Opinion
Introduction
Plaintiffs,Hi-Top Steel Corporation, doing business as Weiner Steel Corporation, and Hiuka America Corporation appeal from a judgment on the pleadings in favor of defendants Bernard Lehrer, Sam Adíen and Aadlen Bros. Auto Wrecking, Inc.
Statement of Facts 1
Plaintiff Hiuka America Corporation (Hiuka) exports scrap steel from Southern California. One method of preparing scrap steel for export is shredding. One part of the market for shredded steel is for shredded automobile bodies. Approximately 50,000 tons of automobile bodies are shredded monthly in Southern California; this is done by only 4 companies.
*573 Defendant Aadlen Bros. Auto Wrecking, Inc. (Aadlen Bros.), owned by defendant Sam Adíen (Adíen), owns automobile dismantling yards which supply automobile bodies for shredding. From September 1987 through August 1989, Adíen negotiated with Hiuka regarding the possibility of entering into a joint venture to construct an automobile body shredding facility on property Adíen owned in Sun Valley, California. As part of the joint venture, Adíen would open an automobile dismantling yard next to Hiuka’s facility in Wilmington, California and would ship the automobile bodies to Sun Valley for shredding. Adíen expected to be able to control 40 percent of the Southern California market for shredded automobile bodies.
Ultimately, Hiuka declined to enter into the joint venture. Instead, in September 1990, it acquired a 51 percent ownership interest in Weiner Steel Corporation (Weiner Steel); Weiner Steel was in the business of preparing scrap steel for export, but it did not shred automobile bodies. Weiner Steel then developed plans to upgrade its facilities. It also entered into a contract with Newell Industries, Inc. (Newell) to purchase the latest in automobile body shredding equipment and sought the necessary government approvals to install and use the automobile body shredder on its property. The automobile body shredding facility planned by Weiner Steel would be superior to those already in use in Southern California, in that the equipment which would be used is more environmentally sound and efficient to operate than that in use at the other facilities.
Beginning in February 1992, Bernard Lehrer (Lehrer), an Aadlen Bros, employee, contacted the City of Pico Rivera on behalf of Adlen and Aadlen Bros, to make false statements about the installation of the automobile body shredding equipment at Weiner Steel. On March 10, 1992, Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design for installation of the shredding equipment was approved by the city planning department. Lehrer then mailed a letter to Councilwoman Gloria Molina containing false statements concerning the Weiner Steel facility. He also filed on behalf of Adlen and Aadlen Bros, an appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design for the purposes of delaying the installation of the shredding equipment, causing plaintiffs undue expense and causing them to abandon their intended entry into the automobile body shredding business.
On May 21, 1992, defendants circulated a flyer to residents of Pico Rivera and the surrounding communities. The flyer contained false statements about the automobile body shredding equipment and encouraged the residents to oppose Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design. However, on May 27, Pico Rivera’s design review board, after considering Lehrer’s appeal, unanimously affirmed the approval of the precise plan of design.
*574 In April 1992, Adlen had informed plaintiffs that Lehrer was his employee and would do anything he asked him to do concerning the appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design. In June, Lehrer stated to a Hiuka representative he would withdraw his appeal if plaintiffs would agree not to shred automobile bodies. If plaintiffs would not agree, he would attempt to delay further installation of the automobile body shredding equipment by asking the City of Pico Rivera to require Weiner Steel to provide an environmental impact report. Lehrer also told Julia Nagano, Director of Public Relations of the Port of Los Angeles, that in opposing the installation of the shredding equipment he was representing the interests of his customers.
At this same time, defendants themselves were gathering information about automobile body shredding equipment. In mid-May 1992, they requested from Newell a quote on a “Megashredder,” the same type of automobile body shredding equipment Weiner Steel sought to install at its facility.
