was highly critical of the clinic. We affirmed
    the district court’s dismissal, on the ground of
    failure to state a claim (Fed. R. Civ. P.
    12(b)(6)), of all but the defamation charge. 
    44 F.3d 1345
     (7th Cir. 1995). That charge was based
    on an accusation in the broadcast that the
    plaintiffs had tampered with a machine at the
    clinic called an "auto-refractor," which tests
    for cataract. The district judge had dismissed
    the charge on the ground that the accusation had
    not added significantly to the harm to the
    plaintiffs’ reputation caused by the parts of the
    broadcast segment that the plaintiffs had not
    challenged. We reversed because the fact that the
    plaintiffs had not challenged the other
    accusations in the broadcast could not be
    construed as a concession that those other
    accusations were true. 
    Id. at 1350-51
    . "Given the
    obstacles to proving defamation, the failure to
    mount a legal challenge to a defamatory statement
    cannot be considered an admission that the
    statement is true." 
    Id. at 1350
    . On remand, the
    district court granted summary judgment for the
    defendants, without reaching the question whether
    the accusation of tampering was true or false, on
    the ground that there was insufficient evidence
    of "actual malice" to permit the case to go
    forward. The Desnick clinic has again appealed.
    The clinic is conceded to be a "public figure,"
    so that under the Supreme Court’s interpretation
    of the free-speech clause of the First Amendment
    it cannot maintain a suit for defamation unless
    it can prove that the defendant acted with
    "actual malice." This is a term of legal art that
    means not what it seems to mean but that the
    defendant either knew that the defamatory
    statement (here, the accusation of tampering with
    the auto-refractor) was false or was recklessly
    indifferent to whether it was true or false.
    E.g., Masson v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 496
    , 510 (1991); Milsap v. Journal/Sentinel
    Inc., 
    100 F.3d 1265
    , 1270 (7th Cir. 1996) (per
    curiam). "Reckless indifference" denotes the same
    state of mind that must be proved to establish
    liability for infringement of a federal right
    under color of state law or for violation of the
    federal mail fraud statute: knowledge by the
    defendant that there was a high risk of harm to
    the plaintiff coupled with a failure to take any
    feasible measure to counter the risk, either by
    investigating further to see whether there really
    is a risk and how serious it is or by desisting
    from the risky activity. See, e.g., Farmer v.
    Brennan, 
    511 U.S. 825
    , 837-38 (1994); Tesch v.
    County of Green Lake, 
    157 F.3d 465
    , 474-75 (7th
    Cir. 1998); Billman v. Indiana Dept. of
    Corrections, 
    56 F.3d 785
    , 788-89 (7th Cir. 1995);
    Archie v. City of Racine, 
    847 F.2d 1211
    , 1219
    (7th Cir. 1988) (en banc); United States v. Dick,
    
    744 F.2d 546
    , 551 (7th Cir. 1984); Chance v.
    Armstrong, 
    143 F.3d 698
    , 703-04 (2d Cir. 1998);
    United States v. DeSantis, 
    134 F.3d 760
    , 764 (6th
    Cir. 1998); Keeper v. King, 
    130 F.3d 1309
    , 1314
    (8th Cir. 1997).
    In a defamation case by a public figure,
    therefore, "the plaintiff must demonstrate that
    the author ’in fact entertained serious doubts as
    to the truth of his publication,’ . . . or acted
    with a ’high degree of awareness of . . .
    probable falsity,’" Masson v. New Yorker
    Magazine, 
    supra,
     
    501 U.S. at 510
     (quoting St.
    Amant v. Thompson, 
    390 U.S. 727
    , 731 (1968), and
    Garrison v. Louisiana, 
    379 U.S. 64
    , 74 (1964),
    respectively), or, while suspecting falsity,
    deliberately avoided taking steps that would have
    confirmed the suspicion. Harte-Hanks
    Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton, 
    491 U.S. 657
    , 692-93 (1989) ("intent to avoid the truth,"
    
    id. at 693
    ); Eastwood v. National Enquirer, Inc.,
    
    123 F.3d 1249
    , 1251 (9th Cir. 1997); McFarlane v.
    Sheridan Square Press, Inc., 
    91 F.3d 1501
    , 1510
    (D.C. Cir. 1996). (For the analog to this
    "ostrich" or "willful blindness" principle in
    cases under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983, see West v.
    Waymire, 
    114 F.3d 646
    , 651 (7th Cir. 1997).) In
    other words, the defendant must either know that
    his published statement was probably false or,
    suspecting that it may be false, deliberately
    close his eyes to the possibility.
    This is the criminal sense of recklessness,
    Farmer v. Brennan, 
    supra,
     
