The Fox/Dominion Settlement Highlights the Importance of Discovery in Proving 'Actual Malice'
Critics argue that excessively strict pleading standards prevent plaintiffs with meritorious defamation claims from obtaining the evidence they need to support them.

Damning evidence that Dominion Voting Systems uncovered during discovery in its defamation case against Fox News seems to have played a decisive role in the settlement that the parties reached this week. That outcome suggests that satisfying the "actual malice" standard for defamation cases involving public figures may not be as difficult as critics sometimes imply. At the same time, it underlines concerns that getting as far as discovery may be impossible when courts require that plaintiffs first make a plausible case that they can meet that test.
After the 2020 presidential election, Fox repeatedly promoted a conspiracy theory alleging that Dominion participated in a massive election fraud scheme aimed at denying Donald Trump a second term. If Dominion's case had gone to trial, the company would have had to present "clear and convincing evidence" that Fox either knew that story was false or recklessly disregarded that likelihood.
That standard, which the Supreme Court has said the First Amendment requires in defamation cases involving public figures, is not easy to satisfy. But Fox, which will pay Dominion the jaw-dropping sum of $787.5 million to make the case go away, clearly thought the company had a good shot at winning, and it is not hard to understand why.
Even as Fox lent credence to election conspiracy theorists such as Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, communications revealed during discovery showed, Fox executives, producers, hosts, and reporters were privately dismissing their claims as "really crazy," "comic book stuff," "MIND BLOWINGLY NUTS," "insane," "unbelievably offensive," and "complete bullshit." They described Powell, a frequent Fox guest who accused Dominion of helping Joe Biden steal the election but never presented any evidence to support that charge, as a "crazy would be lawyer," a liar, and "a complete nut" who was telling a story that "doesn't make sense" and seemed to be "losing her mind."
As Fox implicitly recognized by settling the case, those contemporaneous concessions were powerful evidence of actual malice. But they came to light only because Dominion's lawsuit survived Fox's motion to dismiss the case, a decision that allowed discovery to proceed.
At that stage of the case, Dominion did not have access to the texts and emails that would later reinforce its claims. Delaware Superior Court Judge Eric Davis nevertheless ruled that Dominion had "adequately alleged actual malice." That conclusion was based on publicly available evidence that contradicted Giuliani and Powell's tall tale.
"The failure to investigate a statement's truth, standing alone, is not evidence of actual malice, 'even if a prudent person would have investigated before publishing the statement,'" Davis noted. "But a speaker cannot 'purposefully avoid[]' the truth and then claim ignorance. If the plaintiff offers 'some direct evidence' that the statement 'was probably false,' the Court can infer that the defendant 'inten[ded] to avoid the truth.'"
In this case, Davis said, Dominion's complaint "supports the reasonable inference that Fox either (i) knew its statements about Dominion's role in election fraud were false or (ii) had a high degree of awareness that the statements were false. For example, Fox possessed countervailing evidence of election fraud from the Department of Justice, election experts, and Dominion at the time it had been making its statements. The fact that, despite this evidence, Fox continued to publish its allegations against Dominion, suggests Fox knew the allegations were probably false."
Davis noted that Dominion had sent corrective emails to "Fox's reporters and producers, including those who oversaw and managed content for Lou Dobbs Tonight, Sunday Morning Futures, Mornings with Maria, Justice w/ Judge Jeanine, Hannity, and other Fox shows." Those emails "provided information to disprove the false claims Fox made about the company with links to independent sources."
Fox also heard directly from credible sources who contradicted Powell's claims. Ben
Hovland, a member of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "notified Fox that the 2020 Election was 'the most secure election we've ever had,'" Davis noted. J. Alex Halderman, director of the University of Michigan's Center for Computer Security & Society, "also told Fox that there 'is absolutely no evidence…that Dominion Voting Machines changed any votes in this election.'" Despite those communications and numerous other debunkings by independent experts, state and local officials, and federal agencies, Davis said, "Fox continued to promote known lies on its broadcasts, websites, social media accounts and subscription service platforms."
