A Fergus Falls nonprofit that helps victims of domestic violence had no duty to verify a client's allegations against her ex-husband when it presented her with a "Survivor Award" at a 2014 fundraiser, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.
The decision overturned an appellate court ruling that found that District Judge Frank Kundrat had erred when he dismissed a libel lawsuit filed by Kurt A. Maethner against the nonprofit, Someplace Safe Inc., and his ex-wife, Jacquelyn Jorud.
But the decision left open the question of whether Jorud herself could be sued for publishing her claims on Facebook and in a newsletter that she had survived domestic abuse and stalking. Though Jorud did not identify Maethner as her abuser, he contended that the inference was obvious and that his reputation was damaged as a result. He noted that Jorud filed no police reports alleging abuse and that their divorce documents make no mention of it.
Maethner and Jorud married in 1995, separated in 2008 and divorced two years later. During the separation and divorce proceedings, Jorud was a client of Someplace Safe.
Chief Justice Lorie Skjerven Gildea wrote the complex, 30-page opinion for the court, which she characterized as weighing the "delicate balance" between free speech protections under the First Amendment and the interests of people claiming that certain speech damaged their reputations.
The ruling sends the case back to district court to determine whether the domestic abuse allegations were a matter of "public concern" or a "private matter."
If the former, then Maethner would have to prove at trial that Jorud showed "actual malice" by accusing him of crimes for which he has not been charged. That seems unlikely, given that the court wrote in a footnote that he simply had accused Jorud of showing "ill will." The court said that fails to meet the legal threshold of actual malice.
Gildea wrote that while domestic abuse is clearly a matter of public concern, whether the offending speech rises to that level must be determined by examining the content, form and context of the whole record.