    511 U.S. at 839-40
    ;
    Hill v. Shobe, 
    93 F.3d 418
    , 421 (7th Cir. 1996);
    Hemmings v. Gorczyk, 
    134 F.3d 104
    , 108 (2d Cir.
    1998) (per curiam), or, if a little broader, is
    so only by a hair, West v. Waymire, 
    supra,
     
    114 F.3d at 650-52
    , whereas in tort cases the term
    sometimes denotes little more than gross
    negligence. Farmer v. Brennan, 
    supra,
     
    511 U.S. at
    836 n. 4; Duckworth v. Franzen, 
    780 F.2d 645
    , 652
    (7th Cir. 1985); In re New York City Asbestos
    Litigation, 
    678 N.E.2d 467
     (N.Y. 1997) (per
    curiam); W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and
    Keeton on the Law of Torts sec. 34, p. 213-14
    (5th ed. 1984). Negligence, the standard in
    defamation suits brought by private rather than
    public figures, does not require proof of a state
    of mind at all, but only that the defendant
    failed to exercise the care that a reasonable
    person in his position would have exercised. The
    contrast with recklessness in the strong sense in
    which the term is used to denote the standard in
    constitutional, mail-fraud, and public-figure
    defamation cases is stark. "Reckless conduct [in
    a public-figure defamation case] is not measured
    by whether a reasonably prudent man would have
    published, or would have investigated before
    publishing. There must be sufficient evidence to
    permit the conclusion that the defendant in fact
    entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his
    publication. Publishing with such doubts shows
    reckless disregard for truth or falsity and
    demonstrates actual malice." St. Amant v.
    Thompson, 
    supra,
     