Defendants made false statements to the public and public officials regarding plaintiffs’ proposed automobile body shredding facility; defendants knew their statements about the increased environmental impacts of plaintiffs’ proposed facility were groundless, based upon their own plans to install a shredder. They also instituted a baseless appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design, prosecuting it without regard to its merits. Defendants undertook these actions for their own benefit, and their actions were designed to delay plaintiff’s entry into the automobile body shredding business and disrupt plaintiffs’ business by saddling them with onerous regulatory and administrative costs and burdens.
Contention
Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in granting defendants a judgment on the pleadings, in that they have stated a cause of action under the sham exception to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. For the reasons set forth below, we agree.
Discussion
The
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine provides that there is no antitrust liability under the Sherman Act for efforts to influence government which are protected by the First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances, even if the motive behind the efforts is anticompetitive.
(Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
v.
Bear Steams & Co.
(1990)
The doctrine has its genesis in
Eastern R. Conf.
v.
Noerr Motors
(1961)
The United States Supreme Court started its analysis of the case with the principle that the Sherman Act is not violated by mere attempts to influence the passage or enforcement of laws.
(Eastern R. Conf.
v.
Noerr Motors, supra,
This conclusion was not altered by the fact the railroads’ motivation was the destruction of the trucking industry as competition.
(Eastern R. Conf.
v.
*576
Noerr Motors, supra,
365 U.S. at pp. 138-139 [5 L.Ed.2d at pp. 471-472].) “The right of the people to inform their representatives in government of their desires with respect to the passage or enforcement of laws cannot properly be made to depend upon their intent in doing so. It is neither unusual nor illegal for people to seek action on laws in the hope that they may bring about an advantage to themselves and a disadvantage to their competitors.”
(Id.
at p. 139 [
The court also noted, however, there might be “situations in which a publicity campaign, ostensibly directed toward influencing governmental action, is a mere sham to cover what is actually nothing more than an attempt to interfere directly with the business relationships of a competitor and the application of the Sherman Act would be justified.”
(Eastern R. Conf.
v.
Noerr Motors, supra,
In
Mine Workers
v.
Pennington
(1965)
California Transport
v.
Trucking Unlimited
(1972)
The United States Supreme Court recognized that while unethical conduct may be protected in the legislative arena, “in the setting of the adjudicatory process [it] often results in sanctions.”
(California Transport
v.
Trucking
*577
Unlimited,
supra,
The court noted that “[misrepresentations, condoned in the political arena, are not immunized when used in the adjudicatory process. Opponents before agencies or courts often think poorly of the other’s tactics, motions, or defenses and may readily call them baseless. One claim, which a court or agency may think baseless, may go unnoticed; but a pattern of baseless, repetitive claims may emerge which leads the factfinder to conclude that the administrative and judicial processes have been abused. That may be a difficult line to discern and draw. But once it is drawn, the case is established that abuse of those processes produced an illegal result,
viz.,
effectively barring respondents from access to agencies and courts.”
(California Transport
v.
Trucking Unlimited, supra,
The court later explained the sham exception “encompasses situations in which persons use the governmental process—as opposed to the
outcome
of that process—as an anticompetitive weapon.”
(Columbia
v.
Omni Outdoor Advertising, Inc.
(1991)
While the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine was formulated in the context of antitrust cases, it has been applied or discussed in cases involving other types of civil liability
(City of Long Beach
v.
Bozek
(1982)
In the instant case, the trial court seemed to accept the NoerrPennington doctrine, or at least the principles underlying it, and its applicability to a case such as the one before it involving causes of action for unfair competition and intentional interference with contractual relations and prospective economic advantage. However, it expressed concern that California courts had never actually applied the sham exception but only discussed it in dicta. It ultimately ruled that defendants’ actions were protected under the California Constitution, article I, section 3.
Article I, section 3 of the California Constitution provides in pertinent part: “The people have the right to . . . petition government for redress of grievances . . . .” By contrast, the First Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging . . . the right of the people ... to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
However, in the context of the sham exception to the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine, the differences in language are irrelevant. As noted in
Clipper Exxpress
v.
