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Full-Text Articles in Law
Master's Defamation Of His Servant, Charles A. Caruso
Master's Defamation Of His Servant, Charles A. Caruso
Cleveland State Law Review
The question now arises, as it does so frequently when one right must be held in balance against another, is one's right to unconditionally utter any statement he so wishes subservient to another's right to a reputation free from the impairments of defamation? The question has lost its youth along with the First Amendment of the United States Constitution; yet the decisions and authority, as to which right is the more fundamental and which should be subrogated to which, are still widely divided.
Libelous Ridicule By Journalists, James M. Naughton, Eric R. Gilbertson
Libelous Ridicule By Journalists, James M. Naughton, Eric R. Gilbertson
Cleveland State Law Review
Proof of actual malice, or even establishing that an attack in ridicule bears no relation to public conduct, seems at best, extremely difficult to bring out. The public interest in protecting itself, through criticism of those in prominence, weighs much more heavily on the scales of justice than does the interest of public figures in protecting themselves from personal attack. So go ahead and draw your cartoons, Conrad. Keep sticking pins in the kewpie dolls of America, Art Buchwald. And tell it like it is, Pogo.