    390 U.S. at 731
    . We may assume
    that the defendants were careless in having
    failed to investigate the auto-refractor
    accusation further; but there is no evidence that
    they actually believed the accusation to be false
    and so the question is whether the clinic has
    presented enough evidence of recklessness to
    defeat summary judgment.
    The accusation of tampering was made originally
    by Paddy Kalish, an optometrist who had worked
    for the Desnick eye clinic for two years. Kalish
    claimed that technicians employed by the clinic
    tampered (at the clinic’s direction) with the
    auto-refractor in order to produce false
    diagnoses of cataract. A symptom of cataract is
    that one’s normal eyesight becomes severely
    degraded when there is a lot of glare. The auto-
    refractor tests for this symptom as follows.
    First it inspects the patient’s eyes without
    glare. The machine automatically adjusts for
    whatever correction the patient requires, so that
    if the patient’s vision has been corrected to
    20/20 that is what the eye chart in the machine
    will report. Then the glare function is
    activated. If the patient does not have a
    cataract, his vision will still register as
    20/20, but if he does have a cataract, the glare
    will degrade his vision, and if it degrades it to
    20/50 or worse this is an indication that he
    needs surgery to remove the cataract. According
    to Kalish, the glare created by the machine can
    be amplified to degrade the patient’s vision even
    if the patient does not have a cataract. In an
    interview with Donaldson that was videotaped
    (only part of which was used in the broadcast),
    Kalish first tested Donaldson to ascertain that
    without tampering his corrected vision was 20/20
    even with the glare produced by the (untampered-
    with) machine. In other words, Donaldson did not
    have a cataract. Then Kalish explained that the
    glare could be intensified by removing the
    housing of a part of the machine and unscrewing
    the "glare bulb" exposed by that removal,
    covering the bulb with a piece of scotch tape,
    "painting" the tape with a magic marker, and
    reinstalling the bulb. The dimming of this bulb
    caused by the tampering is detected by a glare
    detector in the machine, and the glare detector
    reacts by sending more power to the glare bulb,
    and Kalish said that the net effect is to create
    increased glare in the patient’s field of vision.
    After several failed attempts to degrade
    Donaldson’s vision, Kalish with the aid of a
    friend of his, a technician formerly employed by
    him, was able to degrade Donaldson’s vision to
    20/40.
    There is nothing, so far, to indicate any
    recklessness on the part of ABC in crediting
    Kalish’s accusation. It is true that Kalish and
    the technician needed several attempts to degrade
    Donaldson’s vision, but this is not surprising or
    suspicious. The machine was new to the
    technician, and Kalish had not done the tampering
    of the eye clinic’s machine himself. Nor is it
    significant that Donaldson’s vision was not
    degraded to the 20/50 level, given the
    technician’s lack of tampering experience and the
    fact that Donaldson was younger than the patients
    at the clinic, almost all of whom were Medicare-
    eligible and thus 65 or older. The technique of
    tampering was odd--dimming the glare bulb in
    order to signal the glare detector to restore its
    brightness doesn’t seem a likely recipe for a net
    increase in glare. The obvious way to achieve
    this end would be to mask the detector, causing
    it to send additional power to the undimmed glare
    bulb. The manufacturer of the auto-refractor
    acknowledged that the machine could be caused to
    register false positives in this way, and it is
    likely that Kalish, who had not done the actual
    tampering himself but merely observed it,
    mistakenly thought that the tamperer covered the
    bulb rather than the detector, which sits beside
    it in the machine.
    The accusation of tampering was corroborated by
    the fact that ABC’s investigation of the Desnick
    clinic turned up evidence of unneeded surgery,
    alteration of patients’ records to show they
    needed cataract surgery when they didn’t,
    diagnoses by clinic surgeons of cataract in
    testers (ABC "undercover agents") with normal
    eyesight, and statements by former employees of
    the clinic that almost everyone failed the glare
    test. The plaintiff points out correctly that
    these "facts" have not yet been established,
    because the district judge dismissed the suit
    before determining their truth. But that is
    irrelevant. All that matters is that ABC was not
    reckless in stating these as facts, facts
    establishing a pattern of herding elderly
    patients into unneeded cataract surgery, or in
    making the further charge that a diagnostic
    machine had been tampered with to produce false
    positives.
    The defendants knew more than the facts we have
    summarized so far, however, and it is on the
    "more" that the plaintiff pitches its contention
    that a jury could infer that they knew there was
    a high probability that Kalish’s accusation, at
    least, was false. But neither singly nor in
    combination do the additional facts that the
    defendants knew permit such an inference.
    One thing they knew was that the U.S. Attorney
    had refused to join Kalish’s multimillion
    whistleblower dollar suit against the clinic (a
    suit that ultimately failed, though for a reason
    unrelated to Kalish’s credibility--that he lacked
    standing to bring such a suit) because he didn’t
    think that Kalish could be the centerpiece of a
    credible suit. But he didn’t think that because
    he thought Kalish was lying but because he
    thought Kalish might not be believed, having
    worked for the clinic for two years and during
    his employment having participated in the
    clinic’s unethical practices. That Kalish might
    not be credible enough to have a good chance of
    persuading a jury does not mean that he was not
    credible enough to be a source for a news story.
    Many a criminal conviction has rested entirely on
    the testimony of coconspirators despite the
    requirement in a criminal case of proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt; a fortiori a broadcaster is
    entitled to repose confidence in a conspirator
    unless the circumstances create in the
