HARRIS V. HAWKINS
Case Date: 07/27/1995
Docket No: SYLLABUS
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(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued September 12, 1994 -- Reargued May 1, 1995 -- Decided July 27, 1995
O'HERN, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
The issue on appeal is whether the absolute privilege accorded to statements made by participants in
judicial proceedings extends to statements made by private investigators employed by the parties or their
representatives.
On July 1, 1987, Linda Hawkins was involved in an automobile accident that left her physically and
mentally disabled. On July 14, 1987, Hawkins had another automobile accident that worsened her condition.
Hawkins filed lawsuits against the two responsible parties. Those matters were consolidated for discovery
and trial and a jury returned a verdict in favor of Hawkins for over $400,000.
On April 10, 1981, Hawkins filed a seven-count complaint against various attorney-defendants,
insurer-defendants, and investigator-defendants involved in the underlying personal injury litigation. The
insurer-defendants were the insurers of the various defendants in the automobile accident. The lawyer-defendants were attorneys for one of the motorists in the underlying case. The lawyer-defendants and
insurer-defendants had hired the investigator-defendants to gather information about the accidents and the
resulting damages claimed by Hawkins. Hawkins's complaint included allegations that the investigator-defendants defamed her during their investigation. Her complaint was eventually dismissed by the trial court
for failure to state a cause of action.
Hawkins appealed the dismissal of her complaint. The Appellate Division reversed the trial court's
dismissal of her claims for invasion of privacy, negligent infliction of emotional distress and conspiracy but
affirmed the trial court's dismissal of Hawkins' other claims. One member of the Appellate Division panel
dissented from that part of the decision affirming the dismissal of Hawkins' defamation claims against the
investigator-defendants. According to Hawkins' complaint, the investigator-defendants had portrayed her as
an unfaithful spouse, an insurance cheat, and as a suborner of perjury. The dissent found that those
allegations could amount to actionable defamation unless privileged. The dissent acknowledged that lawyers
are given an absolute immunity for statements made in the course of judicial proceedings so that they may
exercise unfettered judgment in their clients' interests. Nonetheless, the dissent opined that investigators
should be limited to a qualified privilege, being held liable for otherwise defamatory statements the
investigator knows to be false, or utters in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity.
Hawkins appeals to the Supreme Court as of right on the basis of the dissent below.
HELD: Relevant statements made in the course of pretrial discovery by private investigators employed by
the parties or their representatives are protected by an absolute privilege and are, therefore, immune
from liability.
1. Although defamatory, a statement will not be actionable if it is subject to an absolute or qualified
privilege. A statement made in the course of judicial, administrative, or legislative proceedings is absolutely
privileged and wholly immune from liability. That immunity is predicated on the need for unfettered
expression. The extension of an absolute privilege to jurors, witnesses, and parties and their representatives
is grounded in similar public-policy concerns. The defamatory statement, however, must have some relation
to the nature of the proceedings in order to be privileged. (pp. 5-9)
3. The pretrial discussions between the investigator-defendants and the witnesses were made in the course of
the underlying personal injury litigation and were undertaken to achieve the objects of the litigation. The
allegedly defamatory statements concerning insurance fraud and the subornation of a witness were clearly
relevant to the underlying litigation. However, there is less certainty about the relevance of Hawkins'
claimed infidelity. (pp. 10-14)
4. The litigation privilege should extend to those who aide an attorney in the course of legal proceedings.
Thus, the privilege should extend to the relevant statements an investigator has made in the course of pretrial
discovery. To protect from investigator abuse, courts have the power and authority to impose sanctions on
parties for an abuse of the discovery process. In addition, some private investigators will be subject to State
licensure procedures. Finally, an attorney may be held professionally responsible for a lack of supervision of
such investigators. (pp. 14-18)
5. The litigation privilege is not a license to defame. A statement is privileged only if it has some relation to
the proceeding. Because of the unusual procedural posture of this case, the trial court may not have fully
considered the relevance to the underlying litigation of the investigator's alleged suggestion of Hawkins'
adultery. However, this issue is not before the Court on appeal. (p. 18)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
JUSTICE HANDLER, dissenting, in which the CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE STEIN join, is of
the view that investigators should be limited to a qualified privilege with respect to defamatory statements
made in the course of an investigation that is not a direct part of a judicial proceeding. A qualified privilege
is sufficient to protect investigators and the attorneys who hire them without impinging on the investigator's
ability to conduct a fruitful investigation. The fact that investigators may assist attorneys in preparing a case
does not justify extending an unqualified and absolute privilege to those investigators for statements made in
the course of investigations. Because informal discovery undertaken by investigators is not subject to judicial
supervision, it is subject to abuse. Therefore, the absolute privilege should not be extended to investigators
absent adequate safeguards. As exemplified by this case, the grant of immunity coupled with the absence of
any ethical or legal constraints becomes a license to defame.
