ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is Defendants Keno-sian & Miele, LLP, and Kenneth Miele’s (collectively, “Defendants”) Motion for Partial Judgment on the Pleadings. (Docket No. 22.) Plaintiff Manuel Reyes (“Plaintiff’ or “Reyes”) opposes the motion. For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion for Partial Judgment on the Pleadings.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The instant action presents a debt collection dispute. The material allegations of the operative Complaint are as follows. On January 25, 2006, Defendants filed a debt collection action on behalf of their client, Unifund CCR Partners (“Unifund”), *1160 against Plaintiff in San Mateo County Superior Court (“state court action”). 1 In the state court action, Defendants claimed that Unifund purchased, or was otherwise assigned, an alleged debt that Plaintiff owed to his credit card company, First USA Bank, N.A (“First USA”). Defendants sought to collect $3,985.85 in damages, as well as pre-judgment interest and attorneys’ fees.
Following a state court trial, judgment was entered in Plaintiffs favor. Shortly thereafter, Plaintiff filed the operative Complaint in this case asserting two claims: (1) violations of the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692(a) (“FDCPA”); and (2) violations of the Rosenthal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, California Civil Code section 1788 et seq. (“RFDCPA” or “Rosenthal Act”). Plaintiff incorporates the underlying state court complaint in his current Complaint. As is relevant to this Motion, Plaintiff specifically alleges that Defendants violated the Rosenthal Act by: (1) misrepresenting the character, amount or legal status of Plaintiffs alleged debt in violation of Cal. Civ.Code § 1788.13(e); (2) misrepresenting the compensation that could lawfully be collected in violation of Cal. Civ.Code § 1788.13(e); (3) threatening to collect attorney’s fees in violation of Cal. Civ.Code 1788.13(e); (4) misrepresenting that Unifund was lawfully entitled to attorney’s fees in violation of Cal. Civ. Code 1788.13(e); (5) misrepresenting that Unifund was lawfully entitled to collect the debt in question in violation of Cal. Civ. Code 1788.13(i); and (6) attempting to collect interest, fees, or other charges from Plaintiff not authorized by the debt-creating agreement in violation of Cal. Civ.Code § 1788.13(e). (Complaint ¶ 34.)
Defendants now seek to dismiss Plaintiffs state law RFDCPA claims on the grounds that they are based upon statements made in pleadings filed in state court, and are therefore barred by the litigation privilege, Cal. Civ.Code § 47.
LEGAL STANDARD
“After the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial, any party may move for judgment on the pleadings.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). A motion for judgment on the pleadings is evaluated according to virtually the same legal standard as a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), in that the pleadings are construed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
See Brennan v. Concord EFS, Inc.,
Although materials outside of the pleadings should not be considered, a court may consider all materials properly submitted as part of the complaint, such as exhibits.
See Hal Roach Studios,
DISCUSSION
Plaintiff claims that Defendants violated the RFDCPA by alleging, in the state court complaint, that Plaintiff owed an outstanding debt to Defendants and that Defendants were entitled to attorney’s fees. The issue before the Court is whether Plaintiffs RFDCPA claims are barred by *1161 the California litigation privilege, Cal. Civ. Code § 47(b). Plaintiff contends that the litigation privilege does not apply to the allegations contained in Defendants’ state court complaint because Defendants’ assertions were “conduct,” not “communication,” and because the RFDCPA overrides the litigation privilege as a matter of statutory interpretation. Before turning to the merits of these arguments, a review of-the California litigation privilege is instructive.
The California litigation privilege applies to any publication or broadcast made in any judicial proceeding. Cal. Civ. Code § 47(b). The privilege is absolute in nature and “is now held applicable to any communication, whether or not it amounts to a publication, and all torts except malicious prosecution.”
See Silberg v. Anderson,
The rationale for the broad sweep of the litigation privilege is that it affords “litigants and witnesses the utmost freedom of access to the courts without fear of being harassed subsequently by derivative tort actions.”
