Opinion
Plаintiff Matrixx Initiatives, Inc. (Matrixx), sued a number of individuals for defamation and related claims after they posted statements critical of Matrixx on Internet message boards. Unable to identify two of the anonymous posters, Matrixx sought a discovery order compelling third parties Stephen L. Worthington and Barbary Coast Capital Management, LLC (Barbary Coast) tо disclose the information. The superior court granted Matrixx’s motion to compel answers to the deposition questions designed to discover the identity of the two posters.
Worthington and Barbary Coast appeal, contending that Matrixx failed to demonstrate a sufficient basis for disregarding the First Amendment right to speak anonymously on the Internet. Mаtrixx responds that it had a right to discovery of the anonymous defendants’ identity, and it adds that appellants lacked standing to oppose the discovery order. We agree with Matrixx’s second point and must therefore affirm the order on that ground.
Procedural Background
Matrixx is a pharmaceutical company that produces and sells over-the-counter phаrmaceutical products, including several that are marketed through its subsidiary, Zicam, LLC. Matrixx is traded on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the symbol MTXX.
The present action arose in Maricopa County, Arizona, where Matrixx has its principal place of business. In its sixth amended complaint, Matrixx asserted causes of action for defamation, interference with contractual relations and “business expectancies,” and trade libel against five named individuals and 25 “John Doe” defendants. Matrixx alleged that these defendants had published false and injurious statements on two Internet message boards accessible through the Yahoo! Finance and Silicon Investor Web sites (<http://finance.yahoo.com> [as of Apr. 18, 2006] and <http://www.siliconinvestor.com> [as of Apr. 18, 2006].) As a result of these false statements, Matrixx had suffered “unusual” fluctuations in its stock, such as “relatively large-volume selling near the close of the market.”
*876 Among the anonymous posters on the two message boards were those using the aliases “veritasconari" and “gunnallenlies.” Veritasconari posted disparaging statements about Matrixx on the Yahoo! Finance message board between May and October 2003. In February 2004, Gunnallenlies began posting similar statements on the same message board. Matrixx served subpoenas on Yahoo! for information leading to the identification of the two posters, and Yahoo! complied. Both posters, however, had used identity-obfuscation software that enаbled them to avoid being identified and subpoenaed.
Finally, on one occasion Gunnallenlies neglected to activate the screening service before posting on the Yahoo! Finance message board. Using the information provided by Yahoo!, Matrixx was able to trace Gunnallenlies to Barbary Coast, a hedge fund managed by Wоrthington. Worthington was deposed in San Francisco, but he refused to answer any questions about the identity of Veritasconari or Gunnallenlies, including whether he himself was Veritasconari or Gunnallenlies. He did admit knowing one of the named defendants in the case, Floyd Schneider, as both had once been defendants in an unrelated California lawsuit. 1 He alsо admitted being a paying subscriber to the Eyeshade Report, to which Veritasconari had referred for support in denigrating Matrixx. 2
On February 11, 2005, Matrixx moved in Santa Clara County to compel Worthington’s deposition answers. In opposition, appellants contended that the motion could not withstand the heightened scrutiny necessary to overcome the posters’ First Amendment right to speak anonymously on the Internet. Appellants specifically argued that (1) the complaint was fatally deficient by failing to name Veritasconari and Gunnallenlies as defendants and (2) Matrixx was unlikely to prevail on the underlying defamation claim. After considering the written and oral arguments of the parties, however, the trial court granted Matrixx’s motion.
Discussion
Appellants renew the arguments they presented below. They maintain that Gunnallenlies and Veritasconari have a fundamental First Amendment right to speak anonymously, which cannot be overcome absent a “valid” cause of *877 action. In this case, they argue, Matrixx had failed to make a prima faсie showing that the targeted postings were defamatory. Appellants also point out that Matrixx did not specify that Veritasconari was a Doe defendant or even mention Gunnallenlies in the complaint. 3
In response, Matrixx raises a new argument; that appellants lack standing to assert the rights of Gunnallenlies and Veritasconari as a bаsis for resisting discovery. Matrixx contends that appellants are unable to satisfy the prerequisites for asserting the constitutional rights of another.
Although Matrixx did not raise this issue below, “the issue of standing is so fundamental that it need not even be raised below—let alone decided—as a prerequisite to our consideration.”
(Payne v. Anaheim Memorial Medical Center, Inc.
(2005)
Neither party, however, has submitted adequate authority or analysis on this fundamental question. Both cite
Powers v. Ohio
(1991)
“These principles rest on more than the fussiness of judges. They reflect the conviction that under our constitutional system courts are not roving commissions assigned to pass judgment on the validity of the Nation’s laws. [Citation.] Constitutional judgments ... are justified only out of the necessity of adjudicating rights in particular cases between the litigants brought before the Court.”
(Broadrick
v.
Oklahoma
(1973)
The United States Supreme Court has acknowledged that it has been “quite forgiving with these criteria in certain circumstances”—in particulаr, in First Amendment attacks on overly broad statutes.
