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TONY LAM et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents,
v.
KY NGO et al., Defendants and Appellants.
No. G026329
In the Court of Appeal of the State of California
Fourth Appellate District
Division Three
(Super. Ct. No. 806969)
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County,
Robert D. Monarch, Judge. Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
COUNSEL
Lyon Law and Geoffrey C. Lyon for Defendants and Appellants.
Callahan & Blaine and Jim P. Mahacek for Plaintiffs and
Respondents.
Filed August 21, 2001
I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal from the denial of an anti-SLAPP suit motion requires
us to come to the following conclusions:
(1) Because the Legislature has specified that the anti-SLAPP
suit law (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16) is to be construed
broadly, the provision in the law that a special motion to strike
"may be filed within 60 days of the service of the complaint"
(§ 425.16, subd. (f)) includes amended as well as original
complaints. (See DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical Co. v. Superior
Court (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 562, 565 [considering anti-SLAPP
motion to strike first amended complaint]; Globetrotter Software,
Inc. v. Elan Computer Group, Inc. (N.D.Cal. 1999) 63 F.Supp.2d
1127, 1129 [observing that since the Legislature did not say
"original complaint," statutory time period runs "from
the filing of the most recent amended complaint" ].)[FOOTNOTE
1]
(2) Because the time specified in the anti-SLAPP law (§
425.16, subd. (f)) allows filing motions to strike within 60
days of the service of amended complaints, and the amended complaint
in this case was itself served by mail, the moving party had
an extra five days to file his anti-SLAPP suit motion. (Code
Civ. Proc., § 1013, subd. (a).) Accordingly, an anti-SLAPP
suit motion to strike, filed 64 days after the service of the
first amended complaint by mail, was timely.
(3) Because the issues involved in consideration of a preliminary
injunction are different from those involved in an anti-SLAPP
suit motion to strike, the granting of a preliminary injunction
in favor of the plaintiff does not have collateral estoppel or
res judicata effect as against a subsequent anti-SLAPP suit motion.
(Compare Pro-Family Advocates v. Gomez (1996) 46 Cal.App.4th
1674, 1680-1681 [consideration of preliminary injunction entails
interrelated factors of likelihood of prevailing and the
need to prevent interim harm] with Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16,
subd. (b)(3) [standard for anti-SLAPP suit is whether plaintiff
has "established a probability" of prevailing on claim].)
(4) Because the trial judge erroneously assumed both (a) that
the anti-SLAPP suit motion was untimely, and (b) that the prior
granting of a preliminary injunction precluded consideration
of the motion on the merits, the order denying the motion was
predicated on two faulty premises. Therefore this court must
proceed to the merits of the motion de novo. (See e.g., Paul
for Council v. Hanyecz (2001) 85 Cal.App.4th 1356, 1364 ["On
appeal, the issues are reviewed de novo." ]; Damon v.
Ocean Hills Journalism Club (2000) 85 Cal.App.4th 468, 474
["we review the record de novo" ]; Foothills Townhome
Assn. v. Christiansen (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 688, 695 [reviewing
record independently to determine whether trial court correctly
denied anti-SLAPP suit motion].)
(5) Because this case involves possible tort liability for
the collateral effects of a political protest, three principles
set forth in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co. (1982) 458
U.S. 886 are controlling. They are:
(a) Peaceful picketing of a business for political reasons
cannot be burdened by state tort liability, even if it has the
effect of interfering with prospective economic advantage. (NAACP
v. Claiborne Hardware, supra, 458 U.S. at p. 918 [state may
not "award compensation for the consequences of nonviolent,
protected activity" ].)
(b) Violence and other criminal acts are bases of tort
liability and not constitutionally protected, even when committed
out of political motives and in the context of a political demonstration.
(NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, supra, 458 U.S. at p. 916
["No federal rule of law restricts a State from imposing
tort liability for business losses that are caused by violence
and by threats of violence." ].)
(c) An organizer of a political protest cannot be held personally
liable for acts committed by other protesters unless he or she
authorized, directed or ratified specific tortious activity,
incited lawless action, or gave specific instructions to carry
out violent acts or threats. (See NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware,
supra, 458 U.S. at p. 927.)
(6) Applying these principles to the case at hand, we conclude
that there is insufficient evidence to implicate the sole named
defendant, organizer Ky Ngo, in any of the violent acts that
occurred in connection with the protest. We further conclude
that the nonviolent aspects of the protest (in which Ngo was
implicated) cannot, consistent with NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware,
support tort liability. Accordingly, the tort causes of action
against Ngo must be stricken.
(7) The violent acts associated with the protest do support
tort liability, so the case must be remanded to allow the plaintiff
to substitute named individuals for any of the Doe defendants
who can be shown to have engaged in them.
II. FACTS
In 1999, a video store in Westminster placed the flag of the
North Vietnamese communists and a poster of Ho Chi Minh in the
window. Large numbers of Orange County' s Vietnamese community
were outraged and staged demonstrations at the store.
They also demanded the support of local politicians, including
Garden Grove city council member Tom Lam. Lam, however -- or
at least as his court papers in this case would later claim --
had been instructed by the Garden Grove city attorney not to
publically support the anti-video store demonstrators. He kept
mum.