    broadcaster’s mind a belief that there is a high
    probability that the conspirator is lying.
    The plaintiff in its brief repeatedly urges us
    to view the "outtakes" of Donaldson’s interview
    of Kalish, that is, the parts of the videotape
    that were not broadcast; and we have done so. The
    plaintiff directs us to Donaldson’s statement in
    the outtakes that "this is silly." But the
    referent is omitted. In one of the failed
    attempts to rig the machine, the piece of scotch
    tape was left wedged in it and Kalish suggested
    that he darken the bulb with the magic marker and
    then reinsert it. Evidently what Donaldson
    thought "silly" was attempting to rig the machine
    in two stages. The fact revealed by the outtakes
    and much harped on by the plaintiff that Kalish
    and the technician needed repeated attempts to
    tamper with the machine successfully has no
    significance given that the technician was not as
    knowledgeable about the machine as a Desnick eye
    clinic technician would have been. Incidentally,
    the fact that Kalish couldn’t do the tampering
    himself, that he is clumsy and needed the
    assistance of a technician, has a significance
    unrecognized by the plaintiff. Given his lack of
    mechanical aptitude, it is unlikely that Kalish
    could have made up this method of tampering had
    he never seen or heard about it, though as we
    noted earlier he may have been confused as the
    precise method of tampering that he had observed.
    The clinic’s lawyer speculated at the oral
    argument of the appeal that maybe Kalish had
    heard about the method of tampering from someone
    unrelated to Desnick’s clinic. Maybe. But it was
    not a possibility that ABC was required to
    entertain seriously, given all the evidence it
    had that was corroborative of Kalish’s
    accusation.
    The plaintiff points out that ABC did not
    attempt to hunt up the actual technicians
    employed by the plaintiff who had tampered with
    the machine. This is true, and maybe that failure
    was negligent, though it is understandable why
    ABC might think it an unprofitable quest: people
    are reluctant to admit their misconduct. But
    negligence is not the applicable standard.
    Potentially the best fact for the plaintiff is
    that, as the defendants well knew (because the
    plaintiff’s lawyer told them), the clinic had
    sued Kalish in state court on account of the
    tampering accusation, which Kalish had made on a
    local television station before the "PrimeTime
    Live" broadcast, and had won a judgment. The
    plaintiff argues that the judgment "necessarily
    encompassed a finding that Kalish had made false
    statements about Dr. Desnick," but that is
    incorrect; summary judgment was granted for the
    plaintiff after Kalish’s lawyer failed to make a
    timely response to a request for admissions.
    Still, the fact that Kalish had lost a defamation
    suit based on the identical accusation should
    have set off warning bells at ABC; and it is
    conceivable (though we need not decide) that the
    failure to follow up was reckless, was a case of
    "intent not to learn the truth." There is
    nevertheless a fatal flaw in this part of the
    plaintiff’s case: the plaintiff’s failure to
    indicate what following up would have revealed.
    It is not enough to argue that ABC should have
    examined the state court record. The plaintiff
    must show what the record contained that would
    bear on Kalish’s credibility. True, this
    principle is assumed rather than stated in the
    cases. See McFarlane v. Sheridan Square Press,
    Inc., supra, 
    91 F.3d at 1510
    ; Brown v. Hearst
    Corp., 
    54 F.3d 21
    , 26 (1st Cir. 1995); Perk v.
    Readers Digest Association, Inc., 
    931 F.2d 408
    ,
    412 (6th Cir. 1991). But there is a compelling
    analogy to the duty of a party who complains
    about the exclusion of testimony to show by an
    offer of proof that the testimony would have been
    helpful. Fed. R. Evid. 103(a)(2); United States
    v. Vest, 
    116 F.3d 1179
    , 1189 (7th Cir. 1997);
    Israel Travel Advisor Service v. Israel Identity
    Tours, 
    61 F.3d 1250
    , 1260 (7th Cir. 1995); Faigin
    v. Kelly, 
    184 F.3d 67
    , 86 (1st Cir. 1999).
    Suppose that all that a study of the record in
    the clinic’s suit against Kalish would have
    revealed was a procedural bobble on the part of
    Kalish’s lawyer. It would not be surprising if
    the suit had not been defended vigorously, for
    Kalish appears to be a person of modest means and
    it is entirely possible that the clinic sued him
    not in the hope of obtaining a collectible
    judgment but in the hope of silencing him and
    destroying his credibility. This is speculation;
    our point is different--it is that without any
    indication that ABC would have learned that
    Kalish’s accusations were false had it studied
    the record of the clinic’s suit against him,
    there is no evidence of a causal relation between
    ABC’s alleged recklessness and the injury to the
    clinic. So far as appears, a study of the record
    would have brought to light nothing that would
    have cast any doubt on Kalish’s truthfulness. The
    only aspect of the defendants’ conduct that might
    be considered reckless was also, so far as the
    record discloses, harmless. Cf. Franks v.
    Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    , 171-72 (1978).
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 99-3715

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 10/27/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2015

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Brown v. Hearst Corporation , 54 F.3d 21 ( 1995 )

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United States v. Melvin Dick and Anthony Giacomino , 744 F.2d 546 ( 1984 )

Israel Travel Advisory Service, Inc., Celia Shar, and ... , 61 F.3d 1250 ( 1995 )

Jason Billman v. Indiana Department of Corrections , 56 F.3d 785 ( 1995 )

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James W. Milsap v. Journal/sentinel, Inc. , 100 F.3d 1265 ( 1996 )

Betty J. Archie v. City of Racine, Ronald W. Chiapete, and ... , 847 F.2d 1211 ( 1988 )

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Andrew Keeper v. Fred King, Dr. Anthony Gammon , 130 F.3d 1309 ( 1997 )

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Franks v. Delaware , 98 S. Ct. 2674 ( 1978 )

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