Title: Seley-Radtke v. Hosmane

State: maryland

Issuer: Maryland Supreme Court

Document:

Katherine Seley-Radtke v. Ramachandra S. Hosmane, No. 19, September Term, 2016 
 
PURELY PRIVATE DEFAMATION – STANDARD OF PROOF TO OVERCOME 
COMMON LAW CONDITIONAL PRIVILEGE – PREPONDERANCE OF 
EVIDENCE – Court of Appeals held that standard of proof required to overcome common 
law conditional privilege in purely private defamation action is preponderance of evidence; 
clear and convincing evidence is not required to overcome conditional privilege based in 
common law and not in First Amendment.  Court of Appeals concluded that important 
State interest of protecting private individuals from defamation is best served by allowing 
plaintiff to defeat common law conditional privilege by preponderance of evidence.  
Requiring plaintiffs to overcome common law conditional privilege by clear and 
convincing evidence would be inconsistent with Maryland’s established jurisprudence.    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 19 
 
September Term, 2016 
______________________________________ 
 
KATHERINE SELEY-RADTKE 
 
v. 
 
RAMACHANDRA S. HOSMANE 
______________________________________ 
 
Barbera, C.J. 
Greene 
Adkins 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Getty, 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Opinion by Watts, J. 
McDonald and Getty, JJ., dissent. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed: November 22, 2016 
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore County 
Case No. 03-C-12-007007 
 
Argued: October 11, 2016  
 
This case involves a matter of first impression requiring this Court to determine the 
standard of proof necessary to overcome a common law conditional privilege in a purely 
private defamation action.1  Purely private defamation involves a defamation action that 
arises “when the reputation of a private individual is tarnished by a report of a private 
matter not of general or public concern[.]”  Jacron Sales Co. v. Sindorf, 276 Md. 580, 588, 
350 A.2d 688, 693 (1976).  Although this Court and the Court of Special Appeals have 
addressed issues concerning the standard of proof of fault in defamation cases, we have not 
been specifically asked to decide the standard of proof necessary to overcome a common 
law conditional privilege in a purely private defamation action.  In addressing this matter 
of first impression, we are confronted with two alternative standards: proof by a 
preponderance of the evidence or proof by clear and convincing evidence.   
Although defamation jurisprudence traces its origins to a number of seminal First 
Amendment cases of the United States Supreme Court, the resolution of defamation claims 
brought by private individuals has largely been left to the province of State courts.  See 
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 347-48 (1974).  In cases of purely private 
defamation, this Court has held that proof of fault must meet the standard of the 
                                              
1“Under Maryland law, to present a prima facie case for defamation, a plaintiff must 
ordinarily establish that the defendant made a defamatory statement to a third person; that 
the statement was false; that the defendant was legally at fault in making the statement; and 
that the plaintiff thereby suffered harm.”  Gohari v. Darvish, 363 Md. 42, 54, 767 A.2d 
321, 327 (2001) (citation and paragraph break omitted).  “A defamatory statement is one 
which tends to expose a person to public scorn, hatred, contempt or ridicule, thereby 
discouraging others in the community from having a good opinion of, or associating with, 
that person.”  Id. at 54, 767 A.2d at 327 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). 
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preponderance of the evidence, the quantum of proof ordinarily required in other types of 
actions for negligence.  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 596-97, 350 A.2d at 697-98.  Specifically, 
this Court has held that a “standard of negligence” as set forth in the Restatement (Second) 
of Torts § 580B (Am. Law Inst. 1977),2 is to be applied in cases of purely private 
defamation.  Jacron, 276 Md. at 596, 350 A.2d at 697.  Under this standard, the burden of 
proving falsity falls upon the plaintiff, rather than the burden of proving the truth of the 
alleged defamatory statement falling upon the defendant.  Id. at 597, 350 A.2d at 698.  If 
the defendant asserts a common law conditional privilege, the plaintiff bears the additional 
burden of overcoming that privilege to prevail on the defamation claim.  
It is well established that, in a defamation action, a defendant may assert a qualified 
or conditional privilege.  See Gohari v. Darvish, 363 Md. 42, 55, 767 A.2d 321, 327 (2001).  
A common law conditional privilege arises from the principle that a defendant may not be 
held liable for an otherwise provable defamatory statement if publication of the statement 
advances social interests that outweigh a plaintiff’s reputational interest.  See Marchesi v. 
Franchino, 283 Md. 131, 135, 387 A.2d 1129, 1131 (1978).  A defendant may also assert 
what has been described in case law as a First Amendment conditional privilege.  The 
Supreme Court has stated that statements pertaining to public officials and to public figures 
on matters of public concern merit special protection in our society; thus, such statements 
are subject to a conditional privilege—the First Amendment conditional privilege—that is 
                                              
2At the time of our decision in Jacron, 276 Md. at 596, 350 A.2d at 697, the pertinent 
section of the Restatement (Second) of Torts was a tentative draft: Restatement (Second) 
of Torts § 580B (Am. Law Inst., Tentative Draft No. 21, 1975).  
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overcome only by actual malice, i.e., “knowledge that [the statement] was false or with 
reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”  New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 
U.S. 254, 279-80 (1964); Curtis Publ’g Co. v. Butts, 388 U.S. 130, 155 (1967); Gertz, 418 
U.S. at 335.3  
The existence of both common law and First Amendment conditional privilege is a 
question of law, and the defendant has the burden of proof with respect to establishing the 
privilege.  See Piscatelli v. Van Smith, 424 Md. 294, 307, 35 A.3d 1140, 1147 (2012).  If 
a conditional privilege is established, a plaintiff seeking to rebut the privilege must do so 
by demonstrating that the defendant made the alleged statement with malice, defined as “a 
person’s actual knowledge that his or her statement is false, coupled with his or her intent 
to deceive another by means of that statement.”  Id. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148 (citations, 
brackets, and internal quotation marks omitted).  The definition of malice—a person’s 
                                              
3A defendant may also assert an absolute privilege.  In Gohari, 363 Md. at 55 n.13, 
767 A.2d at 327 n.13, we explained: 
 
An absolute privilege is one which provides complete immunity and applies, 
 
subject to limitations, principally to (1) judicial proceedings; 
(2) legislative proceedings; (3) in some cases to executive 
publications; (4) publications consented to; (5) publications 
between spouses; (6) publications required by law. 
 
We explained that the difference between an absolute privilege and a 
qualified privilege is that the former provides immunity regardless of the 
purpose or motive of the defendant, or the reasonableness of his conduct, 
while the latter is conditioned upon the absence of malice and is forfeited if 
it is abused.   
 
(Citations and internal quotation marks omitted). 
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actual knowledge that his or her statement is false, coupled with his or her intent to deceive 
another by means of the statement—does not cover the standard of proof necessary to 
overcome the conditional privilege.  Case law demonstrates that the standard of proof that 
is required to overcome a First Amendment conditional privilege is clear and convincing 
evidence of knowledge of a statement’s falsity or reckless disregard of whether the 
statement was false or not.  See New York Times, 376 U.S. at 279-80.  In this case, 
however, it is the standard of proof that an individual must satisfy to overcome a common 
law conditional privilege, i.e., to establish malice, in a purely private defamation action 
that is at issue.  For the reasons stated below, we hold that, in a purely private defamation 
action, an individual asserting a defamation claim must overcome a common law 
conditional privilege by a preponderance of the evidence. 
BACKGROUND 
The facts giving rise to this purely private defamation action are as follows.  
Katherine Seley-Radtke (“Seley-Radtke”), Ph.D., Petitioner, and Ramachandra S. 
Hosmane, Ph.D. (“Hosmane”), Respondent, were colleagues in the Department of 
Chemistry at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (“UMBC”).  Hosmane was 
employed as a professor of chemistry at UMBC from 1982 until 2010, when he resigned 
following allegations of sexual assault of a graduate student.  Based on allegations that 
Hosmane had sexually assaulted one of his graduate students, Brahmi Shukla (“Shukla”),4 
UMBC officials conducted an administrative investigation and determined that Hosmane 
                                              
4In 2013, Shukla received her Ph.D. from UMBC.  
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had violated UMBC’s sexual harassment policy.  In addition to allegations of sexual 
assault, UMBC investigated whether an e-mail sent to Shukla regarding the sexual assault, 
which Shukla characterized as threatening, had been authored by Hosmane.  The e-mail 
was sent from a person named “Nimmy Watson,” a person unknown to Shukla; Shukla 
testified at trial that the contents of the Watson e-mail “scared” her.   
According to Hosmane, on December 10, 2009, UMBC informed him of the results 
of the administrative investigation and provided him with three options: (1) submit to a 
two-year suspension without pay; (2) avail himself of the administrative appeal process; or 
(3) retire without the results of the investigation being made public.  Hosmane selected the 
third option and resigned and retired, effective January 1, 2010.  As a result, UMBC did 
not make public the findings of its investigation, nor was Hosmane sanctioned by UMBC.   
The Office of the State’s Attorney for Baltimore County, however, opened a 
criminal case against Hosmane stemming from the alleged sexual assault, and charged him 
with fourth-degree sex offense and second-degree assault in the District Court of Maryland 
sitting for Baltimore County, but subsequently nolle prossed the charges.  Hosmane and 
Shukla entered into a settlement agreement (“the settlement agreement”) concerning the 
sexual assault matter, in which Hosmane was to pay Shukla $10,000 and Shukla was to 
withdraw any civil and criminal claims against Hosmane related to the alleged sexual 
assault.  
On December 10, 2010, Hosmane filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County 
(“the circuit court”) a complaint against UMBC and other defendants related to his 
resignation from UMBC (“the UMBC case”).  While the UMBC case was pending, 
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Hosmane submitted a Maryland Public Information Act (“public information”) request 
seeking documents from UMBC.  In August 2011, Hosmane received a number of 
documents from UMBC as a result of the public information request.  As a result, on July 
6, 2012, Hosmane filed in the circuit court a two-count complaint against Seley-Radtke 
seeking damages for defamation and false light invasion of privacy.  In the complaint, 
Hosmane alleged “some of the numerous instances in which” Seley-Radtke had defamed 
him: 
a.  
In 2009, [Seley-Radtke] told the chemistry department chair, 
at least one co-worker, general counsel for UMBC, and others, that 
[Hosmane] had keys to many offices in the chemistry department, that he had 
stolen private documents regarding [Seley-Radtke] out of said offices, and 
that he had even sold some of the documents for money.  None of these 
assertions are true. 
 
b. 
In February 2010, after [Hosmane]’s employment with UMBC 
had come to an end, [Seley-Radtke] wrote an email to the chemistry 
department chair and general counsel for UMBC in which she stated, among 
several defamatory statements, that [Hosmane] “is an unbalanced individual 
who has done some crazy and bizarre things, not to mention he’s prone to 
sudden outbursts, and given the shootings in Alabama, I worry for my safety 
and for that of anyone around me . . . .” 
 
c. 
The same days she wrote the email referenced above, [Seley-
Radtke] wrote another email to these same people and referred to [Hosmane] 
“stealing documents” and implied that [Hosmane] had falsely accused one of 
his students of trying to kill him.  In this second email, [Seley-Radtke] also 
called [Hosmane] a “nutcase,” and said that “it is not far-fetched that he could 
do something crazy at this point . . . .”  These assertions are all demonstrably 
untrue. 
 
d. 
[Seley-Radtke] has additionally claimed in communicating 
with others that [Hosmane] was banned from campus following the end of 
his employment at UMBC and that he was also not allowed to meet with his 
former students.  This is not true. 
 
e.  
[Seley-Radtke] has also claimed that [Hosmane], in speaking 
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with his students, would make comments to them about [Seley-Radtke]’s 
body parts, particularly her breasts and buttocks.  This is totally false. 
 
f. 
Moreover, [Seley-Radtke] has claimed that [Hosmane] tried to 
convince one of [Seley-Radtke]’s former post-doctorate students to file a 
formal complaint against [Seley-Radtke], even going so far as to offer the 
student a job if he would file the complaint.  Again, this is entirely untrue. 
 
