ARAM BONNI, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. ST. JOSEPH HEALTH SYSTEM et al., Defendants and Respondents.
S244148
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
July 29, 2021
Fourth Appellate District, Division Three G052367 Orange County Superior Court 30-2014-00758655
Justice Kruger authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye and Justices Corrigan, Liu, Cuellar, Groban, and Jenkins concurred.
Justice Groban filed a concurring opinion.
Opinion of the Court by Kruger, J.
Under California law, hospitals must use a process of professional peer review to evaluate physicians’ qualifications for medical staff privileges. (See
We have previously held that the anti-SLAPP statute‘s protections extend to speech and petitioning in connection with hospital peer review. (See Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 192.) This case requires us to consider the scope and limits of those protections. Plaintiff, a physician, alleges the defendant hospitals and members of its medical staff unlawfully retaliated against him for raising concerns about patient care. He says this retaliation began with the suspension of his staff privileges and culminated in the termination of those privileges after peer review. The hospitals seek to strike the retaliation claims under the anti-SLAPP statute. They contend that any claim arising from the peer review process necessarily targets protected speech or petitioning activity and therefore must be afforded anti-SLAPP protection. We hold otherwise. While some of the forms of retaliation alleged in the complaint - including statements made during and in connection with peer review proceedings and disciplinary reports filed with official bodies - do qualify as protected activity, the discipline imposed through the peer review process does not. Thus, while the hospitals may seek to strike some of the physician‘s retaliation claims, they are not entitled to wholesale dismissal of these claims under the anti-SLAPP law.
I.
A.
Aram Bonni, M.D., is a surgeon specializing in obstetrics and gynecology who began practicing in 1998. He received staff privileges at defendant Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center (Mission) in 2002 and at an affiliated hospital, defendant St. Joseph Hospital of Orange (St. Joseph), in 2010. Bonni would face peer review proceedings at both hospitals, which
The proceedings at St. Joseph‘s began not long after Bonni received staff privileges in 2010. That same year, Bonni performed a surgery proctored and assisted by the hospital‘s chief of obstetrics and gynecology, one of the named defendants. Like several of Bonni‘s surgeries, the surgery involved use of a robotic assistant to supply three-dimensional imaging and cut and cauterize tissue. On this occasion, the robot‘s camera provided only two-dimensional imaging instead of three, and Bonni complained to the assisting doctor about the malfunction. The surgery resulted in patient complications. Over the next few weeks, Bonni performed two more surgeries in which similar problems occurred. Again the patients suffered complications; again Bonni raised concerns about the performance of the robotic assistant.
After the third surgery, Bonni was advised that St. Joseph was summarily suspending his staff privileges. The subsequent written notice from St. Joseph‘s chief of staff - one of the defendants here - asserted that in light of “serious and avoidable injuries to patients” in the three cases, suspension was necessary to avoid “imminent danger” to St. Joseph‘s patients. (See
As permitted by the hospital staff bylaws, Bonni sought an informal interview with the hospital‘s medical executive committee. After the interview, the medical executive committee elected to continue the suspension and recommended termination of Bonni‘s privileges. Based on the length of the suspension, St. Joseph was required to, and did, report its disciplinary action to the Medical Board of California and the National Practitioner Data Bank. (See
Bonni challenged the suspension and termination recommendation and requested a formal hearing before a hospital hearing committee composed of members of the hospital staff. After a lengthy series of evidentiary hearings, the hearing committee determined that the medical executive committee had sustained its burden on three of 18 charges against Bonni but had not shown by a preponderance of the evidence that either the summary suspension or the termination recommendation was warranted.
The medical executive committee requested an administrative appeal, whereupon the parties settled. The committee dropped its appeal, Bonni agreed to resign and release the hospital and its staff from any claims, and the parties agreed on the language to be used in the required further reports to the Medical Board of California and National Practitioner Data Bank concerning the disciplinary measures taken against Bonni. (See
In the wake of that surgery, Mission initiated review of Bonni‘s performance over the preceding five years. After an investigation, a peer review committee recommended that Bonni‘s privileges be suspended pending further training in robotic procedures, and Mission‘s chief of staff, a defendant here, imposed a summary suspension.
