Opinion
As Internet technology has evolved over the past two decades, computer users have encountered a proliferation of chat rooms and Web sites that allow them to share their views on myriad topics from consumer products to international diplomacy. Internet bulletin boards, or “message boards,” have the advantage of allowing users, or “posters,” to express themselves anonymously, by using “screen names” traceable only through the hosts of the sites or their Internet service providers (ISP’s). One popular fornm is the financial message board, which offers posters the opportunity to communicate with others concerning stock trading, corporate behavior, and other finance-related issues.
The conversation on one financial message board devolved into scathing verbal attacks on the corporate officers of a Florida company, prompting a lawsuit by one of those officers, plaintiff Lisa Krinsky. Plaintiff attempted to discover the identity of 10 of the pseudonymous posters by serving a subpoena on the message board host, Yahoo! Inc. (Yahoo!). Defendant “Doe *1159 6” moved to quash the subpoena, but the trial court denied the motion. Doe 6 appeals, contending that he had a First Amendment right to speak anonymously on the Internet. Under the circumstances presented, we agree with Doe 6 that his identity should be protected and therefore reverse the order.
Procedural History
Until December 31, 2005, plaintiff was the president, chair of the board, and chief operating officer of SFBC International, Inc., a publicly traded “global development drug service company” with offices in Florida. In January 2006 plaintiff sued 10 “Doe” defendants in a Florida court. In the action plaintiff alleged that defendants had made “defamatory remarks” about her on Yahoo! message boards and other Web sites, using screen names to conceal their identities. During the litigation defendant Doe 6 was often referred to as “Senor_Pinche_Wey,” the screen name he had used in posting on the Yahoo! Finance message board. 1
Seeking damages and an injunction, plaintiff asserted two causes of action in the Florida complaint. All 10 defendants were accused of intentional interference with a “contractual and/or business employment relationship” between plaintiff and SFBC. Nine of the defendants were accused together of libel based on false and misleading Internet statements imputing dishonesty, fraud, improper professional conduct, and criminal activity to plaintiff.
The record contains copies of the alleged defamatory messages posted on the Yahoo! message board devoted to SFBC. Most of the posts derided another SFBC executive, “Jerry ‘Lew’ Seifer.” 2 Doe 6 called Seifer a “mega scum bag” and a “cockroach” and suggested that there were more “cockroach” executives at the company after Seifer resigned. In one message, posted on December 18, 2005, Doe 6 purported to find it “funny and rather sad that the losers who post here are supporting a management consisting of boobs, losers and crooks. (Krinsky, Natan and Seifer) while criticizing a charitable and successful hedge fund manager, who, unlike his critics and the longs here, has done his homework.” In a December 30, 2005 post, Doe 6 offered his so-called “Jerry ‘Lew’ Seifer’s New Year’s resolutions.” The list included the following statement: “I will reciprocate felatoin [sic] with Lisa even though she has fat thighs, a fake medical degree, ‘queefs’ and has poor feminine hygiene.” 3
*1160 In order to serve the proper defendants, Krinsky served a subpoena on the custodian of records at Yahoo! in Sunnyvale, California. Yahoo! notified Doe 6 that it would comply with the subpoena in 15 days unless a motion to quash or other legal objection was filed. Doe 6 then moved in superior court to quash the subpoena on the grounds that (1) plaintiff had failed to state a claim sufficient to overcome his First Amendment rights for either defamation or interference with a contractual or business relationship, and (2) plaintiff’s request for injunctive relief was an invalid prior restraint.
At the April 28, 2006 hearing on the motion, the superior court suggested that Doe 6 was “trying to drive down the price of [plaintiff’s] company to manipulate the stock price, sell it short and so forth.” The court queried whether it was “protected speech to do that? To deliberately engage in tactics designed to circumvent securities laws to drive the price down to a publicly traded company?” The court also expressed the view that “[accusing a woman of unchastity” and “calling somebody a crook . . . saying that they have a fake medical degree, accusing someone of a criminal act, accusing someone—impinging [ire] their integrity to practice in their chosen profession historically have been libel per se.” Counsel for Doe 6 maintained, however, that the reference to “crook” was to Seifer, not plaintiff, 4 and that the use of this term was, in context, mere opinion and therefore protected by the First Amendment.