A group of the demonstrators then focused their attention
on council member Lam, who, they would later claim, had shown
a "conspicuous lack of interest or concern for the Vietnamese
community' s outrage" at the video store display. (We note
the irony in passing: A man who had risked his life to escape
from a communist regime was now condemned for being soft on communism.)
Lam owned a restaurant, the Vien Dong, and beginning March
12, 1999, a group of protesters showed up at the restaurant to
demand that Lam resign his city council post. The restaurant'
s landlord was sympathetic to the protester' s position, and
allowed them to gather in the parking lot. The Vien Dong' s business
suffered, and less than a week later, Lam and the restaurant
(which is separately incorporated) filed this action against
Ky Ngo, the landlord,[FOOTNOTE 2] and 1500 Doe defendants. A
temporary restraining order was issued on March 19, 1999, prohibiting
the protesters from "approaching within 20 feet of the entrance
and windows" of the restaurant, and from using bullhorns
or other amplification equipment that could be heard within the
restaurant. By April 2, a modified temporary restraining order
established a 50 feet "buffer zone" in all directions
from the perimeter around the restaurant' s parking lot.
Lam and the restaurant sought a preliminary injunction based
on a series of declarations that established these facts: In
the period prior to the issuance of the TRO' s, protesters (a)
physically accosted prospective patrons and shouted epithets
at them; (b) in some cases, slashed the tires and pounded on
the cars of prospective patrons; (c) used bullhorns to disrupt
the meals of those customers who did manage to make it into the
restaurant; (d) plastered posters and banners on the side of
the restaurant; and (e) even urinated on the side of the restaurant
premises. In one instance, an 89-year-old man was surrounded
by 30 to 40 protesters who kicked and pounded his car, causing
about $250 in damages. When the elderly gentleman finally stepped
out of the car, he faced further insults from the crowd. Security
guards came to his rescue and escorted him safely away. And when
one of the county board of supervisors and his wife tried to
have lunch at the restaurant, they were called "motherfuckers"
by the crowd as they approached the premises. As they left, protesters
stood in front of their car blocking the driveway. Lam also presented
evidence that some of the protesters tried to videotape or otherwise
record the license plates of some of the restaurant' s customers.
Continuing throughout the protests, demonstrators bore numerous
signs casting Lam as a communist and a traitor. They carried
drawings of Lam as a horned and fanged devil with blood dripping
down his mouth. They crafted a life-sized effigy of Lam tied
to a gallows next to a life-sized effigy of Ho Chi Minh; a bloody
axe bearing a South Vietnamese flag, coffin-like box, and the
slogan "Down with the Communists" adorned their creation.
The protesters also created three-dimensional effigies of Lam
and Ho Chi Minh in lewd sexual positions across the street from
the restaurant.
Financially, the restaurant suffered a 40 percent decline
in revenues through the end of April, compounded by the extra
expense of needing to hire security guards to escort customers
through the parking lot. The trial court granted the preliminary
injunction May 28, 1999.[FOOTNOTE 3]
On May 24, 1999, four days before the preliminary injunction
was granted, Lam filed and served by mail a first amended complaint.
His wife was added as a plaintiff, and he alleged these causes
of action against Ngo and the protesters: intentional infliction
of emotional distress, intentional interference with economic
advantage, trespass, and nuisance. Ngo filed a motion to strike
pursuant to section 425.16 of the Code of Civil Procedure (i.e.,
an anti-SLAPP suit motion) on July 28, 1999, 64 days after the
service by mail.
The trial court denied the motion in October, and the written
order makes it very clear that the denial was based on the fact
that Ngo had already lost the preliminary injunction battle and
was presenting nothing "new." Indeed, it was on this
basis that the court also found that Ngo' s motion had been brought
to harass the plaintiffs by putting them to extra expense and
delay. Accordingly, the court ordered monetary sanctions against
Ngo and his trial attorney in the amount of $8,000 as reimbursement
for the fees Lam incurred in opposing the motion.
The order also concluded that the motion was untimely under
subdivision (f) of section 425.16. That subdivision states: "The
special motion may be filed within 60 days of the service of
the complaint or, in the court' s discretion, at any later time
upon terms it deems proper. The motion shall be noticed for hearing
not more than 30 days after service unless the docket conditions
of the court require a later hearing." Lam timely appealed
from the order.[FOOTNOTE 4]
III. DISCUSSION
A. Timeliness of Anti-SLAPP Suit Motions
1. Original Complaint Only? The Statute Includes
Amended Complaints Also
Clearly, the 60-day time period set forth in subdivision (f)
of section 425.16 is not jurisdictional. The trial court has
the legal authority to allow the filing of an anti-SLAPP suit
motion to strike "at any later time [after "60 days
of the service of the complaint" ] upon terms it deems proper."
The nonjurisdictional nature of the time limit is also emphasized
by the permissive "may" in the setting forth of the
time limit ("The special motion may be filed" ).
But while the time period is not jurisdictional, the provision
specifying that the court may allow later filings of the
motion still has consequences. There is no right to file
an anti-SLAPP suit motion beyond the deadline. It can then only
be "filed" "in the court' s discretion."