JUSTICES POLLOCK, GARIBALDI and JUDGE MICHELS join in JUSTICE O'HERN's opinion.
JUSTICE HANDLER filed a separate dissenting opinion in which the CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
STEIN join. JUSTICE COLEMAN did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
LINDA HAWKINS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BRIAN HARRIS, STEPHEN HOPKINS,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
HANOVER INSURANCE CO.,
Defendant.
Argued September 12, 1994 -- Reargued May 1, 1995 --
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
Division.
Eldridge Hawkins argued the cause for
appellant.
Hugh Francis argued the cause for respondent
New Jersey Automobile Full Insurance
Underwriting Association (Francis & Berry,
attorneys; Mr. Francis, of counsel; Raymond
N. Torres, Jr., on the brief).
David L. Hack argued the cause for respondent
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
Company (Hack, Piro, O'Day, Merklinger,
Wallace & McKenna, attorneys; Mr. Hack, of
counsel; Douglas J. Olcott, on the brief).
Jeffrey M. Kadish argued the cause for
respondents Brian Harris, Stephen Hopkins and
Braff, and EWH&S (Morgan, Melhuish, Monaghan,
Arvidson, Abrutyn & Lisowski, attorneys).
Michael K. Furey argued the cause for amicus
curiae New Jersey State Bar Association
(William B. McGuire, President, attorney; Mr.
Furey, Danielle E. Reid, and Raymond A.
Noble, on the brief).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
the absolute privilege does extend to statements made by private
investigators. We affirm the judgment below.
Because the case arises on the defendants' motions for summary judgment, we may accept as true the facts as set forth in plaintiff's papers. On July 1, 1987, plaintiff, Linda Hawkins, had an automobile accident, which left her physically and mentally disabled. On July 14, 1987, Mrs. Hawkins was involved in another automobile accident, which worsened her condition. She filed lawsuits against the two responsible motorists. The two cases were consolidated for discovery and trial. A jury returned a verdict in favor of Mrs. Hawkins for approximately $435,000. Thereafter, the motorists in the underlying action settled the case for $350,000. On April 10, 1991, plaintiff filed a seven-count complaint against various attorneys, insurance companies, and investigators involved in the underlying litigation. We shall refer to them as the lawyer-defendants, the insurer-defendants, and the investigator-defendants. The insurer-defendants were the insurers of the various defendants in the automobile accident case. The lawyer-defendants were attorneys for one of the motorists in the underlying case. The lawyer-defendants and insurer-defendants had hired the investigator-defendants - Search Investigations, Inc., and Alex Toia -- to gather information about the accidents and the consequential damages
claimed by plaintiff. Plaintiff's complaint included allegations
that the investigator-defendants defamed her during their
investigation.
Those words, portraying plaintiff as an unfaithful spouse,
insurance cheat, and as a suborner of perjury, could amount to
actionable defamation unless privileged. The dissenting member
of the panel acknowledged that lawyers are given an absolute
immunity for statements made in the course of judicial
proceedings so that they may exercise unfettered judgment in
their clients' interest. Nevertheless, he would "limit
investigators to the benefit of a qualified privilege, holding
them responsible for otherwise defamatory language if the
[investigator] knows the statement to be false, or utters it in
reckless disregard of its truth or falsity." Plaintiff appeals
to us as of right on the basis of the dissent below. The only
issue before us, then, is whether the investigator-defendants'
statements were absolutely privileged. Although defamatory, a statement will not be actionable if it is subject to an absolute or qualified privilege. A statement made in the course of judicial, administrative, or legislative proceedings is absolutely privileged and wholly immune from liability. That immunity is predicated on the need for unfettered expression critical to advancing the underlying government interest at stake in those settings.
[Erickson v. Marsh & McLennan Co., Inc.,
117 N.J. 539, 563 (1990) (citations omitted).] The trouble with privileges is that they are granted to good and bad alike. A legislator has an absolute privilege on the floor of a chamber to revile, to defame, or to distort the
truth. Invoking the Speech and Debate Clause, U.S. Const. art.