While the suspension was under review, Bonni provided Mission‘s medical executive committee previous communications about robotic-surgery issues. Apparently unmoved, the committee voted to continue the suspension until Bonni completed additional training. As with the St. Joseph suspension, the length of the suspension triggered a duty to file reports with the Medical Board of California and the National Practitioner Data Bank.
At the same time, Bonni‘s privileges were set to lapse, and he submitted an application for reappointment. (See
Bonni invoked his right to a hearing before Mission‘s judicial review committee, a panel of five doctors. The judicial review committee considered the reasonableness of Bonni‘s suspension but did not directly address his reappointment. In support of suspension, Mission‘s medical executive committee submitted approximately 125 charges arising from 19 cases at Mission and, on the ground that they likewise demonstrated lapses in skill or judgment, the three problematic 2010 surgeries at its affiliated hospital, St. Joseph. After considering extensive testimony, the committee unanimously concluded that the original summary suspension was justified, but by a divided vote concluded continuation of the suspension was no longer warranted. The committee found eight of the 125 charges substantiated. The eight sustained charges related principally to documentation and surgery scheduling issues; according to the final report, “none resulted in poor patient outcomes related to issues raised in these charges.”
Both sides appealed to Mission‘s appellate committee. The appellate committee concluded that the initial suspension was warranted at the time; that whether continuation of the suspension was still warranted was a matter outside the jurisdiction of the judicial review committee and appellate
B.
Bonni sued St. Joseph, Mission, various affiliated entities, and eight individual doctors involved in the disciplinary process (collectively the Hospitals). Bonni‘s first cause of action alleged that the Hospitals unlawfully retaliated against him for raising patient safety concerns by summarily suspending him, reporting his suspensions to the state medical board, subjecting him to lengthy and humiliating peer review proceedings, defaming him, and ultimately terminating his hospital privileges. (See
The Hospitals filed an anti-SLAPP motion seeking to strike the retaliation cause of action. (See Code Civ. Proc.,
The trial court granted the Hospitals’ motion. As a threshold matter, the trial court agreed with the Hospitals that “[t]he gravamen of the claim is based on defendants’ protected peer review activities,” so the anti-SLAPP
The Court of Appeal reversed. (Bonni v. St. Joseph Health System (2017) 13 Cal.App.5th 851 (Bonni).) It concluded that the Hospitals’ “alleged retaliatory motive in suspending plaintiff‘s staff privileges and subjecting him to a lengthy and allegedly abusive peer review proceeding is the basis on which liability is asserted.” (Id. at p. 864.) The court reasoned that the anti-SLAPP statute does not protect actions taken with a retaliatory motive, and so the trial court erred in granting the Hospitals’ special motion to strike. (Ibid.)
We granted review and held this case pending resolution of Wilson v. Cable News Network, Inc. (2019) 7 Cal.5th 871 (Wilson), which addressed the role that an allegation of illicit motive plays in determining whether retaliation and discrimination claims arise from protected activity for anti-SLAPP purposes. We explained in Wilson that allegations of retaliatory or discriminatory motive do not categorically remove retaliation and discrimination claims from the ambit of an anti-SLAPP motion. Such claims, we said, are “necessarily also based on the [defendant‘s] alleged acts - that is, the various outward ‘manifestations’ of the [defendant‘s] alleged wrongful intent.” (Id. at pp. 886–887.) Notwithstanding assertions of an illicit motive, “[i]f the acts alleged in support of the plaintiff‘s claim are of the sort protected by the anti-SLAPP statute, then anti-SLAPP protections apply.” (Id. at p. 887.) We disapproved the Bonni court‘s contrary conclusion. (Id. at p. 892.)
But Wilson only partially resolved the issues in this case. It did not answer the question whether, setting aside Bonni‘s allegations that the Hospitals’ various disciplinary actions were all motivated by a desire to retaliate against Bonni for his whistleblowing activities, those underlying actions were “of the sort protected by the anti-SLAPP statute.” (Wilson, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 887.) Because the application of the anti-SLAPP statute to similar claims has generated confusion in California‘s courts, we retained the case for review and directed the parties to brief the question.