The parallel structure of the first operative sentence is
also somewhat revealing, in that the verb "may be filed"
applies both to what the defendant does as well as what the court
does. Strictly speaking, of course, merely allowing a later filing
at the trial court' s discretion is somewhat meaningless, because
if the trial court were not disposed to hear the motion on the
merits, it could (as was the case before us) simply deny the
motion as untimely, even though the moving papers had a clerk'
s file stamp on them. The inference is that the trial court retains
the discretion to consider the merits of a special motion to
strike filed beyond the 60-day deadline, but also retains the
discretion to refuse to hear any such motion on the merits. On
the other hand, the statutory language certainly implies that
the trial court must consider a special anti-SLAPP suit
motion on the merits if it is filed within the 60-day deadline.
The first question we must answer, then, is whether the words
"the complaint" in subdivision (f) may include amended
complaints, or necessarily are restricted to just the original.
We conclude that the words include amended complaints.
Primarily, the purpose of the anti-SLAPP suit law would be
readily circumventable if a defendant' s only opportunity to
strike meritless "SLAPP" claims were in an attack on
the original complaint. Causes of action subject to a special
motion to strike could be held back from an original complaint,
particularly in situations where, as in the case before us, there
are strong equities in favor of granting a preliminary injunction
against an anonymous group of protesters, but the imposition
of tort liability against a specific individual is problematical.
In context, the "special" anti-SLAPP suit motion
is directed at a particular document, namely "the complaint."
It would make no sense to read "complaint" to refer
to an earlier complaint that contained no anti-free speech claims,
but not allow such a motion for a later complaint that had been
amended to contain some. After all, the whole purpose of the
statute is to provide a mechanism for the early termination
of claims that are improperly aimed at the exercise of free speech
or the right of petition. (See Paul for Council v. Hanyecz,
supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at p. 1364 ["the anti-SLAPP legislation
found in section 425.16 provides an efficient means of dispatching,
early on in a lawsuit, a plaintiff' s meritless claims"
].)
Secondarily, of course, to the degree there is any ambiguity
in the statute that ambiguity should be resolved in favor of
a hearing on the merits. A federal district court construing
California law first articulated this point in Globetrotter
Software, Inc. v. Elan Computer Group, Inc., supra, 63 F.Supp.2d
at page 1129, pointing to the statutory directive in subdivision
(a) of section 425.16 that the statute is to be "' construed
broadly.' " There is no reason to doubt the soundness of
the Globetrotter Software court' s conclusion, which in
any event is self-evident.[FOOTNOTE 5]
Finally, in DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical Co. v. Superior
Court, supra (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th at page 565, our Supreme Court
directed an appellate court to reconsider, in light of Briggs
v. Eden Council for Hope and Opportunity (1999) 19 Cal.4th
1106, the summary denial of a petition for a writ of mandate
seeking to compel the trial court to grant a special motion to
strike. The summary denial had been based on the fact that the
special motion was untimely because the 60 days began running
from the original, as distinct from the amended, complaint. The
appellate court took the direction and the reference to Briggs,
a case dealing with when defamatory statements made in the course
of authorized official proceedings are protected, as a signal
from the Supreme Court to consider the petition on the merits.
The inference from DuPont is that our Supreme Court saw
nothing wrong in considering an anti-SLAPP suit motion directed
against an amended complaint, even though more than 60 days had
elapsed since the service of the original complaint.
2. An Extra Five Days If the Relevant Complaint Is
Mailed? Yes
Ngo' s motion was filed 64 days after the amended complaint.
This fact raises the additional question of whether the moving
party on an anti-SLAPP suit motion gets an extra five days for
mailing.
The answer is yes, when, as here, the complaint at which the
special motion to strike is directed has itself been mailed.
Section 1013, subdivision (a) provides in part: "[A]ny right
or duty to do any act or make any response within any period
or on a date certain after the service of the document, which
time period or date is prescribed by statute or rule of court,
shall be extended five days, upon service by mail, if the place
of address is within the State of California . . . ." The
plain terms of the statute would thus add five days for Ngo'
s "right" to file a special motion to strike to "respond"
to the amended complaint.
Certain language in section 1005, subdivision (b) should not
be read to the contrary. (The language is: "Section 1013,
which extends the time within which a right may be exercised
or an act may be done, does not apply to a notice of motion,
papers opposing a motion, or reply papers governed by this section."
) The key words are "governed by this section." The
context of the "section" is the series of minimum specifications
for the time period between the filing of a motion and the time
it is heard. (The first sentence starts the theme: "Unless
otherwise ordered or specifically provided by law, all moving
an supporting papers shall be served and filed at least 21 calendar
days before the hearing.) The focus of section 1005 is minimum
notice of one' s papers before any hearing. The reference to
section 1013 in section 1005 is to prevent section 1013 from
reducing the period of minimum notice. It has no application
in a context where the deadline to bring a motion is the service
by mail of a complaint or amended complaint.
