*1284 Opinion
SUMMARY
A landlord successfully evicted a long-term tenant from a rent-controlled apartment, ostensibly to free the unit for occupancy by the landlord’s daughter. The landlord’s daughter never moved in, and the tenant sued the landlord for fraud and unlawful eviction, and failure to pay relocation expenses. The landlord responded with a special motion to strike (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16), arguing the tenant’s complaint arose from the landlord’s acts or statements in furtherance of her constitutional rights. The trial court agreed, and granted the motion. We conclude the tenant’s claims did not arise from a protected activity — they are based on the landlord’s violation of rent control laws, not on actions in furtherance of the right of free speech or petition. Accordingly, we reverse.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Defendant and Appellant Mahvash Mazgani owns a triplex in the Westwood area of the City of Los Angeles. The property is subject to the Rent Stabilization Ordinance of the City of Los Angeles (RSO), which restricts the circumstances in which a landlord may effect an eviction. (L.A. Mun. Code (LAMC), § 151.09, subd. A; see also Civ. Code, § 1947.10, subd. (a).) Plaintiff and appellant Karen A. Clark was Mazgani’s tenant for about eight years and paid a monthly rent of approximately $1,100. The RSO permits eviction of a tenant from a rent-controlled apartment if the landlord intends to remove the unit from the rental market in order to free it for occupancy by a member of his or her immediate family. (LAMC, § 151.09, subd. A.8.a; Civ. Code, § 1947.10, subd. (a).)
In January 2006, after serving and filing the requisite notices, Mazgani filed an unlawful detainer action against Clark to evict her from her apartment so Mazgani’s daughter could move into that unit. Mazgani prevailed in that action, and Clark was evicted in April 2006.
In September 2006, Clark filed this action against Mazgani. Clark alleged three causes of action: violation of the RSO, fraud, and unfair business practices (in violation of Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17203). Clark alleged that, following her eviction, Mazgani’s daughter never moved into Clark’s former *1285 apartment. Clark claimed Mazgani made fraudulent misrepresentations in the unlawful detainer action and never meant for her daughter to reside in Clark’s former apartment. Instead, and in violation of the RSO, Mazgani purposefully kept the apartment unoccupied (at least until this lawsuit was filed) and performed renovations, with the goal of reletting the unit to a new tenant for a higher monthly rent. Clark sought an order reinstating her tenancy, and statutory and punitive damages. In addition, under the RSO, Mazgani was required to pay Clark a $3,000 relocation fee at the time of her eviction. (LAMC, § 151.09, subd. G, G.2.) 1 Mazgani had acknowledged that debt and had given Clark a check for that amount. However, she stopped payment on her check. Clark claimed Mazgani still owed her the relocation fee.
Mazgani responded to the complaint by filing a SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) motion. (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16.) She contended Clark’s complaint arose from Mazgani’s privileged communications, made in the course of proceedings before the Los Angeles City Housing Department and in the unlawful detainer action, and from the acts of filing and serving the eviction notice. The trial court agreed and granted the motion. Judgment was entered on May 30, 2007, after a hearing on a motion for attorneys’ fees, and the action was dismissed. Mazgani appealed. Clark filed a cross-appeal.
DISCUSSION
Both sides filed timely appeals. We turn first to Clark’s appeal, as our disposition of that matter renders Mazgani’s appeal moot.
Clark contends the trial court erred in granting the SLAPP motion because Clark’s claim 2 did not arise from Mazgani’s protected activity taken in furtherance of her right of free speech or petition. We agree.
Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (section 425.16) sets forth the procedure for bringing a special motion to strike in lawsuits filed primarily to “chill” the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances. (§ 425.16, subd. (a);
Kibler
v.
Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist.
(2006)
The trial court undertakes a two-step process in determining the merits of a SLAPP motion. First, in order for a complaint to be subject to a SLAPP motion, the court must decide if the defendant has made a threshold showing that the challenged claims arose from his or her protected activity.
(Taus
v.
Loftus
(2007)
In analyzing defendant’s burden under the first prong of the SLAPP analysis, “the critical consideration is whether the cause of action is
based on
the defendant’s protected free speech or petitioning activity.”
(Navellier v. Sletten
(2002)
There is no question that the prosecution of an unlawful detainer action is indisputably protected activity within the meaning of section 425.16. (See
Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche
(2003)
Clark’s complaint, however, is not premised on Mazgani’s protected activities of initiating or prosecuting the unlawful detainer action, but on her removal of the apartment from the rental market and fraudulent eviction of Clark for the purpose of installing a family member who never moved in. “Terminating a tenancy or removing a property from the rental market are not
*1287
activities taken in furtherance of the constitutional rights of petition or free speech.”
(Marlin, supra,
Marlin
is instructive. There, a landlord filed notice under the Ellis Act (Gov. Code, § 7060 et seq.) of its intention to permanently remove units from the rental market. The Ellis Act allows landlords who comply with its provisions to go out of the rental business even if doing so would otherwise violate a local rent control ordinance. Tenants subjected to the notice sued the landlord challenging its right to invoke the Ellis Act. The landlord responded with a SLAPP motion, arguing the tenants’ action arose from the landlord’s filing and service of the Ellis Act notices. This district’s Division Seven disagreed. The court was willing to assume that filing and service of the eviction notices constituted protected free speech or petitioning activity, but concluded the landlord failed to show the lawsuit arose from any protected activity. The court reasoned that simply because an action was filed
after
Ellis Act notices were served and filed, did not mean
it arose from
or
was based on
those protected activities.
(Marlin, supra,
A similar result was reached in
Department of Fair Employment & Housing
v.