(Ellipses in original).   
In her answer to the complaint, among other things, Seley-Radtke raised the 
affirmative defense of privilege, contending that “[a]ny statements made by [her] were 
privileged and confidential communications.”   
On April 4, 2013, Hosmane filed an amended complaint naming UMBC and the 
State as additional defendants in the Seley-Radtke case.  The circuit court subsequently 
consolidated the UMBC case and the Seley-Radtke case for the purpose of trial only.  On 
April 29, 2014, the circuit court granted the State’s and UMBC’s motion for summary 
judgment as to Hosmane’s claims for defamation and invasion of privacy in the Seley-
Radtke case on the basis of sovereign immunity.  The UMBC case and Hosmane’s case 
against Seley-Radtke proceeded to a jury trial.   
Prior to trial, Hosmane filed a motion in limine concerning several evidentiary 
matters; a few days later, Hosmane filed a supplemental motion in limine.  In relevant part, 
Hosmane sought to exclude documents and testimony concerning the settlement agreement 
between himself and Shukla, and to redact from two exhibits the following language from 
Seley-Radtke’s e-mail: “Btw . . . I spoke to Det. John Taylor the other day and he 
mentioned that there are some potential new charges against [Hosmane], due to the 
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harassing emails.  Can’t that keep him off campus?”5  (Ellipsis in original).  During trial, 
the circuit court denied the motion in limine as to those two matters.  As such, during trial, 
Shukla was permitted to testify about the settlement agreement, and Seley-Radtke’s un-
redacted e-mails, containing the language that Hosmane sought to redact, were admitted 
into evidence.   
At trial, due to a scheduling issue, Shukla was permitted testify first.  Shukla 
testified about the settlement agreement.  Specifically, during Shukla’s direct examination, 
the following exchange occurred: 
[SELEY-RADTKE’S COUNSEL]: Now you also mentioned, a while back 
in your testimony, that there were criminal charges filed against [] Hosmane 
for the assault?  What happened with that criminal case? 
 
[HOSMANE’S COUNSEL]: Objection. 
 
THE COURT: Overruled.  You may answer the question. 
 
[SHUKLA]: It was dismissed. 
 
[SELEY-RADTKE’S COUNSEL]: And why was it dismissed to your 
knowledge? 
 
[HOSMANE’S COUNSEL]: Objection. 
 
THE COURT: Overruled.  You may answer the question. 
 
[SHUKLA]: Because there was a settlement of about $10,000 made, and 
therefore it was dismissed. 
 
[HOSMANE’S COUNSEL]: Objection.  Move to strike. 
 
THE COURT: Overruled.   
                                              
5These two sentences appeared in one exhibit containing Seley-Radtke’s original e-
mail message and in a second exhibit in which the original e-mail message text appeared 
in a chain of three e-mails.   
- 9 - 
 
Before closing arguments, the circuit court reviewed proposed verdict sheets and 
jury instructions with the attorneys.  Hosmane requested that the circuit court give a jury 
instruction on the republication or repetition of defamatory statements.  The circuit court 
declined to give the instruction.  The circuit court, however, gave an instruction concerning 
opinions as defamation.   
During review of the proposed verdict sheets and jury instructions, Seley-Radtke 
contended that her statements regarding Hosmane were protected by a common interest 
conditional privilege.6  The circuit court ruled, as a matter of law, that Seley-Radtke was 
entitled to a conditional privilege for the allegedly defamatory statements; Hosmane did 
not argue otherwise.   
As to the standard for overcoming the conditional privilege, Hosmane requested that 
the circuit court give Maryland Civil Pattern Jury Instruction 12:12, which provides that, 
“[i]n order to recover, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the 
defendant made the statement with actual knowledge that the statement was false, coupled 
with the intent to deceive another person by means of the statement.”  MPJI-Cv 12:12 (4th 
ed., 2013 Supp.).  On the other hand, Seley-Radtke argued that the pattern jury instruction 
should be “modified” to use language that the standard of proof is clear and convincing 
                                              
6The common interest conditional privilege is a common law conditional privilege 
that a defendant may assert in a defamation action to avoid liability.  See generally 
Marchesi, 283 Md. at 135, 387 A.2d at 1131.  The common interest conditional privilege 
applies where a defendant demonstrates that he or she is a member of an identifiable group, 
and that the allegedly defamatory statements were made among members of the group in 
furtherance of a shared goal or common interest.  See Gohari, 363 Md. at 57-58, 767 A.2d 
at 329. 
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evidence, not a preponderance of the evidence.  The circuit court agreed with Seley-Radtke 
and determined that the applicable standard of proof to overcome the conditional privilege 
was clear and convincing evidence.  The circuit court stated:  
[T]he cases that have been cited so far, and I’ve reviewed them . . .  I have 
yet to find in any of the cases that have been cited in this court this morning 
and handed to the court, plus other cases I’ve read where there’s a suggestion 
that the privilege is defeated by a preponderance of the evidence.  I just 
haven’t seen it. . . . So, . . . the instruction is gonna be by clear and convincing 
evidence. 
 
The circuit court instructed the jury as follows:  “In order to recover, the Plaintiff must 
prove by clear and convincing evidence that the Defendant made the statements with actual 
knowledge that the statement was false, coupled with the intent to deceive another person 
by means of the statement.”   
On May 9, 2014, the jury found in favor of Seley-Radtke.  Hosmane noted a timely 
appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.  On February 24, 2016, in a reported opinion, the 
Court of Special Appeals reversed the circuit court’s judgment and remanded the case for 
a new trial.  See Hosmane v. Seley-Radtke, 227 Md. App. 11, 16, 132 A.3d 348, 351 
(2016).  The Court of Special Appeals held that the circuit court “erred in instructing the 
jury that the [standard] of proof in overcoming the conditional privilege was clear and 
convincing evidence rather than by a preponderance of the evidence[.]”  Id. at 16, 123 A.3d 
at 351.  The Court of Special Appeals explained:  
Recognizing that malice means different things in different context, the Court 
[of Appeals has] adopted a “uniform standard” or definition of malice 
applicable to determining abuse of a conditional privilege and required the 
same to establish punitive damages.  This did not change or elevate the 
burden of proof in common law defamation required to overcome the 
conditional privilege.  No where [sic] did the Court of Appeals say that 
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plaintiffs in a common law defamation action, involving private individuals, 
not implicating the First Amendment, were entitled to higher protection and 
hence the higher burden of proof. . . . We hold that in common law tort 
defamation involving only private individuals, the burden of persuasion a 
plaintiff must satisfy to overcome the conditional privilege is preponderance 
of the evidence, while in First Amendment cases it is clear and convincing 
evidence. 
 
Id. at 27-28, 132 A.3d at 358 (citations omitted).  Thus, the Court of Special Appeals 
remanded the case to the circuit court for a new trial.  Id. at 16, 123 A.3d at 351.   
In its opinion, “[f]or the guidance of the [circuit] court on retrial,” the Court of 
Special Appeals addressed two evidentiary issues raised by Hosmane.  Id. at 16, 29, 123 
A.3d at 351, 359.  Specifically, the Court of Special Appeals addressed the circuit court’s 
decision not to redact part of an e-mail written by Seley-Radtke that was admitted into 
evidence that referenced “potential new charges” and “harassing emails,” and the circuit 
court’s decision to admit Shukla’s testimony concerning the settlement agreement.  Id. at 
29-31, 132 A.3d at 359-60.  The Court of Special Appeals determined that the two 
sentences in Seley-Radtke’s e-mail and Shukla’s testimony about the settlement agreement 
were not relevant, were “highly prejudicial[,]” and could have led the jury to believe that 
Hosmane “was a sex abuser who paid money to resolve such a claim, that he was the subject 
of unrelated charges and was sending harassing emails.”  Id. at 32, 132 A.3d at 361.   
Seley-Radtke filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which this Court granted on 
May 20, 2016.  Seley-Radtke v. Hosmane, 448 Md. 29, 136 A.3d 816 (2016). 
DISCUSSION 
I. 
Put simply, Seley-Radtke contends that clear and convincing evidence is the proper 
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standard of proof to overcome a common law conditional privilege in a purely private 
defamation action.  Specifically, Seley-Radtke argues that the malice required for 
overcoming a common law conditional privilege and the malice required for establishing 
punitive damages are, by definition, the same, and, therefore, the standard of proof 
necessary to prove both should be the same.  Seley-Radtke asserts that adopting the clear 
and convincing evidence standard as the standard of proof necessary to overcome a 
common law conditional privilege promotes the State’s policy of protecting free speech 
and furthers consistency in the law of defamation.   
Hosmane responds that the application of the preponderance of the evidence 
standard to overcome a common law conditional privilege is consistent with well-
established Maryland case law.  Hosmane contends that the statements in this case that are 
subject to a common law conditional privilege are already sufficiently protected by the 
definition of malice, which requires a plaintiff to prove “that the defendant made his or her 
statement with malice, defined as a person’s actual knowledge that his or her statement is 
false, coupled with his or her intent to deceive another by means of the statement.”  
(Citation, internal quotation marks, and emphasis omitted).  Hosmane argues that this 
definition of malice sufficiently protects privileged communications and that the standard 
of proof need not be clear and convincing evidence.  Hosmane asserts that applying the 
clear and convincing evidence standard of proof would significantly narrow the distinction 
between purely private defamation actions and those implicating the First Amendment, 
thereby providing fewer protections to private individuals who have been defamed.  
Additionally, Hosmane maintains that adopting the clear and convincing evidence standard 
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would upend well-established case law and create confusion in Maryland defamation 
jurisprudence rather than provide clarity.   
This Court reviews a trial court’s giving of a jury instruction for abuse of discretion.  
See Keller v. Serio, 437 Md. 277, 283, 85 A.3d 283, 286 (2014).  “In determining abuse of 
discretion in this context, we look to the following factors: (1) whether the requested 
instruction was a correct statement of the law; (2) whether it was applicable under the facts 
of the case; and (3) whether it was fairly covered in the instructions actually given.”  Id. at 
283, 85 A.3d at 286 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).  Whether a jury 
instruction was a correct statement of the law is a question of law, which we review without 
deference.  See, e.g., Griffin v. Lindsey, 444 Md. 278, 285, 119 A.3d 753, 757 (2015) (“We 
review questions of law without deference.”  (Citation omitted)).  As this Court has 
observed, though, even in areas where a trial court has discretion, “no discretion is afforded 
to trial [court]s to act upon an erroneous conclusion of law.”  John Hopkins Hosp. v. 
Pepper, 346 Md. 679, 700, 697 A.2d 1358, 1368 (1997).  Accordingly, although we 
determine whether a trial court’s decision as to whether to give a particular jury instruction 
was an abuse of discretion, we review without deference the issue of whether the jury 
instruction was a correct statement of the law. 
 
