Lead Opinion
OPINION
Sinuon and Lawrence Leiendecker sued the nonprofit organization Asian Women United of Minnesota (AWUM), alleging that two of AWUM’s previous lawsuits against them constituted malicious prosecution. AWUM sought immunity under Minnesota’s anti-SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) law, which permits parties to move for dismissal of a lawsuit on the ground that a claim against them relates to an act involving public participation. Minn. Stat. §§ 554.01-.06 (2016). After we clarified the law’s procedure, the district court ruled that the section of the law that governs motions “to dispose of a judicial claim,” Minn. Stat. § 554.02, subdivision 1, violated the Leien-deckers’ right to a jury trial by requiring the trial judge to find facts. Id., subd. 2(3) (requiring “the court” to make findings). AWUM appealed to the court of appeals, then petitioned this court for accelerated review, which we granted. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
Our previous case involving these parties chronicled the history of this litigation.
The parties in this case have a long-running feud that has resulted in multiple lawsuits. AWUM is a nonprofit organization that operates a shelter for battered women and provides other services for women and children. Sinuon Leiendecker was AWUM’s executive director from 1999 to 2004. Lawrence Leiendecker is an attorney who provided pro bono legal services to AWUM.
The relationship between AWUM and the Leiendeckers began to deteriorate in 2003. In late 2003, the Leiendeckers attempted to oust AWUM’s board of directors by forming a new board, terminating the old board, and filing a declaratory-judgment action to have the new board declared legitimate. In response, AWUM’s old board alleged that it had previously fired Sinuon from her position as AWUM’s executive director and that she had received wages and benefits to which she was not entitled.
In that lawsuit—the first between the parties—the district court rejected the Leiendeckers’ efforts to install the new board of directors. The district court also rejected the old board’s allegation that it had fired Sinuon, but permitted the old board to proceed on its claims that Sinuon had received wages and benefits to which she was not entitled. The old board then fired Sinuon and sought, unsuccessfully, to add a legal-malpractice claim against Lawrence to the action. After AWUM declined to tender advance indemnification to Sinuon, the district court dismissed the case and awarded approximately $25,000 to Sin-uon as reimbursement of her costs and attorney fees.
In the parties’ second lawsuit, Sinuon sued AWUM in August 2005 for, among other things, wrongful termination. The district court dismissed the action, but the court of appeals reversed. Leiendecker v. Asian Women United of Minn.,731 N.W.2d 836 , 838 (Minn. App. 2007). The parties settled the second lawsuit in 2008.
In the parties’ third lawsuit, AWUM sued Lawrence in February 2007 for legal malpractice and related claims. Lawrence counterclaimed for indemnification. The district court eventually dismissed AWUM’s complaint at AWUM’s request, granted summary judgment to Lawrence on his counterclaim for indemnification, and entered judgment for over $41,000 in favor of Lawrence.
In the parties’ fourth lawsuit, AWUM sued Sinuon in February 2008 for conversion and related claims, alleging that Sinuon had received wages and other payments to which she was not entitled while she was AWUM’s executive director. Sinuon again moved for advance indemnification. The district court initially denied Sinuon’s motion, but the court of appeals reversed and remanded. Asian Women United of Minn. v. Leiendecker,789 N.W.2d 688 , 689 (Minn. App. 2010). On remand, the district court concluded that Sinuon was entitled to indemnification, and then dismissed the lawsuit when AWUM declined to tender advance indemnification to Sin-uon. The district court also entered judgment in favor of Sinuon to reimburse her for the costs and attorney fees that she had incurred prior to the dismissal.
In this lawsuit, now the fifth between the parties, the Leiendeckers seek to recover under a host of legal theories for the injuries allegedly inflicted by AWUM and the other defendants through the four previous lawsuits. Their complaint spans 116 pages, includes a total of 11 separately numbered claims, and names 18 defendants (plus some John Does and John Doe entities), including: AWUM; a current and a former executive director of AWUM; certain current and former AWUM board members; and individuals and companies that have provided professional services or expert testimony for AWUM....
In the district court, AWUM moved for dismissal on a number of grounds, but the only ground relevant to this appeal arises out of Minnesota’s anti-SLAPP statutes, Minn. Stat. §§ 554.01-.05 (2012). The anti-SLAPP statutes are directed at “SLAPP suits”—“Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation”—which are lawsuits that target the exercise of “[Ijawful conduct or speech that is genuinely aimed in whole or in part at procuring favorable government action.” Minn. Stat. § 554.03; see also Middle-Snake-Tamarac Rivers Watershed Dist. v. Stengrim,784 N.W.2d 834 , 839 (Minn. 2010)....