B. Does a Preliminary Injunction Have An Issue
Preclusive Effect on an Anti-SLAPP Motion? No
The trial court did not consider the merits of Ngo' s motion
because it viewed the motion as nothing more than a rerun of
the preliminary injunction question. But the standards bearing
on the two kinds of proceedings are different, so the special
motion to strike should have been evaluated on its own merits.
Collateral estoppel requires, among other things, that the issue
be the same.
In deciding whether to grant preliminary injunction, the trial
court not only assesses "the likelihood that the plaintiff
will prevail at trial," but "the interim harm that
the plaintiff will likely sustain if the injunction were denied."
(Pro-Family Advocates v. Gomez, supra, 46 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1680-1681.) Trial courts must balance the respective equities,
and in any event the decision is tested under an abuse of discretion
standard. (Id. at p. 1680.)
By contrast, in passing on anti-SLAPP suit motions, the trial
court faces a much more binary task, more akin to a summary judgment
motion: Has the plaintiff made a prima facie showing of facts
which, if proved at trial, support a favorable judgment? (Wilcox
v. Superior Court (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 809, 823.)
The present case illustrates how the plaintiff' s ability
to obtain a preliminary injunction cannot be equated with a "probability"
the plaintiff will prevail on the claim (the statutory standard
for anti-SLAPP suit motions, see § 425.16, subd. (b)). Here,
strong equities certainly favored the grant of a preliminary
injunction requiring the protesters to be at least some distance
from the Vien Dong restaurant. Those equities included at least
the dramatic drop in the restaurant' s business and the willingness
of the protesters to copy down the license plates of the restaurant'
s customers.
But by the same token it cannot be assumed that any of the
tort causes of action directed against Ngo personally would withstand
substantive scrutiny under section 425.16. (A topic we explore
in detail in the next section of this opinion.) An individual
organizer of a political protest is not necessarily liable for
acts of "' animal exuberance' " perpetrated by the
protesters. (NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, supra, 458 U.S.
at p. 924, quoting Milk Wagon Drivers v. Meadowmoor Dairies,
Inc. (1941) 312 U.S. 287, 293.) In Claiborne Hardware,
for example, the United States Supreme Court held that Charles
Evers and the NAACP could not be held liable in tort for business
losses incurred during a boycott of White merchants in Claiborne
County, Mississippi, even though some of those losses could undoubtedly
be attributed to a number of acts of violence directed at Black
individuals who did not participate in the boycott.[FOOTNOTE
6] The federal high court held that there was simply insufficient
evidence of their authorization of the wrongful conduct.
Additionally, a key difference between preliminary injunctions
and special motions to strike is the role of the individual cause
of action. A single cause of action can sustain a preliminary
injunction. (See California Medical Assn. v. Regents of
University of California (2000) 79 Cal.App.4th 542, 552.) By
contrast, an anti-SLAPP suit motion involves examination of each
of the causes of action attacked, because the purpose is to weed
out meritless "claims" at an early stage. (See Wilcox
v. Superior Court, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 823.) In the
context of this case, for example, the single cause of action
against the protesters as a group for nuisance might indeed be
meritorious. But the meritoriousness of that cause of action
couldn' t make valid a cause of action brought by a public figure
for intentional infliction of emotional distress claim based
on, say, being called a "communist."
In sum, the fact that a preliminary injunction was granted
did not prevent consideration of the merits of the anti-SLAPP
suit motion.
C. The Merits
1. No Connection of Ky Ngo to Any of the Wrongful or
Violent Activity Done by Some of the Protesters
As mentioned above, denials of anti-SLAPP suit motions are
reviewed de novo by appellate courts. (Paul for Council
v. Hanyecz (2001) 85 Cal.App.4th 1356, 1364; Damon v. Ocean
Hills Journalism Club (2000) 85 Cal.App.4th 468, 474; Foothills
Townhome Assn. v. Christiansen, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at
p. 695.) In reviewing the record de novo, the fact that Lam opposed
Ngo' s motion based solely on the evidence supporting the preliminary
injunction, and did not go out and try to link Ngo to any specific
violent act now takes special importance.
The basic two-prong framework for analyzing an anti-SLAPP
suit motion is well established. First prong: Has the defendant
shown that the causes of action he or she is attacking arise
from acts in furtherance of the right of free speech or petition?
(See DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical Co. v. Superior Court,
supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 567, citing § 425.16, subd.
(b)(1).) Here, there is no doubt that the protests directed at
a public figure (Lam) based on his stand concerning an issue
of public significance in his constituency (whether a local video
store should be displaying the flag of the North Vietnamese communists)
satisfies the first prong, and Lam makes no argument to the contrary.
The second prong focuses on the "probability" that
the plaintiff will prevail on the claim (DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical
Co. v. Superior Court, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 567), which
case law has refined into an inquiry as to whether the plaintiff
has made a "prima facie showing of facts" that, if
proved at trial, would support a judgment in the plaintiff' s
favor. (Wilcox v. Superior Court, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th
at p. 823.) Thus an important substantive aspect of the law is
that, once it has been shown a cause of action is based on the
defendant' s exercise of free speech or petition, it is the plaintiff
who has the burden of making a prima facie case of prevailing.
