{"title":"The Defamation Injunction Meets the Prior Restraint Doctrine","authors":"Doug Rendleman","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.2404560","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In Near v. Minnesota, the Supreme Court added the injunction to executive licensing as a prior restraint. Although the Near court circumscribed the injunction as a prior restraint, it approved criminal sanctions and damages judgments. The prior restraint label resembles a death sentence. This article maintains that such massive retaliation is overkill. A judge’s injunction that forbids the defendant’s tort of defamation tests Near and prior restraint doctrine because defamation isn’t protected by the First Amendment. Arguing that the anti-defamation injunction has outgrown outright bans under the prior restraint rule and the equitable Maxim that “Equity will not enjoin defamation” turns out to be formidable. This article examines the Sullivan v. New York Times privileges in defamation, their tension between truth and falsity, and their limitations on compensatory and punitive damages. It tests the injunction against damages by examining several Equitable doctrines: the inadequacy prerequisite-irreparable injury rule, the injunction as preventive relief, the temporary restraining order, the preliminary injunction, the injunction bond, the juryless injunction trial, the task of drafting an injunction to avoids vagueness and over-breadth, the use of motions to modify-dissolve an injunction, and the declaratory judgment, and contempt, compensatory, coercive, or criminal, including the collateral bar rule. It weighs important prior restraint scholarship, including Professor Emerson’s and Professor Blasi’s. The administration of the prior restraint doctrines has expanded its operation beyond the policy reasons that gave it birth. This article concludes that the differences between damages and an injunction don’t warrant different treatment. In Balboa Island VillageInn v. Lemen, the California Supreme Court approved a targeted injunction that forbids a defendant from repeating proved defamation. Influential scholars beginning with Roscoe Pound and including more recently Professors Redish, Jeffries, Schauer, and Ardia have eroded the prior restraint doctrines’ reasoning and application. The procedure leading to an injunction can be augmented by requiring prior notice, adversary adjudication, and narrow drafting. A properly adjudicated and drafted injunction that specifically forbids defendant’s defamation will prevent harmful torts without threatening free-speech values. The article closes by asking for abolition of the Maxim and suspension or qualification of the prior restraint doctrine for defamation.","PeriodicalId":83257,"journal":{"name":"The San Diego law review","volume":"56 1","pages":"615"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-03-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The San Diego law review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2404560","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In Near v. Minnesota, the Supreme Court added the injunction to executive licensing as a prior restraint. Although the Near court circumscribed the injunction as a prior restraint, it approved criminal sanctions and damages judgments. The prior restraint label resembles a death sentence. This article maintains that such massive retaliation is overkill. A judge’s injunction that forbids the defendant’s tort of defamation tests Near and prior restraint doctrine because defamation isn’t protected by the First Amendment. Arguing that the anti-defamation injunction has outgrown outright bans under the prior restraint rule and the equitable Maxim that “Equity will not enjoin defamation” turns out to be formidable. This article examines the Sullivan v. New York Times privileges in defamation, their tension between truth and falsity, and their limitations on compensatory and punitive damages. It tests the injunction against damages by examining several Equitable doctrines: the inadequacy prerequisite-irreparable injury rule, the injunction as preventive relief, the temporary restraining order, the preliminary injunction, the injunction bond, the juryless injunction trial, the task of drafting an injunction to avoids vagueness and over-breadth, the use of motions to modify-dissolve an injunction, and the declaratory judgment, and contempt, compensatory, coercive, or criminal, including the collateral bar rule. It weighs important prior restraint scholarship, including Professor Emerson’s and Professor Blasi’s. The administration of the prior restraint doctrines has expanded its operation beyond the policy reasons that gave it birth. This article concludes that the differences between damages and an injunction don’t warrant different treatment. In Balboa Island VillageInn v. Lemen, the California Supreme Court approved a targeted injunction that forbids a defendant from repeating proved defamation. Influential scholars beginning with Roscoe Pound and including more recently Professors Redish, Jeffries, Schauer, and Ardia have eroded the prior restraint doctrines’ reasoning and application. The procedure leading to an injunction can be augmented by requiring prior notice, adversary adjudication, and narrow drafting. A properly adjudicated and drafted injunction that specifically forbids defendant’s defamation will prevent harmful torts without threatening free-speech values. The article closes by asking for abolition of the Maxim and suspension or qualification of the prior restraint doctrine for defamation.
在尼尔诉明尼苏达州案中,最高法院将禁令添加到行政许可中,作为一种事先限制。虽然附近法院将禁令限制为一种预先限制,但它批准了刑事制裁和损害赔偿判决。先前约束的标签类似于死刑判决。这篇文章坚持认为,如此大规模的报复是过度的。法官禁止被告的诽谤侵权行为的禁令检验了Near and prior restraint doctrine,因为诽谤不受第一修正案的保护。反对诽谤的禁制令已经超越了“先抑原则”和“衡平法不禁止诽谤”这一公平原则下的直接禁令,这是令人生畏的。本文考察了沙利文诉《纽约时报》案中的诽谤特权,它们在真实与虚假之间的紧张关系,以及它们在补偿性和惩罚性损害赔偿方面的局限性。它通过审查几个衡平法原则来检验禁止损害赔偿的禁令:不充分的先决条件-不可弥补的伤害规则,禁令作为预防性救济,临时限制令,初步禁令,禁令保释金,无陪审团禁令审判,起草禁令的任务以避免模糊和过于宽泛,使用动议来修改-解散禁令,以及宣告判决,蔑视,补偿性,强制性或刑事,包括附带禁令规则。它重视重要的先行约束奖学金,包括爱默生教授和布拉西教授的奖学金。优先限制原则的运用已经超越了其产生的政策原因。这篇文章的结论是,损害赔偿和禁令之间的区别并不能保证不同的处理。在Balboa Island VillageInn诉Lemen案中,加州最高法院批准了一项有针对性的禁令,禁止被告重复已证实的诽谤。从罗斯科·庞德(Roscoe Pound)开始的有影响力的学者,包括最近的瑞迪什、杰弗里斯、肖尔和阿迪亚教授,已经削弱了优先约束理论的推理和应用。导致禁令的程序可以通过要求事先通知、对抗性裁决和狭义起草来扩大。一个经过适当裁决和起草的禁令,明确禁止被告的诽谤,将在不威胁言论自由价值的情况下防止有害的侵权行为。文章最后要求废除《格言》,暂停或限制诽谤的优先限制原则。