On July 6, 2006, the court requested additional briefing on two questions: whether
O’Grady
v.
Superior Court
(2006)
Discussion
1. Standard of Review
The parties do not concur on the applicable standard of review. Doe 6 submits that we must evaluate his motion de novo, as the matter “involves the important constitutional right to speak anonymously.” Plaintiff maintains that the order should be reviewed only for abuse of discretion.
This appeal arises from a discovery order, which normally is reviewed under the deferential abuse of discretion standard.
(John B. v. Superior Court
(2006)
Moreover, Doe 6 invokes the protection of the First Amendment in seeking reversal. We cannot ignore our highest court’s admonition that when the appellate issue is whether a particular communication falls outside the protection of the First Amendment, independent review is called for, “both to be sure that the speech in question actually falls within the unprotected category and to confine the perimeters of any unprotected category within acceptably narrow limits in an effort to ensure that protected expression will not be inhibited.”
(Bose Corp.
v.
Consumers Union of U.S., Inc.
(1984)
2. The First Amendment and Speech on the Internet
As noted earlier, ordinary people with access to the Internet can express their views to a wide audience through the forum of the online message board. The poster’s message not only is transmitted instantly to other subscribers to the message board, but potentially is passed on to an expanding network of recipients, as readers may copy, forward, or print those messages to distribute to others. The use of a pseudonymous screen name offers a safe outlet for the user to experiment with novel ideas, express unorthodox political views, or criticize corporate or individual behavior without fear of intimidation or reprisal. In addition, by concealing speakers’ identities, the online forum allows individuals of any economic, political, or social status to be heard without suppression or other intervention by the media or more powerful figures in the field.
Yet no one is truly anonymous on the Internet, even with the use of a pseudonym. Yahoo! warns users of its message boards that their identities can be traced, and that it will reveal their identifying information when legally compelled to do so. 6 Nevertheless, the relative anonymity afforded by the Internet forum promotes a looser, more relaxed communication style. Users *1163 are able to engage freely in informal debate and criticism, leading many to substitute gossip for accurate reporting and often to adopt a provocative, even combative tone. As one commentator has observed, online discussions may look more like a vehicle for emotional catharsis than a forum for the rapid exchange of information and ideas: “Hyperbole and exaggeration are common, and ‘venting’ is at least as common as careful and considered argumentation. The fact that many Internet speakers employ online pseudonyms tends to heighten this sense that ‘anything goes,’ and some commentators have likened cyberspace to a frontier society free from the conventions and constraints that limit discourse in the real world.” (Lidsky, Silencing John Doe: Defamation & Discourse in Cyberspace (2000) 49 Duke L.J. 855, 863, fns. omitted.)
It is this informal ability to “sound off,” often in harsh and unbridled invective, that opens the door to libel and other tortious conduct. In the corporate and financial arena, the targets of such “cybersmear” may suffer damage to their business reputations and a concomitant decline in company value as disinformation and rumors propagate rapidly over the Internet. In addition, as the level of rational and civil discourse deteriorates, it becomes increasingly difficult to find meaningful contribution in these online conversations. (Lidsky,
Silencing John Doe: Defamation & Discourse in Cyberspace, supra,
Judicial recognition of the constitutional right to publish anonymously is a long-standing tradition. Most of the early decisions affirming this right concern political speech or artistic endeavors. “Anonymous pamphlets, leaflets, brochures and even books have played an important role in the progress of mankind. Persecuted groups and sects from time to time throughout history have been able to criticize oppressive practices and laws either anonymously or not at all.”
(Talley v. California
(1960)
When vigorous criticism descends into defamation, however, constitutional protection is no longer available. “[I]t is well understood that the right of free speech is not absolute at all times and under all circumstances. There are certain well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech, the prevention and punishment of which has never been thought to raise any Constitutional problem. These include the lewd and obscene, the profane, the libelous, and the insulting or ‘fighting’ words—those which by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace. It has been well observed that such utterances are no essential part of any exposition of ideas, and are of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality.”
(Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire
(1942)
Speech on the Internet is also accorded First Amendment protection. “Through the use of chat rooms, any person with a phone line can become a town crier with a voice that resonates farther than it could from any soapbox. Through the use of Web pages, mail exploders, and newsgroups, the same individual can become a pamphleteer. . . . [Q]ur cases provide no basis for qualifying the level of First Amendment scrutiny that should be applied to this medium.”
(Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union
(1997)
Corporate and individual targets of these online aspersions may seek redress by filing suit against their unknown detractors. Once notified of a lawsuit by the Web site host or ISP, a defendant may then assert his or her First *1165 Amendment right to speak anonymously through an application for a protective order or, as here, a motion to quash the subpoena. The present action for defamation and interference with business relationships is but one example of such confrontations.
3. The Applicable Balancing Test
The parties agree that the viability of the subpoena should be determined by weighing Doe 6’s First Amendment right to speak anonymously against plaintiff’s interest in discovering his identity in order to pursue her claim. They disagree, however, as to how that weighing process should be approached. Plaintiff urges application of three California decisions:
Mitchell v. Superior Court
(1984)
None of these cases is helpful to our analysis.
Mitchell,
for example, concerned a libel action in which the defendants, a newsmagazine and its reporters, resisted disclosing their confidential sources based on the “freedom of the press.”
(Mitchell v. Superior Court, supra,
Rancho Publications
is likewise not helpful. There the appellate court balanced the relevance of the material sought and the plaintiff’s need for disclosure against the magnitude of the invasion of the critics’ privacy. The
*1166
court stressed the “particularized nature” of the qualified privilege it was applying.
(Rancho Publications v. Superior Court, supra,
In
O’Grady
v.
Superior Court, supra,
This case is of the kind we distinguished in O’Grady. Plaintiff seeks only the identity of her detractor, not the content of a communication; and the protected interests asserted in the motion are not those of a third party host or news medium but those of the anonymous speaker himself. To reach a *1167 workable standard by which to balance the parties’ competing interests we must look beyond the reporters’ shield law and the constitutional protections enjoyed by the news media. The proper focus instead should be on providing an injured party a means of redress without compromising the legitimate right of the Internet user to communicate freely with others.
4. Dendrite, Cahill, and Other Tests
Federal and state courts have made valiant efforts to devise a fair standard by which to balance the interests of the parties involved in disputes over Internet speech. The most deferential to plaintiffs are those applying a “good faith” standard. (See, e.g.,
In re Subpoena to America Online, Inc.
(2000)
Other courts have exercised greater scrutiny of the plaintiff’s cause of action before allowing the speaker to be identified. In
Dendrite Intern. v. Doe No. 3
(2001)
*1168
The same court on the same day followed
Dendrite
to a different result in
Immunomedics, Inc. v. Doe
(2001)
The third and fourth ingredients of
the Dendrite
analysis were later applied in
Highfields Capital Management, L.P. v. Doe
(N.D.Cal. 2005)
While Doe 6 urges us to follow
Highfields Capital,
plaintiff objects to that court’s requirement of a prima facie showing of each element at the pleading stage. She nevertheless maintains that she met that test. Neither party advocates a third line of analysis set forth in
Doe v. Cahill
(Del. 2005)
The
Dendrite
test, on the other hand, required too much. The
Cahill
court instead adopted a standard applicable to a plaintiff opposing summary judgment. Thus, the plaintiff “must support his defamation claim with facts sufficient to defeat a summary judgment motion.”
9
(Doe v. Cahill, supra,
Cahill
was followed by trial courts in various jurisdictions. (See, e.g.,
Best Western Intern., Inc.
v.
Doe
(D. Ariz., July 25, 2006, No. CV-06-1537-PHX-DGC)
Other courts have utilized a motion-to-dismiss standard in weighing the need of injured parties to discover the identity of libelous Doe defendants against the rights of those defendants to speak anonymously. In
Rocker Mgmt. LLC
v.
