Claims Stories: Woeful Website Wording

Your website is the face of the organization. Make sure it's saying the right message.

Without clear language on your website and other materials, individuals in the general public may misconstrue what it is your nonprofit does.

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The chances are that your nonprofit has a website. In the digital era, creating and maintaining a website is almost unavoidable.

It explains your nonprofit’s mission and programs to current and potential supporters, solicits donations, and provides additional information on events and fundraisers.

The fact of the matter is, your website is the face of the organization.

Given the importance of your nonprofit’s website, it shouldn’t be a surprise that choosing your wording with care and caution is a must — so that visitors are not only engaged and interested in your nonprofit, but also leave with a clear and accurate understanding of what your organization does.

Without clear language, individuals in the general public may misconstrue what it is your organization does, and as a result, could end up suing for damages.

Unfortunately, that’s exactly what happened to one of our nonprofit members.

The Claim

The nonprofit runs a halfway house for men with dual substance abuse and psychiatric issues.

Their clients come into the program after being discharged from hospitals, to make sure they’re stable and can establish both a job and a place to live.

One such client, who we’ll call John, entered the program to manage and treat both schizoaffective disorder and an addiction to methamphetamines.

During the intake process, John told the organization that he was single and had no spouse — this turned out to be a lie and, while John was in treatment, his wife filed for divorce.

Despite this, John’s condition was stabilized, he found a job and an apartment, was discharged from the program, and by all accounts was doing well.

After seeing how well things were going for John after he was discharged from the program, his wife tried to re-enter the picture and showed up to his new apartment to reconcile.

As the couple was about to become intimate, John’s wife discovered that he had a visible STD. It was subsequently discovered that John had been having an affair with a staff member at the nonprofit, and they were now in love.

The staff member was let go as a result, but John’s wife sued the nonprofit for emotional damages caused by the relationship.

Initially, it was deemed that she had no standing in court as she was not a client of the nonprofit, so the judge dismissed the claim.

However, she then amended her complaint based on the fact that the nonprofit’s mission, as listed on their website, was to help addicts and their families.

The inclusion of families in the nonprofit’s mission meant that the wife could be included under the umbrella of who is being served by the organization.

In the end, it was ruled that the website’s text did not mean that John’s wife was owed anything by the nonprofit, and the suit was ultimately dismissed.

However, this claim had the potential to cause of lot of problems for the nonprofit, had the court agreed with the wife that the word “families” meant she was a client of the nonprofit organization.

Lessons Learned

Although this claim did not result in liability for the organization, it highlighted the potential that words used in nonprofit marketing materials, such as websites, have the potential to create legal liability.

Words describing services can be alleged to be an implied-in-fact contract or create a legal relationship which can create a legally enforceable duty to act in a certain manner.

So what’s the takeaway from this nonprofit’s story? Your organization’s wording, on its website and elsewhere, is critical.

For that reason, carefully examining what you’re communicating and how, is essential — not only to ensure it’s accurate and engaging, but also to ensure that you’re not opening your organization up to unanticipated liability.

Legal review of such materials or disclaimers may be appropriate risk mitigation tools for those nonprofits in highly regulated industries, such as health care.