Libel


  • Jordan v. Kollman (Virginia Supreme Court on libel)

    Jordan, a resident of Colonial Heights, published advertisements criticizing the mayor for allowing low-income housing to be built in the city. In fact, the mayor had opposed the construction of the housing, and he sued for defamation. But the Court ruled that the mayor was a ‘public official’ required to show ‘actual malice’ in the…


  • Carr v. Forbes Inc. (4th Cir. on libel)

    An engineer who sued a magazine for defamation had made himself a limited-purpose public figure by his role in choosing and publicizing contracts. He could not show that the magazine acted with . . .actual malice.’


  • Yeagle v. Collegiate Times (Va. Supreme Court on libel)

    Yeagle, a college employee, filed a complaint against Virginia Tech’s Collegiate Times, alleging defamation after the phrase . . .director of butt licking’ appeared under her name in an article. Her suit was dismissed, and the Court upheld that dismissal. As a matter of law, the phrase could not convey a defamatory meaning. It contained…


  • Reuber v. Food Chemical News Inc. (4th Cir. on libel)

    Reuber, a scientist, declared himself a whistleblower and created the misleading impression that a controversial pesticide was carcinogenic. A newsletter published his employer’s reprimand, which stated that Reuber had engaged in unprofessional conduct. He sued for defamation and won in a jury trial which awarded him compensatory and punitive damages. On appeal, the Court reversed…


  • Lee v. Ilbo (4th Circuit on libel)

    A South Korean government agency issued a report that identified Lee, a U.S. resident alien, as a North Korean spy. Several newspapers and a television station reported the story. Lee sued the media groups for libel, and the trial court granted their motions for summary judgment. On appeal, the Court held that defendants were not…

    Opinions

  • Falwell v. Flynt (4th Cir. on libel)

    Falwell brought suit against Larry Flynt and his magazine for libel, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress after Hustler published a parody of the preacher having a drunken rendezvous with his own mother. (1) The district court dismissed the claim for invasion of privacy because the use of plaintiff’s name and likeness…


  • The Gazette Inc. v. Harris (Virginia Supreme Court on libel)

    In consolidated cases, several citizens sued newspapers for publishing defamatory articles about them. In each action, the trial court had applied a negligence standard, and the Court took the opportunity to clarify the standard of liability that should govern an award of compensatory damages to a private individual in a libel action. (1) A preponderance…


  • Fleming v. Moore (Virginia Supreme Court on libel)

    A broker wanted to build a low-income residential development on land neighboring Moore, a U.Va. professor who opposed the development. The broker’s application for rezoning was denied. Consequently, he published paid advertisements in The Cavalier Daily (U.Va.’s newspaper) saying Moore did “not want any black people within his sight.” Moore brought a libel action alleging…


  • Sanders v. Harris (Virginia Supreme Court on libel)

    Sanders, a professor at Virginia Western Community College, sued after a newspaper wrongly reported that she improperly withheld documents from her department head. Her employment contract with the university was not renewed after the article appeared, and she was unable to obtain another position with a university. The Court affirmed a circuit court’s ruling in…