John Does I Through 20
(N.D.Cal., May 29, 2003, No. MISC 03-003 3 CRB, 2003 U.S.Dist. Lexis 16277 [
We find it unnecessary and potentially confusing to attach a procedural label, whether summary judgment or motion to dismiss, to the showing required of a plaintiff seeking the identity of an anonymous speaker on the Internet. California subpoenas in Internet libel cases may relate to actions filed in other jurisdictions, which may have different standards governing pleading and motions; consequently, it could generate more confusion to define an obligation by referring to a particular motion procedure. 10 The specific Dendrite criteria to defeat a protective order or motion to quash may likewise be dependent on the different pleading and motion procedures across the states. For example, if a complaint is filed in a notice-pleading state in which defamation claims are not excepted by statute or case law, the second Dendrite requirement (setting forth the statement with particularity) will be *1171 essential, while in Wisconsin it will be superfluous, as the statement will already be set forth in the initial pleading.
We agree with the Delaware Supreme Court that the first requirement, an attempt to notify the defendant, does not appear to be unduly burdensome.
(Doe v. Cahill, supra,
Common to most courts considering the issue is the necessity that the plaintiff make a prima facie showing that a case for defamation exists.
12
Requiring at least that much ensures that the plaintiff is not merely seeking to harass or embarrass the speaker or stifle legitimate criticism.
13
Even the decisions imposing a motion-to-dismiss obligation nonetheless require “ ‘some showing’ ” that the tort took place. (See, e.g.,
Rocker Mgmt. LLC
v.
John Does I Through 20, supra,
2003 U.S.Dist. Lexis 16277 at p. *3, quoting
Columbia Ins. Co. v. Seescandy.com, supra,
Plaintiff objects to the requirement of a prima facie showing. She contends that it infringes a party’s due process right because it does not include a reasonable opportunity to obtain evidence a plaintiff would need to establish a *1172 prima facie case. She does not, however, explain why she would necessarily be deprived of such an opportunity in the context of a motion to quash. Nor does she complain that she actually was deprived of that opportunity; indeed, she maintains that she satisfied her burden to make a prima facie showing of libel. A plaintiff need produce evidence of only those material facts that are accessible to her. (See fn. 12, ante.) In an Internet libel case, that burden should not be insurmountable; here, for example, plaintiff knows the statement that was made and produced evidence of its falsity and the effect it had on her.
We therefore agree with those courts that have compelled the plaintiff to make a prima facie showing of the elements of libel in order to overcome a defendant’s motion to quash a subpoena seeking his or her identity. Where it is clear to the court that discovery of the defendant’s identity is necessary to pursue the plaintiff’s claim, the court may refuse to quash a third party subpoena if the plaintiff succeeds in setting forth evidence that a libelous statement has been made.
14
When there is a factual and legal basis for believing libel may have occurred, the writer’s message will not be protected by the First Amendment. (Cf.
Beauhamais v. Illinois, supra,
In its order, the trial court in this case approached the question of plaintiff’s prima facie showing of defamation, but it did not reach any clear conclusion on the matter. 15 Instead, after reviewing the law of defamation in the federal and Florida courts, the trial court presented the parties’ arguments and *1173 queried whether the “crooks” reference constituted libel. The court then suggested, “On the one hand, SenorJPincheJWey’s other comments, calling Seifer a scum bag and cockroach, may reinforce the understanding that Senor_Pinche_Wey’ s references to Plaintiff were hyperbole and insults rather than assertions of literal fact.” The next sentence, however, which began, “On the other hand,” pertained to an entirely different question: whether this case was similar enough to federal “pump and dump” stock manipulation cases to “justif[y] the relief Plaintiff is seeking.” The trial court incorporated plaintiff’s supplemental brief in its ruling, thereby basing its ruling not on any showing related to the libel claim, but on plaintiff’s argument regarding stock manipulation. Plaintiff’s complaint included only two causes of action: intentional interference with a “contractual and/or business/employment relationship with SFBC” and defamation. In her supplemental brief she acknowledged that she had “not yet asserted claims relating to violations of State and/or Federal securities laws.” We will refrain from ruling on the adequacy of a cause of action that was never pleaded. 16
5. Prima Facie Showing of Libel
In examining the law of defamation, the court correctly determined that plaintiff’s prima facie burden must be defined and satisfied according to Florida law. (Cf.
Gertz
v.
Robert Welch, Inc.