“A defamatory statement is one which tends to expose a person to public scorn, 
hatred, contempt[,] or ridicule, thereby discouraging others in the community from having 
a good opinion of, or associating with, that person.”  Gohari, 363 Md. at 54, 767 A.2d at 
327 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).  Whether a statement is defamatory is 
a question of law.  Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 306, 35 A.3d at 1147.   
- 14 - 
 
The United States Supreme Court (“the Supreme Court”) and Maryland appellate 
courts have addressed a myriad of issues related to proof of defamation, First Amendment 
conditional privilege, and common law conditional privileges.  In New York Times Co. v. 
Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 256, 279-80 (1964), the Supreme Court considered “the extent to 
which the constitutional protections for speech and press limit a State’s power to award 
damages in a libel action brought by a public official[, in that case, an elected 
Commissioner of the City of Montgomery, Alabama,] against critics of his official 
conduct[,]” and held: 
The constitutional guarantees [of the First and Fourteenth Amendments] 
require . . . a federal rule that prohibits a public official from recovering 
damages for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he 
proves that the statement was made with ‘actual malice’—that is, with 
knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false 
or not. 
 
In so holding, the Supreme Court noted that it “consider[ed] th[e] case against the 
background of a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues 
should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, 
caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”  Id. 
at 270 (citations omitted).  The Supreme Court explained that its holding was further 
supported by “[a]n oft-cited statement of a like rule,” namely, the adoption by a number of 
courts of “a privilege for criticism of official conduct[.]”  Id. at 280-82 (footnote omitted).  
According to the Supreme Court, “[s]uch a privilege for criticism of official conduct is 
appropriately analogous to the protection accorded a public official when he is sued for 
libel by a private citizen.”  Id. at 282 (footnote omitted).  The Supreme Court noted that 
- 15 - 
decisions by other courts “all hold that all officials are protected unless actual malice can 
be proved” because, otherwise, “the threat of damage suits would [] inhibit the fearless, 
vigorous, and effective administration of policies of government[.]”  Id. (citation and 
internal quotation marks omitted).  The Supreme Court determined that “[a]nalogous 
considerations support the privilege for the citizen-critic of government” because “[i]t is as 
much his duty to criticize as it is the official’s duty to administer.”  Id. (citation omitted).   
Accordingly, the Supreme Court “conclude[d] that such a privilege is required by the First 
and Fourteenth Amendments.”  Id. at 283. 
 
A few years later, in Curtis, 388 U.S. at 134, the Supreme Court considered the 
impact of New York Times on “libel actions instituted by persons who are not public 
officials, but who are ‘public figures’ and involved in issues in which the public has a 
justified and important interest.”  In other words, the Supreme Court was tasked with 
deciding whether New York Times applied only in actions brought by public officials or 
whether the case had a broader application and could apply to public figures who were not 
public officials, such as a university athletic director and football coach or a private citizen 
who was a person “of some political prominence[,]” who were involved in matters of public 
interest.  See Curtis, 388 U.S. at 134, 135-36, 140.  Unsurprisingly, the publishers argued 
that New York Times should be extended to public figures, whereas the public figures 
urged otherwise.  See Curtis, 388 U.S. at 146.  The Supreme Court recognized the 
competing interests and stated “that an accommodation between them is necessary not only 
in these cases, but in all libel actions arising from a publication concerning public issues.”  
- 16 - 
Id. at 147.  The Supreme Court analyzed the distinctions between public officials and 
public figures and ultimately held: 
 
These similarities and differences between libel actions involving 
persons who are public officials and libel actions involving those 
circumstanced as [public figures], viewed in light of the principles of liability 
which are of general applicability in our society, lead us to the conclusion 
that libel actions of the present kind [involving public figures] cannot be left 
entirely to state libel laws, unlimited by any overriding constitutional 
safeguard, but that the rigorous federal requirements of New York Times are 
not the only appropriate accommodation of the conflicting interests at stake.  
We consider and would hold that a ‘public figure’ who is not a public official 
may also recover damages for a defamatory falsehood whose substance 
makes substantial danger to reputation apparent, on a showing of highly 
unreasonable conduct constituting an extreme departure from the standards 
of investigation and reporting ordinarily adhered to by responsible 
publishers. 
 
Curtis, 388 U.S. at 155 (citation omitted). 
A few years later, in Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc., 403 U.S. 29, 30 (1971) 
(plurality opinion), abrogated by Gertz, 418 U.S. 323, the Supreme Court yet again 
considered the reach of New York Times.  The plurality set forth the framework and 
circumstances of the case as follows: 
New York Times held that in a civil libel action by a public official against a 
newspaper those [constitutional] guarantees [of freedom of speech and of the 
press] required clear and convincing proof that a defamatory falsehood 
alleged as libel was uttered with knowledge that it was false or with reckless 
disregard of whether it was false or not.  The same requirement was later held 
to apply to public figures who sued in libel on the basis of alleged defamatory 
falsehoods.  The several cases considered since New York Times involved 
actions of public officials or public figures, usually, but not always, against 
newspapers or magazines.  Common to all the cases was a defamatory 
falsehood in the report of an event of public or general interest.  The instant 
case presents the question whether the New York Times’[s] knowing-or-
reckless-falsity standard applies in a state civil libel action brought not by a 
public official or a public figure but by a private individual for a defamatory 
- 17 - 
falsehood uttered in a news broadcast by a radio station about the individual’s 
involvement in an event of public or general interest.   
 
Rosenbloom, 403 U.S. at 30-32 (plurality opinion) (citations, footnotes, and internal 
quotation marks omitted).  As to that issue, the Supreme Court held that the New York 
Times definition of malice applied, thus further extending the applicability of New York 
Times.  See Rosenbloom, 403 U.S. at 32 (plurality opinion).  Specifically, the Supreme 
Court held:  
[A] libel action . . . by a private individual against a licensed radio station for 
a defamatory falsehood in a newscast  relating to his involvement in an event 
of public or general concern may be sustained only upon clear and 
convincing proof that the defamatory falsehood was published with 
knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false 
or not. 
 
Id. at 52 (footnote omitted).   
In 1974, in the seminal case of Gertz, 418 U.S. at 346-47, the Supreme Court 
abrogated Rosenbloom and held that, “so long as they do not impose liability without fault, 
the States may define for themselves the appropriate standard of liability for a publisher or 
broadcaster of defamatory falsehood injurious to a private individual.”  (Footnote omitted).  
In other words, the Supreme Court rejected its holding in Rosenbloom that the New York 
Times malice definition extended automatically to private individuals who had been 
defamed where the statement was related to a matter of public or general concern.  See 
Gertz, 418 U.S. at 346.  According to the Supreme Court, in Gertz, its holding “provide[d] 
a more equitable boundary between the competing concerns involved[,]” recognizing “the 
strength of the legitimate [S]tate interest in compensating private individuals for wrongful 
injury to reputation, yet shield[ing] the press and broadcast media from the rigors of strict 
- 18 - 
liability for defamation.”  Id. at 347-48.  Indeed, as the Supreme Court recognized, its 
“accommodation of the competing values at stake in defamation suits by private 
individuals allows the States to impose liability on the publisher or broadcaster of 
defamatory falsehood on a less demanding showing than that required by New York Times.”  
Gertz, 418 U.S. at 348. 
Underpinning its holding was the Supreme Court’s acknowledgment that private 
individuals are distinguishable from public officials and public figures for purposes of 
defamation actions.  See id. at 344.  Specifically, the Supreme Court observed that “[p]ublic 
officials and public figures usually enjoy significantly greater access to the channels of 
effective communication and hence have a more realistic opportunity to counteract false 
statements than private individuals normally enjoy.”  Id. (footnote omitted).  As such, 
private individuals are “more vulnerable to injury, and the [S]tate interest in protecting 
them is correspondingly greater.”  Id.  Moreover, the Supreme Court observed that public 
officials, unlike private individuals, have chosen to place themselves in the public realm.  
See id.  at 344.  Individuals who run for office “must accept certain necessary consequences 
of [] involvement in public affairs[,]” such as “closer public scrutiny” of the public 
official’s discharge of his or her official duties and the public official’s fitness for office.  
Id. at 344-45.   
The Supreme Court stated that public figures stand in a similar position to public 
officials, usually having assumed prominent roles in society by “thrust[ing] themselves to 
the forefront of particular public controversies[,]” thus “invit[ing] attention and comment.”  
Id. at 345.  According to the Supreme Court, as a consequence of their positions as public 
- 19 - 
officials and public figures, “the communications media are entitled to act on the 
assumption that public officials and public figures have voluntarily exposed themselves to 
increased risk of injury from defamatory falsehood concerning them.  No such assumption 
is justified with respect to a private individual.”  Id.  Indeed, a private individual “has 
relinquished no part of his interest in the protection of his own good name, and 
consequently he has a more compelling call on the courts for redress of injury inflicted by 
defamatory falsehood.”  Id.  Thus, according to the Supreme Court “private individuals are 
not only more vulnerable to injury than public officials and public figures; they are also 
more deserving of recovery.”  Id.  
Given the distinction between public officials and public figures on the one hand 
and private individuals on the other hand, the Supreme Court concluded that the States 
should control legal remedies for private individuals who are defamed.  See id. at 345-46.  
Indeed, in the Supreme Court’s view, “[t]he extension of the New York Times test proposed 
by the Rosenbloom plurality would abridge this legitimate [S]tate interest to a degree that 
[it] f[ou]nd unacceptable” and would, instead, bog the courts down with trying to determine 
“which publications address issues of ‘general or public interest’ and which do not[.]”  
Gertz, 418 U.S. at 346.  According to the Supreme Court, the “public or general interest” 
test set forth in Rosenbloom for determining whether the New York Times malice 
definition applied failed to serve the competing interests presented when a private 
individual is defamed.  Gertz, 418 U.S. at 346. 
 