II.
The anti-SLAPP statute is “designed to protect defendants from meritless lawsuits that might chill the exercise of their rights to speak and
Litigation of an anti-SLAPP motion involves a two-step process. First, “the moving defendant bears the burden of establishing that the challenged allegations or claims ‘aris[e] from’ protected activity in which the defendant has engaged.” (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1061.) Second, for each claim that does arise from protected activity, the plaintiff must show the claim has “‘at least minimal merit.‘” (Ibid.) If the plaintiff cannot make this showing, the court will strike the claim.
The issue before us concerns the first step of this process, determining whether the plaintiffs claims arise from protected activity. At this first step, courts are to “consider the elements of the challenged claim and what actions by the defendant supply those elements and consequently form the basis for liability.” (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1063.) The defendant‘s burden is to identify what acts each challenged claim rests on and to show how those acts are protected under a statutorily defined category of protected activity. (Wilson, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 884.)
The anti-SLAPP statute identifies four categories of protected activity. (
Although the parties agree on these settled principles, they disagree on one critical threshold question about the mechanics of anti-SLAPP review. The Hospitals’ anti-SLAPP motion seeks to strike Bonni‘s retaliation cause of action in its entirety. But that singular cause of action alleges multiple factual bases; the operative complaint contains a nonexhaustive list of at least 19 distinct acts or courses of conduct allegedly undertaken in retaliation for Bonni‘s complaints of unsafe conditions. Bonni urges that when, as here, a motion has been filed to strike an entire cause of action, a court should not
In Baral, we addressed how a court should proceed when a plaintiff has pleaded what is sometimes loosely referred to as a “mixed cause of action” - that is, a cause of action that rests on allegations of multiple acts, some of which constitute protected activity and some of which do not. (Baral, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 382.) We considered and disapproved a line of cases that had held an anti-SLAPP “motion lies only to strike an entire count as pleaded in the complaint.” (Ibid.) Such a rule would allow a plaintiff, through artful pleading, to shield particular allegations of protected activity, themselves sufficient to give rise to a claim for relief, from a motion to strike by intermingling them with unprotected acts. (Id. at pp. 387-388, 392-393.) Analysis of an anti-SLAPP motion is not confined to evaluating whether an entire cause of action, as pleaded by the plaintiff, arises from protected activity or has merit. Instead, courts should analyze each claim for relief - each act or set of acts supplying a basis for relief, of which there may be several in a single pleaded cause of action - to determine whether the acts are protected and, if so, whether the claim they give rise to has the requisite degree of merit to survive the motion. (Id. at pp. 393-395.)
Baral was a second-step anti-SLAPP case, but our instructions for how to handle so-called mixed causes of action began with the first step. At that stage, we said, the moving defendant must identify the acts alleged in the complaint that it asserts are protected and what claims for relief are predicated on them. In turn, a court should examine whether those acts are protected and supply the basis for any claims. It does not matter that other unprotected acts may also have been alleged within what has been labeled a single cause of action; these are “disregarded at this stage.” (Baral, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 396.) So long as a “court determines that relief is sought based on allegations arising from activity protected by the statute, the second step is reached” with respect to these claims. (Ibid.)
Since Baral, most Courts of Appeal have taken a claim-by-claim approach to the anti-SLAPP analysis, rather than attempting to evaluate a cause of action as a whole. (See, e.g., Laker v. Board of Trustees of California State University (2019) 32 Cal.App.5th 745, 772 & fn. 19; Sheley v. Harrop (2017) 9 Cal.App.5th 1147, 1168–1170; see also, e.g., Okorie v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist. (2017) 14 Cal.App.5th 574, 601-602 (conc. & dis. opn. of
We reject the contention: Our holding in Baral applies even though the Hospitals sought to strike the entire cause of action, rather than merely parts of it. If we were instead to adopt Bonni‘s proposed gravamen approach, we would again risk saddling courts with an obligation to settle intractable, almost metaphysical problems about the “essence” of a cause of action that encompasses multiple claims. (Okorie v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist., supra, 14 Cal.App.5th at p. 587.) The attempt to reduce a multifaceted cause of action into a singular “essence” would predictably yield overinclusive and underinclusive results that would impair significant legislative policies. Striking a cause of action that rests in part on unprotected activity constrains a plaintiff‘s ability to seek relief without advancing the anti-SLAPP‘s goals of shielding protected activity, which would have been fully served by striking from the complaint only the allegations of protected activity. Conversely, refusing to strike any part of a cause of action that rests in part on protected activity defeats the legislative goal of protecting defendants from meritless claims based on such conduct. Plaintiffs do, of course, have considerable discretion in how to shape their pleadings, and as Okorie observed, there is nothing to stop them from “deliberately or innocently” pleading causes of action that “allege both protected and unprotected activity.” (Id. at p. 590.) But at the end of the day, we do not believe the Legislature in enacting the anti-SLAPP statute intended to make the protections of the anti-SLAPP law turn on a plaintiff‘s pleading choices. (Baral, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 393.)