The district court dismissed most of the Leieiideckers’ claims, but deniedAWUM’s anti-SLAPP motion with respect to one: a claim for. malicious prosecution.
Leiendecker v. Asian Women United of Minn.,
A party moving to dismiss a claim based on the anti-SLAPP law must “make a threshold showing that the underlying ‘claim materially relates to an act of the moving party that involves' public participation.’” Stengrim,
(2) the responding party has the burden of proof, of going forward with the evidence, and of persuasion on the motion;
(3) the court shall grant the motion and dismiss the judicial claim unless the court finds that the responding party has produced clear and convincing evidence that the acts of the moving party are not immunized from liability under section 554.03....
In the previous case involving these parties, we announced that the plain language of clause 3 requires the responding party to provide evidence—not mere allegations—to show by clear and convincing evidence that the moving party’s acts are not immune. Leiendecker,
On remand, the court of appeals determined that AWUM had made a threshold showing that the lawsuit filed by the Leiendeckers materially related to an act by AWUM involving public participation. Leiendecker v. Asian Women United of Minn., Nos. A12-1978, A12-2015,
At the district court, AWUM renewed its motion to dismiss under the anti-SLAPP law, In response, the Leiendeckers moved for an order declaring the anti-SLAPP law unconstitutional.
AWUM appealed and sought accelerated review. We granted AWUM’s petition for accelerated review.
I.
Before proceeding to the merits of the constitutional argument, we must resolve two preliminary issues: whether the Leien-deckers waived their argument that the law is unconstitutional and whether the district court violated the court of appeals’ remand instructions.
A.
AWUM contends that the Leien-deckers waived their right to assert that the anti-SLAPP law is unconstitutional by failing to make that argument at any of three junctures: (1) in their petition for review of the court of appeals’ 2013 decision, (2) in their petition for rehearing following our 2014 decision, and (3) in their second petition for review following the court of appeals’ 2014 decision on remand. We conclude that the Leiendeckers’ constitutional challenge was not ripe until the case was remanded to the district court and, therefore, could not have been waived at an earlier point in time.
The legal effect of a party’s failure to raise an issue on appeal presents a question of law requiring de novo review. See State v. Dahlin,
This issue also arises in the context of successive appeals. A claim becomes ripe when there is an intervening change in the law between a party’s initial decision not to raise the claim because it would have been futile under then-existing law, and a later decision to raise that claim for the first time. See State v. Lindquist,
The Leiendeckers’ constitutional challenge to the anti-SLAPP law was not ripe when we granted review of the court of appeals’ 2013 decision. In that decision, the court of appeals determined that mere allegations in a complaint could satisfy the anti-SLAPP law’s requirement that the responding party show by clear and convincing evidence that the moving party’s acts are not immune, and that the anti-SLAPP law did not require the district court to weigh the evidence presented by the parties. Leiendecker v. Asian Women United of Minn.,
Waiver “must be based on a full knowledge of the facts.” Colder v. Smith,
Nor were the Leiendeckers obliged to assert a constitutional challenge when they petitioned for rehearing following our 2014 decision. At that point, we had already addressed the Leiendeckers’ constitutional-avoidance argument. Thus, we remanded the case to the court of appeals to address whether AWUM had made its threshold showing under section 554.02. Leiendecker,
Lastly, the Leiendeckers’ constitutional argument was not ripe when they petitioned for review following the court of appeals’ decision on remand, for two reasons: the claim was not addressed by the court of appeals on remand and the issue had not yet been raised before the district court. See Woodhall v. State,
B.
We must also determine whether the district court overstepped the bounds of the court of appeals’ remand instructions. “Appellate courts review a district court’s compliance with remand instructions under the deferential abuse of discretion standard.” Janssen v. Best & Flanagan, LLP,
The district court properly ruled on the constitutionality of the anti-SLAPP law. On remand, the district court received instructions to “apply the standard articulated by the supreme court to determine whether the Leiendeckers have met their burden” under the anti-SLAPP law. Leiendecker,
II.
We now address the merits of AWUM’s appeal: the constitutionality of Minn. Stat. § 554.02 as applied to the Leiendeckers’ malicious prosecution claim. We review de novo both the constitutionality of statutes and the interpretation and
Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution establishes that the “right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and shall extend to all cases at law without regard to the amount in controversy.” The language of Article I, Section 4 is “categorical,” permitting no exceptions. United Prairie Bank,
The jury-trial right exists for any “type of action” for which a jury trial was provided when the Minnesota Constitution was adopted in 1857. Olson v. Synergistic Techs. Bus. Sys., Inc.,
A.