Following Gertz, in a series of cases, “this Court substantially changed the Maryland 
common law regarding defamation actions even in areas where the changes were not 
- 20 - 
mandated by the First Amendment and Article 40 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights.”  
Telnikoff v. Matusevitch, 347 Md. 561, 593, 702 A.2d 230, 246 (1997) (citations and 
footnote omitted).  In Jacron, 276 Md. at 581-82, 350 A.2d at 689, we considered “the 
extent to which the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Federal Constitution are 
applicable to actions for defamation by private individuals against defendants who are not 
publishers or broadcasters[,]” and, alternatively, whether, as a matter of Maryland law, “the 
law of defamation should be changed” in light of Gertz.  We held that the principles 
announced in Gertz apply to defamation cases involving non-media defendants—i.e., 
defendants who are not publishers and broadcasters—and that the standard of proof of fault 
“in cases of purely private defamation must meet the standard of the preponderance of the 
evidence.”  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 594, 597, 350 A.2d at 696, 698.  In Jacron, id. at 582, 
350 A.2d at 689, an employee brought an action for slander against his former employer; 
in other words, the plaintiff was a private individual and the defendant was a private entity, 
not a publisher or broadcaster.  The trial court ultimately directed a verdict for the former 
employer, ruling that the former employer was protected by a common law conditional 
privilege that had not been overcome because the employee had failed to show actual 
malice.  See id. at 583-84, 350 A.2d at 690.  The Court of Special Appeals reversed, holding 
that the employee “had presented sufficient evidence of malice to warrant submission of 
the question of abuse of the common law conditional privilege to the jury[.]”  Id. at 584, 
350 A.2d at 690.  The Court of Special Appeals also concluded that, because the 
defamatory statements were “purely private” in nature, the “case was beyond the reach of 
Gertz[,]” and that Gertz applied only where a private person was defamed in connection 
- 21 - 
with a matter of public or general interest.  Jacron, 276 Md. at 584, 588, 350 A.2d at 690, 
693. 
 
This Court concluded that the case involved “defamation of a private individual as 
to a purely private matter[.]”  Id. at 584, 350 A.2d at 690-91.  However, this Court disagreed 
with the Court of Special Appeals that Gertz did not apply to purely private defamation 
actions.  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 588, 350 A.2d at 693.  We recognized that “[t]he very 
essence of the Gertz decision . . . was the shift in focus from the protection of free 
expression, which undergirded New York Times and its progeny . . .  to the [S]tate interest 
in protecting private persons who have been defamed.”  Jacron, 276 Md. at 589, 350 A.2d 
at 693.  We determined that Gertz applies to “actions brought by private persons regardless 
of whether the subject matter of the defamation is one of public or general interest.”  Jacron, 
276 Md. at 590, 350 A.2d at 694.   
 
This Court next concluded that Gertz itself extended to media defendants only, i.e., 
publishers and broadcasters, and did not extend to non-media defendants, such as the 
former employer, a private entity.  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 590, 350 A.2d at 694.  
Nonetheless, after reviewing as analogous the application of New York Times in both 
media and non-media cases, this Court held “as a matter of [S]tate law that the Gertz 
holding should apply to media and non-media defendants alike, and to both libel and 
slander.”  Jacron, 276 Md. at 592, 350 A.2d at 695.  We explained that our holding was 
driven by “the compelling need for consistency and simplicity in the law of defamation.”  
Id. at 593, 350 A.2d at 696.  Thus, we held that the principles articulated in Gertz apply 
broadly in defamation actions, to both media and non-media defendants in actions for libel 
- 22 - 
and slander.  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 594, 350 A.2d at 696.   
Notably, in Jacron, id. at 596, 350 A.2d at 697, as to cases of purely private 
defamation, we adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 580B (Am. Law Inst. 1977), 
and specifically held that a standard of negligence must be applied in cases of purely private 
defamation.  The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 580B (Am. Law Inst. 1977) provides:   
580B. DEFAMATION OF PRIVATE PERSON. 
 
ONE 
WHO 
PUBLISHES 
A 
FALSE 
AND 
DEFAMATORY 
COMMUNICATION CONCERNING A PRIVATE PERSON, OR 
CONCERNING A PUBLIC OFFICIAL OR PUBLIC FIGURE IN 
RELATION TO A PURELY PRIVATE MATTER NOT AFFECTING HIS 
CONDUCT, FITNESS OR ROLE IN HIS PUBLIC CAPACITY, IS 
SUBJECT TO LIABILITY, IF, BUT ONLY IF, HE 
 
(a) KNOWS THAT THE STATEMENT IS FALSE AND THAT IT 
DEFAMES THE OTHER, 
 
(b) ACTS IN RECKLESS DISREGARD OF THESE MATTERS, OR 
 
(c) ACTS NEGLIGENTLY IN FAILING TO ASCERTAIN THEM. 
 
Jacron, 276 Md. at 596-97, 350 A.2d at 697-98.  We also clarified that the plaintiff bears 
the burden of proving the falsity of an allegedly defamatory statement.  See id. at 597, 350 
A.2d at 698.  In other words, the defendant was no longer required to establish the truth of 
the statement as an affirmative defense, but rather the plaintiff was required to establish the 
falsity of the statement.  See id. at 597, 350 A.2d at 698.  In establishing fault, this Court 
expressly determined that, in proving a defamation claim, a plaintiff must meet the 
preponderance of the evidence standard, rather than the clear and convincing evidence 
standard.  See id. at 597, 350 A.2d at 698.  We specifically explained that we addressed the 
standard of proof issue “to dispel any possible notion that the plaintiff must prove 
- 23 - 
negligence by ‘clear and convincing’ evidence.”  Id. at 597, 350 A.2d at 698. 
As to common law conditional privileges, we noted that, in Stevenson v. Balt. 
Baseball Club, Inc., 250 Md. 482, 486-87, 243 A.2d 533, 536 (1968) (which was later 
overruled in Marchesi, 283 Md. 131, 387 A.2d 1129), we explained that we had adopted 
the following definition of malice:  
The privilege may be lost, however, if the plaintiff in a defamation case can 
show malice, which in this context means not hatred or spite but rather a 
reckless disregard of truth, the use of unnecessarily abusive language, or 
other circumstances which would support a conclusion that the defendant 
acted in an ill-tempered manner or was motivated by ill-will. 
 
Jacron, 276 Md. at 599-600, 350 A.2d at 699.  In Jacron, id. at 600, 350 A.2d at 699-700, 
we observed that Maryland law did not recognize negligence as a legitimate ground upon 
which to defeat a common law conditional privilege, and, thus, we retained the Stevenson 
definition of malice, i.e., “the reckless disregard standard[,]” as applied to common law 
conditional privileges, explaining: 
We repeated the Stevenson definition [in another case], and thus the 
reckless disregard standard now appears to be firmly established in Maryland 
as a test, albeit not the exclusive test, for abuse of a conditional privilege.  
This being a higher standard than negligence, we retain the common law 
conditional privilege in Maryland which, in a given case, may suffice to 
avoid liability even though the Gertz standard regarding falsity and 
defamation is met by the plaintiff.  It should be noted, however, that in a case 
where a common law conditional privilege is found to exist, the negligence 
standard of Gertz is logically subsumed in the higher standard for proving 
malice, reckless disregard as to truth or falsity, and therefore becomes 
irrelevant to the trial of the case.  Were the plaintiff who is confronted with 
a conditional privilege incapable of proving the malice necessary to 
overcome that hurdle, it would be of no consequence that he might have met 
the lesser standard of negligence.  
 
(Footnote omitted).  Thus, this Court held: 
- 24 - 
Unless a conditional privilege is found to have existed, the plaintiff 
shall be required at the new trial of this case to establish the liability of the 
defendant through proof of negligence by the preponderance of the evidence, 
and may recover compensation for actual injury, . . . but neither presumed 
nor punitive damages, unless he establishes liability under the more 
demanding New York Times [malice definition] of knowing falsity or 
reckless disregard for the truth.  Should the court determine that a common 
law conditional privilege existed, the question of its forfeiture vel non shall 
be governed by the views expressed herein. 
 
Id. at 601, 350 A.2d at 700. 
As to privileges in defamation cases, in Smith v. Danielczyk, 400 Md. 98, 117, 928 
A.2d 795, 806 (2007), we explained that “[a]n absolute privilege is distinguished from a 
qualified privilege in that the former provides immunity regardless of the purpose or motive 
of the defendant, or the reasonableness of his conduct, while the latter is conditioned upon 
the absence of malice and is forfeited if it is abused.”  (Citation and internal quotation 
marks omitted).  By contrast, “[t]he common law conditional privileges rest upon the 
notion that a defendant may escape liability for an otherwise actionable defamatory 
statement, if publication of the utterance advances social policies of greater importance 
than the vindication of a plaintiff’s reputational interest.”  Marchesi, 283 Md. at 135, 387 
A.2d at 1131 (citations omitted).  This Court has identified four common law conditional 
privileges:   
(1) The public interest privilege, to publish materials to public officials on 
matters within their public responsibility; (2) the privilege to publish to 
someone who shares a common interest, or, relatedly, to publish in defense 
of oneself or in the interest of others; (3) the fair comment privilege; and (4) 
the privilege to make a fair and accurate report of public proceedings. 
 
Gohari, 363 Md. at 57, 767 A.2d at 329.  As to application of the common interest 
conditional privilege—the privilege asserted by Seley-Radtke in this case—this Court has 
- 25 - 
explained that “a common interest may include interests in property, business and 
professional dealings, and can inhere in business dealings between the publisher and the 
recipient.”  Id. at 58, 767 A.2d at 329 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).  
And, we have provided the following guidance as to application of the common interest 
conditional privilege:  
Common interests are usually found among members of identifiable groups 
in which members share similar goals or values or cooperate in a single 
endeavor. . . .  The idea is to promote free exchange of relevant information 
among those engaged in a common enterprise or activity and to permit them 
to make appropriate internal communications and share consultations 
without fear of suit. . . .  The privilege does not arise in the first place unless 
the communication relates in some degree to the common interest, and once 
the privilege arises it is lost if it is abused by malice or excessive publication. 
 