Bonni suggests his gravamen approach is justified by waiver principles: if a moving party has not specified which subparts of a cause of action it seeks to strike, the nonmovant should not be put to the burden of parsing the cause of action in the moving party‘s stead. But this problem already has a solution under well-established anti-SLAPP law - namely, attention to the allocation of the applicable burden of proof. If a cause of action contains multiple claims and a moving party fails to identify how the speech or conduct underlying some of those claims is protected activity, it will not carry its first-step burden as to those claims. (See, e.g., post, at p. 34.) The nonmovant is not faced with the burden of having to make the moving party‘s case for it.
Here, too, we may consider whether Bonni‘s various allegations supply the elements of a retaliation claim or merely provide context. But to the extent Bonni has alleged various acts as a basis for relief and not merely as background, each act or set of acts must be analyzed separately under the usual two-step anti-SLAPP framework. The Hospitals bear the burden of showing that each allegation supporting Bonni‘s claim of recovery is one that rests on protected activity. If the Hospitals carry that burden, Bonni will then need to demonstrate some merit to his claim that those protected acts were taken for impermissible retaliatory reasons; if he cannot, those particular allegations will be stricken. Conversely, to the extent any acts are unprotected, the claims based on those acts will survive.2
III.
We first addressed the application of the anti-SLAPP statute to claims arising from peer review in Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th 192. The question in Kibler was whether medical peer review proceedings fall within the compass of
As we explained in Kibler, medical peer review is the process by which a hospital‘s medical staff evaluates fellow physicians’ professional
Peer review is primarily designed to ensure the maintenance of high professional standards and the protection of patient welfare. (
In Kibler, we relied on these features of peer review in concluding that peer review proceedings are “official proceeding[s]” within the meaning of
In the wake of Kibler, some courts - including the trial court in this case - understood the decision to mean that the anti-SLAPP statute applies to any claim arising from hospital peer review proceedings. But our holding in Kibler was significantly more limited, as we later explained in Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th 1057. The question in Park was whether the anti-SLAPP statute protects decisions made in the course of an official proceeding - there, review of the tenure of a professor at a public university. We answered no. We explained that the anti-SLAPP statute protects speech and petitioning activity taken in connection with an official proceeding, but not necessarily the decisions made or actions taken as a result of those proceedings. Under the statute, “a claim is not subject to a motion to strike simply because it contests an action or decision that was arrived at following speech or petitioning activity, or that was thereafter communicated by means of speech or petitioning activity. Rather, a claim may be struck only if the speech or petitioning activity itself is the wrong complained of, and not just evidence of liability or a step leading to some different act for which liability is asserted.” (Id. at p. 1060.) We rejected the university‘s argument based on Kibler, explaining that while Kibler had established that peer review proceedings are official proceedings within the meaning of
In short, Kibler established no more than that the anti-SLAPP statute is potentially applicable in cases arising from hospital peer review; it did not address the scope of the statute‘s protections in such cases. We now turn to that question as it is presented here, taking care to differentiate between claims based on protected speech and petitioning activity in connection with peer review proceedings and the disciplinary actions that result. (See Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1060.)
IV.
A.
Again, a claim is subject to an anti-SLAPP motion to strike if its elements arise from protected activity. (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1063.) Courts deciding an anti-SLAPP motion thus must consider the claim‘s elements, the actions alleged to establish those elements, and whether those actions are protected. (Ibid.)
