448 Mass. 242 | Mass. | 2007
We examine in this case the extent to which G. L. c. 231, § 59H, popularly known as the “anti-SLAPP”
1. The background of the case, drawn from the judge’s decision and order denying the special motions to dismiss, may be summarized as follows. Cadle is a debt collection company with its main office in Newton Falls, Ohio. The individual defendant, Schlichtmann, is an attorney licensed to practice law in Massachusetts and, as has been noted, the president and sole shareholder and director of the defendant professional corporation. In the mid-1990’s, Cadle and Schlichtmann became involved in litigation in connection with certain debts allegedly owed Cadle by Schlichtmann. In the early 1990’s, Schlichtmann and his former law firm borrowed money from Boston Trade Bank. After the Boston Trade Bank failed, Cadle purchased Schlichtmann’s debts from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). In October, 1991, Schlichtmann filed a petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, see 11 U.S.C. § 301 (1988), and, in January, 1992, the Bankruptcy Court issued a discharge of debtor to Schlichtmann. Years of litigation followed over whether certain of Schlichtmann’s debts had survived the discharge. Although litigation is always divisive and often contentious, the legal battles between the parties appear to have been particularly acrimonious.
In the spring of 2003, Schlichtmann filed complaints with the
“According to attorney Jan Schlichtmann, who is also being dunned by Cadle, the firm has been doing business illegally in Massachusetts for years, hiding its assets from its clients and the state and defrauding both”;
“Schlichtmann says threats and harassment are typical of Cadle”;
“Schlichtmann says Cadle has used these same strong arm tactics here to collect millions from people in debt while avoiding paying taxes by hiding its assets in other companies owned by [Daniel C. Cadle, owner and president of Cadle]”;
“The Cadle Co. traffics in intimidation and fraud and it’s catching up with them in Massachusetts”;
“According to Schlichtmann, the sole purpose of this enterprise is to defraud consumers and businesses, deceive state and federal courts, and avoid state laws and regulations meant to protect against predatory practices”;
*245 “[Schlichtmann] says Cadle, ‘surreptitiously’ transferred loan accounts to separate corporations and partnerships set up by Daniel Cadle to circumvent state laws governing collection agencies. Cadle used ‘strong arm tactics’ including threats, intimidation and coercion to collect, Schlichtmann claims”;
“[Cadle had] used hardball tactics to try to collect debts, harassing and abusing people by making false reports to ruin their credit, calling their neighbors, talking to children about their parents’ debts, threatening to take people’s homes, and taking people to court”; and
“ ‘[Cadle] has been illegally going after hundreds of people — vulnerable people, in particular — for years,’ [Schlichtmann] said. ‘All of the tricks of the trade this company uses in spades. All of it is illegal and all of it is fraudulent.’ ”5
Also in the spring of 2003, Schlichtmann created a Web site, accessible on the Internet. Included on the Web site are statements representing Cadle as a company that employs “fraudulent practices to intimidate and collect millions of dollars from hundreds of [Massachusetts] residents.” According to the Web site, Cadle is “a collection arm of a fraudulent enterprise” whose “sole purpose and intent ... is to defraud consumers and businesses, deceive state and federal courts, and avoid state laws and regulations meant to protect against predatory practices.” The Web site provides links to news articles published by various news media outlets containing Schlichtmann’s statements that are quoted above. Links provided on the Web site also connect a viewer to the above mentioned March, 2003, G. L. c. 93A demand letter and to court pleadings and other documents submitted to the court in connection with various legal proceedings. The following statements also appear on the Web site:
“This site was created and sponsored by Jan R. Schlichtmann, Attorney At Law, P.C., as a service advertising this*246 effort. Attorney Schlichtmann has been fighting The Cadle Company for the past [ten] years. . . . Attorney Schlichtmann now represents several other victims of Cadle’s unlawful business practices.”