Id. at 58, 767 A.2d at 329 (citation omitted) (ellipses in original).  
If a trial court determines that a common law conditional privilege exists, a plaintiff 
seeking to defeat the privilege must prove that the defendant abused the privilege by 
making the statements “with malice, defined as a person’s actual knowledge that his or her 
statement is false, coupled with his or her intent to deceive another by means of that 
statement.”  Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1147-48 (citation, brackets, and 
internal quotation marks omitted).  In assessing whether a party’s statements were made 
with malice, a trial court considers all relevant factors, “including the defendant’s 
reasonable belief in the truth of his statements, the excessive nature of the language used, 
whether the disclosures were unsolicited, and whether the communication was made in a 
proper manner and only to proper parties.”  Id. at 308, 35 A.3d at 1148 (citation and internal 
quotation marks omitted).   
- 26 - 
The definition of “malice” as applied to defamation cases has evolved since Gertz.  
As discussed above, in Stevenson, 250 Md. at 486-87, 243 A.2d at 536, this Court stated 
that the malice required to overcome a claim of common law conditional privilege is “not 
hatred or spite but rather a reckless disregard of truth, the use of unnecessarily abusive 
language, or other circumstances which would support a conclusion that the defendant 
acted in an ill-tempered manner or was motivated by ill-will.”  This definition of malice 
differed, however, from the New York Times, 376 U.S. at 280, definition of malice, which 
applied when a plaintiff sought presumed or punitive damages: a statement made “with 
knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”  Over 
time, these differing, incompatible definitions of malice resulted in confusion for juries, 
leading this Court to adopt a single definition for malice in defamation cases—the New 
York Times definition of malice.  See Marchesi, 283 Md. at 138, 387 A.2d at 1133.  In 
Marchesi, id. at 138-39, 387 A.2d at 1133, this Court explained its rationale for abandoning 
the definition articulated in Stevenson, 250 Md. 482, 243 A.2d 533, as follows: 
If, as we suspect is frequently the case, juries encounter difficulty in applying 
even a single standard of malice, where only one is applicable, then they 
cannot help but find the task of coping with two disparate forms vastly more 
complicated.  The solution to this dilemma, we think, lies in the adoption of 
the New York Times standard of malice to defeat the conditional privilege 
defense in cases of private defamation, thus resulting in a uniform definition 
of malice to be applied for all purposes where defamatory conduct is charged. 
 
As such, this Court adopted the New York Times standard, requiring evidence of the 
defendant’s “knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for truth” for overcoming a 
conditional privilege “in cases of private defamation.”  Marchesi, 283 Md. at 139, 387 A.2d 
at 1133.  In Jacron, 276 Md. at 600, 350 A.2d at 699-700, this Court explained “that in a 
- 27 - 
case where a common law conditional privilege is found to exist, the negligence standard 
of Gertz is logically subsumed in the higher standard for proving malice, reckless disregard 
as to truth or falsity,[7] and therefore becomes irrelevant to the trial of the case.”  Indeed, as 
we explained, if a plaintiff “confronted with a conditional privilege [is] incapable of 
proving the malice necessary to overcome that hurdle, it would be of no consequence that 
he might have met the lesser standard of negligence.”  Jacron, 276 Md. at 600, 350 A.2d at 
700. 
 
In Le Marc’s Mgmt. Corp. v. Valentin, 349 Md. 645, 646, 653, 709 A.2d 1222, 
1223, 1226 (1998), this Court further refined the definition of “malice” by re-examining 
the definition of malice as applied to defamation actions in which the plaintiff seeks 
punitive damages.  We held that, in light of relevant recent decisions on the issue of 
punitive damages, such damages are allowable in defamation cases “only when the plaintiff 
establishes that the defendant had actual knowledge that the defamatory statement was 
false” and that “punitive damages may only be awarded if the plaintiff proves, by clear and 
convincing evidence, that the defendant had the requisite mens rea, i.e., actual 
knowledge[.]”  Id. at 653, 709 A.2d at 1226 (footnote omitted).  In so holding, this Court 
abandoned the “reckless disregard” prong of the malice definition and adopted the 
definition articulated in Ellerin v. Fairfax Savings, F.S.B., 337 Md. 216, 229, 652 A.2d 
                                              
7As explained below, after Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148, the 
standard for proving malice is no longer “reckless disregard as to the truth or falsity[,]” but 
rather “a person’s actual knowledge that his or her statement is false, coupled with his or 
her intent to deceive another by means of that statement.”  (Citation, brackets, and internal 
quotation marks omitted).   
- 28 - 
1117, 1123 (1995).  See Le Marc’s, 349 Md. at 653, 709 A.2d at 1126-27.  In Ellerin, 337 
Md. at 234, 652 A.2d at 1126, we held that, to recover punitive damages in an action for 
fraud, a plaintiff must show actual malice, defined as “the defendant’s actual knowledge 
of falsity, coupled with [the defendant’s] intent to deceive the plaintiff by means of the 
false statement[.]”  And, in Ellerin, id. at 235, 652 A.2d at 1126, we explained that 
“‘reckless disregard’ or ‘reckless indifference’ concerning the truth of the representation 
falls short of the mens rea which is required to support an award of punitive damages.”   
Consequently, in Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148, this Court likewise 
adopted the Ellerin malice definition for cases in which the plaintiff must prove malice to 
overcome a common law conditional privilege.  Thus, for the purpose of defamation 
actions, malice is defined as “a person’s actual knowledge that his or her statement is false, 
coupled with his or her intent to deceive another by means of that statement.”  Piscatelli, 
424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148 (citations, brackets, and internal quotation marks 
omitted). 
 
Although this Court has identified the applicable standard of proof in a purely 
private defamation action to be the negligence standard, i.e., the preponderance of the 
evidence, we have not directly addressed whether a plaintiff must meet a higher standard 
of proof when seeking to defeat a common law conditional privilege.  In Hanrahan v. Kelly, 
269 Md. 21, 31, 305 A.2d 151, 157 (1973), which was decided prior to Gertz, this Court 
examined the jury instructions given by a trial court in a defamation action where the 
defendant asserted a common law conditional privilege.  The jury instructions contained 
the following instruction: 
- 29 - 
If you find from all of the evidence in the case that the letter in question was 
privileged under the standards I have hereinbefore set forth, and if you 
further find that the plaintiff has not persuaded you by a fair 
preponderance of affirmative evidence that there was actual or express 
malice on behalf of the defendant in writing said letter, then your verdict 
should be in favor of the defendant. 
 
Hanrahan, 269 Md. at 30, 305 A.2d at 157 (emphasis added).  This Court upheld the giving 
of the jury instructions.  See id. at 32, 305 A.2d at 158.  The standard of proof for 
overcoming the common law conditional privilege was not, however, an issue that the 
parties raised in that case; instead, the plaintiff contested the jury instructions on the ground 
that the jury was instructed to consider evidence that was, in the plaintiff’s view, irrelevant.  
See id. at 31, 305 A.2d at 157.  Thus, we did not directly address the proper standard of 
proof for overcoming a common law conditional privilege.   
In Globe Sec. Sys. Co. v. Sterling, 79 Md. App. 303, 311, 556 A.2d 731, 735 (1989), 
the Court of Special Appeals specifically examined the proper standard of proof required 
to overcome a claim of privilege, and, specifically, “whether the trial court erred in refusing 
to instruct the jury that a conditional privilege may be overcome only by clear and 
convincing evidence of malice.”  In that case, the jury was instructed that the plaintiff “met 
her burden if she established abuse of the privilege by a preponderance of the evidence.”  
Id. at 311, 556 A.2d at 735.  The defendants, however, claimed that the proper standard of 
proof was clear and convincing evidence.  See id. at 311, 556 A.2d at 735.  The Court of 
Special Appeals disagreed and held that preponderance of the evidence was, indeed, the 
proper standard for establishing malice.  See id. at 311, 556 A.2d at 735-36.  Relying on 
the principles set forth in Gertz, the Court of Special Appeals explained that requiring a 
- 30 - 
higher standard of proof would limit the State’s interest in protecting the ability of private 
individuals to seek a remedy for defamation:   
The type of malice required for both private person and public person 
defamation actions is knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth.  
Hence, if the type of malice is the same, then the only avenue open to protect 
private persons in accordance with Gertz is to lower the quantum of proof[.] 
 
Globe Sec. Sys., 79 Md. App. at 311, 556 A.2d at 735-36 (citations omitted); see also 
Shapiro v. Massengill, 105 Md. App. 743, 777 n.11, 661 A.2d 202, 219 n.11 (1995) (“We 
note that the [standard] of proof necessary for a plaintiff to establish a claim of 
constitutional malice in the case-in-chief (i.e., clear and convincing evidence) is greater 
than the degree of proof necessary to establish constitutional malice in order to overcome 
the affirmative defense of conditional privilege.”). 
 
Other jurisdictions have not reached a consensus regarding the standard of proof 
required to overcome a common law conditional privilege.  We are aware of eight 
jurisdictions that explicitly require the plaintiff to establish abuse of a common law 
conditional privilege by clear and convincing evidence.  See Advanced Cardiac Specialists, 
Chartered. v. Tri-City Cardiology Consultants, P.C., 214 P.3d 1024, 1028-29 (Ariz. Ct. 
App. 2009) (“To avoid summary judgment pursuant to the qualified privilege that protects 
[certain] reports, plaintiffs must produce clear and convincing evidence that [the defendant] 
abused his privilege.”  (Citations omitted)); Myers v. Levy, 808 N.E.2d 1139, 1148 (Ill. 
App. Ct. 2004) (“The plaintiff need prove the common-law elements of defamation only 
by a preponderance of the evidence, but when the defendant establishes the existence of a 
qualified privilege, the plaintiff must prove by clear and convincing evidence that the 
- 31 - 
defendant acted with actual malice.”  (Citation omitted)); Erickson v. Marsh & McLennan 
Co., Inc., 569 A.2d 793, 806 (N.J. 1990) (“We have also declared that proof of malice in 
the context of a qualified privilege must be established by clear and convincing evidence.”  
(Citations omitted)); Jacobs v. Frank, 573 N.E.2d 609, 614 (Ohio 1991) (“[W]hen a 
defendant possesses a qualified privilege regarding statements contained in a published 
communication, that privilege can be defeated only by a clear and convincing showing that 
the communication was made with actual malice.”); Scott v. Poindexter, 53 S.W.3d 28, 33 
(Tex. Ct. App. 2001) (“The plaintiff must offer clear and convincing affirmative proof of 
actual malice to support a recovery [for defamation when the defendant has asserted a 
qualified privilege].”); Crump v. P & C Food Markets, Inc., 576 A.2d 441, 447 (Vt. 1990) 
(“The jury was properly instructed that [the] plaintiff had to prove malice to defeat the 
privilege by clear and convincing evidence.”); Gov’t Micro Res., Inc. v. Jackson, 624 
S.E.2d 63, 71 (Va. 2006) (“[W]e held that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that a 
qualified privilege could be overcome if actual malice was established by a preponderance 
of the evidence.”  (Citing Great Coastal Express, Inc. v. Ellington, 334 S.E.2d 846, 854 
(Va. 1985), overruled on other grounds by Cashion v. Smith, 749 S.E.2d 526 (Va. 2013))); 
Moe v. Wise, 989 P.2d 1148, 1157 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999) (“[O]nce the defendant 
establishes a qualified privilege, to prove the abuse of that privilege even a private figure 
plaintiff must satisfy the higher clear and convincing standard otherwise applied only to 
public figure plaintiffs.”).   
Jurisdictions vary as to the rationale for requiring a higher standard of proof to 
overcome a common law conditional privilege in a defamation case.  For instance, in Moe, 
- 32 - 
989 P.2d at 1157, the Court of Appeals of Washington explained that “[t]he higher [burden] 
of proof necessary to overcome a qualified privilege stems from the public policy bases 
supporting privileges.”  Similarly, in Erickson, 569 A.2d at 806, the Supreme Court of New 
Jersey held that the applicable standard for defeating a common law conditional privilege 
was clear and convincing evidence, noting that “the imposition of a lesser [standard] of 
proof would fail to adequately protect the interests underlying the privilege.”  
Alternatively, in Great Coastal Express, 334 S.E.2d at 854, the Supreme Court of Virginia 
adopted the higher standard of proof to avoid confusing juries tasked with applying 
differing standards for malice in a defamation action:8  
We agree that the burden of proving malice for the purpose of defeating a 
qualified privilege is by clear and convincing evidence, and that the quoted 
instruction was erroneous in setting the burden at a preponderance.  It is 
important, we think, that juries not be confused in these cases by two 
different burdens of proof of malice, one pertaining to the defeat of a 
qualified privilege, the other pertaining to punitive damages. 
 
