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finding a statement absolutely privileged under Section 74 where the party did not allege that the defaming party "presented what amounts to a pleading as an allegation of fact"
Summary of this case from Pisani v. Staten Island University HospOpinion
January 8, 1991
Appeal from the Supreme Court, New York County (Edward Greenfield, J.).
We agree with the motion court that the quoted statement contained in a bulletin admittedly published by a tenants' group, of which plaintiffs are members, does not accuse defendants of violating Penal Law §§ 175.30 and 175.35. The statement clearly had reference to a letter of complaint defendants delivered to the Department of Buildings which cannot be considered as an "instrument" within the meaning of the Penal Law defining the crime of offering a false instrument for filing. (People v Sansanese, 17 N.Y.2d 302; People v Gottlieb, 36 N.Y.2d 629.) The fact that the statement does not accuse defendants of a criminal act does not mean, however, that the statement may not be construed as libelous per se. Its libelous character derives from the fact that it charges defendants in writing with being liars and is thus actionable on its face. As we said in Mase v Reilly ( 206 App. Div. 434, 436): "In an action for libel the rule is that any publication which tends to hold up a man to scorn or ridicule is libelous per se. The charge that a man is lying, at least, in a matter of public interest, is such a charge as tends to hold him up to scorn, as [a] matter of law, and prima facie a complaint stating the making in writing of such a charge is good."
We agree with the motion court that Civil Rights Law § 74 confers an absolute privilege upon the statement that the defendant committee "needs to account for over $91,000." This branch of the alleged libel does not trespass beyond a fair report of a pending judicial proceeding. So much of the libel counterclaim based on this statement was properly dismissed, because the pleaded words simply refer to a legal duty which may be imposed on defendants if a pending lawsuit should prevail. The statement is therefore cloaked with the Civil Rights Law privilege (Ford v Levinson, 90 A.D.2d 464). Nowhere do defendants allege that plaintiffs presented what amounts to a pleading as an allegation of actual fact, nor do they plead in this action that the mentioned prior action was brought in bad faith as a vehicle for disseminating defamatory matter — contentions which might put a different perspective on the issue.
The remaining charges of libel were properly dismissed because the particular words alleged to be libelous were not set forth in the complaint (CPLR 3016 [a]).
We have examined the remaining contentions and find them to be without merit.
Concur — Sullivan, J.P., Carro, Ellerin, Wallach and Rubin, JJ.