The Web site further states:
“Call 877.CADLETRUTH (1.877.223.5387)”;
“To find out more or if you believe you have been victimized by The Cadle Company, contact us directly: 877.CADLETRUTH (1.877.223.5387).”6
On January 15, 2004, Darnel Cadle wrote Schlichtmann a letter advising him that information on the Web site was false and defamatory and requesting that Schlichtmann correct any “exaggerations, false statements, and plain old ‘bold face lies’ in order to mitigate [his] damages.”
The events described above led to the present litigation, which we now summarize. On April 12, 2005, Cadle filed a complaint in the Superior Court asserting claims against the defendants. Cadle’s first amended complaint alleges defamation and libel
2. We now consider the merits of this appeal. General Laws c. 231, § 59H, provides, in pertinent part:
“In any case in which a party asserts that the civil*248 claims . . . against said party are based on said party’s exercise of its right of petition under the constitution of the United States or of the [C]ommonwealth, said party may bring a special motion to dismiss. . . . The court shall grant such special motion, unless the party against whom such special motion is made shows that: (1) the moving party’s exercise of its right to petition was devoid of any reasonable factual support or any arguable basis in law and (2) the moving party’s acts caused actual injury to the responding party. In making its determination, the court shall consider the pleadings and supporting and opposing affidavits stating the facts upon which the liability or defense is based.”
The statute identifies five types of statements that comprise “a party’s exercise of its right of petition”:
“[1] [A]ny written or oral statement made before or submitted to a legislative, executive, or judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding; [2] any written or oral statement made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding; [3] any statement reasonably likely to encourage consideration or review of an issue by a legislative, executive, or judicial body or any other governmental proceeding; [4] any statement reasonably likely to enlist public participation in an effort to effect such consideration; or [5] any other statement falling within constitutional protection of the right to petition government.” G. L. c. 231, § 59H.
We have stated that the right to petition may include “reporting violations of law, writing to government officials, attending public hearings, testifying before government bodies, circulating petitions for signature, lobbying for legislation, campaigning in initiative or referendum elections, filing agency protests or appeals, being parties in law-reform lawsuits, and engaging in peaceful boycotts and demonstrations.” Duracraft Corp. v. Holmes Prods. Corp., 427 Mass. 156, 161-162 (1998), quoting Pring, SLAPPs: Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, 7 Pace Envtl. L. Rev. 3, 5 (1989). A SLAPP suit, as a general rule, has no merit. “The objective of SLAPP suits is not to win
The procedure governing an anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss is well established. We recognized in our Duracraft decision that, “[b]y protecting one party’s exercise of its right of petition . . . the statute impinges on the adverse party’s exercise of its right to petition . . . .” Duracraft Corp. v. Holmes Prods. Corp., supra at 166. We require, therefore, as a threshold matter to invoke the statute’s protection, that the party seeking dismissal demonstrate, through pleadings and affidavits, that the claims against it are “ ‘based on’ the petitioning activities alone and have no substantial basis other than or in addition to the petitioning activities.” Id. at 167-168. At this early stage of the proceedings, “[t]he focus solely is on the conduct complained of, and, if the only conduct complained of is petitioning activity, then there can be no other ‘substantial basis’ for the claim.” Office One, Inc. v. Lopez, supra at 122. If the moving party fails to make this showing, the special motion is denied. If this showing is made, then the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to demonstrate, again by pleadings and affidavits, that “(1) the moving party’s exercise of its right to petition was devoid of any reasonable factual support or any arguable basis in law and (2) the moving party’s acts caused actual injury to the responding party.” G. L. c. 231, § 59H. See Fabre v. Walton, 436 Mass. 517, 520 (2002); Baker v. Parsons, 434 Mass. 543, 552 (2001); McLarnon v. Jokisch, 431 Mass. 343, 349 (2000). In this way, the legislative purpose behind the statute, to protect parties from harassing lawsuits that have no basis in law and that are filed solely to discourage individuals from exercising their right to petition, is furthered. See Duracraft Corp. v. Holmes Prods. Corp., supra at 166-167. At the same time, the rights of opposing parties, to petition the courts for redress of wrongs unlawfully inflicted by another, are protected. See Baker v. Parsons, supra at 553.