(Footnote omitted). 
On the other hand, we are aware of ten jurisdictions that explicitly apply the 
preponderance of the evidence standard to a plaintiff’s attempt to defeat a common law 
conditional privilege.  See Manguso v. Oceanside Unified Sch. Dist., 153 Cal. App. 3d 
                                              
8Interestingly, the Supreme Court of Virginia did not conclude that juries would be 
confused by the “two species of malice[,]” i.e. common law malice and the New York 
Times malice definition, which, under Virginia law, include different elements.  Great 
Coastal Express, 334 S.E.2d at 854.  Noting that the elements of the New York Times 
malice definition are subsumed within the elements of Virginia common law malice, the 
Supreme Court of Virginia determined that the disjunctive manner in which the elements 
are presented to the jury would resolve such confusion.  Great Coastal Express, 334 S.E.2d 
at 854.  
- 33 - 
574, 580 (1984) (“[E]ven if [a letter] is defamatory, it was not libelous unless [the plaintiff] 
shows by a preponderance of the evidence [the defendant] acted with malice[.]”  (Footnote 
omitted)); Miles v. Perry, 529 A.2d 199, 204 (Conn. App. 1987) (“[I]f the plaintiff is a 
public figure, she is required to prove actual malice by clear and convincing evidence.  If 
the plaintiff is a private individual, on the other hand, she is required to prove actual malice, 
in order to rebut the defense of privilege and recover general damages, merely by a 
preponderance of the evidence.”  (Citations omitted)); DelMonico v. Traynor, 116 So. 3d 
1205, 1215 (Fla. 2013) (“To overcome a qualified privilege, . . . a plaintiff must ‘establish 
by a preponderance of the evidence that the defamatory statements were false and uttered 
with common law express malice[.]’”  (Citation omitted)); Sanders v. Stewart, 298 N.E.2d 
509, 513 (Ind. Ct. App. 1973) (“The fact that words otherwise actionable are spoken under 
[] circumstances [of qualified privilege] rebuts the inference of malice which would 
otherwise arise as a matter of law from the speaking of the words.  The plaintiff must then 
establish express malice by a preponderance of the evidence or fail in his action.”); Lester 
v. Powers, 596 A.2d 65, 70 (Me. 1991) (“We do not require clear and convincing evidence, 
however, to overcome a conditional privilege that arises at common law and not from the 
First Amendment.”  (Citation and footnote omitted)); Pope v. Motel 6, 114 P.3d 277, 283-
84 (Nev. 2005) (“Under a qualified privilege, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance 
of the evidence that the defendant abused the privilege by publishing the defamatory 
communication with actual malice.”  (Footnote omitted)); Mancuso v. Allergy Assocs. of 
Rochester, 895 N.Y.S.2d 756, 758 (N.Y. App. Div. 2010) (“Where, as here, a plaintiff is a 
private individual and the allegedly defamatory statements are not a matter of legitimate 
- 34 - 
public concern, the more stringent First Amendment protections associated with public 
officials or affairs are not implicated[.]”  (Citations omitted)); Tubra v. Cooke, 225 P.3d 
862, 867 n.3 (Or. App. 2010) (“‘If you find that the plaintiff has proved by a preponderance 
of the evidence that defendants[ ] abuse[d the] privilege . . .  then the defendants are not 
entitled to the qualified privilege defense.’”  (Alterations in original)); Rutt v. Bethlehems’ 
Globe Publ’g Co., 484 A.2d 72, 83 (Pa. Super. 1984) (“Consistency, as well as prudence, 
compels the view that the appropriate standard of proof, in defamation actions where the 
plaintiff is, as heretofore determined, a private figure, should be one of negligence.”);9 
Calero v. Del Chemical Corp., 228 N.W.2d 737, 748 (Wis. 1975) (“[When refuting a 
conditional privilege not predicated on First Amendment principles,] express malice must 
be shown by the preponderance of the evidence.”).   
In requiring proof by a preponderance of the evidence to overcome a common law 
conditional privilege, several courts have relied on the distinction between a privilege 
implicated by the First Amendment and a common law conditional privilege.  For example, 
in Lester, 596 A.2d at 69-70, the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine explained the distinction 
                                              
9It should be noted that, unlike Maryland, Pennsylvania has adopted a negligence 
standard that applies to conditional privileges, as well as private-individual defamation 
actions:   
 
[U]nder Pennsylvania law, once the issue of conditional privilege is raised 
by a defendant who has been sued by a private figure for defamatory 
communications concerning matters which are not of public concern, the 
burden of proof of the plaintiff in order to establish abuse of the conditional 
privilege is “want of reasonable care and diligence to ascertain the truth” or 
more simply put, negligence.  
 
Rutt, 484 A.2d at 83 (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).   
- 35 - 
as follows: 
Discussion of public officials and public figures on matters of public 
concern, the U.S. Supreme Court has declared, deserves special favor in a 
democratic society, and thus such discussion is subject to a conditional 
privilege—the “First Amendment privilege”—that can be overcome only by 
clear and convincing evidence of knowledge or disregard of falsity.  We do 
not require clear and convincing evidence, however, to overcome a 
conditional privilege that arises at common law and not from the First 
Amendment.   
 
(Citations and footnote omitted).  Similarly, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court 
of New York, Fourth Department, has concluded: 
Where . . .  a plaintiff is a private individual and the allegedly defamatory 
statements are not a matter of legitimate public concern, the more stringent 
First Amendment protections associated with public officials or affairs are 
not implicated.  Thus, the clear and convincing standard does not apply 
herein but, rather, the preponderance of the evidence standard applies[.]  
 
Mancuso, 895 N.Y.S.2d at 758 (citations omitted).  The Supreme Court of Wisconsin has 
made a similar distinction:   
In the instant case, we are not dealing with a conditional privilege based on 
First Amendment principles but rather with one based on a public policy 
favoring the encouragement of a free interchange of information under 
certain circumstances.  The circumstances are the inquiry by a prospective 
employer of a former employer.  In such a case, one must prove only ‘express 
malice’ which is a defamatory statement motivated by ill-will, spite, envy, 
revenge, or other bad or corrupt motive.  And such express malice must be 
shown by the preponderance of the evidence. 
Calero, 228 N.W.2d at 748 (citation omitted).   
Turning to the present case, we hold that the standard of proof required to overcome 
a common law conditional privilege in a purely private defamation action is preponderance 
of the evidence.  Considering the evolution of the Maryland common law on this matter, 
we observe that this Court has consistently sought to balance the protection of the free flow 
- 36 - 
of information with the State’s interest in providing a remedy for individuals who have 
been victims of defamation.  See Marchesi, 283 Md. at 135, 387 A.2d at 1131.  We 
conclude that the important State interest of protecting private individuals from defamation 
is best served by allowing a plaintiff to defeat a common law conditional privilege by a 
preponderance of the evidence.  Indeed, requiring plaintiffs to overcome a common law 
conditional privilege by clear and convincing evidence would run counter to this Court’s 
jurisprudence since Jacron, 276 Md. 580, 350 A.2d 688.    
This conclusion is supported by the trajectory of both the Supreme Court’s and 
Maryland’s defamation jurisprudence since New York Times.  As discussed above, the 
Supreme Court’s refusal in Gertz, 418 U.S. at 348, to apply the New York Times definition 
of malice to defamation claims involving private plaintiffs was premised on “the strength 
of the legitimate [S]tate interest in compensating private individuals for wrongful injury to 
reputation[.]”  Following Gertz, this Court took the significant step of adopting a 
negligence standard for defamation cases involving purely private actions, requiring the 
New York Times malice definition to be satisfied only for claims seeking punitive and 
presumed damages.  See Jacron, 276 Md. at 596-601, 350 A.2d at 697-700.  Since Jacron, 
we have consistently recognized that private individuals are more vulnerable than public 
officials and public figures, and, as such, require greater protection.   
Put succinctly, Gertz transformed the law of defamation.  Seley-Radtke, however, 
would have this Court overlook the foundational principles of Gertz and impose a greater 
requirement for private individuals asserting a defamation claim than that which is set forth 
in the case law.  Indeed, Seley-Radtke reads into Jacron a requirement that plaintiffs 
- 37 - 
seeking to overcome a common law privilege must prove malice by clear and convincing 
evidence.  Specifically, Seley-Radtke relies on a portion of our opinion in Jacron, 276 Md. 
at 600, 350 A.2d at 700, that states:  
[I]n a case where a common law conditional privilege is found to exist, the 
negligence standard of Gertz is logically subsumed in the higher standard for 
proving malice, reckless disregard as to truth or falsity, and therefore 
becomes irrelevant to the trial of the case. 
 
We disagree with Seley-Radtke’s interpretation of Jacron.10   
As previously discussed, following New York Times and Gertz, this Court 
undertook the lengthy and meticulous task of defining malice as it applies to defamation 
cases.  See Marchesi, 283 Md. at 138, 387 A.2d at 1133; Le Marc’s, 349 Md. at 653, 709 
A.2d at 1226; Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148.  Regardless of the applicable 
standard of proof, a plaintiff seeking to defeat a common law conditional privilege must 
prove that the defendant had “actual knowledge that his [or her] statement [was] false, 
coupled with his [or her] intent to deceive another by means of that statement[,]” i.e., that 
the defendant acted with malice.  Piscatelli, 424 Md. at 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148 (some 
                                              
10Seley-Radtke also directs our attention to a footnote in Chesapeake Publ’g Corp. 
v. Williams, 339 Md. 285, 296 n.4, 661 A.2d 1169, 1175 n.4 (1995), in which this Court 
stated that the actual malice standard necessary to overcome a common law conditional 
privilege was “the same standard as is required to prove defamation of a public figure, 
knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth.”  We observe that a streamlining 
of the malice standard does not automatically equate with an adoption of the clear and 
convincing evidence standard of proof.  Furthermore, the plaintiff in Chesapeake Publ’g 
Corp., id. at 293, 661 A.2d at 1173, was a public figure; thus, this Court’s requirement that 
the plaintiff prove malice by clear and convincing evidence was proper and distinguishable 
from the present case. 
 
