quincy
Senior Member
I am sure Quaere is working on just that, jci, and I am, as well.
Yours has never been a libel action that was going to be a slam-dunk anyway - I think you probably had a much stronger slander action possible against some of those in your community, as well as the possibility of a decent shot at winning a false light invasion of privacy action. However, none of that really matters at this point.
Your goal is to show the court that the trial court and appeals court erred in designating you a limited public figure, this to get around the actual malice proof you would need as a public figure for your defamation action to be successful. Proving actual malice is one of the most difficult elements in any defamation suit, and I honestly don't see you proving it based on the letters that were written. So that is one area where you need to convince the Supreme Court that the lower courts erred.
The other area is the defamation itself. The word albino is not defamatory in and of itself. It can, however, be defamatory when used in a certain context. This is where your DNR testimony can be used, to demonstrate that the judge erred by relying on the "legal" definition of albino provided him by the DNR witness, and not on it's actual definition as it appears in 3.100.
The dual meanings of the word "albino" is important in your case, because the people in your community understand that shooting an albino deer is (was) illegal, and that knowledge imparts a different meaning to the word albino, to those in your community (who, being in a hunting community, are aware of the difference between albino, white, piebald) than the innocent form of the word does.
You are up against what is, basically, a free speech issue here, jci. It is the constitutional right of people to speak out on matters of public interest and controversy. The letters were, to my mind, opinion, and were also placed in the Letters to the Editor section of the paper, which further connotes that the letters express opinion and not fact.
I think one of the strong cases you can use for the public figure/private figure issue is the Firestone case I cited (somewhere around here
).
Wait for Quaere to post, and I will post back as well, when I come up with some brilliant ideas for you.
Yours has never been a libel action that was going to be a slam-dunk anyway - I think you probably had a much stronger slander action possible against some of those in your community, as well as the possibility of a decent shot at winning a false light invasion of privacy action. However, none of that really matters at this point.

Your goal is to show the court that the trial court and appeals court erred in designating you a limited public figure, this to get around the actual malice proof you would need as a public figure for your defamation action to be successful. Proving actual malice is one of the most difficult elements in any defamation suit, and I honestly don't see you proving it based on the letters that were written. So that is one area where you need to convince the Supreme Court that the lower courts erred.
The other area is the defamation itself. The word albino is not defamatory in and of itself. It can, however, be defamatory when used in a certain context. This is where your DNR testimony can be used, to demonstrate that the judge erred by relying on the "legal" definition of albino provided him by the DNR witness, and not on it's actual definition as it appears in 3.100.
The dual meanings of the word "albino" is important in your case, because the people in your community understand that shooting an albino deer is (was) illegal, and that knowledge imparts a different meaning to the word albino, to those in your community (who, being in a hunting community, are aware of the difference between albino, white, piebald) than the innocent form of the word does.
You are up against what is, basically, a free speech issue here, jci. It is the constitutional right of people to speak out on matters of public interest and controversy. The letters were, to my mind, opinion, and were also placed in the Letters to the Editor section of the paper, which further connotes that the letters express opinion and not fact.
I think one of the strong cases you can use for the public figure/private figure issue is the Firestone case I cited (somewhere around here

Wait for Quaere to post, and I will post back as well, when I come up with some brilliant ideas for you.

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