Libel.
Defamation is speech that wrongfully damages a person's reputation. It includes both slander, which is spoken defamation, and libel, which is written defamation. To prove defamation, the statement must be false, harmful to the person's reputation, and communicated to a third party.
Knowingly and falsely harming another person's reputation.
A false speech intended to damage a person's reputation is called defamation. Defamation can be in the form of slander (spoken defamation) or libel (written defamation). It involves making false statements about someone that harm their reputation.
my estranged wife under Oath made a written allegation on an affidavit which subjected another person and me to having had a sexual relationship when she was a minor. This was both untrue and malicious. The other person has written a document supporting this fact. I wish to now to sue for libel and defamation.
Call it a verbal defamation of a person's character that is untrue.
Written defamation is known as libel. It is the publication of a remark that injures the reputation or character of someone.
To defame someone, that is, to impair their reputation by making false statements about them, is not usually a criminal offence but rather a civil wrong or tort which forms the basis of a lawsuit. In some jurisdictions this is simply called defamation but in others there are differences in law and procedure depending on whether the defamatory statement was published as an oral statement or as a written one. Oral defamation is called slander whereas written defamation is called libel.
A written attack on a person's reputation is commonly referred to as defamation. It involves making false statements about someone that harm their reputation, credibility, or standing in the community. Defamation can take the form of libel when the statement is made in writing.
Defamation. It includes libel (written false statement) and slander (spoken false statement) where a person intentionally spreads falsehoods about another person to harm their reputation.
When someone knowingly makes untrue and harmful remarks about another person in public, the speaker may be guilty of defamation. Defamation involves making false statements that damage another person's reputation, and it can take the form of slander (spoken) or libel (written). If the remarks are proven to be false and made with malice or reckless disregard for the truth, the speaker could face legal consequences.
Defamation is a broader term that encompass both libel and slander. Libel specifically refers to defamatory statements that are written or published, while slander refers to defamatory statements that are spoken. Both libel and slander involve making false statements that harm a person's reputation.
Defamation occurs when an individual says (slander) or publishes (libel) something false about another individual and the information is heard/read by others to the detriment of the individual being spoken/written about.