(1974)
Plaintiff contends that she demonstrated that Doe 6’s posts were libelous per se. A publication is libelous per se in Florida “if, when considered alone without innuendo: (1) it charges that a person has committed an infamous crime; (2) it charges a person with having an infectious disease; (3) it tends to subject one to hatred, distrust, ridicule, contempt, or disgrace; or (4) it tends to injure one in his trade or profession. [Citations.]”
(Richard v. Gray
(Fla. 1953)
In determining whether a publication is libelous per se, the language used “will be given neither a mild nor [a] harsh construction”
(Adams v. News-Journal Corporation
(Fla. 1955)
When a defamation action arises from debate or criticism that has become heated and caustic, as often occurs when speakers use Internet chat rooms or message boards, a key issue before the court is whether the statements constitute fact or opinion. In some cases, the communication may
*1175
amount to “mixed opinion.” “Pure opinion occurs when the defendant makes a comment or opinion based on facts which are set forth in the [publication] or which are otherwise known or available to the reader or listener as a member of the public. Mixed expression of opinion occurs when an opinion or comment is made which is based upon facts regarding the plaintiff or his conduct that have not been stated in the article or assumed to exist by the parties to the communication.”
(From
v.
Tallahassee Democrat, Inc.
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1981)
“In determining whether the statement is one of pure or mixed opinion, the court must examine the statement in its totality and the context in which it was uttered or published. The court must consider all of the words used, not merely a particular phrase or sentence. In addition, the court must give weight to cautionary terms used by the person publishing the statement and consider all of the circumstances surrounding the statement, including the medium by which the statement is disseminated and the audience to which it is published.”
(Hoch v. Rissman, Weisberg, Barrett
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1999)
In this case, Doe 6’s messages, viewed in context, cannot be interpreted as asserting or implying objective facts. During November and December 2005 many messages were posted on the Yahoo! finance “SFCC” message board 18 regarding the management and value of SFBC. Heated discussion focused on plaintiff’s credentials and “credibility.” Other messages questioned the reputed personal relationship between her and Seifer.
Those posts of Doe 6 that are alleged as libelous convey scorn and contempt. On December 15, 2005, Doe 6 called Seifer a “mega scum bag.” The next day, reacting to Seifer’s departure from SFBC, Doe 6 said, “Shorts *1176 sing ‘La Cucaracha, La Cucaracha’ [ft] Where there is one cockroach, many more are there . . . Firing Seifer won’t stop the meltdown.” The sarcastic, derisive tone of these two derogatory posts is obvious, but neither one referred to plaintiff by name or by title. Likewise, a December 20 post titled “Seifer..........OUT!” said only, “That is one cockroach gone....how many left? [ft] Ole!” Even if we assume that readers understood “many more are there” and “how many [are] left” to target plaintiff, calling her a cockroach obviously cannot be interpreted as a statement of actual fact.
On December 18, 2005, in a post titled “State of denial,” Doe 6 criticized in crude, ungrammatical language the “idiot longs” who had supported the management of SFBC: “[F]unny and rather sad that the losers who post here are supporting a management consisting of boobs, losers and crooks. (Krinsky, Natan and Seifer) while criticizing a charitable and successful hedge fund manager, who, unlike his critics and the longs here, has done his homework, [ft] How many of the idiot longs here did their work and said to themselves, T know Natan had been CFO of at least 3 bankrupt companies and I know Seifer filed for personal bankruptcy and roughed up some patients, shares a rolls royce and a bendy [szc] with the President and a $15mm [sic] mansion, but what the hey, the numbers look good and it has been a long time.’ [ft] No, Loeb earned his $$$ and those of you who are whimpering on eachother’s [sic] shoulders crying to be saved by Spizer, the SEC etc are a bunch of pathetic losers .... But we already knew that, you were long SFCC. [ft] Ole!” A reasonable reader of this diatribe would not comprehend the harsh language and belligerent tone as anything more than an irrational, vituperative expression of contempt for the three officers of SFBC and their supporters. It appears to label each of the executives in the order named (with “boobs” referring to plaintiff); but even if each epithet refers to all three, this juvenile name-calling cannot reasonably be read as stating actual facts.
