ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT BRUNTON’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Defendant Thomas Brunton’s motion for summary judgment, argued May 17, 1999, requires the Court to address a split of authority concerning whether police reports constitute official communications entitled to an absolute privilege pursuant to California Civil Code § 47. The Court *1108 concludes that an absolute privilege is applicable and thus will render judgment in favor of Brunton. 1
I. Facts
This case arises from a workplace dispute between Plaintiff and Brunton, who was Plaintiffs subordinate. The dispute may or may not have culminated with Johnson striking Brunton in the chest with both fists. Whether or not Johnson actually hit Brunton, Brunton told medical providers he had been hit in the chest and also reported to law enforcement officers that Johnson had hit him. Johnson then filed the instant lawsuit, claiming that he lost his job and suffered various other adverse consequences because of Brun-ton’s allegedly false statements.
II. Discussion
Brunton attacks both aspects of Plaintiffs defamation cause of action by arguing that (1) statements made to medical providers did not identify Johnson and therefore could not have been defamatory; and (2) statements made to law enforcement officers were absolutely privileged as “official communications” pursuant to California Civil Code § 47(b)(3). Johnson concedes that Bruntoris statements to medical providers are not actionable because the medical records do not reflect that Brun-ton identified Johnson such that “a third party [could] understand[ ] the [statements’] applicability to plaintiff.”
Neary v. Regents of University of California,
(1986)
A. Standard
A motion for summary judgment
2
should be granted if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In the instant case, whether Brunton has met his moving burden depends entirely upon the Court’s interpretation of California Civil Code § 47. If section 47 mandates the application of absolute privilege to the category of communication at issue, then Bruntoris burden is both met and unrebutted.
B. Police Reports are Absolutely Privileged Under California Civil Code § 47
As noted above, judgment for Brunton is warranted only if California Civil Code § 47 cloaks with absolute privilege rele *1109 vant communications to law enforcement entities. The statute provides in part as follows:
A privileged publication or broadcast is one made: [¶¶] (b) In any (1) legislative proceeding, (2) judicial proceeding, (3) in any other official proceeding authorized by law .... [¶] (c) In a communication, without malice, to a person interested therein, (1) by one who is also interested....
Thus if a police report is properly considered an “official proceeding authorized by law,” it is subject to absolute privilege under section 47(b)(3). Otherwise, the police report at issue in this case only could be privileged under section 47(c), applicable to communications made “without malice” (in which case Brunton has provided no evidentiary basis for granting summary judgment).
“When interpreting state law, federal courts are bound by decisions of the state’s highest court.”
Nelson v. City of Irvine,
The line of cases cloaking police reports with the absolute privilege of section 47(b)(3) may be traced to
Williams
v.
Taylor,
The other side of the split is represented by
Fenelon v. Superior Court,
(1990)
This Court concludes that the California Supreme Court would adopt the position taken in Williams. The Court reaches this result because California’s public policy, as explicated both by its courts and by its Legislature, favors the application of an absolute privilege, because existing Ninth Circuit authority addressing the identical issue is in accord, and because the policy arguments in Fenelon ultimately are unpersuasive.
*1110 1. Policy Considerations and Precedent Support the Application of an Absolute Privilege
Of great significance to this Court’s interpretation of section 47 is the fact that the great majority of California’s intermediate appellate courts have tended to conclude, and the California Legislature appears to have presumed without saying so explicitly, that section 47(b)(3) applies to police reports. The fact that the majority of California Courts of Appeal which have considered the issue have tended to agree with
Williams, (see, e.g., Cabesuela v. Browning-Ferris Industries,
(1998)
Moreover,
Cabesuela
and
Hunsucker
are significant because they stem from trial court decisions rendered by the Santa Clara Superior Court, from whence the instant case was removed. A decision in this case contradicting the findings of absolute privilege in
Cabesuela
and
Hunsucker
would constitute a potential incentive for litigants in California’s Sixth District to forum shop, comparing the legal stock of the state and federal courts.
5
A finding by this Court of qualified privilege would therefore be in tension with the policy considerations delineated in
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
The applicability of absolute privilege to communications made in the context of
ongoing
governmental investigations into suspected wrongdoing is undisputed, except for the contrary implication of
Fenelon. See, e.g., Braun v. Bureau of State Audits,
(1998)
The conclusion that absolute privilege applies to police reports is further bolstered by an examination of how the Legislature otherwise has chosen to deal with the potential for citizen abuse of law enforcement mechanisms. For instance, Penal Code § 11172 explicitly causes persons filing knowingly false child abuse reports to be “[civilly] liable for any damages caused.” False police reports of child mo
*1111
lestation thus are excepted from the absolute privilege of Civil Code 47 to avoid stripping all meaning from the liability provision of Penal Code § 11172.
Begier v. Strom,
(1996)
In contrast to Penal Code § 11172, Penal Code § 148.5, which makes it a misdemeanor knowingly and falsely to report to a law enforcement official “that a felony or misdemeanor has been committed,” contains no provision for civil liability. The Legislature’s special treatment of false child abuse reports in contrast to its treatment of other police reports indicates an intent to shelter the publisher of the latter against all but a criminal conviction obtained under a reasonable doubt standard. 6
2. Existing Ninth Circuit Authority Favors the Application of Absolute Privilege
In addition to the foregoing reasoning and authority, the only relevant Ninth Circuit case to discuss section 47 strengthens even further the
Erie
doctrine considerations discussed earlier.