Davis added that, according to Dominion's complaint, "several of Fox's personnel openly disclaimed the fraud claims as false." In a tweet she posted nine days after the election, for example, Fox reporter Jacqui Heinrich corrected a tweet in which Trump had cited Hannity and Lou Dobbs Tonight to support his claim that Dominion was implicated in election fraud. Quoting "top election infrastructure officials," Heinrich noted that "there is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised." After Giuliani and Powell laid out their conspiracy theory at a bizarre press conference on November 19, Fox White House Correspondent Kristin Fisher called it "colorful" but noted that it was "light on facts," adding that "much of what [Giuliani] said was simply not true or has already been thrown out in court."
Hosts such as Lou Dobbs nevertheless "continued to push the fraud claims," Davis noted. He thought "the nearby presence of dissenting colleagues…further suggests Fox, through personnel like Mr. Dobbs, was knowing or reckless in reporting the claims."
In short, even without the incriminating messages that Dominion obtained during discovery, there was considerable evidence that Fox was, at best, willfully blind to information that undercut the narrative that Giuliani, Powell, and Dobbs were pushing. Davis therefore concluded it was "reasonably conceivable that Dominion will establish actual malice by clear and convincing evidence at trial."
That "reasonably conceivable" standard, which is based on Delaware law, is less demanding than the federal rule established by a pair of Supreme Court decisions in 2007 and 2009. Under those precedents, which did not deal specifically with defamation cases but have been extended to cover them, claims must be not just "conceivable" but "plausible." Surviving a motion to dismiss requires "well-pleaded factual allegations" that "plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief."
That requirement, critics argue, creates an obstacle that may be impossible to overcome in defamation cases: Before they can proceed to discovery, plaintiffs need evidence of actual malice that they may be unable to obtain without discovery. "The plausibility standard bars plaintiffs from discovery whether or not discovery in the particular case might prove to be overly burdensome or expensive for the defendant," University of Tennessee law professor Judy Cornett writes in a 2017 law review article. "And in cases where the defendant's state of mind must ultimately be proven by the plaintiff—like public figure libel cases—the bar to discovery puts plaintiffs in a catch-22 situation. The plaintiff must allege facts from which knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard of truth or falsity must be inferred, but the plaintiff has no access to the tools of discovery with which to learn these essential facts."
University of Tennessee law professor Glenn Harlan Reynolds concurs. The plausibility standard "makes pleading actual malice very difficult for libel plaintiffs," he writes in a 2020 paper, "since it requires proof of a subjective doubt about the truthfulness of the publication. In the absence of an objective standard based on, say, what a 'reasonably prudent person' would or would not have published, plaintiffs must prove state of mind—and [they] must make their case before discovery can produce things like emails or internal memos that might be evidence of such doubts."
The evidence that persuaded Davis to let Dominion proceed with its case might have been sufficient to establish plausibility. But this case was unusual in the extent to which the challenged statements were at odds with readily available information.
Reynolds notes the successful 2015 libel lawsuit against Rolling Stone, which he argues was likewise unusual. University of Virginia Associate Dean of Students Nicole Eramo sued the magazine in federal court over a 2014 story that portrayed her as indifferent to an alleged rape on campus. Charlottesville police later concluded there was no "substantive basis" to believe that crime had actually occurred. In her complaint, Reynolds notes, Eramo "was able to demonstrate actual subjective doubts" about the veracity of the story "because an independent investigation by the Columbia Journalism Review, which the Rolling Stone's lawyers must surely have regretted, made such doubts plain." He adds that "few future plaintiffs will be so lucky."
A ruling that the plausibility pleading standard does not apply in defamation cases, Reynolds argues, would make the process fairer to plaintiffs without overturning the actual malice test that the Supreme Court established in 1964. "Requiring plaintiffs to prove actual subjective malice by a clear and convincing evidence standard is a very high burden already," he writes. "Requiring them to also demonstrate plausible factual support at the pleading stage, before any discovery, is to make that burden almost insuperable. Rather than return libel law to its pre-1964 stage, such a ruling would merely return things to their state a decade or so ago."