I, § 6, a lawmaker may use this provision "as a cloak of immunity
from prosecution while he [is] smearing the reputations and
characters of American citizens whom the Bill of Rights [had]
been designed to protect." Albert Coates, Preserving the
Constitution: The Autobiography of Senator Sam Ervin,
63 N.C. L.
Rev. 993, 994 (1985) (book review). We accept such a privilege
because it is more important to allow a lawmaker to speak and
vote freely on matters of public concern than it is to punish the
lawmaker as a rogue. The Speech and Debate Clause protects the
integrity of the legislative process by preventing the
"intimidation of legislators by the Executive and accountability
before a possibly hostile judiciary." Gravel v. United States,
408 U.S. 606, 617,
92 S. Ct. 2614, 2623,
33 L. Ed.2d 583, 597
(1972).
[Pierson v. Ray,
386 U.S. 547, 554,
87 S. Ct. 1213, 1217-18,
18 L. Ed.2d 288, 294 (1967).]
"The principle of judicial immunity has remained viable in the
face of challenges in some very emotionally and politically
charged cases." Jarvis v. Drake,
830 P.2d 23, 26 (Kan. 1992).
Our doctrine derives from the English rule of immunity. The
English rule differs slightly from the American rule in that
England affords a true, absolute privilege without regard to the
relevancy of the statements to the subject matter of the
proceedings. Id. at 118 (citing Munster v. Lamb, [1883]
11 Q.B.D. 588).
The only dilution of the rule [of absolute
immunity] which has occurred in New Jersey
(and most American jurisdictions) is the
requirement that the defamatory matter
uttered have some relation to the nature of
the proceedings. Thus, statements made in
the course of judicial proceedings, but not
relevant thereto, are excluded from the
privilege.
[Devlin v. Greiner,
147 N.J. Super. 446, 453
(Law Div. 1977).]
The litigation privilege is still widely accepted. See
Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 586-87 (1977) (reaffirming
absolute privilege of parties and their attorneys if the
defamatory statements have "some relation to the proceeding");
see also Uniform Defamation Act (Tentative Draft 1992) (providing
an absolute privilege for statements made "in and pertaining to a
judicial proceeding by a judge, attorney, witness, juror, or
other participant"), reprinted in Robert J. Hawley, An Overview
of the Uniform Defamation Act, in Libel Litigation 1992, at 645
app. (PLI Patents, Copyrights, Trademarks, and Literary Property
Course Handbook Series No. 338), available in WESTLAW, PLI-PAT
Database.
prosecution. Kirschstein, supra, 788 P.
2d at 950-51. "Remedies
for perjury, slander, and the like committed during judicial
proceedings are left to the discipline of the courts, the bar
association, and the state." Wright v. Yurko,
446 So.2d 1162,
1164 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1984).
The California Supreme Court set forth a useful formulation of the litigation privilege in Silberg v. Anderson, 786 P.2d 365 (1990). Although California's litigation privilege has been codified, the underlying principles are substantially the same as those underlying the New Jersey privilege. The absolute privilege applies to "any communication (1) made in judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings; (2) by litigants or other participants authorized by law; (3) to achieve the objects of the litigation; and (4) that have some connection or logical relation to the action." Id. at 369. Whether a defendant is entitled to the privilege is a question of law. Devlin, supra, 147 N.J. Super. at 460. Because the most difficult question in this case is whether investigator-defendants should be considered "litigants" or "other participants authorized by law," we will address that issue last.
1. Were the investigator-defendants'
statements made in the course of judicial
proceedings?
The litigation privilege is not limited to statements made
in a courtroom during a trial; "it extends to all statements or
communications in connection with the judicial proceeding."
Ruberton, supra, 280 N.J. Super. at 133. For example, the
privilege covers statements made during settlement negotiations.
Id. at 132-34. The privilege also protects a person while
engaged in a private conference with an attorney regarding
litigation. Middlesex Concrete Prods. & Excavating Corp. v.
Carteret Indus. Ass'n,
68 N.J. Super. 85, 92 (App. Div. 1961).
Such application of the privilege affords litigants and witnesses
"the utmost freedom of access to the courts without fear of being
harassed subsequently by derivative tort actions." Silberg,
supra, 786 P.
2d at 369 (citation omitted).
Levy,
104 Cal. Rptr. 650, 654 (Ct. App. 1972). The reason has
been well explained:
[Briscoe v. LaHue,
460 U.S. 325, 333-34,
103 S. Ct. 1108, 1114-15,
75 L. Ed.2d 96, 106-07
(1983) (citations omitted).]
