When someone says or publishes something false about you and the statement amounts to calculable damages to your reputation, you may have a case against them for defamation. Libel occurs when the untrue statement is made in writing, and slander occurs when the statement is made verbally.
Georgia's Definition of Defamation Specifically, libel is statutorily defined as malicious and false defamation of a party, expressed in writing, print, signs, or pictures, that tends to injure the party's reputation and expose it to contempt, ridicule, and public hatred.
Definition of Defamation An imputation which is likely to lower the person in the estimation of right thinking people; An imputation which injures a persons reputation, by exposing them to hatred, contempt or ridicule; An imputation which intends to make a person be shunned or avoided.
Defamation refers to the act of damaging someone's reputation by making false statements about them. It can occur in two forms: libel (written statements) and slander (spoken statements).
To damage the reputation of a person or group by saying or writing bad things about them that are not true: Mr Turnock claimed the editorial had defamed him.
- A viable defamation claim under Georgia law consists of: (1) a false and defamatory statement concerning the plaintiff: (2) an unprivileged communication to a third party; (3) fault by the defendant amounting at least to negligence; and (4) special harm or the action ability of the statement irrespective of special ...
For the purposes of this article, the term “harassing and intimidating” means a knowing and willful course of conduct directed at a specific person which causes emotional distress by placing such person in reasonable fear for such person's safety or the safety of a member of his or her immediate family, by establishing ...
Defamation arises when there is the publication of subject matter to a third party that would make an ordinary person think worse of the claimant as a result, thereby causing or being likely to cause serious harm to the claimant.