In an interview with The New York Times, Dominion lawyer Rodney Smolla described the case as "an example of how plaintiffs can win—and win big—under the actual malice standard." But Smolla added that the evidence Dominion obtained through discovery was crucial. "The fact that the court here gave Dominion the opportunity to engage in discovery paved the way for the victory," he said. "This case is the ultimate example of that—it's really hard to make an actual malice case without discovery."
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Glenn "Instapundit" Reynolds?
Why is this ostensibly libertarian website so enamored of the relatively few right-wing professors in modern academia?
"right-wing professor"
Kirkland's Overton Window is so far to the left of Pol Pot, that a pro-pot, pro-gay marriage, former Al Gore campaign worker is now a "right-wing professor".
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Kirkland is only here to spam his rape fantasies and make serial killers look good by comparison.
Reason must be doing something right if it is getting complaints about associating with Glenn Reynolds and complaints about Taylor Lorenz. It's almost like Reason provides an open forum for thought.
"It’s almost like Reason provides an open forum for thought."
Haha, good one.
Everyone at Fox News believing the Dominion conspiracy to be false isn't proof that it's not true.
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>>strict pleading standards
yes! defamation suits are ludicrous they should be strictly difficult to "prove"
Yes, this case is an example of how the discovery phase should have a less strict standard than the standard needed to win the case. On the other hand, some large, wealthy corporations could bankrupt smaller competitors in the discovery phase by demanding every record defendant possesses at great expense. So the potential for abuse should be carefully weighed by judges at several phases of the process.
Hassan is asking for Taibbi to be tried for congressional purely despite Taibbi being right during his testimony. Hope MSNBC has a billion dollars.
https://www.racket.news/p/lee-fang-vs-mehdi-hasan-round-2/comments
And the article showing Hasan to be wrong.
https://leefang.substack.com/p/msnbcs-mehdi-hasan-gets-basic-facts
Or is this only a fox only standard of defamation?
Leftists Jacob supports should not be held accountable to any standards.
Who cares?
Try to keep up.
Mike will deny Reason used the word prove when there was a settlement and not determination again tomorrow.
He's such a magical thinker we should call him the White Wizard.
Leave it to Reason to use a case where the court prevented the defendant from any discovery and almost every defense as an example of the system working. I am of that strange kind of Libertarian who believes a kangaroo court is an affront to the rule of law. Since Trump the rule of law doesn't seem to matter to Reason.
Can you provide a cite about the court preventing Fox from any discovery? I have not been able to find any article talking about that.
Here https://www.forbes.com/sites/alisondurkee/2022/01/14/pennsylvania-supreme-court-blocks-voting-machine-inspection-in-gop-election-audit/?sh=56fb00fb5b37
What do you think the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had to do with the Fox lawsuit in Delaware?
Please do explain...
It's impossible for Fox or Guests of Fox to prove any suspicious claims true when the State Supreme Court blocks any access to them. Why are the courts concealing Dominion? Doesn't that even strike your bigoted mind as suspicious?
That goes 100% in correlation to "preventing Fox from any discovery".
I'll take this one.
Judge Davis made some summary judgements at the end of March. Among those he rejected the argument from Fox to dismiss the case and ruled that the claims that Dominion machines were changing votes were false. Bam! The jury wouldn't determine whether or not they were true, Davis already declared it untrue.
I'm not a lawyer, but it seems like this should have been left to the jury if the case got that far. But it's a technicality, a footnote, in this case. There was a mountain of evidence that the claims were false and no evidence of vote switching. Add to that, Fox had already essentially ceded the argument as they were not making any claims or investigation on this front. Technically, Davis closed the possibility that Fox may have begun and completed this discovery research in the 2 weeks remaining before the trial and proved what thousands of people working for 2 years thoroughly disproved.
That has nothing to do with discovery, which takes place well before that stage of the lawsuit. Fox conducted its own discovery, but the Alt-right talking points being repeated here falsely claim that the judge prevented Fox from doing so. You can't fix stupid.