Finally, on December 30, 2005, Doe 6 posted the last of the messages plaintiff charged as defamatory. This one clearly was satirical in nature; it listed fictional “Jerry ‘Lew’ Seifer’s New Year’s resolutions” which alluded to troubles Seifer had recently encountered as an officer at SFBC. 19 Of these so-called resolutions, the only statement pertaining to plaintiff was, “I will reciprocate felatoin [szc] with Lisa even though she has fat thighs, a fake *1177 medical degree, ‘queefs’ and has poor feminine hygiene.” 20 The language is unquestionably vulgar and insulting, but nothing in this post suggested that the author was imparting knowledge of actual facts to the reader. The reference to a “fake medical degree” was only the latest entry in a protracted online debate about whether plaintiff’s medical degree from Spartan Health Sciences University in the West Indies justified her use of the “M.D.” title in company documents. No reasonable reader would have taken this post seriously; it obviously was intended as a means of ridiculing Seifer and plaintiff.
The federal district court in
Highfields Capital, supra,
We likewise conclude that the language of Doe 6’s posts, together with the surrounding circumstances—including the recent public attention to SFBC’s practices and the entire “SFCC” message board discussion over a
*1178
two-month period—compels the conclusion that the statements of which plaintiff complains are not actionable. Rather, they fall into the category of crude, satirical hyperbole which, while reflecting the immaturity of the speaker, constitute protected opinion under the First Amendment. It hardly need be said that this conclusion should not be interpreted to condone Doe 6’s rude and childish posts; indeed, his intemperate, insulting, and often disgusting remarks understandably offended plaintiff and possibly many other readers. Nevertheless, “ ‘ “the fact that society may find speech offensive is not a sufficient reason for suppressing it. Indeed, if it is the speaker’s opinion that gives offense, that consequence is a reason for according it constitutional protection.” ’ [Citations.]”
(Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of N. Y. State Crime Victims Bd.
(1991)
6. Interference with Contractual/Business Relationships
The next question is whether the cause of action for intentional interference with a contractual or business relationship remains viable, thereby precluding an order quashing the subpoena. Establishing intentional interference with a business relationship in Florida requires proof of “(1) the existence of a business relationship, not necessarily evidenced by an enforceable contract; (2) knowledge of the relationship on the part of the defendant; (3) an intentional and unjustified interference with the relationship by the defendant; and (4) damage to the plaintiff as a result of the breach of the relationship.”
(Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc. v. Cotton
(Fla. 1985)
Doe 6 contends that the applicability of the First Amendment to his speech on the message board forecloses plaintiff’s claim. We agree. Our Supreme Court, addressing both logical and pragmatic concerns, held that the limitations of the First Amendment “must be broadly applicable whenever the gravamen of the claim is injurious falsehood.”
(Blatty v. New York Times Co.
(1986)
*1179 Here the complaint states background facts relating the specific “defamatory remarks” made by each defendant. Count 1 incorporates those allegations and adds the following: (1) plaintiff had a “contractual and/or business employment relationship” with SFBC; (2) defendants knew of the “contractual/business relationships” between plaintiff and SFBC; (3) defendants intentionally and unjustifiably interfered with those relationships; (4) plaintiff had suffered damages proximately caused by defendants’ interference. As to Doe 6, it is clear from the pleading that the business tort alleged in the interference cause of action is based entirely on the “defamatory remarks” that were protected speech under the First Amendment. Casting the defamation claim in terms of interference with a business relationship does not save plaintiff’s cause of action.
Plaintiff’s reliance on several Florida decisions is misplaced. None addressed the question of whether an allegation of a business tort may withstand a demurrer or motion to quash when the underlying conduct is protected by the First Amendment. (See, e.g.,
Linafelt v. Beverly Enterprises-Fl., Inc.
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1999)
We thus conclude that Doe 6’s online messages, while unquestionably offensive and demeaning to plaintiff, did not constitute assertions of actual fact and therefore were not actionable under Florida’s defamation law. 21 Because plaintiff stated no viable cause of action that overcame Doe 6’s First Amendment right to speak anonymously, the subpoena to discover his identity should have been quashed.