Malicious prosecution is a claim at law, so the Leiendeckers are entitled to a jury trial. Specifically, malicious prosecution “is an action for a tort” with a right to damages. Schmidt v. Bickenbach,
Specifically, clauses 2 and 3 of Minnesota Statutes § 554.02, subdivision 2, combine to abrogate the Leiendeckers’ jury-trial right. Clauses 2 and 3 provide:
(2) the responding party has the burden of proof, of going forward with the evidence, and of persuasion on the motion;
(3) the court shall grant the motion and dismiss the judicial claim unless the court finds that the responding party has produced clear and convincing evidence that the acts of the moving party are not immunized from liability under section 554.03....
Clause 2 imposes on the responding party the burdens of proof, production, and persuasion. The burden of production is “the obligation of a party to come forward with sufficient evidence to support its claim or the relief requested.” Braylock v. Jesson,
Clause 3 animates the burdens allocated by clause 2. Clause 3 requires the responding party to “produce[ ] ... evidence” (the burden of production) that persuades the district court by a “clear and convincing” standard (the burden of persuasion) that the moving party’s acts are not immune under the anti-SLAPP law. Clear and convincing evidence refers to a burden of persuasion. Braylock,
Clauses 2 and 3 violate the responding party’s right to a jury trial in two ways as applied to actions at law alleging torts.
The law provides the district court with two options to resolve a motion to dismiss. The district court could decide that the responding party failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that the moving party engaged in tortious conduct. This determination would require dismissal of the suit under the anti-SLAPP law, thus precluding a jury trial. Alternatively, the district court could decide that the responding party did show by clear and convincing evidence that the moving party engaged in tortious conduct. This conclusion would also arguably preclude a jury trial. See Leader v. Joyce,
In a similar case, the Washington Supreme Court agreed. That court determined that Washington’s anti-SLAPP law-—which it described as “close to” Minnesota’s—violated Washington’s constitutional jury-trial guarantee. Davis v. Cox,
We also note that, procedurally, Minn. Stat. § 554.02 is unlike other judicial gatekeeping laws. For example, the heightened pleading standard in the Private Securities Litigation and Reform Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-5(c) (2012), does not resemble the anti-SLAPP statute. When assessing a claim under that standard, a court must “constantly assum[e] the plaintiffs allegations [are] true,” and “a plaintiff is not forced to plead more than she would be required to prove at trial.” Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.,
AWUM’s analogy between the anti-SLAPP law and Minnesota’s punitive damages statute fails for the same reason. Minnesota Statutes § 549.191 (2016) precludes plaintiffs from seeking punitive
Nor are Minnesota’s substantive immunities affected by our holding that Minn. Stat. § 554.02 is unconstitutional as applied to claims at law alleging torts. AWUM argues that the anti-SLAPP law resembles other immunities enacted by the Minnesota Legislature. See, e.g., Minn. Stat. § 214.34 (2016) (immunizing parties submitting health reports from civil liability); Minn. Stat. § 604A.12, subd. 2 (2016) (immunizing parties donating livestock services from civil liability). These are substantive immunities; they immunize participants in certain categories of activity. Like the above statutes, the anti-SLAPP law creates a substantive immunity: non-tortious conduct or speech aimed at procuring favorable government action. What differentiates section 554.02 is its procedural requirement that the responding party prove by clear and convincing evidence that its claim falls outside the law’s substantive immunity. The Legislature can immunize a category of people from lawsuits, but it cannot interpose the district court as the fact-finder in actions at law.
AWUM contends that because the anti-SLAPP law does not specify a right to a jury trial on the issue of anti-SLAPP immunity, the responding party is entitled to a jury trial only after immunity is denied. We do not decide whether anti-SLAPP immunity is a form of equitable relief wholly apart from the actual merits of a tort claim, because even if it is, the law still abridges the Leiendeckers’ jury-trial right. Allowing equitable immunities that are identical to a plaintiffs cause of action would permit the Legislature to erode the jury-trial right by sleight of hand. “[FJactual findings that are common to both claims at law and claims for equitable relief are binding upon the district court.” Onvoy, Inc. v. ALLETE, Inc.,
B.
