Wandt v. Hearst's Chicago American
Wandt v. Hearst's Chicago American,129 Wis. 419, 109 NW 70 (1906), was a Wisconsin Supreme Court case wherein the court ruled that a photographic association could be construed as defamation or libel.
Wandt v. Hearst's Chicago American | |
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Court | Wisconsin Supreme Court |
Full case name | Wandt, Respondent, v. Heart's Chicago American, Appellant. |
Decided | October 9, 1906 |
Citation(s) | 109 N.W. 70; 129 Wis. 419 |
Case history | |
Appealed from | Milwaukee County Circuit Court |
Court membership | |
Judge(s) sitting | John B. Cassoday, John B. Winslow, Roujet D. Marshall, Joshua Eric Dodge, Robert G. Siebecker, James C. Kerwin |
Case opinions | |
Decision by | Winslow |
Keywords | |
The Chicago American ran a picture next to an article about a person who repeatedly attempted suicide. Although it wasn't explicit that the picture was of that person, the location of the picture next to that article created a false association that constituted libel. This case is authority that: where a person's picture is taken by a photographer, there is a breach of an implied contract or relationship of trust when the photographer makes additional pictures and uses them for commercial purposes.[1]
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