Rocky Mountain Motor Tariff
(9th Cir. 1982)
*579
In discussing the sham exception,
Blank
v.
Kirwan, supra,
points out that genuine efforts to influence government action will not constitute a sham. (
Blank v. Kirwan, supra, while discussing the sham exception, did not apply it. Since the cause of plaintiff’s alleged injury was government action itself, not defendants’ efforts related to the government action, defendants could bear no liability for the injury and it was unnecessary for the court to apply the Noerr-Pennington doctrine or the sham exception. (39 Cal.3d at pp. 322-323.) Similarly, in Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Bear Steams & Co., supra, the California Supreme Court again set forth the Noerr-Pennington doctrine and the sham exception but did not apply them. Instead, it decided the case before it on principles contained in malicious prosecution cases. (50 Cal.3d at pp. 1135, 1137.) However, in neither of these cases did the Supreme Court question the sham exception or suggest it would not apply or should not be applied in California; the sham exception simply was inapplicable to those cases.
As discussed above, we see no impediment to applying the sham exception in California; it is not inconsistent with the California Constitution. Additionally, there is no reason not to apply it; defendants should not be protected from liability for their torts if they are not engaged in a genuine exercise of their constitutional rights but merely “shamming” exercise of those rights in order to injure their competitors. Accordingly, we hold the sham exception to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine is applicable in California.
Defendants argue, however, that even if the sham exception applies in California, it cannot apply to the instant case, in that it applies only in an adjudicatory setting. They point out that one case has called it the “ ‘sham litigation’ ” exception
(King
v.
Levin, supra,
Noerr
never limited the sham exception to the adjudicatory process only. In fact, it introduced the sham exception in the context of publicity campaigns to influence legislation, noting there could be “situations in which a publicity campaign, ostensibly directed toward influencing governmental action, is a mere sham to cover what is actually nothing more than an attempt to interfere directly with the business relationships of a competitor
*580
and the application of the Sherman Act would be justified.”
(Eastern R. Conf.
v.
Noerr Motors, supra,
California Transport
involved and applied the sham exception in an adjudicatory setting, but the United States Supreme Court did not limit its application to that setting.
(California Transport
v.
Trucking Unlimited, supra,
Defendants argue that
Havoco of America, Ltd.
v.
Hollowbow
(7th Cir. 1983)
“For purposes of this motion, the court treats as undisputed the allegations that defendants registered complaints with the SEC, that as a result the SEC conducted an investigation of Havoco or its subsidiary, and that this investigation caused Havoco to postpone its planned public offering. Such conduct is privileged as petitioning activity and cannot form the basis of a claim for tortious interference with business relationships, unless, as plaintiff argues, defendants’ actions were a ‘mere sham.’
“In an adjudicatory context, the bringing of a claim that an opponent or even the adjudicatory body itself considers baseless will not ordinarily result in sanctions. [Citations.] However, ‘a pattern of baseless, repetitive claims’ may establish the ‘sham’ nature of the petitioning activity and result in the loss of the privilege. [Citation.] . . . Here, there is no pattern of baseless, repetitive claims, although Havoco argues that there is. [Citation.] Defendants have only been pressing one claim, rooted in their displeasure with the management of their investments, and have been seeking a forum in which *581 to argue the merits of their claim. . . . Havoco is thus left with the argument that defendants claimed to tlíe SEC, not out of any desire to protect their investments or to instigate official action, but solely out of a desire to block the public offering.
“. . . The First Amendment guarantees defendants’ right to attempt to enlist the government on their side of the dispute. That this petitioning activity may have had incidentally an adverse effect on plaintiffs business, even that defendants knew this and intended such a result, has no effect on the First Amendment’s protection, as long as the activity represents a genuine attempt to influence governmental action. [Citations.] Here, the allegations in Havoco’s complaint represent the end defendants wanted to achieve: governmental intervention against Havoco. That they were unsuccessful does not automatically transform their attempt into a sham.