Having decided that clauses 2 and 3 of section 554.02, subdivision 2, are unconstitutional as applied to claims at law
The two unconstitutional clauses of Minn. Stat. § 554.02 are inseparable from the remainder of the section. Without the unconstitutional provisions, section 554.02 provides no procedure for courts to determine whether a lawsuit violates the substantive prohibition of Minn. Stat. § 554.03. We therefore conclude that Minn. Stat. § 554.02 is unconstitutional when it requires a district court to make a pretrial finding that speech or conduct is not tortious under Minn. Stat. § 554.03, as was the case here. For the foregoing reasons, Minn. Stat. § 554.02 is unconstitutional as applied to claims at law alleging torts.
Affirmed.
DISSENT
Notes
. As the district court explained, although the Leiendeckers "broadly challenged the constitutionality” of the anti-SLAPP law, once the constitutional jury-trial challenge to Minn. Stat. § 554.02 was resolved,, there was no need to address the Leiendeckers' other constitutional claims.
. Although we refer only to AWUM in this opinion, we note that we also granted the petition for accelerated review filed by appellants Greenstein, Mabley & Wall, LLC, et al., which also challenged the district court's ruling on the constitutionality of section 554.02. The Leiendeckers also petitioned for accelerated review on their claims that the anti-SLAPP law is facially unconstitutional. We denied that petition. The Leiendeckers nonetheless presented in their brief for this appeal the additional constitutional challenges they raised before the district court, which that court did not address. Because we denied the Leiendeckers’ petition for accelerated review
. In contrast to waiver, forfeiture refers to the failure to timely assert a right. State v. Beaulieu,
. Contrary to the dissent's position, the district court resolved at least one factual dispute when analyzing the element of probable cause. The district court determined that "[a]bsent Lawrence's advice to Sinuon, it is unlikely AWUM would have formed a new board at that time.” Summary judgment is appropriate only if ''there is no genuine issue
. The anti-SLAPP law requires the responding party to prove that the moving parly's acts "constituted a tort or a violation of a person's constitutional rights.” Minn. Stat. § 554.03. As only one claim remains in this action, a tort claim for malicious prosecution, we do not need to decide whether the anti-SLAPP law is unconstitutional as applied to alleged violations of a person’s constitutional rights.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
The majority strikes down Minn. Stat. § 554.02 (2016) of the anti-SLAPP statutes as unconstitutional as applied to claims at law alleging torts. Specifically, the majority holds that the statute violates the right to jury trial because the statute requires that the district court judge resolve fact issues. It is not necessary, in my view, to reach the broad issue the majority decides. We presume that statutes are constitutional. Midland Glass Co. v. City of Shakopee,
The complaint alleges malicious prosecution. The anti-SLAPP statutes provide an
The tort of malicious prosecution requires that the Leiendeckers prove that AWUM brought a lawsuit without probable cause and with malice. See Allen v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
The district court here concluded that AWUM brought the lawsuit underlying the malicious prosecution claim with probable cause. Specifically, on the legal malpractice claim against Lawrence Leiendecker in the underlying action, the court relied on determinations in prior district court proceedings and undisputed testimony from the Leiendeckers’ themselves. Similarly, on the conversion claim against Sinuon Leiendecker in the underlying action, the court based its conclusion on uncontrovert-ed facts about Sinuon’s salary and an unchallenged incident demonstrating her ability to give herself money with little oversight. The district court here did not find facts and did not need to make any credibility determinations on the probable cause element. Indeed, the parties themselves did not dispute the facts relating to the element of probable cause. In short, the district court’s conclusion that the Leiendeckers failed to show a lack of probable cause was a ruling as a matter of law.
On appeal, the Leiendeckers do not contend otherwise and their brief points to no disputes of fact as to the probable cause element. The fact that the district court made findings of fact when analyzing the other elements of the tort is not dispositive here. The Leiendeckers’ failure to show a lack of probable cause is dispositive. Because the district court’s resolution of the legal question of probable cause did not
. AWUM argued before the district court that rulings as a matter of law do not violate the jury-trial right and it makes the same argument here.
. The majority points to only one statement in the district court order to support its conclusion that there were factual disputes on the issue of probable cause on the legal malpractice claim against Lawrence. Notably, the majority does not identify any factual disputes on the issue of probable cause on the conversion claim against Sinuon. As to Lawrence, the majority notes that the district court determined that “[ajbsent Lawrence’s advice to Sinuon, it is unlikely AWUM would have formed a new board at that time.” The district court, however, did not have to choose between conflicting evidence or resolve conflicting inferences in order to make this conclusion. See Scheiber v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Ry. Co.,
. The Leiendeekers also raise alternate constitutional challenges to the anti-SLAPP law, but the district court did not rule on these matters and so they are not properly before our court in this appeal. See Thiele v. Stick,