Id.
at 213,
With this framework in mind, the Court turns to the merits of the present case.
A. Defendants’ Filing of the State Court Complaint is a Communicative Act.
Plaintiff argues that the litigation privilege does not apply because Defendants’ assertions in the state court debt *1162 collection action were “conduct” and not “communication.” The Court disagrees.
“Because the litigation privilege protects only publications and communications, a ‘threshold issue in determining the applicability’ of the privilege is whether the defendant’s conduct was communicative or noneommunicative.”
Jacob B. v. County of Shasta,
Here, Plaintiff does not allege that Defendants engaged in any conduct outside of asserting allegations against Plaintiff in the state court complaint. Plaintiffs Complaint in fact expressly incorporates by reference the content of Defendants’ state court debt collection complaint. (Complaint ¶ 12.) Plaintiff has failed, therefore, to demonstrate that the operative Complaint is based on the existence of an independent, noneommunicative, wrongful act. Instead, the gravamen of the action is based on contents of the state court complaint, which is a communication subject to the litigation privilege.
See, e.g., Rubin,
B. Plaintiffs Contentions Do Not Support the Proposition that the RFDCPA is Exempted from the Litigation Privilege.
Plaintiff contends that principles of statutory construction support the proposition that the RFDCPA is exempted from the litigation privilege. Plaintiff argues that the RFDCPA trumps the litigation privilege because the RFDCPA is more recent
2
and specific. Plaintiff cites the well-established principle that, where statutes are otherwise irreconcilable, later and more specific enactments prevail over earlier and more general ones.
Wells v. One2One Learning Found.,
At the outset, the Court notes that while there is no California authority on the issue, there is a split of authority among federal district courts on the question of whether the litigation privilege and the
*1163
Rosenthal Act are irreconcilable.
Compare Butler v. Resurgence Fin., LLC,
Each court that has confronted the issue of whether the litigation privilege and the RFDCPA are irreconcilable has made findings in the context of the alleged violations presented in that case. In Oei, the court found that the RFDCPA prevailed over the litigation privilege where plaintiffs alleged multiple instances of harassing communications and conduct occurring pri- or to the debt collection action. Id. at 1092. The court found that the two statutes were irreconcilable in that case because the RFDCPA “would effectively immunize conduct that the Act prohibits.... [f|or example ... threats that failure to pay a consumer debt may result in the garnishment of the debtor’s wages or the sale of his property ... [or] repeated, continuous and harassing telephone calls.” Id. at 1100. Because the alleged communications were arguably within the scope of the litigation privilege, applying the litigation privilege to immunize this conduct would “vitiate the Rosenthal Act and render the protections it affords meaningless.” Id. at 1101. The court therefore found that, in this factual context, the two statutes were irreconcilable and thus the RFDCPA prevailed over the litigation privilege. Id. at 1100-01.
In
Butler,
the court found that all of the alleged actions were taken in judicial proceedings by a litigant and as such were within the scope of the litigation privilege.
See Butler,
On the other hand, both
Taylor
and
Nickolojf
found that allegations regarding debt collection efforts that occurred entirely within the context of litigation did not present a situation wherein the two statutes were irreconcilable. In
Taylor,
decided before
Oei,
the court found that there was no authority to support Plaintiffs contention that allegedly wrongful debt collection practices that occurred entirely in the context of litigation were exempted from the litigation privilege.
Taylor,
*1164 The instant case is distinguishable from Oei and Butler. Here, unlike in Oei, Plaintiff makes no allegations of wrongful conduct occurring outside of the filing of a state court complaint. Rather, Plaintiff bases his Complaint entirely on the allegations contained in Defendants’ state court complaint. The court in Oei understandably confronted a different question of the irreconcilability of the statutes given the allegations in that case. The Court therefore finds Oei to be distinguishable. In addition, Butler is not persuasive as it does not consider whether the statutes are irreconcilable and instead relies on Oei, which is factually distinguishable, and First North American, which does not speak to whether the filing of a complaint to recover a debt under the RFDCPA is protected by the litigation privilege.