*1180 Disposition
The order denying Doe 6’s motion to quash the subpoena is reversed. The trial court is directed to enter a new order quashing the subpoena to the extent that it commands Yahoo! to disclose the identity of “Senor_Pinche_Wey.” Doe 6 is entitled to his costs on appeal.
Rushing, P. J., and Premo, J., concurred.
Notes
For ease of reference we will use masculine pronouns to refer to Doe 6, as did his attorney in the proceedings below.
Seifer was a vice-president of legal affairs at SFBC, who apparently resigned in mid-December 2005.
At the hearing on Doe 6’s motion to quash, his attorney and the court assumed that “felatoin” was a misspelling of the word “fellatio.”
Addressing the slur “boobs, losers and crooks (Krinsky, Natan and Seifer),” counsel for Doe 6 argued that each of the labels was intended to attach to one of the three individual executives, in the same order; thus, “crook” was directed at only Seifer. Plaintiff’s counsel, however, took the position that Doe 6 had been attributing all three labels to all three executives.
“The independent review function is not equivalent to a
‘de novo’
review of the ultimate judgment itself, in which a reviewing court makes an original appraisal of all the evidence to decide whether or not it believes that judgment should be entered for plaintiff.”
(Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of U.S., Inc., supra,
In its Terms of Service, Yahoo! cautions that it “may access, preserve and disclose your account information and Content if required to do so by law or in a good faith belief that such access preservation or disclosure is reasonably necessary to: (a) comply with legal process; (b) enforce the TOS; (c) respond to claims that any Content violates the rights of third parties . . . .” (<http://info.yahoo.com/legal/us/yahoo/utos/utos-173.html> [as of Feb. 6, 2008].)
These factors included (1) the nature of the litigation and the reporter’s role in it, with disclosure being especially appropriate when a reporter is a defendant in a civil case, and particularly a libel action; (2) the importance of the information, which favors disclosure only if the information goes to “ ‘the heart of the plaintiff’s claim’ ”
(Mitchell
v.
Superior Court, supra,
One commentator has questioned the
Dendrite
test, finding at least the third and fourth elements “troubling.” (Vogel,
Unmasking “John Doe” Defendants: The Case Against Excessive Hand-Wringing over Legal Standards
(2004) 83 Or. L.Rev. 795, 808.) Without knowing the defendant’s identity, a plaintiff may have difficulty determining whether it is financially worthwhile to pursue litigation. The author cited a Pennsylvania court that sympathized with the plaintiff’s dilemma. “[PJlaintiff needs to know the identity of the Doe
*1168
defendants prior to incurring the expenses and other burdens of a trial, because it is questionable whether plaintiff would wish to proceed with a trial if John Doe turned out to be, for example, an inmate incarcerated pursuant to a trial before plaintiff. In this instance, it is unlikely that any judgment that she obtained would be satisfied.”
(Melvin v. Doe
(2000) 49 Pa. D. & C.4th 449, 453, appeal quashed on other grounds (2001)
The court made an exception for the element of malice in a case involving a public figure, a showing that depends on whether the defendant had knowledge that his or her statement was false or made it with reckless disregard as to its truth. (See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, supra, 376 U.S. at pp. 279-280.) As we do not decide whether plaintiff was a public figure, the question of whether she was obligated to produce evidence of malice is academic.
For example, a motion to dismiss in federal court is functionally equivalent to a demurrer filed in California. (See
Laguna Village, Inc. v. Laborers’ Intemat. Union of North America
(1983)
Indeed, the burden described by past courts can be compared to the showing required for a preliminary injunction. In such a case, the plaintiff must convince the court of the likelihood of prevailing on the merits, and the court must weigh the relative interim harm to the parties from the issuance or nonissuance of the injunction.
(Butt v. State of California
(1992)
The posting requirement is also “more idealistic than practical; a wronged plaintiff is unlikely to want to keep a false assertion alive by inviting continued debate.” (Siber & Marino, Unmasking Online Defendants: Addressing the anonymous posting of rumors while preserving the First Amendment, N.Y.L.J. (Apr. 9, 2007) p. S5 (Siber & Marino).)