In regard to Ky Ngo personally, however, we cannot say that
the burden has at all been met. NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware
is quite clear that there must be some evidence of authorization,
direction, or ratification of "specific" constitutionally
unprotected tortious activity by the organizer of a protest before
the organizer can be held responsible for the consequences of
the activity. (NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, supra, 458
U.S. at p. 927.)
Lam may have had a good case against the protesters generally
for a preliminary injunction based on nuisance, but the evidence
against Ngo personally is very thin indeed. A Garden Grove Police
Department lieutenant declared that on the first day of the protest,
March 12, 1999, "A gentleman approached me and identified
himself as Ky Ngo and said he was an organizer of the protest,
which again, is directed at Mr. Lam. Mr. Ngo assured me that
he wanted a peaceful demonstration and that the protesters would
limit their activities to the public sidewalk in front"
of the restaurant. Lam produced several declarations to the effect
that on April 4, Ngo had "instructed" the protesters
not to take a copy of the TRO when one of Lam' s daughters attempted
to serve them with it. (Ngo controverted this allegation with
his own set of declarations denying he had ever said any such
thing, and in fact claimed to have posted the TRO himself on
a fence for his fellow protesters to see.) Those declarations
also asserted that just before Ngo made the "don' t take
it" statement, Ngo went 20 feet inside the then-50 feet
buffer zone and screamed at one of Lam' s process servers "you
cannot stop them, they are just citizen [sic] with flags."
On April 5, Ngo apparently also violated the buffer zone, was
confronted by Lam' s daughter, walked back, made some rude gestures
toward Ms. Lam, took some pictures of her, and then "screamed
in Vietnamese the equivalent of, ' I will send these pictures
to Playboy magazine.' "
And that, unless we have missed some reference to Ngo in this
record or otherwise blinked, is pretty much it so far as the
evidence of Ngo' s personal involvement in the protests. None
of the declarations delineating the clearly wrongful acts involved
in the early days of the protests -- such as the slashed tires,
the posting of banners on the restaurant, the urination on it,
or even the direct intimidation of any of the customers in the
parking lot -- show that such acts were authorized, directed
or ratified by Ngo.[FOOTNOTE 7]
There was, in fact, far more in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware,
to link Charles Evers, the field secretary of the state NAACP,
to the sporadic acts of violence in that case. Evers organized
the boycott, made "emotional and persuasive appeals for
unity in the joint effort," and even made "' threats'
of vilification and social ostracism." (NAACP v. Claiborne
Hardware, supra, 458 U.S. at p. 926.) Even so, Evers' conduct
was "constitutionally protected and beyond the reach of
a damages award." (Ibid.) In the case before us,
as in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, tort liability cannot
be predicated merely on Ngo' s role as an "organizer"
of protests in which some protesters committed wrongful acts.
Ngo didn' t even make a "persuasive speech." The record
lacks any "threat" of vilification or social ostracism.
The worst that can be said about his actual conduct is that
he violated the extended 50-foot buffer zone a few times, "instructed"
his fellow protesters not to take copies of the TRO, and taunted
Lam' s daughter. While Ngo' s violation of the restraining order
on those occasions may indeed have subjected him to contempt
of court (perhaps the same may be said of his "instruction"
not to take the TRO), any effect on Lam or the Vien Dong restaurant
from those nonviolent incursions was de minimis in terms of the
tort causes of action alleged against him in the first amended
complaint.
2. No Tort Liability Against Ngo Ky or Any Other
Protester for the Peaceful Speech Connected to the
Protest
a. Intentional Interference With Prospective Economic
Advantage
The next question is whether the fact of the protests, or
the statements made in connection with them, can support tort
liability -- in particular based on causes of action for interference
with prospective economic advantage or intentional infliction
of emotional distress. In this regard it must be remembered that
there is no dispute that Tony Lam, as a local politician, is
a public figure.[FOOTNOTE 8]
We must begin by distinguishing labor law disputes from public
protests which are political in nature. There is a well established
line of federal Supreme Court cases centered on Carpenter'
s Union v. Ritter' s Cafe (1942) 315 U.S. 722, which establish
that at least the picketing of noncombatants in a labor dispute
can be prohibited by state law. In Ritter' s Cafe, union
members picketed a cafe that was owned by a man who was employing
nonunion labor on a construction site a mile and a half away.
The United States Supreme Court held that state law could constitutionally
ban picketing at the cafe, because the picketing there amounted
to the "conscription of neutrals" in a dispute that
otherwise did not affect them. (See id. at p. 728.) Then
again, substantive California law would appear to be more solicitous
of free speech when the "neutral" being picketed in
a labor dispute is the business of a public official. (See Pittsburg
Unified School Dist. v. California School Employees Assn.
(1985) 166 Cal.App.3d 875, 893-894 [teachers' union members had
constitutional right to pass out leaflets on the public sidewalk
in front of the businesses of school board members].)
The labor cases are, in any event, of only limited use in
the case before us. NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware specifically
confronted the labor union cases, but said they were explained
by the "broad power" of the states "to regulate
economic activity," a right which was not comparable
to the "right to prohibit peaceful political activity"
such as the boycott in that case against the White merchants.
(NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., supra, 458 U.S. at pp.
