quincy
Senior Member
I understand that there does not have to be 3 people involved for a "third party" in a defamation claim. The Dean would not be considered a third person. The secretary would, however. Hence my original comment about potential problems if she read the email.
Unless this private communication between the student and the Dean were conveyed somehow to another person, like the secretary, there is not an actionable defamation claim. The personal confidential and conditionally privileged communication between the Dean and the student is not actionable. That IS the point. You have the faculty member and the coordinator, who apparently are unaware of the defamatory email, and you have the student who sent it, and you have the Dean. What the student says to the Dean is privileged. So you have no third party, only those accused of misconduct and the sort-of accuser, the student. The Dean is like the attorney. He may handle the matter, but he is not considered a third person in the defamation claim.
Does the communication potentially affect the faculty member and the coordinator? Yes. It depends on what the Dean decides to do with the information in the email. As with any misconduct reported about faculty, the Dean would have to decide what to do. But the person reporting the misconduct cannot be charged with defamation for reporting the misconduct, no matter how defamatory, if he reports it in good faith to a person with whom he can have a confidential and privileged communication.
I am not re-reading what I wrote, but I hope I am clearer this time.
Actually, I did re-read it and decided to add something else. Publication can only be made if it is made to the person defamed (faculty and coordinator, in this case) and one other person. The "defamed" people don't even know they have been defamed, however, as it was a private email. Without knowledge of the defamation, there can be no defamation claim.
Unless this private communication between the student and the Dean were conveyed somehow to another person, like the secretary, there is not an actionable defamation claim. The personal confidential and conditionally privileged communication between the Dean and the student is not actionable. That IS the point. You have the faculty member and the coordinator, who apparently are unaware of the defamatory email, and you have the student who sent it, and you have the Dean. What the student says to the Dean is privileged. So you have no third party, only those accused of misconduct and the sort-of accuser, the student. The Dean is like the attorney. He may handle the matter, but he is not considered a third person in the defamation claim.
Does the communication potentially affect the faculty member and the coordinator? Yes. It depends on what the Dean decides to do with the information in the email. As with any misconduct reported about faculty, the Dean would have to decide what to do. But the person reporting the misconduct cannot be charged with defamation for reporting the misconduct, no matter how defamatory, if he reports it in good faith to a person with whom he can have a confidential and privileged communication.
I am not re-reading what I wrote, but I hope I am clearer this time.
Actually, I did re-read it and decided to add something else. Publication can only be made if it is made to the person defamed (faculty and coordinator, in this case) and one other person. The "defamed" people don't even know they have been defamed, however, as it was a private email. Without knowledge of the defamation, there can be no defamation claim.
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