Just as we wish witnesses to have absolute freedom to express the
truth as they view it, we wish parties to have an unqualified
opportunity to explore the truth of a matter without fear of
recrimination.
2. Were the investigator-defendants'
statements made to achieve the objects
of the litigation?
Pretrial investigation is "necessary to a thorough and
searching investigation of the truth," Van V. Veeder, Absolute
Immunity in Defamation: Judicial Proceedings,
9 Colum. L. Rev.
463, 477 (1909), and, therefore, essential to the achievement of
the objects of litigation. In Devlin, supra, 147 N.J. Super. at
458, the court implicitly recognized that the statements of a
private investigator made during the course of the proceeding
would be covered by the privilege, but found that in the
circumstances of that case the investigation was too remote from
any anticipated litigation.
[Adams v. Peck,
415 A.2d 292, 295
Pretrial communications by parties and witnesses are protected
"to promote the development and free exchange of information and
to foster judicial and extra-judicial resolution of disputes."
General Elec. Co. v. Sargent & Lundy,
916 F.2d 1119, 1129 (6th
Cir. 1990).
been. We are satisfied that the investigations were undertaken
to achieve the objects of the litigation. Whether the statements
were made to achieve the objects of the litigation depends on
their relationship to the investigation.
3. Did the investigator-defendants'
statements have some connection or
logical relation to the action? To be privileged, a defamatory statement must have some relation to the course of the proceedings. Fenning, supra 47 N.J. Super. at 117. "The pertinency thus required is not a technical legal relevancy, such as would, necessarily, justify insertion of the matter in a pleading or its admission into evidence, but rather a general frame of reference and relationship to the subject matter of the action." Id. at 118. That requirement "was never intended as a test of a participant's motives, morals, ethics or intent." Silberg, supra, 786 F. 2d at 374. So, too, the morals, ethics, and values of the investigators here cannot resolve the issue of relatedness. The question is whether the three statements at issue were in any way relevant to the proceedings. The allegedly defamatory statements concerning insurance fraud and the subornation of a witness were clearly relevant to the underlying litigation. However, we are less certain about the relevance to the proceedings of plaintiff's claimed infidelity. "[E]xtrajudicial defamatory allegations relating to a party's honesty are not sufficiently `pertinent' to a judicial proceeding
to clothe them with an absolute privilege, when the only basis
alleged for finding the allegations pertinent is that the defamed
party's credibility was at issue." Demopolis v. Peoples Nat'l
Bank,
796 P.2d 426, 431 (Wash. Ct. App. 1990). We shall return
to the issue of relevancy in our disposition.
4. Were the investigator-defendants "other
participants authorized by law"?
Whether investigators are "other participants authorized by
law" is the crucial issue. Had an insurance company for the
defendants in the underlying litigation conducted the
investigations, the company would have been regarded as a
participant authorized by law because of its undoubted interest
in the outcome of the proceedings. Petty v. General Accident
Fire & Life Assurance Corp.,
365 F.2d 419, 421 (3d Cir. 1966)
(applying New Jersey law); Doctors' Co. Ins. Servs. v. Superior
Court,
275 Cal. Rptr. 674, 680-82 (Ct. App. 1990). The immunity
that attends judicial proceedings "protects both counsel and
other representatives who are employed to assist a party in the
course of litigation." Petty, supra, 365 F.
2d at 421 (emphasis
added). The privilege protects an attorney's agents and
employees in what they do at the attorney's request. Youmans v.
Smith,
47 N.E. 265, 267 (N.Y. 1897). Thus, in Middlesex Concrete
Products, supra, 68 N.J. Super. at 92, the court found that the
litigation privilege immunized accusations made by an engineering
consultant working for a defendant in a pending lawsuit.
The closest case on point is Leavitt v. Bickerton,
855 F.
Supp. 455 (D. Mass. 1994). In that case, the mother of a brain-damaged child had sued the birthing physician for malpractice.
During the malpractice action, the mother's attorney sent a
letter about the suit to the medical school where the birthing
physician taught. The physician, in turn, sued the mother and
her attorney for libel. While investigating the libel case, a
private investigator working for the physician's attorney
interviewed the mother's former employers and suggested that she
had used alcohol during the pregnancy. The mother sued the
doctor's attorney and investigator for defamation and intentional
infliction of emotional distress. The court acknowledged that
the investigator "could have used a more tactful method of
inquiry or otherwise saved Mrs. Leavitt humiliation and grief,"
but it concluded that to be privileged the statement "need only
be made in the course of judicial proceedings and be, in some
way, related to those proceedings." Id. at 458. The private
investigator's inquiries met those requirements and were
therefore privileged. Ibid. The court concluded:
protected had it been undertaken by an
attorney, he is entitled to absolute immunity
while acting as an agent of an attorney.