Bonni‘s retaliation claims rest primarily on
System, St. Joseph Hospital of Orange and Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center;
“(2) Unilaterally taking retaliatory action against Plaintiff without affording him due process, a hearing, an investigation, or any other meaningful opportunity or procedural protection for Plaintiff to address the summary suspensions before they were issued;
“(3) Reporting Plaintiff‘s summary suspensions to the Medical Board of California and National [Practitioner] Data Bank, as well as other persons/entities;
“(4) Abusing the powers of the peer review process and subjecting Plaintiff to a lengthy and humiliating peer review process for over two years, and by refusing to lift Plaintiff‘s summary suspension despite recommendations by several separate boards/committees to do so, challenging the favorable findings of the Judicial Review Committee (JRC) at a hearing which occurred in or around October 2014;
“(5) On December 5, 2014, by having an Appellate Committee recommend to the Board that it reverse the findings of the JRC that had been favorable to Plaintiff;
“(6) On December 18, 2014 by the Board of Trustees adopting the recommendations of the Appellate Committee without any consideration of the favorable findings of the JRC;
“(7) Ongoing hostility in the work environment;
“(8) Obstructing other economic and career opportunities for Plaintiff;
“(9) Failing to protect Plaintiff from retaliation for whistleblowers and adverse actions;
“(10) Intolerable working conditions;
“(11) Engaging in a campaign of character assassination which caused irreparable damage to Plaintiff‘s reputation;
“(12) Depriving Plaintiff of his property right and interest to use
certain hospital facilities and privileges;
the conduct underlying two additional causes of action brought against St. Joseph alone — fraudulently inducing Bonni to enter the settlement agreement, exercising undue influence to force him to sign it, and then breaching that agreement — was also retaliatory. These alleged actions supply a necessary element of the retaliation claims under
B.
Two of the alleged retaliatory actions underlying Bonni‘s complaint — defamation and “character assassination” — describe quintessential speech activities and thus are protected under
“(13) Interfering with Plaintiff‘s right to practice his occupation;
“(14) Wrongfully terminating Plaintiff‘s hospital, membership, and clinical privileges;
“(15) Improperly using Plaintiff‘s confidential and private health information; and
“(16) Making defamatory statements about Plaintiff.”
As we explained in Kibler, this result reflects a core function of the anti-SLAPP statute in hospital peer review cases. To adequately protect patient welfare, the system depends on the ability of those with expertise to speak frankly about the competence of medical professionals without fear of retribution. To withhold anti-SLAPP protection against harassing lawsuits would chill physicians’ willingness to fulfill the essential public functions discharged by peer review committees. (Id. at p. 201.)
Bonni asserts that the alleged defamation and character assassination were unconnected to peer review and therefore were not protected by the anti-SLAPP statute. In the alternative, he argues that this speech activity is immaterial to his retaliation claims. Both assertions are belied by Bonni‘s
assertions of defamation or character assassination are statements concerning Bonni‘s professional competence, made in connection with the peer review consideration of Bonni‘s standing at the Hospitals. These statements are protected under Kibler. (Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 198; see Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at pp. 1069–1070.) As for Bonni‘s second point, we agree that if Bonni truly meant only to raise these claims as window dressing, there would be no reason to strike them. (See Baral, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 394.) But the complaint makes clear that Bonni intended them to have operative effect: The complaint in no uncertain terms lists the alleged defamation and character assassination as conduct taken in retaliation for his expression of patient care concerns, thus satisfying essential elements of his retaliation claims. If Bonni wishes to abandon the retaliation claims based on defamation and character assassination, he may seek to do so in an appropriate forum. But for present purposes, we will assume his complaint means what it says.
Bonni‘s complaint raises other instances of protected activity. For one, Bonni alleges the Hospitals retaliated against him by reporting his summary suspensions to the Medical Board of California and National Practitioner Data Bank. These reports qualify as “statement[s] or writing[s] made in connection with an issue under consideration” in an “official proceeding.” (
these statements and more — essentially everything any defendant said in the course of the peer review process in support of limiting Bonni‘s privileges.