1105 Alta Loma Road Apartments, LLC
(2007)
The same reasoning applies here. Clark’s action against Mazgani is not based on Mazgani’s filing or service of the notices of intent to evict, it is not based on anything Mazgani said in court or a public proceeding, and it is not based on the fact that Mazgani prosecuted an unlawful detainer action against her. The complaint is based on Mazgani’s allegedly unlawful eviction, in that she fraudulently invoked the RSO to evict Clark from her rent-controlled apartment as a ruse to provide housing for her daughter, but never installed her daughter in the apartment as required by that ordinance, and also that she failed to pay Clark’s relocation fee. Mazgani’s briefs fail to distinguish the holding in Marlin,
3
and fail to address
DFEH
at all. Instead, she offers the decisions in
Birkner, supra,
In
Birkner,
tenants sued their landlord for wrongful eviction in violation of San Francisco’s rent control ordinance, negligence, breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
(Birkner, supra,
In
Feldman, supra,
As in Marlin and DFEH, we assume, without deciding, that statements made by Mazgani were in furtherance of her right of petition or free speech. Nevertheless, Clark’s claims do not “arise from” Mazgani’s conduct in exercising those constitutional rights. The gravamen of Clark’s action is her claim that wrongful eviction was the result of fraud in that Mazgani did not fulfill the RSO requirement that her family member reside in the evicted tenant’s apartment for at least six months. (Civ. Code, § 1947.10, subd. (a).) That claim could only be raised and determined months after Mazgani accomplished the eviction. A landlord’s fraudulent act of terminating a tenancy or removing a unit from the rental market and allowing that unit to stand empty, in breach of the RSO, is an actionable unlawful eviction. (Civ. Code, § 1947.10, subd. (a).) Neither that act, nor the failure to make good on the check tendered to her former tenant, is protected by Mazgani’s constitutional rights of petition or speech.
Contrary to her contentions, Mazgani was not sued for exercising constitutional rights. She was sued to compel compliance with the provisions of the
*1290
RSO. Clark’s suit was unquestionably “triggered by” Mazgani’s statements and the documents she filed in connection with the unlawful detainer. But the suit is
not based on
those statements or filings. It is based on Clark’s claim that Mazgani fraudulently invoked the family occupancy exemption of the RSO to effect Clark’s eviction, and failed to fulfill her obligations under that ordinance to install her daughter in the apartment or to pay Clark’s relocation expenses. Mazgani’s eviction notices and the unlawful detainer action are merely cited as evidence and background to illustrate Mazgani’s subsequent violation of the RSO and Civil Code section 1947.10, subdivision (a). To paraphrase an observation in
DFEH,
“ ‘[i]f we were to accept [Mazgani’s] argument, then [she] could preclude any judicial review of [her] violation of the rent control law, no matter how egregious, by simply filing a SLAPP motion . . .’ ” as was done here.
(DFEH, supra,
Mazgani has not met her threshold burden of showing this suit is based on protected activity. Accordingly, we need not consider whether Clark demonstrated she is likely to succeed on the merits. 5
*1291 DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Clark shall recover her costs of appeal.
Mallano, P. J., and Rothschild, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 5, 2009, and the petition of appellant Mahvash Mazgani for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 29, 2009, S170634.
Notes
Retired judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
In September 2008, the relocation fee was increased to $9,300 to $17,600 for evicted tenants who have occupied their units for at least three years. (LAMC, § 151.09, subd. G.)
Clark pled three causes of action. Both parties acknowledge, however, that all three are essentially the same claim, with different prayers for relief.
Although Mazgani’s in-court statements formed the basis for Clark’s eviction and may have triggered this action, Mazgani was not sued for engaging in a protected activity. She was sued under Civil Code section 1947.10, for fraudulently invoking the immediate relative exception to the RSO as the reason to terminate Clark’s tenancy.
After he served the eviction notices, the landlord’s mother died. He rescinded the notices and the tenants were never evicted, but they sued anyway based on the landlord’s initial filing, service and refusal to rescind the notices.
(Birkner, supra,
Based on our conclusion that Mazgani has not prevailed on her SLAPP motion, we also find the trial court erred in awarding her attorneys’ fees under section 425.16, subdivision (c).
Our decision renders moot any further issues raised by Mazgani. Appellate courts decide only actual controversies. Consistent therewith, it has been said that an action, originally based upon a justiciable controversy, cannot be maintained on appeal if the questions raised therein have become moot by subsequent events.
(Giles
v.
Horn
(2002)
However, we note there is no merit in Mazgani’s contention that she is (or may be) somehow harmed because, although the trial court granted her SLAPP motion as to every claim, in the minute order issued after the hearing on the motion, the court observed Clark might still be owed the relocation fee, and noted its order was made “without prejudice as to any . . . claims which Clark may elect to bring” regarding payment of the relocation fee. Mazgani’s entire appeal is devoted to the assertion that, having granted the SLAPP motion, the court was divested of authority to dismiss any claim “without prejudice,” or to invite Clark to “plead around” the facts that had made her original allegations vulnerable to the motion to strike. First, even if Mazgani’s legal argument was correct it would be irrelevant. Clark did not seek leave to amend or file a new action; Mazgani has not shown how she is harmed by the court’s ruling. Second, any legitimate fear Mazgani may have had was put to rest shortly after the hearing on the SLAPP motion, when the parties met to argue Mazgani’s motion for attorneys’ fees. Following that hearing, the court entered judgment dismissing Clark’s entire action “with prejudice.” Mazgani’s reliance on a conflicting notation in an earlier minute order is unfounded. If there is a conflict between the terms of the minute order and the judgment, the judgment controls. The minute order, or memorandum of decision, is merely a statement of the