912-913.) Our conclusion in this regard is reinforced by our
own high court' s decision in Environmental Planning &
Information Council v. Superior Court (1984) 36 Cal.3d 188,
which involved an organized effort by an environmental group
who published a newsletter to boycott the advertisers of a newspaper
that was perceived by the group as too pro-developer. The Environmental
Planning & Information Council court specifically referenced
the Claiborne Hardware distinction between "solely
economic boycott activity" and "peaceful political
activity," and concluded that the trial court should have
granted a summary judgment on a complaint predicated on a cause
of action for intentional inference with prospective economic
advantage. (See Environmental Planning & Information Council,
supra, 36 Cal.3d at pp. 193, 196, 198.)
For our purposes there is no basis on which to distinguish
the White merchants who were boycotted by Black customers in
NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware and the Vien Dong restaurant
here. Indeed, the connection between the political purpose of
the picketing here and the target is, if anything, closer than
in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, where the only reason
for boycotting was the color of the owner' s skin. Here, at least,
the restaurant is owned by a political figure. If liability for
interference with prospective economic advantage could not constitutionally
be imposed in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware (or Environmental
Planning & Information Council for that matter) it cannot
constitutionally be imposed here.
b. Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Almost all the cases involving public figures suing for intentional
infliction of emotional distress involve publications, and are
thus typically governed by the principles set forth in Hustler
Magazine v. Falwell (1988) 485 U.S. 46. The rule is: A public
figure "may not recover for the tort of intentional infliction
of emotional distress . . . without showing . . . that the publication
contains a false statement of fact . . . ." (Id. at p.
56.)
While the Hustler case involved a magazine parody,
there can be no doubt that its basic framework must apply to
picket signs and effigies as well. In the context of peaceful
picketing in a place where the picketer has a right to be, there
is no meaningful difference in terms of the medium between words
on a picket sign and, as in Falwell, a fake ad in a magazine.
The same may be said for effigies, which are surely at least
as protected a form of political communication as flag burning.
(See United States v. Eichman (1990) 496 U.S. 310; Texas
v. Johnson (1989) 491 U. S. 397.)
The federal high court' s subsequent opinion in Milkovich
v. Lorain Journal Co. (1990) 497 U.S. 1, has refined the Falwell
court' s requirement of "false statement of fact,"
at least in the defamation context. While there is not "an
additional separate constitutional privilege for ' opinion' "
(Milkovich, supra, 497 U.S. at p. 21), statements "that
cannot ' reasonably [be] interpreted as stating actual facts'
about an individual" are still constitutionally protected.
(Id. at p. 20.) Thus the Milkovich court made clear that
"' rhetorical hyperbole' " (id. at p. 20) or
"loose, figurative, or hyperbolic language" which would
"negate the impression that the writer was seriously maintaining"
a proposition that was "sufficiently factual to be susceptible
of being proved true or false" is protected. (Id.
at p. 21.)
The content of the signs and effigies in this case was that
Lam was a communist sympathizer, and -- as rather grossly expressed
in the effigies -- the ideological lackey of Ho Chi Minh. That
these sentiments would appear to be grossly unfair to Lam --
himself an immigrant who risked his life to escape from a Communist
country -- is beside the point. The dispositive question is whether
they constituted protected rhetorical hyperbole or loose language.
On that point the answer must be yes. In context, the protesters
were making a political point as to what they thought of Lam'
s stand on the video store controversy.
Charges of communism are part of the heat of the political
kitchen.[FOOTNOTE 9] (See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan
(1964) 376 U.S. 254, 273, fn. 14 [observing that political figures
often must face charges of "communist sympathies" ];
Milkovitch, supra, 497 U.S. at p. 20 [hypothetically observing
that the statement, "In my opinion Mayor Jones shows his
abysmal ignorance by accepting the teachings of Marx and Lenin"
would not be actionable]; Nat. Ass' n, etc. v. Central
Broadcasting (Mass. 1979) 396 N.E.2d 996, 1002 [charge of communism
against union on talk show was "most likely taken by the
audience as mere pejorative rhetoric" ]; see also Rosenaur
v. Scherer (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 260, 280 [use of words "thief"
and "liar" in heated oral exchange at shopping center
in the midst of "hard-fought initiative contest" held
protected as loose, figurative or hyberbolic language]; Beilenson
v. Superior Court (1996) 44 Cal.App.4th 944, 951 [political
mailer charging state official with having "ripped off"
taxpayers because he had an outside job was, in context, protected
as "rhetorical hyperbole that is common in political debate"
].)[FOOTNOTE 10] As Justice Kline wrote in the Pittsburg Unified
School Dist. case, "Public office is no place for the
thin-skinned." (Pittsburg Unified School Dist. v. California
School Employees Assn., supra, 166 Cal.App.3d at p. 899.)
The protesters were not accusing Lam, like Chambers vis-....
-vis Hiss, of being an actual member of a secret Communist cell.