 
- 38 - 
alterations in original) (citation omitted).  Our decision in Jacron does not set forth a higher 
standard of proof necessary to overcome a common law conditional privilege, but rather 
explains the applicable definition of malice utilized to rebut a common law conditional 
privilege.  
 
Seley-Radtke argues that this Court’s reconciliation of the differing definitions of 
malice in Jacron is evidence of an intention to similarly streamline the burdens of proof.  
We disagree.  Again, such an outcome would undermine the case law developed by this 
Court post-Gertz.  Indeed, requiring a plaintiff to prove malice necessary to rebut a 
common law conditional privilege by clear and convincing evidence—which, as we 
described in Piscatelli, 424 Md. 307-08, 35 A.3d at 1148, requires actual knowledge of a 
statement’s falsity as opposed to reckless disregard for the truth—would certainly interfere 
with the State’s well-established interest in providing a remedy for private individuals who 
have been victims of defamation.  As the Court of Special Appeals incisively observed in 
Globe Sec. Sys., 79 Md. App. at 311, 556 A.2d at 735-36, the existence of a single 
definition for malice in the defamation context leaves the standard of proof as “the only 
avenue open to protect private persons in accordance with Gertz[.]”  Thus, the application 
of a higher standard of proof would frustrate the public policy considerations announced 
in Jacron, 276 Md. at 590, 350 A.2d at 694, which refocused the “emphasis [in private 
defamation actions] from the value of uninhibited debate to the [S]tate interest in protecting 
private persons ‘for the harm inflicted on them by defamatory falsehood.’”  (Quoting Gertz, 
418 U.S. at 341). 
Turning to authority from other jurisdictions, the number of jurisdictions requiring 
- 39 - 
proof by a preponderance of the evidence to overcome a common law conditional privilege 
is nearly equal to the number of jurisdictions requiring proof by clear and convincing 
evidence, with ten jurisdictions requiring proof by a preponderance of the evidence and 
eight jurisdictions requiring proof by clear and convincing evidence.  Considering the 
principles articulated in Gertz and Jacron, we find more persuasive the authority from the 
jurisdictions that require proof by a preponderance of the evidence.  Indeed, the reasoning 
provided by a number of courts applying the preponderance of the evidence standard 
comports with our holding in Jacron.  Specifically, we observe that the distinction drawn 
between First Amendment privilege and common law conditional privilege in Lester, 596 
A.2d at 69-70, and in Mancuso, 895 N.Y.S.2d at 758, is in accord with our conclusion in 
Jacron, 276 Md. at 589, 350 A.2d at 693, that Gertz signaled a sea change in defamation 
law and placed a greater emphasis on the protection of private individuals who had been 
defamed.  Consequently, we conclude that the jurisdictions that apply the clear and 
convincing evidence standard to overcome a common law conditional privilege have 
adopted an approach that is not commensurate with Maryland law.  See, e.g., Moe, 989 
P.2d at 1157 (“The higher [burden] of proof necessary to overcome a qualified privilege 
stems from the public policy bases supporting privileges.”); Erickson, 569 A.2d at 806 
(“[T]he imposition of a lesser [standard] of proof would fail to adequately protect the 
interests underlying the privilege.”).     
 
Adoption of the clear and convincing evidence standard of proof to avoid jury 
confusion is equally unpersuasive.  Relying on Great Coastal Express, 334 S.E.2d at 854, 
Seley-Radtke asserts that adopting different standards of proof for malice will cause 
- 40 - 
confusion among jurors.  Seley-Radtke also relies on the language in Jacron, 276 Md. at 
593, 350 A.2d at 696, referencing “the compelling need for consistency and simplicity in 
the law of defamation.”  According to Seley-Radtke, adopting the preponderance of the 
evidence standard for defeating a common law conditional privilege would undermine the 
principles of consistency and simplicity.  We observe that Virginia has adopted a single 
standard of proof at least partially based on considerations of clarity in jury instruction.  
See Great Coastal Express, 334 S.E.2d at 854 (“It is important, we think, that juries not be 
confused in these cases by two different burdens of proof of malice, one pertaining to the 
defeat of a qualified privilege, the other pertaining to punitive damages.”).  We, however, 
note that, in Jacron, 276 Md. at 596-601, 350 A.2d at 697-700, this Court went to great 
lengths to delineate the standards of proof for claims implicating the First Amendment and 
those brought by private individuals.  Indeed, First Amendment claims are public claims 
that serve to prevent granting “public servants an unjustified preference over the public 
they serve[,]” whereas purely private defamation actions pertain only to the private 
individuals affected by the case.  New York Times, 376 U.S. at 282.  As such, we declined 
to enmesh the standards for the sake of simplicity, thus evincing the importance of the 
private/public distinction in defamation claims in Maryland.  We conclude that these 
considerations are as weighty today as they were when Jacron was decided, and we 
determine that the burden for a private individual seeking to overcome a common law 
conditional privilege in a purely private defamation action should not be raised beyond 
requiring the plaintiff to demonstrate malice, already a heightened definition, and that the 
applicable standard is proof by a preponderance of the evidence.   
- 41 - 
We observe that Seley-Radtke’s concern regarding juror confusion is largely 
alleviated by the Maryland Civil Pattern Jury Instructions on overcoming a common law 
conditional privilege.  Whereas the jury instructions for punitive damages refer to “malice” 
and state the standard of proof is clear and convincing evidence, the instructions regarding 
common law conditional privilege do not use the word “malice,” but rather provide its 
definition: “[i]n order to recover, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the 
evidence that the defendant made the statement with actual knowledge that the statement 
was false, coupled with the intent to deceive another person by means of the statement.”  
MPJI-Cv 12:12 (4th ed., 2013 Supp.).  As the Court of Special Appeals explained, “there 
should be no confusion in those cases where the jury is instructed as to the punitive 
damages malice standard, clear and convincing evidence, and overcoming the conditional 
privilege, preponderance of the evidence.”  Hosmane, 227 Md. App. at 28, 132 A.3d at 
358-59.  In sum, the Court of Special Appeals properly determined that the standard of 
proof necessary to overcome a common law conditional privilege in a purely private 
defamation case is proof by a preponderance of evidence; therefore, we shall affirm the 
judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.  
II. 
Having determined that the Court of Special Appeals properly concluded that the 
standard of proof necessary to rebut a common law conditional privilege in a purely private 
defamation case is the preponderance of the evidence standard, we turn briefly to three 
additional questions that were before the Court of Special Appeals.  In the Court of Special 
Appeals, Hosmane presented three questions pertaining to the order of witnesses and the 
- 42 - 
admission of evidence at trial:   
[1]. Did the [circuit] court abuse its discretion in allowing [Seley-Radtke’s] 
witness, Dr. Brahmi Shukla, to appear as the first witness in the trial?[11] 
 
[2]. Did the [circuit] court abuse its discretion in allowing testimony 
regarding a settlement agreement between [Hosmane] and Dr. Brahmi 
Shukla? 
 
[3]. Did the [circuit] court err by abusing its discretion in denying 
[Hosmane’s] requests to redact portions of two February 23, 2010 emails 
written by appellee Dr. Seley-Radtke that contained language that was very 
damaging to [Hosmane]? 
 
                                              
11The Court of Special Appeals declined to address the first question, explaining 
that “circumstances similar to those that gave rise to that question are unlikely to reoccur 
upon retrial.”  Hosmane, 227 Md. App. at 16 n.1, 132 A.3d at 351 n.1.  The record reveals 
that the decision to permit Seley-Radtke’s witness, Shukla, to testify first stemmed from a 
scheduling issue.  The circuit court provided the following explanation to the jury to 
assuage any concern that the jury might attach significance to Shukla being called as the 
first witness:       
 
Now folks, you’ll come to find out as we progress in this trial that trials are 
dynamic things.  There’s little changes here and there.  Ordinarily the 
Plaintiff, that is the party who brings an action, calls witnesses first, and when 
they’re, they’ve presented their case the other side can call witnesses.  But 
because trials are dynamic sometimes there’s some flexibility necessary, and 
for scheduling purposes we’re going to allow the defense to call Ms. Shukla 
out of turn.  Ordinarily [Hosmane’s counsel] would call all of his witnesses 
first, but we’re going to allow the defense to call Ms. Shukla first.  She will 
be directed, that is to say that they will get, they, the defense, will ask her 
questions first and then [Hosmane’s counsel] will be permitted to ask cross 
examination questions.  Ordinarily, and you should give no significance to 
this, it’s just a scheduling change, ordinarily the Plaintiff would call all of 
their witnesses first and would ask them direct examination questions and the 
defense would cross examine, and then any witnesses the defense wanted to 
call, they would ask their questions first and then the other side, the Plaintiff, 
would be able to cross examine.  I’m sure you all appreciate that and 
understand that.  It’s really a scheduling issue.  So if you’ll call Ms. Shukla 
we’ll get her going. 
- 43 - 
Hosmane, 227 Md. App. at 16, 132 A.3d at 351.   
In its opinion, “[f]or guidance purposes,” the Court of Special Appeals addressed 
two of the evidentiary issues that Hosmane raised, and concluded that the challenged 
evidence was not relevant and “highly prejudicial[.]”  Id. at 29, 32, 132 A.3d at 359, 361.12  
Although the Court of Special Appeals essentially recommended against admission of 
evidence that Seley-Radtke had introduced at the original trial, Seley-Radtke did not raise 
these issues in her petition for a writ of certiorari, save for a footnote that stated:  
After [issuing its holding], the Court of Special Appeals opined on two 
evidentiary issues.  Specifically, the court found that the trial court’s 
admission of certain evidence and its refusal to redact certain documents 
w[ere] erroneous because [they] resulted in the admission of irrelevant and 
prejudicial evidence.  [Seley-Radtke] asks this Court to consider these issues 
to the extent necessary to decide this matter.   
 
In other words, although the Court of Special Appeals’s determination was against Seley-
Radtke’s position, Seley-Radtke asked this Court to review the evidentiary matters only 
“to the extent necessary to decide this matter.”  In making this request, Seley-Radtke may 
have deemed the evidentiary matters not to be worthy of this Court’s review on certiorari, 
or she may have considered the Court of Special Appeals’s determination not to be a 
holding of that Court that could give rise to a petition for a writ of certiorari.  In her opening 
brief in this Court, Seley-Radtke does not address the evidentiary matters.  It is undisputed 
                                              
12In his brief in this Court, Hosmane raises an additional jury instruction issue not 
addressed by the Court of Special Appeals.  Specifically, Hosmane contends that the circuit 
court erred by declining to provide a jury instruction on the republication or repetition of 
defamatory material.  Additionally, Hosmane argues that the circuit court’s instruction 
regarding opinions as defamation was improper.  On brief, Hosmane offers little 
information to this Court on these contentions, merely directing this Court to his filings in 
the Court of Special Appeals.   
- 44 - 
that Seley-Radtke did not raise the evidentiary matters as an issue for certiorari review, 
except in the footnote above, or address the evidentiary matters in her opening brief. 
 