Bonni does not appear to dispute that the reports and recommendations are protected activity but argues instead that his claims do not arise from them. The Hospitals’ reports of his suspensions, he now says, were simply the “natural consequence” of the acts that actually harmed him, the underlying suspensions and ultimate losses of staff privileges. But the fact remains that the complaint alleges these reports as separate acts of retaliation. What is more, Bonni‘s declaration submitted in opposition to the anti-SLAPP motion separately describes the harm he suffered as a result of the allegedly retaliatory reports, when another hospital rescinded a job offer after it obtained the public report of his discipline. Again, we take Bonni‘s pleadings at face value.
Bonni similarly argues that the Mission medical executive committee‘s recommendations led to the acts that harmed him — the loss of privileges — but were not themselves a source of harm. At most, he says, the recommendations supply evidence of retaliatory animus. But Bonni‘s complaint expressly alleges that committee‘s challenge to peer review findings favoring Bonni was an act of retaliation. Bonni‘s claim arises from that act because it supplies an element of the claim: The retaliation statute defines actionable “discriminatory treatment” to include both an actual “suspension” or “unfavorable change[] in . . . [the] privileges of the . . . member of the medical staff” and “the threat of any of these actions.” (
Because each of his claims of retaliation based on statements in connection with peer review proceedings arises from protected activity, on remand Bonni will need to demonstrate at least some “minimal merit” to the claims. (Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 29 Cal.4th 82, 89.) If he cannot, these allegations will be stricken from his pleadings. (Wilson, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 884.) That does not mean the underlying factual allegations may not be mentioned in the course of any ensuing proceedings; to the extent Bonni does consider these allegations to be probative of defendants’ motives or relevant to any other claims that survive, statements made in the course of peer review proceedings remain as admissible as any others. As our discussion in Park of the relevant precedent illustrates, communicative activities often may supply evidence of illicit animus even if they do not in themselves supply a basis for liability. (See Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at pp. 1064–1067.) But if the claims are stricken from the pleadings for lack of merit, Bonni may no longer seek to impose liability on defendants for having engaged in these protected acts.
C.
The allegations just identified as protected activity under
The Hospitals acknowledge the limits of Kibler and the significance of the distinction drawn in Park between adverse decisions and the communications
By its terms,
At bottom, disciplining a doctor based on the view that the doctor‘s skills are deficient is not the same thing as making a public statement to that effect. The latter is, or may be, speech on a matter of public concern. The former is not speech at all. (See Smith v. Adventist Health System/West (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 40, 60 [summary suspension of physician‘s staff privileges is “a noncommunicative act“].) Treating disciplinary acts indistinguishably from speech — such that if stating a given viewpoint would warrant constitutional and anti-SLAPP protection as an exercise of free speech rights, the same protection should extend equally to any actions motivated by that viewpoint — assumes, at root, that conduct generally is tantamount to speech. But expression and nonexpressive acts do not have equal stature in First Amendment law. An employer has the constitutional right to express opposition to antiretaliation laws, for example, but the employer has no equivalent right to fire an employee in retaliation for whistleblowing activity. (Cf. Hishon v. King & Spalding (1984) 467 U.S. 69, 78 [prohibition on sex discrimination in private employment does not infringe constitutional right of expression].) The scope of the protection afforded by the anti-SLAPP statute may not precisely track the lines drawn under the First Amendment and state Constitution (City of Montebello v. Vasquez (2016) 1 Cal.5th 409, 421), but we see no evidence the Legislature intended to discard this well-established distinction when it enacted
Of course, the Hospitals need not prove their disciplinary actions represented “expressive” conduct — tantamount to a report on their commitment to patient safety — to successfully meet their burden under
The Hospitals emphasize that disciplining Bonni triggered a peer review hearing, an official proceeding during which the Hospitals’ medical executive committee petitioned in support of its action, and the suspensions supplied the occasion for reports to the Medical Board of California and National Practitioner Data Bank. Those reports are, as we have discussed, the sort of petitioning activity the anti-SLAPP statute protects. And it is true that the suspensions of Bonni were a “but for” cause of those protected acts — no suspension, no proceedings or reports. But that sort of causal link does not mean the suspensions advanced the Hospitals’ ability to speak or to petition on matters of public concern in any substantial way. Suspension or no, the Hospitals were perfectly free to express views about Bonni‘s competence. Likewise, nothing in the Hospitals’ bylaws would have prevented them from
Finally, the Hospitals argue anti-SLAPP protection for physician disciplinary decisions is necessary lest the risk of frivolous suits chill such decisions and jeopardize patient safety. Enhanced patient safety is surely a worthy policy goal, but it is not the concern of the anti-SLAPP statute, which is aimed instead at protecting the exercise of speech and petitioning rights on matters of public significance. (
desirous of offering input on a matter of public importance. But no similar concerns attach to denying protection for the ultimate decision itself“].)