We believe that that is the correct legal analysis. See Devlin,
supra, 147 N.J. Super. at 458 (assuming that private investigator
would be covered by absolute privilege if investigator's
statements had been made in actual course of judicial
proceedings). Just as the legislative privilege extends to the
aide of the legislator, Gravel, supra, 408 U.S. at 621, 92 S. Ct.
at 2624-25, 33 L. Ed.
2d at 600, the litigation privilege should
extend to the aide of an attorney in the course of legal
proceedings.
false swearing and perjury prosecutions * * * ."); Binkewitz v.
Allstate Ins. Co.,
222 N.J. Super. 501, 510 (App. Div.) ("Judges
and lawyers answer to their oaths and are subject to discipline
for misconduct in court; parties and witnesses speak under oath
or similar restraint, and may be punished for irresponsible
speech."), certif. denied,
113 N.J. 378 (1988). A corresponding
burden, then, that flows from the benefits of the privilege is an
attorney's ethical and professional responsibility for the
conduct of aides. Cf. In re Opinion No. 24,
128 N.J. 114, 127-30
(1992) (reminding attorneys of their responsibility to supervise
paralegals, whether employees or independent contractors).
We are satisfied that the privilege should extend to the relevant statements of investigators made in the course of pretrial discovery. Courts have the power and authority to impose sanctions (for example, the suppression of improperly adduced evidence) on parties for an abuse of the discovery process. In addition, some private investigators will be subject to State licensure procedures. Finally, an attorney may be held professionally responsible for a lack of supervision of such investigators. This litigation immunity, of fourteenth century origin, protects lawyers, judges, witnesses, parties, and jurors. Judith Kilpatrick, Regulating the Litigation Immunity: New Power and a Breath of Fresh Air for the Attorney Discipline System, 24 Ariz.
St. L.J. 1069, 1072 (1992). "In providing this protection,
English courts were concerned that justice would be impaired if
those involved in court proceedings could be sued for statements
made `in the discharge of their public duties or in pursuing
their rights.'" Ibid. (quoting Veeder, supra,
9 Colum. L. Rev.
at 469).
[Silberg, supra, 786 P.
2d at 370 (quoting
McClatchy Newspapers, supra, 189 Cal. App.
3d
at 970).]
Those values are at least as important today as they were when
the privilege originated 600 years ago. There must be an end to
litigation.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
LINDA HAWKINS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BRIAN HARRIS, STEPHEN HOPKINS,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
HANOVER INSURANCE CO.,
Defendant.
HANDLER, J., dissenting. The Court acknowledges that plaintiff, seeking to recover for her personal injuries in an action against two motorists, "was subjected to repeated indignities by private investigators acting on behalf of an insurance company and a law firm representing one of the motorists." Ante at __ (slip op. at 2). The "indignities" she endured were slanderous remarks made about her -- that she was an adulteress, a faker, a fraud, and a liar. The Court concludes that there is nothing plaintiff can do about
those slanderous remarks. The Court holds that the policy of
immunity in the law of defamation that grants an absolute
privilege to statements made by participants in judicial
proceedings extends to statements made by private investigators
employed by the parties or their representatives. Ante at __
(slip op. at 2-3).
The law of defamation "embodies the important public policy that individuals and business entities should generally be free to enjoy their reputations unimpaired by false and defamatory attacks." Rainier's Dairies v. Raritan Valley Farms, Inc., 19 N.J. 552, 557 (1955). In certain situations, however, "a paramount public interest [dictates] that persons be permitted to speak or write freely without being restrained by the possibility of an ensuing defamation action." Id. at 557-58; see Fees v. Trow, 105 N.J. 330, 336 (1987) (noting that "[t]he law of privilege is designed to protect speech in those narrowly defined instances in which the public interest in unrestrained communication outweighs the right of redress.")
Public policy encourages free and unconstrained
communication in the administration of justice and, to that end,
justifies an absolute privilege for those who participate or are
involved in judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings. Devlin v.
Greiner,
147 N.J. Super. 446, 455 (Law Div. 1977). "The most
noteworthy illustration of the absolute privilege or immunity is
that afforded in judicial proceedings where judges, attorneys,
witnesses, parties and jurors are fully protected against
defamation actions based on utterances made in the course of the
judicial proceedings and having some relation thereto."
