Posted On: December 19, 2008 by William Ryan Moore

Florida Injury Lawyer on Dignitary Torts: A Different Kind of Injury

Most Broward County residents think of personal injury in terms of injury to the person, such as a slip and fall accident at a Fort Lauderdale grocery store. Maybe they think of an improperly designed toy that hurts a child or a doctor’s medical malpractice that results in grievous injury to a patient. Injury to the body, however, is not the only kind of case Florida injury lawyers take on.

Dignitary torts are those injuries which harm a person in different way – it is injury to one’s dignity. Most famously, defamation is a dignitary tort. To prove defamation, a person must communicate a false statement about someone that is harmful to that person’s reputation. Generally, it is at least implied to be factual; an obvious joke, for instance, is not considered defamatory. Defamation can be in the form of slander, which is spoken, or libel, which is written defamatory language. For instance, Alice, a nurse, attends the Broward County Nurses Association dinner, where she imparts gossip about Betty (also a nurse). Betty, Alice says authoritatively, neglects her elderly patients because “they’re going to die soon enough, anyway.” A statement like that could have a significant impact on Betty’s reputation, her career, and her earning potential. Betty could likely win a defamation lawsuit against Alice on the basis of Alice’s slander. Of course, if Alice’s statement was accurate, Betty will not be able to recover monetary damages from Alice. Likewise, if Alice had made that statement to Betty alone – not in front of any other person – Betty would be unable to recover, even if the statement were inaccurate. The information must be passed along to other people.

Invasion of privacy is another dignitary tort worth mentioning. Generally, the plaintiff was intruded upon in some area in which a reasonable person would have expected privacy. For instance, if a private citizen bugged a hotel room with listening devices to detect personal conversations, it would likely be an invasion of privacy. Also, appropriating the plaintiff’s image for commercial benefit falls within invasion of privacy. If the manufacturer of Wheaties put Michael Jordan’s picture on the box without his permission, with the goal of increasing sales, Michael Jordan would have a cause of action against the company.

Alienation of affections is an old-fashioned dignitary tort, little used and no longer even a cause of action. Florida and 41 other states removed it as a cause of action prior to 1935; it remains valid in Hawaii and seven others. Alienation of affections refers to suing the person believed responsible for causing a marriage to fail, typically the other spouse’s paramour. Extramarital sexual relations need not be proven and, occasionally, former spouses have sued family members or others who counseled in favor of divorce, rather than an illicit adulterous lover.

These are just a few examples of dignitary torts. Contact a Florida injury lawyer if you have been injured.

Alitowski & Moore, P.A. is an experienced personal injury law firm that handles many different types of claims, including car and motor vehicle accidents. If you have been injured, contact a personal injury attorney at 1-888-ASK-ANDREW to find out if you could be eligible to receive monetary damages. Our personal injury lawyers have represented thousands of clients who have been injured. Offices are located in Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach Counties.

This article is intended to be informational and not to provide legal advice.

Article contributed by Mallory Shipman, Attorney-at-Law.

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