See Forro Precision Inc. v. IBM,
Although a circuit court’s prediction of state law is not binding in the same way as is its definitive interpretation of federal law, as a practical matter a circuit court’s interpretations of state law must be accorded great deference by district courts within the circuit. Were Plaintiff to appeal the instant ruling, the Ninth Circuit would review,
de novo,
this Court’s interpretation of California law.
See Salve Regina College v. Russell,
S. The Fenelon Court’s Arguments are not Persuasive
To be sure, the conclusions drawn from the above considerations are not beyond reasoned debate, as illustrated by the decision in
Fenelon,
a. Law of Other Jurisdictions Does Not Inform Interpretation of Section 17
In
Fenelon,
numerous cases from other jurisdictions are cited without analysis for
*1112
the proposition that
Williams
marks an unjustified deviation from the majority rule of qualified privilege for police reports.
See Fenelon,
The weight of numbers is relevant to show that
Williams
is in the minority only if the cases cited in
Fenelon
involve the interpretation of statutes comparable to section 47(b)(3).
7
However, eighteen of the nineteen cases merely apply the common law privilege for good faith communications between interested parties (codified in California by Civil Code § 47(c)(1)), or similar case law precedent. While the nineteenth case,
Hardaway v. Sherman Enterprises, Inc.,
(1974)
In none of the nineteen cases was the scope of a statutory privilege for “official proceeding[s]” addressed. Thus, Fene-lon ’s lengthy recitation of out-of-state cases applying qualified privilege to various citizen reports of criminal activities has little bearing upon the determination of how section 47 should be applied to police reports in California.
b. Section 17 Does not Require that an “Official Proceeding” be “Quasi-Judicial”
The
Fenelon
court also was concerned that “to clothe with absolute immunity communications made to a body acting in other than a quasi-judicial capacity ... would provide an unchecked vehicle for silent but effective character assassination.”
Fenelon,
*1113
The
Fenelon
court’s paramount concern was with a perceived lack of safeguards. The court noted that, prior to
Williams,
absolute privilege applied only where the governmental agency receiving a report was authorized to hold
its own
quasi-judicial proceeding.
9
See, e.g., Imig v. Ferrar,
(1977)
In sum, the reasoning set forth in Fene-lon does not militate against finding that section 47 confers absolute privilege upon police reports. The cases cited by Fene-lon to show that other jurisdictions apply only qualified privilege are of little weight because none of them interpret statutes similar to section 47. Moreover, the lack of a quasi-judicial proceeding associated with police reports does not relevantly distinguish such reports from other absolutely privileged communications.
III. Conclusion
In light of all of the above, this Court concludes that California’s highest court would hold that police reports are absolutely privileged under California Civil Code § 47(b)(3). While this interpretation of California law leaves open the possibility that some real wrongs may go unre-dressed, and while the Court has not been unmindful of this possibility in conducting its analysis, the clear weight of judicial and legislative authority appears to support this conclusion.
ORDER
Accordingly, Brunton’s motion for summary judgment is granted as to Plaintiffs Fourth Cause of Action. Pursuant to stipulation, the Fifth and Sixth Causes of Action also are dismissed with prejudice as to the moving defendant.
Notes
. Brunton is the sole remaining defendant after otherwise successful settlement efforts among the parties. Plaintiff contests the instant motion only with regard to a single cause of action for defamation, having expressly abandoned his other causes of action against Brunton in light of information gained through formal discovery.
. Johnson contends that the instant motion constitutes an attack on the pleadings, and suggests that the resources of all concerned might have been conserved by bringing the challenge earlier as a motion to dismiss or motion for judgment on the pleadings. Johnson overlooks the fact that while he only opposes that aspect of the instant motion which attacks the pleadings, the moving papers rely, for the most part, upon facts not apparent from the face of the complaint. In any event, there is no effective difference whether the Court treats the contested portion of this motion as a motion for summary judgment or a motion for judgment on the pleadings because (1) resolution of the remaining issue does not turn upon inferences which the Court may draw from the complaint and (2) a ruling in favor of Brunton would be finally dispositive of the case whether made pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) or Rule 56.
. The California Supreme Court took note of the split in
Lubetzky.v. State Bar,
(1991)
. One
post-Passman
case which purports to follow
Williams
actually may be more consistent with
Fenelon:
In
Devis v. Bank of America,
(1998)
It is unclear how an absolute privilege with a "good faith” exception differs at all from a qualified privilege. Thus the Devis court’s professed preference for Williams over Fene-lon is confusing. It is also dictum, given that the conduct at issue in Devis was deemed to be protected even by the (effectively) qualified privilege described by the Devis court.
. A finding in this case that absolute privilege does not apply also would create a division
within
the Northern District of California because it would conflict with the decision in
Goehring v. Wright,
. Nothing herein is intended to interpret the applicability of section 47 with respect to malicious prosecution claims.
. California Civil Code Section 4 provides as follows:
The rule of the common law, that statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly construed, has no application to this Code. The Code establishes the law of this State respecting the subjects to which it relates, and its provisions are to be liberally construed with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice.
. This more limited view of
McMann
also is more consistent with the view of the California Supreme Court which commented in
Slaughter v. Friedman,
(1982)
. Notably, this distinction does not gainsay the conclusion of Williams and other cases that communications which initiate official proceedings may be considered to be part of those proceedings for section 47 purposes.