Rainier's, supra, 19 N.J. at 558.
referring to them as "informal discovery." Investigators are
neither parties, jurors, judges, attorneys, nor are they
necessarily witnesses. With respect to witnesses, the importance
of open communications is clearly identified by the majority.
The Court observes that
[Ante at __ (slip op. at 11)
(citing Briscoe v. LaHue,
460 U.S. 325, 333,
103 S.Ct. 1108, 1114,
75 L.Ed.2d 96, 106 (1983) (citations
omitted).]
How likely is it that a hired professional investigator will
"be reluctant to come forward to testify"? Or that he will
distort his testimony because he is afraid of being sued? Even
though an investigator's statements may be afforded an absolute
privilege if the investigator becomes a party witness, see
Devlin, supra, 147 N.J. Super. at 458, that hardly justifies
protecting an investigator's statements made in the course of
unstructured, uncontrolled, and unsupervised "informal
discovery," when the investigator is not a witness.
by the investigator in the form of an affidavit. After divorce
was granted, the wife and her alleged paramour filed a complaint
against the investigator raising numerous causes of action
stemming from alleged fabrications in his report and subsequent
affidavit. The investigator argued that he was entitled to
immunity based on an absolute privilege because the alleged
fabrications were made in the course of a judicial proceeding.
of the work performed by Middlesex. The results of Streander's
investigation were extremely favorable to the Borough. During
trial, Streander testified as an expert witness. Finding in
favor of Middlesex, the trial court indicated that "Streander and
his employees had knowingly used improper methods of computation
. . . in an attempt to make out a case of fraud [against
Middlesex]." Id. at 89.
construction of a building. He filed suit against numerous
defendants including architects Petty and Croft. The worker
claimed that the negligence of Petty and Croft in planning and
constructing the building had caused him serious physical injury.
Petty and Croft were insured against any liability arising from
negligence in their professional work. The insurance policy
provided the insurers with the obligation to defend any such suit
and the right to make whatever settlement they might deem
expedient.
party in the course of litigation." Ibid. (noting Middlesex,
supra.). That court further noted:
It cannot be overemphasized that the court extended the absolute
privilege to the insurers because they were "interested and
authorized participants" engaged in a distinct part of the
judicial proceeding, the settlement of the claims against Petty
and Croft. Ante at __ (slip op. at 10).
litigation. That consideration may serve to justify extending
some type of protection to agents of attorneys for statements
made in the course of a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding,
while under the control, direction or supervision of an attorney.
See Youmans v. Smith, supra,
47 N.E. 265, 267 (N.Y. 1897)
(acknowledging that "the privilege that protected [the attorney]
also protected his agents and employees in whatever they did at
his request that he could have lawfully done himself.").
However, the fact that investigators may aid attorneys in
preparing a case does not justify extending an unqualified and
absolute privilege to investigators for statements made in the
course of investigations.
promote more effective direction, control and supervision on the
part of the attorney in the conduct of such informal discovery.
Further, the more limited protection of the qualified privilege
could itself constitute an incentive that investigators will act
responsibly and fairly.
privilege is based is found to exist." Devlin, supra, 147 N.J.
Super. at 456. As is noted, affording investigators with an
absolute privilege does not necessarily promote open
communications and the search for truth, but, as in this case,
encourages insinuation, innuendo and insult.
judicial supervision, and is therefore subject to abuse, the
absolute privilege should not be extended to investigators absent
adequate safeguards. See Schulman v. Anderson Russell Kill &
Olick,
458 N.Y.S.2d 448, 453 (Sup. Ct. 1982) (acknowledging that
absolute privilege does not protect statements rendered during
informal discovery because of "the grave potential for abuse and
bad faith in such informal quests for information.").
In my view, the extension of an absolute privilege to investigators, endorsed by the majority, goes much too far. As exemplified by this case, the grant of immunity coupled with the absence of any ethical or legal constraints becomes a license to defame. The absolute privilege, reserved for participants in judicial proceedings, in the hands of hired investigators, does not genuinely or reasonably encourage or promote the truth -- the only purpose intended to be achieved by applying the absolute privilege to judicial and quasi-judicial proceedings and those directly and substantially involved in such proceedings.
Chief Justice and Justice Stein join in this opinion.
NO. A-6 SEPTEMBER TERM 1994
LINDA HAWKINS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BRIAN HARRIS, et al.,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
HANOVER INSURANCE CO.,
Defendant.
DECIDED July 27, 1995
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