Preszler Injury Lawyers
Preszler Injury Lawyers

Why You Should Never Discuss Your Car Accident on Social Media

How many times a day do you post to your Facebook or Twitter account? For some of us, social media is as much a part of our everyday routine as brushing our teeth or driving to work. We have become accustomed to sharing every minute detail of our lives with our online friends, followers, and the world at large.

But suppose you are involved in a car accident while driving: Should you post pictures of the car accident on social media, the way you might a dinner at a nice restaurant? Most personal injury lawyers would advise against this, and for good reason. What you see as an unremarkable Facebook post can be potential evidence the other side uses against you at trial or to deny your insurance claim.

The truth is, there is almost no way talking about an auto accident on social media can help you if it becomes necessary to pursue (or defend against) a personal injury claim. Seemingly innocuous things you say or post online can be twisted and misinterpreted.

Additionally, discussing your accident may prompt a response from the other party, and the last thing you want to do is litigate your case in the so-called court of public opinion.

Veneruzzo v. Storey: Discussion Of Car Accident On Social Media Not In The Public Interest

Even discussing an already resolved personal injury case online can lead to problems. Remember, Ontario has laws against libel. This means, for instance, that you could be liable for civil damages if you make false or defamatory statements about the other party to an accident online and outside the normal judicial process.

The Ontario Court of Appeal recently considered just such a libel lawsuit, Veneruzzo v. Storey. This terrible case started with a tragic 2008 auto accident. The defendant, at the time an Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) officer, was traveling at unsafe speedsย and collided with another vehicle driven by an 18-year-old woman.

The victim โ€œsustained extreme traumatic blunt force injuriesโ€ and died on impact, according to Ontario court records.

The Crown subsequently charged the defendant with โ€œcriminal negligence causing death,โ€ for which he was tried and convicted in 2013. The defendant then served a two-year prison sentence. The victimโ€™s family later settled a civil lawsuitย against the defendant.

That might have been the end of the story. But in 2015, after the defendantโ€™s release from prison, he made a series of posts about the car accident on Facebook. In brief, the defendant attempted to shift blame for the fatal accident onto the victim and made critical personal statements about the victimโ€™s family.

For example, the defendant alleged the victim had poor driving habits prior to the accident, and that members of her family got drunk and yelled at OPP officers following the funeral service.

The victimโ€™s family responded to these posts by filing a libel lawsuit, seeking damages for โ€œdefamation, intentional infliction of mental distress and intrusion upon seclusion.โ€

Ontarioโ€™s Anti-slapp Law And The Meaning Of โ€œPublic Interestโ€

Before the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss, arguing his Facebook posts constituted protected expression on a โ€œmatter of public interest.โ€ Ontario law protects such expression against what are known as โ€œstrategic lawsuits against public participationโ€ (SLAPP).

The trial court denied the motion to dismiss. There was no question the defendantโ€™s Facebook posts qualified as โ€œexpressionโ€ under Ontarioโ€™s anti-SLAPP law. But the judge determined the defendantโ€™s statements did not โ€œrelate to a matter of public interest.โ€

The Court noted that Ontarioโ€™s anti-SLAPP law does not directly define โ€œpublic interest.โ€ But the Supreme Court of Canada has explained that โ€œthe public interest is not synonymous with what interests the public.โ€ Rather, the subject matter โ€œmust be shown to be one inviting public attention, or about which the public has some substantial concern because it affects the welfare of citizens.โ€

Here, the defendant argued that the original auto accident, and his subsequent criminal trial, was an โ€œan event of notoriety and controversy,โ€ and therefore qualified as a matter of public interest.

The judge disagreed, holding that there was โ€œno public aspectโ€ to the posts attempting to blame the victim for her own death, especially given the defendant previously admitted responsibility in court.

It would be one thing if the defendant used the accident as context for commenting on โ€œpolice policy involving high speed chases or the responsibility of civilian motorists to pull over.โ€ In this case, the defendant was not involved in any sort of active pursuit.

Furthermore, the judge said there was no public interest in the alleged conduct of the victimโ€™s family. They were not public figures. And although some degree of notoriety โ€œmay well have attached to the collisionโ€ and the victimโ€™s death, that does not mean there were any โ€œpublic interest implicationsโ€ in the defendantโ€™s allegations.

The defendant appealed the denial of his motion to dismiss to the Court of Appeal. In a judgment issued on April 30, 2018, a three-judge panel unanimously dismissed the appeal. The defendantโ€™s principal argument on appeal was that the trial court โ€œfailed to consider the relevant Facebook posts โ€˜as a wholeโ€™โ€ and โ€œcharacterized the phrase โ€˜public interestโ€™ too narrowly.โ€

The Court of Appeal disagreed on both counts.

Contact Preszler Injury Lawyers

If you were injured in an accident caused by someone elseโ€™s negligence, social media may seem like a safe space to express thoughts and feelings about your experience. However, these sentiments can be used against you at a later date. To learn how our Ontario car accident lawyers may be able to help you through this process, call 1-800-JUSTICE today.

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