1. What Are the Four Types of Invasion of Privacy Claims in New York?
New York law recognizes four distinct invasion of privacy causes of action. Intrusion upon seclusion occurs when someone intentionally intrudes into a private space or affair without consent, and the intrusion would be offensive to a reasonable person. Public disclosure of private facts requires the defendant to have disclosed information that is not of legitimate public concern, and whose disclosure would be highly offensive to a reasonable person. False light claims involve portraying someone in a false or misleading way that would be offensive to a reasonable person. Commercial misuse of identity happens when someone uses another person's name, likeness, or identity for commercial gain without permission. Understanding which type of claim has been filed against you is the first step in formulating an effective defense.
Which Defense Strategy Depends on the Type of Invasion?
Your defense must target the specific elements of the invasion of privacy type alleged. For intrusion claims, you may challenge whether the plaintiff had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the location or context, or whether your conduct was truly offensive to a reasonable person. For public disclosure claims, you can argue that the information disclosed was already public, was newsworthy, or was not highly offensive. In false light cases, you may defend by showing the portrayal was substantially true or was not offensive to a reasonable person. For commercial misuse of identity, you can assert that you had consent, that the use was not for commercial purposes, or that it falls within a statutory exception.
2. What Procedural Defenses Can Eliminate an Invasion of Privacy Claim before Trial?
Several procedural defenses may dispose of an invasion of privacy claim without reaching the merits, including failure to state a cause of action, insufficient service of process, lack of personal jurisdiction, and statute of limitations expiration. A motion to dismiss under CPLR 3211 challenges whether the plaintiff has pleaded facts sufficient to support each element of the invasion of privacy tort. If the complaint lacks specificity about when, where, and how the invasion occurred, or fails to allege that the defendant's conduct was intentional or that a reasonable person would find it offensive, the court may dismiss the claim.
How Can Statute of Limitations and Service Defects Protect Your Position?
The one-year statute of limitations for invasion of privacy claims in New York is a powerful defensive tool. If the plaintiff delayed filing and the claim is time-barred, the entire action may be dismissed. Service of process defects also present strong grounds for dismissal. If the plaintiff failed to serve you properly under CPLR 308 or failed to perfect service by filing proof of service timely, you can move to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. Procedural defects in notice or service are often overlooked by plaintiffs and can be decisive if raised promptly in your answer or in a pre-answer motion to dismiss.
3. What Substantive Defenses Apply to Each Type of Invasion of Privacy?
Beyond procedural grounds, New York recognizes several substantive defenses that directly challenge the plaintiff's legal right to recover. These include consent, truth, newsworthiness, privilege, and statutory exceptions. Consent is a complete defense to all four invasion of privacy torts. If the plaintiff consented to the intrusion, disclosure, portrayal, or commercial use, the claim fails. Truth is a defense to false light claims; if the portrayal was substantially accurate, it cannot be false. Newsworthiness and public concern are defenses to public disclosure claims; if the disclosed information was newsworthy or the plaintiff was a public figure or public official, the disclosure may be protected. New York General Business Law Sections 50 and 51 provide statutory exceptions for newsworthy uses and uses in connection with news, public affairs, and sports reporting.
What Does Consent Look Like in Practice?
Consent must be clear, knowing, and voluntary. Written consent is strong evidence, but oral consent or implied consent may also be sufficient depending on the circumstances. If you received permission from the plaintiff to enter a space, photograph them, disclose information about them, or use their identity, you have a complete defense. The burden of proving consent typically falls on you as the defendant, so contemporaneous documentation is valuable. Email exchanges, signed agreements, or witness testimony confirming that the plaintiff agreed to the conduct in question can defeat an invasion of privacy claim entirely.
4. What Is the Role of Newsworthiness and Public Concern in Your Defense?
Newsworthiness and public concern are critical defenses, especially for public disclosure and false light claims. If the information disclosed or the portrayal relates to a matter of legitimate public interest, the invasion of privacy claim may be barred. Courts balance the plaintiff's privacy interest against the public's interest in the information or the defendant's interest in commenting on a matter of public concern. Information about public figures, public officials, or matters affecting the general public is more likely to be deemed newsworthy than information about private citizens in purely private contexts. A defense grounded in invasion of privacy law often succeeds when the defendant can demonstrate that the disclosure or portrayal served an informational, educational, or protective purpose.
5. What Practical Steps Should You Take after an Invasion of Privacy Claim Is Filed?
Immediate action is essential to protect your defense and preserve evidence. Your first step is to preserve all documents, communications, and records relevant to the claim, including emails, text messages, photographs, consent forms, and any other evidence that supports your defense. Notify your insurance carrier if you have liability coverage that may apply to the claim. Review the complaint carefully to identify which type of invasion of privacy is alleged and which specific conduct is challenged. Gather evidence of consent, truthfulness, newsworthiness, or other defenses before memories fade and documents are lost. Prepare a detailed timeline of events to identify any statute of limitations issues or procedural defects in service or notice. Consult with legal counsel to evaluate whether a motion to dismiss or other early motion is appropriate. Do not delete or alter any materials, as doing so could result in sanctions or adverse inferences. Ensure that all employees, contractors, or agents who may have information are instructed not to destroy or alter relevant materials. Biometric privacy violations and other forms of biometric privacy violation claims often turn on whether proper notice and consent procedures were followed, so contemporaneous documentation of your compliance efforts is invaluable.
| Defense Category | Key Elements to Establish | Evidence to Preserve |
|---|---|---|
| Consent | Clear, knowing, voluntary permission | Written agreements, emails, witness statements |
| Truth | Portrayal was substantially accurate | Source documents, fact-checking records |
| Newsworthiness | Information relates to public interest | Editorial judgment notes, public records |
| Privilege | Disclosure made in official proceeding | Court filings, legislative records |
| Statute of Limitations | Claim filed after one-year period | Complaint filing date, service records |
Focus on establishing which procedural or substantive defense is strongest given the facts and the type of invasion alleged. Early motion practice, combined with thorough evidence preservation and careful pleading, positions you to challenge the claim efficiently and, in many cases, to dispose of it before costly discovery or trial. Consult with counsel experienced in privacy litigation to evaluate your specific circumstances and to develop a defense strategy tailored to your situation.
01 Jun, 2026