Instead, the present case is more similar to Nickoloff and Taylor. The only allegedly wrongful debt collection practices in the present case occurred entirely in the context of the filing of a state court complaint to recover a debt. The RFDCPA does not explicitly regulate the content of complaints or other pleadings that are transmitted in connection with an actual legal proceeding and only prohibits the use of the courts as a means to collect a debt in a few specific ways, none of which are at issue here. See Sections 1788.15(a), (b) (proscribing a debt collector’s use of judicial proceedings with knowledge that service of process has not been legally effected, and proscribing the debt collector’s use of judicial proceedings in counties other than where the debtor incurred the debt or resides); Section 1788.16 (proscribing a debt collector’s simulation of a “legal or judicial process” in collecting a debt). The application of the litigation privilege to the communication at issue in this case would not, therefore, vitiate the RFDCPA and render it meaningless as was found in Oei. The Court therefore follows the lead of Nickoloff and Taylor in finding that the litigation privilege and the RFDCPA are not irreconcilable in this case. Plaintiffs statutory construction argument is, therefore, unavailing.
Having rejected the argument that the statutes are irreconcilable, the Court turns to Plaintiffs legislative intent argument. Here, Plaintiff asserts that subsequent amendments of the litigation privilege establish, by implication, a legislative intent to exempt the Rosenthal Act from the litigation privilege. (Plf.’s Supp. Mem. at 2.) Plaintiffs argument, however, requests that the Court exempt the Rosenthal Act from the general application of the litigation privilege absent any support in the legislative history. The Court declines to do so.
First, the Court notes that it should not lightly imply exceptions to legislative enactments. “Under the maxim of statutory construction,
expressio unis est exclusion alterius,
if exemptions are specified in a statute, we may not imply additional exemptions unless there is a clear legislative intent to the contrary.”
People v. Palacios,
In addition, the California Legislature’s incorporation of the FDCPA into the RFDCPA in 1999 does not support an implied exception. The RFDCPA explicitly excludes attorneys from the definition of “debt collectors” while the FDCPA does not.
See
Cal. Civ.Code § 1788.2(c); 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(6). In addition, the Supreme Court of the United States in
*1165
terpreted the FDCPA as applying to attorneys who regularly, through litigation, engage in debt collection.
See Heintz v.
Jenkins,
Finally, the cases that recognized exceptions to the litigation privilege, while supporting the proposition that courts can recognize exceptions to the litigation privilege, do not suggest that the RFDCPA was intended to create such an exception.
See, e.g., Shafer v. Berger,
Finding no. support for the proposition that the Legislature intended to exempt the RFDCPA from the litigation privilege, the Court declines to imply such an exception as advocated by Plaintiff. Such an implied exception is not supported by the case law or the record before this Court. Thus, in sum, the Court follows the lead of Nickoloff and Taylor, and finds that there is no reason to conclude that the RFDCPA is exempted from the litigation privilege in this case.
CONCLUSION
Because Plaintiff basis his RFDCPA claims exclusively on Defendants’ communications within the state court debt collection complaint, the Court finds that the litigation privilege applies. For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motion for partial judgment on the pleadings as to Plaintiffs RFDCPA claims. IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Unifund CCR Partners v. Manuel L. Reyes, et al., Case No. CJL-452482.
. The RFDCPA was enacted in 1977, Cal. Civ.Code § 1788, and the litigation privilege was enacted in 1872, Cal. Civ.Code § 47.
. Instead, the only legislative intent noted by either party is that the 1999 amendments to the RFDCPA were intended to increase the protections afforded California consumers under the act. (Plf.'s Supp. Mem. at 2; Def.’s Supp. Mem. at 7.)