An examination of the plaintiff’s amended complaint reveals that Counts I, II, and III are based, respectively, on statements contained on the Web site as well as statements made by Schlichtmann to the media that were then republished on the Web site, through electronic links to other Web sites containing the original news articles. Many of the statements, standing alone, had been made in connection with Schlichtmann’s petitions to the banking commissioner or complaints to the Bankruptcy or State courts, and republished on the Web site in order to raise public concern over Cadle’s (purportedly) questionable business practices. These statements, at first glance, may appear to fall within the literal scope of activities protected by § 59H, because they were “made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial body” or are “reasonably likely to enlist public participation in an effort to effect such consideration.” Schlichtmann published the statements on his Web site, however, not as a member of the public who had been injured by these alleged practices, but as an attorney advertising his legal services. The Web site was, in essence, designed by Schlichtmann to disseminate to the public information about Cadle and, by doing so, to attract clients to his law practice.
We reject the defendants’ self-serving characterization of the Web site as a “public forum” that is “dedicated to sharing with others information about Cadle’s business activities that [Schlichtmann] and other victims have provided to regulatory officials and
The defendants rely heavily on three decisions of the Appeals Court, Wynne v. Creigle, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 246 (2005), Plante v. Wylie, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 151 (2005), and MacDonald v. Paton, 57 Mass. App. Ct. 290 (2003). We address these cases in turn. The defendant in Wynne v. Creigle, supra, was a fire fighter’s widow who sought pension benefits after her husband committed suicide. The defendant maintained, in statements made in connection with a department investigation of the plaintiff’s workplace conduct and repeated to a newspaper reporter, that her husband’s suicide was precipitated by harassment by the plaintiff. The plaintiff, in turn, sued for defamation, based on the newspaper’s accounts of the statements. The Appeals Court recognized that the defendant’s statements to the newspaper were not unsolicited but were made in direct response to the “plaintiff’s providing the newspaper with the statements of the firefighters, [and] other documents from the [disciplinary] hearing” and were “essentially mirror images of those [the defendant] made during and ‘in connection with’ the departmental investigation of the plaintiff. Taken in context, [the] mere repetition of those statements to the media was also possessed of the characteristics of petitioning activity.” Id. at 254. Here, nothing in the record would support a finding that the challenged statements made by Schlichtmann were either a response to statements that Cadle had made to the press or repetitions of statements initially made in a governmental proceeding. The fact that the news articles containing Schlicht
In Plante v. Wylie, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 151 (2005), the trustees of a realty trust filed a lawsuit against the attorney who challenged, on behalf of a conservation trust, efforts of the realty trust to win approval for expansion of a subdivision development. See id. at 153-154. The Appeals Court reasoned that, although the anti-SLAPP statute is restricted by its language “to those defendants who petition the government on their own behalf,” id. at 156, quoting Kobrin v. Gastfriend, supra at 332, the “statute would provide but hollow protection for citizens who wish to exercise their right of petition if statements made by an attorney on their behalf were not covered by the [statute] to the same extent as statements made by them directly.” Id. We agree with the Appeals Court that suits brought against attorneys who speak on behalf of petitioning parties would have a chilling effect on petitioning activity, and, therefore, the language of G. L. c. 231, § 59H, must be read to protect, not only individuals who petition on behalf of themselves, but also attorneys who are sued for “voicing the positions of a petitioning client.” Id. at 157. See note 10, supra. Our decision in this case, however, does not turn on whether Schlichtmann’s statements were made on behalf of himself or on behalf of the clients he represented in the litigation against Cadle. As has been discussed above, it is the palpable commercial motivation behind the creation of the Web site that so definitively undercuts the petitioning character of the statements contained therein.