(See Nat. Ass' n, etc. v. Central Broadcasting, supra,
396 N.E.2d at p. 1002 [there is a difference between charging
a person with "communism" and "charging him specifically
with being ' a member of the Communist Party' " ].) In context,
their statements were not susceptible to verification using a
falsifiability test.[FOOTNOTE 11]
It is true, as Lam' s brief reminds us, that the word "Communist"
has some real sting in the Vietnamese community in Orange County,
California. That community, after all, consists of many people
who have actually lived under a Communist regime. Then again,
such folks are in a better position to appreciate First Amendment
freedoms than some of us who have not lived in a totalitarian
country.
3. The Conduct of the Doe Defendants Who
Participated in the Violence Is Not Protected
As in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, the present case
involves discrete "elements of criminality," and certainly
tortious conduct unprotected by the First Amendment. (See NAACP
v. Claiborne Hardware, supra, 458 U.S. at p. 888.) Justice
Stevens there noted, the "First Amendment does not protect
violence" (id. at p. 916) and the present case --
particularly events in the first week of the protests -- certainly
involved acts of violence, not political theater. Some protesters,
presently anonymous, accosted patrons of the Vien Dong, slashed
the tires of cars, plastered posters on the outside of the restaurant,
and urinated on it. All clearly unprotected acts. Our conclusion
that the record contains no support for a prima facie case that
Ky Ngo, as an individual, authorized, directed or ratified these
acts does not mean that someone isn' t liable for them.[FOOTNOTE
12] On remand, Lam should have the opportunity to substitute
for existing Does any individuals who participated in the violent
acts involved in this case, or any as yet unnamed organizer who
can be shown to have authorized, directed or ratified those acts.
IV. CONCLUSION
We reverse the order denying the anti-SLAPP suit motion as
it applies to Ky Ngo.[FOOTNOTE 13] However, Tony Lam and the
other plaintiffs have shown that other, anonymous, protesters
did engage in violent acts for which there is no First Amendment
protection. We therefore affirm the order to the extent it contemplates
causes of actions against any Doe defendants based on violent
acts. On remand Lam and the other plaintiffs should be given
ample opportunity to substitute for current Doe defendants any
specific individuals who were actually involved in the wrongful
acts which we have identified in this opinion.
In the interests of justice, both sides will bear their costs
on appeal.
SILLS, P.J.
WE CONCUR: RYLAARSDAM, J., and O' LEARY, J.
August 23, 2001 CALIFORNIA
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S) :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN1. SLAPP stands for "Strategic Lawsuit Against
Public Participation," and basically refers to suits directed
at some exercise of a person' s right of free speech or petition.
All statutory references in this opinion are to the Code of Civil
Procedure.
FN2. The landlord is not a party to this appeal, which
involves only Ky Ngo' s anti-SLAPP suit motion.
FN3. The injunction required the protesters to stay
900 feet away from the restaurant. Much of Ngo' s opening brief
is devoted to attacking the 900 foot distance, and intuitively
it would appear that his position on the point might have some
merit. (See Planned Parenthood Assn. v. Operation Rescue
(1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 290, 302 [250-foot buffer zone around apartment
where physician who performed abortions at a local clinic was
too restrictive]. However, Ngo never perfected an appeal from
the preliminary injunction, so we do not address the merits of
the preliminary injunction, except to point out that a different
set of legal standards applied.
FN4. So solicitous is California law of free speech
that orders on SLAPP-suit motions under section 425.16 are immediately
appealable. (See § 425.16, subd. (j).) Compare that with
denials of summary judgment motions, where a litigant
may only file a writ petition if he or she wants an immediate
review of a possibly erroneous trial court ruling denying the
motion. (See § 437c, subd. (l).)
FN5. There are no less than three ironies in the fact
that Ngo was sanctioned because, as the trial court' s order
recited, he "cited and relied upon an unpublished federal
district court opinion in violation of California Rule of Court
977 and decisional authority."
The first irony is that by October 1999, rule 977 of the California
Rules of Court had been amended to allow citation or reliance
on unpublished opinions, as long as they weren' t California
state court opinions. So the basis of the court' s order sanctioning
Ngo was based on out-of-date law.
The second irony is that the Globetrotter Software
opinion eventually made its way into the Federal Supplement Second,
so it wasn' t "unpublished" after all, though it had
existed only in cyberspace at the time of the hearing on the
preliminary injunction.
The third irony is that the "decisional authority"
that Ngo supposedly violated began with footnote 34 in the opinion
of this court in ACL Technologies, Inc. v. Northbrook Property
& Casualty Ins. Co. (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 1773, 1783.
There we observed that a California court need not consider federal
and out-of-state opinions that had not been published. The change
in rule 977 in 1997 was clearly aimed at that footnote. The irony
here is that footnote 34 was written to relieve courts
and counsel from having to worry about the continuously growing
legions of unpublished cases, not to add another trap
for the unwary practitioner.
We must also reiterate this truth: Unpublished decisions from
the federal and out-of-state courts were by definition never
intended for use as precedent. As Ninth Circuit Judges
Kozinski and Reinhardt have pointed out, unpublished decisions
usually do not get the kind of attention that published decisions
get. (See Kozinski and Reinhardt, Please Don' t Cite This!