That has nothing to do with discovery, which takes place well before that stage of the lawsuit.
Call it what you will, but this is where/when the claim originates.
See where your blind faith in government media gets you, soy.
Sure thing! I'll tell you what. Why don't we compare your belief that we are in a current all-out war where democrats are destroying republicans; where there are no words, only weapons; where rule of law no longer exists...**looks out window...no shooting...no artillery...no one rounding up conservatives...not even a single drag queen..** against my blind faith and see where that gets both?
what about proving actual harm suffered by the plaintiff ... dominion reportedly lost one contract worth less than $1 million and yet they were awarded a sum roughly 10x their enterprise value and still have 3 more similar lawsuits pending
To keep things factual, Dominion wasn’t awarded anything: Fox settled with Dominion.
Dominion weren't awarded anything. Fox offered a settlement. Want to guess at why they offered such a large settlement? (Hint: it wasn't because losing at trial would have cost them _less_.)
Want to guess at why they offered such a large settlement?
No need. The judge openly decided their case before any trial could begin.
This would have resulted in the judge being removed in normal times, but today it indicated to Fox, that they were not going to get justice no matter what happened.
So settling is the logical move.
No, it has everything to do with leftist lawfare, corruption of the judiciary and propagandists like you Jacob.
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"Damning evidence that Dominion Voting Systems uncovered during discovery"
Where? Where is the counter-evidence?
It's listed in the article (in very brief quotes), you drooling moron. Fox admitted in internal communications that they knew the claims were false.
I really don't know why you aren't more upset that Fox deliberately told you fairy tales because their business is fooling you.
As the meme has it, "Fox News: 'We lied to you!' Fox viewers: "No you didn't!'"
Yes. That is correct. The fact people can SEE all the evidence posted and still follow news-narratives that counter *all* of it "just because" is baffling.
Show the counter-evidence, excuse, explanation F'EN ANYTHING; don't just "say" something and expect the whole world to believe you.
Predictable replies.
Someone at Fox doubted the evidence therefore it's ALL countered.
The all holy-grail TRUTH of opinions of fox gods???
If it's not Gov-Gods it's Fox News Gods???
F'All that noise. Show the evidence....
On this case in particular; one side has shown all the evidence and the other side just favors personal opinions and propagandizes it into ?evidence?. It really is an 'idiocracy' (the movie) like justice case. And a deflection/projection case to begin with.
Well they would have provided the "counter-evidence", but Sidney never gave it to them!
Mr. Pillows has it (copy of IP communications from China). Youtube has it (Live TV count subtractions). I’ve seen it. Some of it might not be directly related to Dominion but the IP log sure is.
IP logs are recorded; It could’ve been countered so easily as a print out of the record and a little investigation as to discrepancies in Mr. Pillows logs. Easy as crap to counter. Yet; no details as to why that was never done.
Just a bunch of name-calling it a ‘lie’ and a projection (i.e. counter-attack) case to boot. That alone should tell any reasonable person something. What was even the point of the counter-attack? If they didn't want to be accused and they knew they were being wrongly accused they would SHOWN evidence to that resolve and not worried about a counter-attack.
The only thing Dominion is attacking is the evidence and any conclusion drawn from that evidence. They are using the legal system to SILENCE and CENSOR accusations they haven't shown beyond a reasonable doubt to be untrue. They are using cherry-picked opinions of certain people as their foundation (i.e. hearsay).
What's so blatantly hilarious about this is the more they carry on this way the more guilty they look to 'reasonable' people. In the big picture the only thing they're doing is instilling FEAR about questioning their systems.
Civil cases do not use the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. Its a much lower burden of proof... preponderance of evidence sometimes referred to as 'more likely than not.' The judge had motions for summary judgment which Dominion filed and Fox opposed...and based on the evidence presented, the judge ruled that there was no issues of material fact and dominion was entitled to judgments as a matter of law.
