The Oyez Project Virtual Tour of the Supreme Court Building

Abstract

Argument: Monday, January 14, 1991
Decision: Thursday, June 20, 1991
Issues: First Amendment, Libel, Defamation

Advocates

H. Bartow Farr, III (Argued the cause for the respondents)
Charles Morgan, Jr. (on behalf of the Petitioner)

Facts of the Case

After Jeffrey Masson was fired from his position at the Sigmund Freud Archives, Janet Malcolm interviewed him for an article in the New Yorker magazine. Malcolm_s article included many long direct quotations from Masson. The article presented Masson as extremely arrogant and condescending; at one point, he was quoted as calling himself "the greatest analyst who ever lived." However, Malcolm fabricated many of the more distasteful quotations. Masson sued for libel. The District Court dismissed the case on First Amendment free speech grounds because Masson was a public figure.

Question

Does the First Amendment give the New Yorker a right to publish fabricated quotations attributed to a public figure?

Conclusion

No. In a 9-0 vote, the Court ruled that the First Amendment_s free expression clause could not protect the distortions in Malcolm_s article. Justice Anthony Kennedy's majority opinion also explained when a direct quotation can be considered false, and therefore potentially libelous. The First Amendment limits libel suits by public figures. A report about a public figure cannot be considered "false" unless it is a gross distortion of the truth. Justice Kennedy's opinion explained that a direct quotation will qualify as such a distortion if the quoted words differ in their factual meaning from anything the public figure really said. Malcolm_s fabrication qualified as a "gross distortion," and the Court granted Masson standing to sue.

Supreme Court Justice Opinions and Votes (by Seniority)

Sort by Ideology
(More information here)
Decision: 7 votes for Masson, 2 vote(s) against
Legal Provision: Amendment 1: Speech, Press, and Assembly
Voted with the majority
Rehnquist
Wrote a dissent
White
Voted with the majority
Marshall
Voted with the majority
Blackmun
Voted with the majority
Stevens
Voted with the majority
O'Connor
Voted with the minority, joined White's dissent
Scalia
Wrote the majority opinion
Kennedy
Voted with the majority
Souter
Full Opinion by Justice Anthony Kennedy

Cite this page

The Oyez Project, Masson v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc., 501 U.S. 496 (1991),
available at: <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1990-1999/1990/1990_89_1799/>
(last visited ).