In sum, the Hospitals have not shown physician disciplinary decisions, such as the summary suspension and eventual termination of privileges underlying many of Bonni‘s retaliation claims, are entitled to protection under the anti-SLAPP statute.
D.
The complaint also identifies a handful of miscellaneous retaliatory conduct not explicitly tied to any specific event or action: that the Hospitals created a hostile work environment, blocked Bonni from career opportunities, failed to protect him from retaliation, subjected him to intolerable work conditions, and misused his private, confidential health information. The
E.
In addition to the undifferentiated retaliation allegations pleaded against all defendants, the complaint alleges St. Joseph and its related entities retaliated by first using undue influence or fraud to persuade Bonni to settle his dispute with them and then breaching that settlement agreement by reporting Bonni‘s resignation to the Medical Board of California and National Practitioner Data Bank using language that deviated from that agreed to by the parties.
The filing of a lawsuit is an exercise of the First Amendment right to petition the government. (Soukup v. Law Offices of Herbert Hafif (2006) 39 Cal.4th 260, 291; Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche, supra, 31 Cal.4th at p. 736, fn. 5; Briggs v. Eden Council for Hope & Opportunity (1999) 19 Cal.4th 1106, 1115.) Consequently, claims that arise out of the filing of a suit arise from protected activity for purposes of the anti-SLAPP statute. (Jarrow Formulas, at pp. 734-735.) The same is true of discussions that precede the filing of a suit: “‘[J]ust as communications preparatory to or in anticipation of the bringing of an action or other official proceeding are within the protection of the litigation privilege of
Settlement negotiations while a suit is pending are likewise protected; they involve communications in connection with a matter pending before or under consideration by an official body, and so fall within the scope of
We deal here with a claim arising out of settlement negotiations preceding the filing of any suit. But we nevertheless conclude such negotiations, no less than postfiling settlement negotiations or communications in anticipation of filing, are protected activity for anti-SLAPP purposes. In
Here, the retaliation claim rests in part on St. Joseph‘s settlement negotiations with Bonni. Although Bonni alleges fraud in the course of those negotiations, that allegation does not remove them from the definition of protected activity. (See Navellier v. Sletten, supra, 29 Cal.4th at pp. 87, 90; Navarro v. IHOP Properties, Inc. (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th 834, 841-842; Dowling v. Zimmerman (2001) 85 Cal.App.4th 1400, 1418–1420.)
The last pleaded retaliatory act is St. Joseph‘s alleged breach of the parties’ settlement agreement by communicating with the Medical Board of California using unauthorized language. A breach of contract claim can arise from protected activity if the action allegedly breaching the contract is itself protected. (Compare Navellier v. Sletten, supra, 29 Cal.4th at pp. 90-91 [breach of settlement claim arose from protected petitioning activity, filing claims in court in alleged violation of a prior release] and Mundy v. Lenc (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 1401, 1408-1409 [same] with Applied Business Software, Inc. v. Pacific Mortgage Exchange, Inc. (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 1108, 1118 [breach of settlement claim did not arise from protected activity where acts constituting breach not exercise
V.