Finally, in MacDonald v. Paton, supra, the plaintiff, an elected selectman in Athol, sued the defendant, who operated a Web site that reported on local affairs in Athol and the surrounding community, for publishing on the Web site a description of the plaintiff as a “Gestapo agent.” Id. at 293. It was undisputed that the Web site was an “interactive public forum on issues relating to Athol town governance, including education funding and municipal use of tax dollars.” Id. at 294.
There is one recent Appeals Court decision that is, in our view, sufficiently on point to provide guidance in this case. That decision, Global NAPs, Inc. v. Verizon New England, Inc., 63 Mass. App. Ct. 600 (2005), concerned a statement made in the context of ongoing litigation between two business competitors and published in the Boston Globe, asserting, in effect, that the Department of Telecommunications and Energy had “shut down ‘a scam’ . . . [the plaintiff] very cleverly developed in the late 1990s.” Id. at 603. The Appeals Court rejected the defendant’s argument that a literal reading of G. L. c. 231, § 59H, protects all statements made “in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding.” Id. at 604. We
Because the defendants did not make a “threshold showing through the pleadings and affidavits that the claims against [them] are ‘based on’ the [lawful] petitioning activities alone and have no substantial basis other than or in addition to the petitioning activities,” Duracraft Corp. v. Holmes Prods. Corp., 427 Mass. 156, 167-168 (1998), the motion to dismiss was properly denied.
4. We affirm the judge’s order denying the defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaint against them and remand the case to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
SLAPP is an acronym for “strategic litigation against public participation.”
The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit eventually concluded that Cadle had an interest in a monetary settlement received by Schlichtmann and his former law firm, see Cadle Co. v. Schlichtmann, 267
Relevant news articles published by the Associated Press were picked up by media outlets throughout the country, including The Boston Globe.
In October, 2003, Cadle filed a complaint against the defendants in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, alleging defamation. This suit was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction.
The telephone number listed on the Web site is operated solely by Schlichtmann.
In his letter, Cadle took specific exception to four statements on the Web site, enumerated as follows:
“1. Daniel C. Cadle is a fugitive from justice. As you full well know, I am not a fugitive from justice;
“2. Daniel C. Cadle has been convicted of contempt. As you also know, I have not been legally convicted of contempt;
“3. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts ordered The Cadle Company to cease all activities in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. As you know, the Commonwealth simply ordered Cadle to cease all ‘illegal’ activities in the Commonwealth, if any, and has never made any determination that Cadle has committed ‘any’ illegal acts; and
“4. Schlichtmann has filed lawsuits on behalf of clients against Cadle. As you know, no such lawsuits have, in fact, been filed against Cadle.”
The motion to dismiss also was brought pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (6) and (9), 365 Mass. 754 (1974). Schlichtmann does not argue that dismissal was warranted on these bases and, thus, waives any claim to that effect.
This second motion, apparently, was brought in response to testimony given by Cadle’s counsel at an evidentiary hearing on Schlichtmann’s motion for sanctions in the Bankruptcy Court. At the hearing, Daniel C. Cadle testified that the defamation suit had been initiated in an attempt to have Schlichtmann remove (or at least modify) his Web site.
Thereafter, Schlichtmann filed a counterclaim against Cadle and took the highly unusual step of filing a third-party complaint against Cadle’s counsel. The basis for the third-party complaint is not clear from the record, but we note our approval of the recent decision of Plante v. Wylie, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 151 (2005), in which the Appeals Court held, as a general principle, that G. L. c. 231, § 59H, protects attorneys who are “sued for voicing the positions of a petitioning client.” Id. at 157.
We need not consider the alternate claim advanced by Cadle that the alleged defamatory statements, even if within the scope of petitioning activity, are not deserving of the protection of § 59H because they are devoid of factual or legal basis. See McDonald v. Smith, 472 U.S. 479, 485 (1985) (right to petition is not shield against liability for libel); Kobrin v. Gastfriend, 443 Mass. 327, 335 (2005).