Why We Don' t Allow Citation to Unpublished Dispositions,
June 2000 Cal. Law. at pp. 43-44 [contrasting care that must
go into opinions intended for use as precedent with work on unpublished
"memdispos" ].) Thus, even though a litigant can certainly
cite and rely on such decisions in state court under the amended
rule, California courts are well within their own power to view
such "precedent" as having little or no weight in and
of itself.
FN6. The incidents of violence were not unlike those
involved in the present case, except obviously more extensive,
as they covered a seven-year time period beginning in the 1960'
s. The NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware court noted these specific
incidents: Shots were fired at a house in two cases. Someone
threw a brick through a windshield. Tires were slashed. Someone
damaged a flower garden. One NAACP member took away a man' s
whisky bottle bought from a White merchant. Four men grabbed
and beat up a fisherman who failed to observe the boycott. (Id.
at pp. 904-906.) And there was an incident in which a "group
of young Blacks apparently pulled down the overalls of an elderly
brick mason known as ' Preacher White' and spanked him for not
observing the boycott." (Id. at p. 905.)
FN7. In the respondent' s brief Lam is forced to implicate
Ngo personally either by the use of generalities ("The Lams
submitted evidence that Ngo engaged in illegal conduct [the allusion
to the violation of the TRO], in Ms. Lam' s presence. The Lams
submitted declarations that Ngo' s conduct caused emotional distress
to Tony Lam and his family." ) or by imputing to Ngo the
acts of his "cohorts" ("Tony Lam submitted evidence
that Ngo' s cohorts [and then follows a list of the violent acts
we have mentioned]).
FN8. On the other hand, neither Lam' s wife nor his
restaurant are public figures, and they are plaintiffs as well.
However, the "speech" part of this case, i.e., the
picketing qua picketing and the effigies, were all directed
at Lam, not his restaurant. While, in the early days of the protest,
a number of anonymous protesters yelled "how does it feel
to eat shit," or words to that effect, at customers emerging
from the restaurant, this is not a case for trade libel. Our
opinion, however, should not be read to preclude claims based
by the restaurant on such remarks against the protesters, presently
unknown according to this record, who uttered them.
FN9. So are charges of fascism. (See Buckley v.
Littell (2d Cir. 1976) 539 F.2d 882, 890-895 [charge that
political commentator William F. Buckley, Jr., was "fellow
traveler of fascism" not actionable].)
FN10. Nothing in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc. (1974)
418 U.S. 323 is to the contrary, though in that case one of the
defamatory statements made in the magazine of the John Birch
Society was that the plaintiff was a "Leninist" and
a "Communist-fronter." (See id. at p. 326.)
Those statements were among a set of four which formed the basis
for the defamation action, and the other three (plaintiff had
a criminal record, plaintiff was a member of the National Lawyers
Guild which had organized the attack on Chicago police during
the 1968 Democratic convention, and plaintiff was a member of
the Marxist League for Industrial Democracy) were all clearly
statements of fact, subject to verification on a falsifiability
test. (The court merely observed that there was "no basis"
for these charges. (Ibid.)) The Gertz court never considered
whether the "Leninist" and "Communist-fronter"
statements were not susceptible to verification, because the
case reached the high court on the issue of whether the New
York Times standard for a public figure applied in cases
where private figures were involved in public controversies.
FN11. The falsifiability test underlies the Milkovich
case, with its emphasis on whether there has been a "false
assertion of fact." (See Milkovich, supra, 497 U.S.
at p. 19.) The test provides the breathing space for polemicists
to go inveighing while still not protecting actual false statements
of fact just because they are preceeded by the words, "in
my opinion" or "I think." (See ibid.) An
excellent example of the distinction may be found in Buckley
v. Littell, supra, 539 F.2d 882. A statement in a book that
the plaintiff was a fellow traveler of fascism was not actionable
because those terms were loaded with "tremendous imprecision."
(See id. at p. 893.) But the same book also said that
"Buckley could be taken to court by any one of several people
who had enough money to hire competent legal counsel" indicating
that he had "implicitly libeled several people." (Id.
at p. 895.) That, said the Second Circuit, was "an assertion
of fact" as distinct from "loosely definable, variously
interpretable statements of opinion" (id. at p. 895)
and could even justify a punitive damage award, albeit a small
one under the facts of that case. (See id. at p. 897.)
FN12. Because this case comes to us in an appeal from
an anti-SLAPP suit motion, we confine our determination regarding
the viability of Lam' s causes of action against the Does to
the question of whether the Does enjoyed First Amendment protection
for their acts. (Answer, with regard to the violent acts: no.)
We do not address the substantive merits of each cause of action
apart from the question of First Amendment protection. An anti-SLAPP
suit motion is not a substitute for a demurrer or summary judgment
motion.
FN13. The good news for Lam and the other plaintiffs
is that Ky Ngo' s opening brief did not address the sanction
order in the slightest, and he has filed no reply brief, so any
argument that the sanction order was in error has been waived.
The sanction order is therefore not affected by our decision
today. While such a result is anomalous, it would be unfair to
Lam under these circumstances to conclude anything else.
The bad news for the plaintiffs is that their motion to have
Ky Ngo and his counsel sanctioned for a frivolous appeal obviously,
in light of our disposition, has no merit and is hereby denied.
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