In sum, the Hospitals have demonstrated that some but not all of the claims collected together as unlawful acts of retaliation in Bonni‘s first cause of action arise from protected speech or petitioning activity: reporting Dr. Bonni‘s summary suspension and advocating in peer review proceedings that it be upheld (First Amended Complaint for Damages, ¶ 16, subparas. (3)-(5)); criticizing Dr. Bonni‘s professional abilities in the course of peer review proceedings (id., ¶¶ 16, subparas. (11), (16)); and inducing Dr. Bonni to settle his dispute with St. Joseph and then allegedly breaching that settlement by filing a nonconforming report with the Medical Board of California (id., 16, addtl. subparas. (1)-(3)). The remaining allegations do not arise from protected activity.
Echoing other courts, the Court of Appeal here expressed concern that discrimination and retaliation claims should “rarely, if ever” be seen as appropriate targets of an anti-SLAPP motion. (Bonni, supra, 13 Cal.App.5th at p. 864.) We agree that the anti-SLAPP statute has a limited role to play in such suits. As we said in Wilson, “[w]e see no realistic possibility that anti-SLAPP motions will become a routine feature of the litigation of discrimination or retaliation claims.” (Wilson, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 890.) This case is no exception to the rule; as we have explained, the disciplinary actions central to Bonni‘s retaliation cause of action do not constitute protected activity and thus are not subject to a special motion to strike under the anti-SLAPP statute. To the extent Bonni‘s cause of action seeks to impose liability not for disciplinary actions but for statements made in the course of hospital peer review proceedings, the statute entitles the Hospitals to seek early review of the merits of Bonni‘s claims, just as they would be permitted to seek early review of any other claim arising from protected activity. We reiterate, however, that while this is the conclusion that follows from the statute as written, the Legislature remains free to adjust the statutory scheme‘s application to discrimination and retaliation claims if it so chooses. (See id. at p. 892.)
The Court of Appeal reversed the trial court based on a determination that the Hospitals had not met their first-step burden. It thus did not have occasion to review the trial court‘s further conclusion that Bonni had failed to satisfy his second-step burden. We reverse in part the Court of Appeal‘s first-step determination and remand for it to consider in the first instance whether
KRUGER, J.
We Concur:
CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
CORRIGAN, J.
LIU, J.
CUÉLLAR, J.
GROBAN, J.
JENKINS, J.
Concurring Opinion by Justice Groban
The majority opinion concludes the anti-SLAPP statute (see
separately, however, to express my view that our now-settled construction of
Plaintiff Aram Bonni alleges, inter alia, that the hospital defendants retaliated against him by making false statements at the peer review proceedings regarding his competency. (See maj. opn., ante, at pp. 21–22.) The majority opinion concludes the anti-SLAPP statute applies to this claim because the defendants’ protected statements “supply the basis” for the claim. (Id. at p. 11; see id. at pp. 21–23.) The majority opinion further finds, however, that Bonni could have avoided application of the statute by instead alleging that the defendants’ false statements at the peer review proceedings prove that subsequent disciplinary acts were retaliatory. (See id. at pp. 26–27.) In that circumstance, the statements would receive no protection because they would merely “supply evidence of illicit animus” (id. at p. 26) rather than “supply the basis” (id. at p. 11) for the claim. Thus,
While consistent with our prior decisional law (see Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1060; Wilson, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 890), that conclusion has curious consequences where, as here, it seems clear Bonni cannot prove the hospital defendants’ disciplinary decisions were retaliatory without first persuading the jury that the statements against him at the peer review proceedings were themselves false and retaliatory.2 If a plaintiff cannot prove his or her claim without persuading a jury that protected statements were false, one might reasonably think the claim “aris[es] from” (
Although I join the majority opinion‘s application of our prior case law, I am less persuaded that our construction of the anti-SLAPP statute will have no conceivable chilling effect on free participation in official proceedings. (See maj. opn., ante, at p. 33.) We have previously held that the Legislature‘s purposes in enacting the anti-SLAPP statute are “best served . . . by a construction of
Nonetheless, this is the dividing line that our case law compels. As the majority opinion notes, if the Legislature believes our construction is inadequate to protect statements made in connection with peer review and other “official proceeding[s]” (
GROBAN, J.
Notes
The two-part FilmOn inquiry will often be dispositive in cases concerning the reach of the catchall provision. But in instances where it is unclear whether apparently noncommunicative acts qualify as “conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of petition or the constitutional right of free speech” (