“In summary, a plaintiff must do more than merely allege that defendant’s petitioning activity was a sham in order to overcome the First Amendment privilege. Otherwise, the right to petition without fear of sanctions would become a mockery. The ‘sham’ exception cannot be used to chill this constitutional right. [Citations.] Havoco, therefore, must allege facts that demonstrate that defendants’ complaints to the SEC were merely a ruse and that defendants were not truly seeking favorable governmental action. Havoco has not done so . . . .” (Havoco of America, Ltd. v. Hollowbow, supra, 702 F.2d at pp. 650-651.)
Havoco
did not
hold
the sham exception applies
only
in an adjudicatory context; it merely applied it in such a context. Additionally, it did not hold the exception applies only when there is “ ‘a pattern of baseless, repetitive claims,’ ” as defendants here suggest is the case. To the contrary, it stated that such a pattern
“may
establish the sham nature of the petitioning activity.”
(Havoco of America, Ltd.
v.
Hollowbow, supra,
In the instant case, plaintiffs alleged defendant Lehrer made false statements about the installation of the automobile body shredding equipment by *582 plaintiff Weiner Steel to the City of Pico Rivera. After Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design for installation of the shredding equipment was approved by the city planning department, Lehrer filed on behalf of defendants Adíen and Aadlen Bros, an appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design for the purposes of delaying the installation of the shredding equipment, causing plaintiffs undue expense and causing them to abandon their intended entry into the automobile body shredding business.
Defendants circulated a flyer to residents of Pico Rivera and the surrounding communities. The flyer contained false statements about the automobile body shredding equipment and encouraged the residents to oppose Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design. However, Pico Rivera’s Design Review Board, ¿ter considering Lehrer’s appeal, unanimously affirmed the approval of the precise plan of design.
Adíen had informed plaintiffs that Lehrer was his employee and would do anything he asked him to do concerning the appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design. In June, Lehrer stated to a representative of plaintiff Hiuka that he would withdraw his appeal if plaintiffs would agree not to shred automobile bodies. If plaintiffs would not agree, he would attempt to delay further installation of the automobile body shredding equipment by asking the City of Pico Rivera to require Weiner Steel to provide an environmental impact report.
At this same time, defendants themselves were gathering information about automobile body shredding facilities. In mid-May 1992, they requested from Newell a quote on a “Megashredder,” the same type of automobile body shredding equipment Weiner Steel sought to install at its facility.
Defendants made false statements to the public and public officials regarding plaintiffs’ proposed automobile body shredding facility; defendants knew their statements about the increased environmental impacts of plaintiffs’ proposed facility were groundless, based upon their own plans to install a shredder. They also instituted a baseless appeal of Weiner Steel’s precise plan of design, prosecuting it without regard to its merits. Defendants undertook these actions for their own benefit, and their actions were designed to delay plaintiff’s entry into the automobile body shredding business and disrupt plaintiffs’ business by saddling them with onerous regulatory and administrative costs and burdens.
The foregoing allegations show defendants undertook petitioning activity solely to delay or prevent plaintiffs’ entry into the shredded automobile body
*583
market through use of “the governmental process—as opposed to the
outcome
of that process—as an anticompetitive weapon”
(Columbia
v.
Omni Outdoor Advertising, Inc., supra,
The judgment is reversed. Plaintiffs are to recover their costs on appeal.
Masterson, J., concurred. Vogel (Miriam A.), J., concurred in the disposition only.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 17, 1994, and respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 21, 1994. Arabian, J., did not participate therein. Lucas, C. J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
For purposes of review of a judgment on the pleadings, the facts are the allegations of the complaint, which are taken as true.
(Tiffany
v.
Sierra Sands Unified School Dist.
(1980)