Vogel (see fn. 8,
ante)
has questioned the prima facie element altogether, pointing out that certain elements of a claim may be difficult to establish without knowing the defendant’s identity. (See also Siber & Marino, N.Y.L.J.,
supra,
at p. S5, suggesting that proof of actual malice toward a public figure “could be impossible.”) Courts have obviated that difficulty, however, by insisting on a preliminary showing of only those facts accessible to the plaintiff. (See, e.g.,
Doe v. Cahill, supra,
For lawsuits brought in California and about half the other states, an anti-SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) statute (e.g., Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16) protects defendants from meritless actions arising from their exercise of the right of free speech.
“Prima facie evidence is that which will support a ruling in favor of its proponent if no controverting evidence is presented. [Citations.] It may be slight evidence which creates a reasonable inference of fact sought to be established but need not eliminate all contrary inferences. [Citation.]”
(Evans v. Paye
(1995)
The court reviewed a number of prior decisions, including Highfields Capital, after which it stated, “Therefore, Plaintiff must establish a prima facie case of libel before revelation of an anonymous internet speaker.” Doe 6 suggests that the court applied this test and “apparently” concluded that his statements did not constitute defamation. Plaintiff, on the other hand, maintains that the court “did not expressly adopt the Highfields Capital test... and ... did not conclude that [she] failed to prove a prima facie case of defamation.” With respect to the first point, the court did appear to accept the “prima facie” requirement. Plaintiff’s second point, however, is well taken, as the court did not articulate any finding on whether plaintiff met her burden.
The only reference in the complaint to stock manipulation was in the description of the defendants: “On information and belief, the Defendants are short sellers of SFBC common stock, that is, traders who bet that the market price for SFBC common stock will decline for profit. The Defendants have been posting false, misleading, derogatory and defamatory messages on the Yahoo! message boards, the Silicon Investor message boards, and the Kedrosky Blogs ... to interfere with the contractual/business relationships between Ms. Krinsky and SFBC as an officer, director and shareholder of the company. By posting the defamatory messages on the Message Boards, the Defendants intend to cause stock market research analysts and SFBC’s employees, consultants and investors to form a negative view of SFBC and Ms. Krinsky. The Defendants’ goal is to depress the price of the stock for the short sellers’ benefit, to harm Ms. Krinsky’s business reputation and interfere with her contractual and business relationship with SFBC and other members of the business community.”
Libel per se has been more elaborately defined as “ ‘the false and unprivileged publication by letter, newspaper, or other form of writing, of unfounded statements or charges which expose a person to hatred, distrust, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy, or which tend to cause such person to be avoided, or which have a tendency to injure such person in his office, occupation, business, or employment, and which are such that in their natural and proximate consequence, will necessarily cause injury to the person concerned, in his personal, social, official, or business relations of life, so that legal injury may be presumed or implied from the bare fact of the publication itself. [Citations.]’ ”
(McCormick v. Miami Herald Publishing Company
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1962)
SFBC stock was traded under the symbol “SFCC:
According to articles published by Bloomberg News, The Miami Herald, and other media sources, Seifer was vice-president of legal affairs but was not a lawyer. They also reported that Seifer jointly owned a $15 million home and a Rolls Royce with plaintiff, that he had encountered “regulatory problems” in the past, and that he had threatened drug trial participants with deportation if they did not sign statements refuting an earlier news report of deaths and injuries from SFBC drug testing. A Bloomberg.com news entry reported that Seifer resigned on December 19, 2005, following an investigation of his conduct with drug trial subjects.
The other statements were as follows: “I will not intimidate poor defenseless immigrants [f] I will not commit fraud [f] I will nor [sic] run afoul [of] SEC, CBOT or FCC regulattions [sic] [U I will remember to put the top down on the Rolls Royce when it rains in Miami []Q I will not trade on inside information gleened [sic] from clinical trials. [][] I will not worship the devil, [f] I will not purchase mansions from former fraudsters who ran crooked ‘vitamin’ companies (R[e]xall Sundown) . . . [][] I will not rip people off through crooked sales schemes on television, [f] I will not go banrupt [sic] when I can’t pay for my mortgage, [f] Ole!”
In light of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to address the parties’ dispute over whether plaintiff was a public figure or, if she was, whether she would be required to adduce evidence of malice at this stage of the proceedings. (See
Doe
v.
Cahill, supra,