Juries are primarily for deciding factual issues. If the facts are not in dispute, litigants can motion the court to rule on such facts and remove them from the provenance of the jury's consideration. This happens ALL the time in civil court. The pre trial rules promote this. The mechanisms of discovery promote this. Hell, my state has 'requests to admit' which one side serves on the other. If in response, that side 'admits' the facts which the jury would hear, then you don't need a jury to hear them because that party already admitted to their existence. Again, this happens every single day in civil court. Nothing I have seen here is either weird or different than any other civil case. The only people who seem confused about what happened here are people who have no idea what proper civil procedure is. So in their ignorance, they invent conspiracies and ulterior motives to explain why things happened.
You must have missed where an arbitrator ruled that Lindell has to pay $5 million to a computer expert who met his challenge by proving his "evidence" was garbage.
Citation?
Oh… I found it… So Lindell is so sure of his Logs he offers to pay anyone $5M to defeat his claim.
Lets see here. There was ZERO dispute that China was accessing the machines. The ‘award’ was given entirely because part of Lindell claims was that China switched votes but since he didn’t have actual payload along with his IP logs he couldn’t actually prove that SPECIFIC action as fact.
The only thing this does is further provides PROOF that China was hacking the machines.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2021/aug/11/mike-lindells-lead-cyber-expert-says-they-cant-pro/
Fox wants everyone to know that Occupy the White House must not be questioned.
The venue and jury pool probably had more to do with the settlement than anything else. The Corporate Media and Biden Regime decided that Fox News should be punished because it was against their goals and stance.
Never mind that the Corporate Media does the same dishonest reporting that Fox News does. Fox News is the outlier simply because they are the controlled opposition to the unified narrative of the other Corporate Media outlets.
While I don't believe that there was enough election corruption to have made a difference in the actual outcome. There is no doubt that there was election corruption. Some of the election corruption may have been technically legal, but implemented illegally.
The election was gamed to give an advantage to one side over the rest of the field. To date there has been no serious attempt made to address or even investigate the problems with our elections.
Not having standing is not an investigation, but rather used to shutdown the possibility of an investigation. There are real problems with our elections even if some are just the appearance of a problem. The reality is there is a lack of confidence.
It is not rocket science to understand that the two major parties do not care about the populace, but rather about maintaining their power. They will lie, steal and cheat in order to gain an advantage if the opportunity arises and they believe they will not be caught.
The election of 2020 can be summed up that the Democrat party did a better job gaming the election than the Republican party did. Unfortunately we all lost because we have yet another clown for a president.
Dominion has yet to prove that their voting machines cannot be hooked up to the internet. (How do the machines report their accumulated voting results to the main collection centers?)
Dominion refuses to divulge whether their machines can be programmed to skew results, claiming proprietary protection.
Until they prove that the machines cannot be manipulated in any way, they will remain suspect to a majority of the American voters.
They have yet to prove that they weren't part of the International Zionist Conspiracy's outreach group to the Bavarian Illuminati, either.
Nope; They haven't proven a GD thing except they know how to retaliate and bully anyone who questions their self-proclaimed ?integrity????
SRG trusts all government and all government contractors implicitly. For him, there is no need for public disclosure, review, auditing, or testing. In fact, SRG would probably just love to get rid of FOIA, since it is a bloody nuisance for our betters.
Personally, I think all source code used by the government should be subject to mandatory FOIA releases. All of it.
Jacob Sullum, SHAME ON YOU!!!!!!!!!!
Listing the Department of "Justice" as a credible source! I think that this shows the kind of mindset that belongs, well, somewhere else. Think Nation, Progressive or some other p.o.s. rag
I think there's a libertarian case to be made against Discovery in general. It's forcing your opponent to give their own information to the other side. How is that justifiable? That goes double for criminal cases, where a defendant can face additional charges of destruction of evidence if he deletes files or throws out items related to a crime.
Ah, you noticed that there was a "discovery" phase. Good. Did you notice that Fox was prevented from actually getting the information they needed to prove their case during discovery?
But, of course, to Reason, software used by government to run elections is to be trusted implicitly. It doesn't need to be reviewed or audited! Its operation and potential backdoors shall not be questioned! The very fact that government purchased that software from a private company makes its trustworthiness certain! /sarc