Hosmane did not file a conditional cross-petition for a writ of certiorari in this Court 
raising any issue as to the Court of Special Appeals’s determination on the evidentiary 
matters, which was in Hosmane’s favor.  Hosmane also did not file a cross-petition for a 
writ of certiorari raising any issue as to the evidentiary matters that were not addressed by 
the Court of Special Appeals—namely, allowing Seley-Radtke’s witness, Shukla, to testify 
first and the circuit court’s ruling on additional jury instructions.  In his brief in this Court, 
Hosmane points out that Seley-Radtke did not challenge the determination reached by the 
Court of Special Appeals as to the evidentiary matters (i.e., the redaction of e-mails and 
exclusion of testimony regarding the settlement agreement) and contends that, even if this 
Court reversed the Court of Special Appeals’s judgment with respect to the common law 
conditional privilege jury instruction, he would nonetheless be entitled to reversal and a 
new trial based on the determination of the Court of Special Appeals.  And, in his brief in 
this Court, Hosmane attempts to raise issues as to the evidentiary matters that were not 
addressed by the Court of Special Appeals—specifically, Shukla testifying first and 
additional jury instruction issues.   
 
In a reply brief, lumping the four evidentiary issues together, Seley-Radtke contends 
that Hosmane failed to preserve for this Court’s review any issue as to the evidentiary 
issues by failing to file a conditional cross-petition for a writ of certiorari.   
 
Having set out the parties’ positions, we determine that the evidentiary issues that 
the Court of Special Appeals did not address—namely, Shukla testifying first and the 
- 45 - 
additional jury instruction issues—are clearly not preserved for this Court’s review.  See 
Md. R. 8-131(b)(1) (“Unless otherwise provided by the order granting the writ of certiorari, 
in reviewing a decision rendered by the Court of Special Appeals or by a circuit court acting 
in an appellate capacity, the Court of Appeals ordinarily will consider only an issue that 
has been raised in the petition for certiorari or any cross-petition and that has been 
preserved for review by the Court of Appeals.”).  Given that the issues are not preserved 
for this Court’s review, remanding to the Court of Special Appeals for a determination on 
the evidentiary issues on which the Court of Special Appeals did not offer guidance is not 
warranted.   
 
As to the remaining evidentiary issues, it is clear that the Court of Special Appeals 
deemed its holding with respect to the common law conditional privilege jury instruction 
to be dispositive of the case and, therefore, offered guidance only on the two evidentiary 
issues involving redaction of e-mails and testimony about the sexual assault settlement 
agreement.13  On the other hand, had the Court of Special Appeals affirmed on the issue of 
the standard of proof required to overcome common law conditional privilege, it would 
have been necessary for the Court of Special Appeals to address the evidentiary issues and 
issue holdings as to them.  In the strictest sense, the two issues on which the Court of 
                                              
13The Court of Special Appeals reversed the circuit court on the premier issue of the 
standard of proof required to rebut a common law conditional privilege, which necessarily 
mandated a new trial.  It was within the Court of Special Appeals’s sound discretion to 
address, not address, provide guidance, or issue a holding on evidentiary issues where the 
Court had already determined that reversal and remand for a new trial would occur.  The 
Court of Special Appeals was not required to issue a holding as to these additional 
evidentiary issues where it was remanding for a new trial on another issue, although it may 
be a good practice generally to do so. 
- 46 - 
Special Appeals offered guidance are not properly before this Court because: Seley-Radtke 
raised the issues only in a footnote in her petition for a writ of certiorari asking that this 
Court review the matters only to the extent necessary to resolve the case; Hosmane did not 
file a cross-petition; and the Court of Special Appeals did not issue a formal holding on the 
matters, but rather gave guidance.  We could end discussion of the evidentiary matters here.  
But, nonetheless, to the extent that the Court of Special Appeals issued guidance on these 
evidentiary matters, and recognizing that the issues are likely to recur at the new trial, we 
note that we agree with the guidance offered by the Court of Special Appeals. 
We concur with the Court of Special Appeals that Seley-Radtke’s un-redacted e-
mail referencing the “potential new charges” for Hosmane and “harassing emails” 
allegedly sent by Hosmane and Shukla’s testimony regarding the settlement agreement 
were not relevant to the defamation claim.  See Hosmane, 227 Md. App. at 32, 132 A.3d 
at 361.  At trial, Hosmane stipulated that Seley-Radtke’s e-mail references to the settlement 
agreement were not part of the defamation claims.  Yet, the circuit court allowed Shukla to 
testify, over Hosmane’s objections, to the settlement agreement’s existence, its effect on 
the criminal charges filed against Hosmane, and the amount of the settlement.   
Put plainly, we fail to discern that Shukla’s testimony regarding the settlement 
agreement bore any relevance to the instant case.  Indeed, evidence is relevant only if it has 
“any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the 
determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the 
evidence.”  Md. R. 5-401 (emphasis added).  From our perspective, Shukla’s testimony 
regarding the settlement agreement did not render any fact that was of consequence to the 
- 47 - 
defamation action more probable or less probable.  In the Court of Special of Appeals, 
Seley-Radtke argued that Shukla’s testimony was offered to corroborate the portions of 
Seley-Radtke’s e-mails referencing the settlement agreement, thereby making the truth of 
Seley-Radtke’s other allegedly defamatory statements more likely.  See Hosmane, 227 Md. 
App. at 32, 132 A.3d at 360-61.  We, however, are unpersuaded that Shukla’s testimony as 
to the settlement agreement has any bearing on the veracity of assertions contained in 
Seley-Radtke’s e-mails.14   
Similarly, the two sentences of Seley-Radtke’s e-mail referencing the “potential 
new charges” for Hosmane and “harassing emails” allegedly sent by Hosmane were also 
not relevant to the defamation case.  In the circuit court, Seley-Radtke’s counsel argued 
that no redaction of the two sentences was appropriate because the two sentences were 
necessary to provide “context” for the other allegedly defamatory statements in the e-mails.  
Again, the determination as to relevance of evidence is based on whether its admission 
would render a determinative fact more probable or less probable.  Plainly, the reference 
in Seley-Radtke’s e-mails to Hosmane’s alleged harassing e-mails and alleged new charges 
does not tend to make Seley-Radtke’s other statements more probable or less probable.15 
                                              
14Seley-Radtke’s e-mails make only general reference to the settlement agreement: 
 
“The charges weren’t really dismissed, he settled out of court and also with the 
university. . . .”   
 
“Look, we all know two deals were struck and I understand why that was done.  I 
get it!  But the charges were dropped because of those deals, but not because 
[Hosmane] was innocent. . . .”   
15Indeed, the Watson e-mail, to which Seley-Radtke makes general reference, was 
never formally attributed to Hosmane.   
- 48 - 
In offering guidance, the Court of Special Appeals assessed the admissibility of the 
challenged evidence as follows: 
The two sentences in the two February 23, 2010 emails referring to new 
charges against [Hosmane] and “harassing emails” he purportedly sent, and 
testimony by Dr. Shukla about any settlement agreement for an alleged 
assault, were not relevant to any issue in this defamation case.  These two 
pieces of evidence were highly prejudicial and cast [Hosmane] in a very bad 
light, i.e., that he was a sex abuser who paid money to resolve such a claim, 
that he was the subject of unrelated charges and was sending harassing 
emails.  The purported purpose for which these two pieces of evidence were 
offered was that if the jury believed that parts of the email were true then the 
jury could or should find that the remainder of the emails was true.  The logic 
does not follow.  Unrelated charges and alleged harassing emails, or that 
[Hosmane] may have in fact settled an unrelated civil matter, do not make 
the other allegations in the emails more likely or less likely true, and have no 
relevancy to this defamation action. 
 
Hosmane, 227 Md. App. at 32-33, 132 A.3d at 361 (footnotes omitted).  We agree with the 
Court of Special Appeals’s evaluation.  Given the lack of relevance and prejudicial nature 
of this evidence—i.e., the harassing e-mails, unrelated charges, and Shukla’s testimony 
regarding the settlement agreement—the evidence was not admissible at trial.   
 
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL 
APPEALS AFFIRMED.  PETITIONER TO PAY 
COSTS. 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 19 
 
September Term, 2016 
______________________________________ 
 
KATHERINE SELEY-RADTKE 
 
v. 
 
RAMACHANDRA S. HOSMANE 
______________________________________ 
 
Barbera, C.J. 
Greene 
Adkins 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Getty, 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Dissenting Opinion by McDonald, J.,  
which Getty, J., joins. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed: November 22, 2016 
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore County 
Case No. 03-C-12-007007 
 
Argued: October 11, 2016  
 
 
The Majority opinion explains in some detail the history of defamation law in 
Maryland, as limited and guided by the Supreme Court’s First Amendment case law.  As 
the Majority opinion accurately notes, this Court has not yet determined the standard of 
proof of malice necessary to overcome a common law conditional privilege in a defamation 
case.  There is nearly an even split among other American jurisdictions between a standard 
of preponderance of the evidence and a standard of clear and convincing proof.  So we 
have a choice to make. 
 
The Majority opinion opts for a preponderance standard based on its assessment of 
the State interest in providing a remedy for individuals who have been victims of 
defamation.  Majority slip op. at 36.  I would make a different choice, in light of the other 
interests at stake when a conditional privilege applies.   
 
The Majority opinion begins from the premise that this is a “purely private 
defamation action.”  Majority slip op. at 1.  However, whenever a conditional privilege 
exists – and it is undisputed that a conditional privilege applies in this case unless malice 
is proven – there are inevitably public or social interests at stake.  See Gohari v. Darvish, 
363 Md. 42, 55-58 (2001).  For example, those who report serious violations of the law or 
other wrongdoing to public authorities may rely on the public interest privilege – a common 
law conditional privilege.  In this case, the common interest privilege is invoked in the 
context of what the defendant asserted was continuing wrongful conduct by one who had 
been found to have violated the university’s rules against sexual harassment as a result of 
a complaint of sexual assault.  The conditional privileges thus offer to those who come 
forward to report wrongdoing some protection against attempts to discourage such 
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reporting with the threat of a defamation lawsuit.   
 
The interest relied upon by the Majority opinion, though an important one, is that of 
the plaintiff alone.  The interests underlying the conditional privileges are not just those of 
the defendant, but of other individuals and sometimes society at large.  In light of the public 
and societal interests at stake, I agree with those courts that have opted for a standard of 
clear and convincing evidence.  Adoption of the clear and convincing standard would not 
mean that a conditional privilege could not be overcome – just that it would take more than 
a slight tip of the scales to do so. 
 
Judge Getty has indicated that he joins this opinion.