(Kowalski
v.
Tesmer
(2004)
Neither the
Powers
criteria nor the exceptions find compelling application in the procedural сircumstances before us. The applicable issue in most cases is whether a
plaintiff
has standing to bring an action or whether a
defendant
may challenge an action against him or her—in either case, based on the asserted violation of a nonparty’s constitutional rights or the overbreadth of a statute. (See, e.g.,
Virginia v. American Booksellers Assn.
(1988)
Where a third party is brought into the litigation, typically through a discovery order, the anonymous plaintiff or defendant normally steps forward to oppose the disclosure of his or her identity. (See, e.g.,
Doe v. 2Themart.com,
Inc. (W.D.Wn. 2001)
The case before us, however, presents a different procedural posture: Here the litigants who are challenging discovery are not parties in the underlying action for which the discovery is sought, but instead are themselves the third parties in a lawsuit that may have nothing to do with them. Nevertheless, appellants believe they are justified in asserting the First Amendment rights of Veritasconari and Gunnallenlies—even though, *880 according to appellants’ theory, these individuals were never actually accused оf defamation in Matrixx’s complaint. 5
The closest analogous circumstances we have found are those described in
In re Subpoena Duces Tecum to America Online, Inc.
(Jan. 31, 2000, No. 40570) 52 Va.Cir. 26 [
In
Verizon,
another ISP sought to quash a subpoena issued by the Recording Industry Association of America under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (17 U.S.C. § 512(h)) (DMCA). The district court ruled that Verizon had standing to challenge the DMCA on behalf of its subscribers. In addition to society’s concern about the chilling of Internet users’ speech, thе court noted that Verizon itself had “a vested interest in vigorously protecting its subscribers’ First Amendment rights, because a failure to do so could affect Verizon’s ability to maintain and broaden its client base.”
6
(Verizon, supra,
In both the
AOL
and
Verizon
cases, the challenge to the subpoena was made by an entity with a sufficiently close relationship to the anonymous user that judicial cоnsideration was warranted. (See also
NAACP v. Alabama
(1958)
The third prerequisite to standing is also laсking here. Appellants have neither demonstrated nor even suggested that there is some “hindrance” to the ability of Veritasconari and Gunnallenlies to protect their own interests.
(Powers v. Ohio, supra,
Appellants offer no facts compelling a finding of standing beyond the unsupported assertion that Matrixx never provided any due process notice to Vеritasconari or Gunnallenlies in connection with either its subpoena to Yahoo! or the subpoena to appellants. Even if it is assumed that Matrixx had the ability to provide adequate notice to those who were still anonymously posting on the affected message boards, there is no factual basis for inferring that Veritasconari and Gunnаllenlies were unaware of the lawsuit and unable to assert this ground in opposing the discovery motion on their own behalf. Furthermore, appellants’ “due process” argument merely begs the question of their standing to assert Gunnallenlies and Veritasconari’s defenses.
Because appellants were not entitled to resist discovery by invoking the сonstitutional rights of presumably unrelated third parties, it is unnecessary—and, we believe, would be inappropriate—to proceed to consider what standard to employ in evaluating the merits of Matrixx’s motion. “In an emerging area of the law, we do well to tread carefully and exercise judicial restraint, deciding novel issues only when the сircumstances require.”
(Mateel Environmental Justice Foundation
v.
Edmund A. Gray Co.
(2003)
Disposition
The order is affirmed.
Bamattre-Manoukian, J., and Duffy, J., concurred.
Notes
In that lawsuit several companies had similarly alleged a scheme in which the defendants, using aliases, had posted defamatory statements about the plaintiffs on stock-related Internet message boards. That case settled, with defendants promising not to publish any more statements about any оf the plaintiff companies or the individuals associated with them. Plaintiffs made a reciprocal promise.
The issue of the Eyeshade Report cited by Veritasconari contained a detailed and largely unfavorable analysis of Matrixx.
Matrixx admits that it did not specifically mention Gunnallenlies, but it maintains that it was sufficient to designate both Gunnallenlies and Veritasconari as Doe defendants pursuant to the Arizona pleading rules. The applicable rule provides: “When the name of the defendant is unknown to the plaintiff, the defendant may be designated in the pleadings or proceeding by any name. When the defendant’s true name is discovered the pleading or proceeding may be amended accordingly.” (16 A.R.S. Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 10(f).)
Section 2 of article m confers on the judiciary the power to hear certain “Cases” and “Controversies.” (U.S. Const., art. in, § 2, cl. 1.) The United States Supreme Court has articulated two other requirements for standing under this provision: The party must show (a) a causal connection between the injury and the conduct to which he or she objects; and (b) a substantial likelihood that the requested relief will remedy the alleged injury.
(McConnell v. FEC
(2003)
Appellants continue to argue on appeal that the complaint is “fatally defective” as it “contains no allegations of defamatory conduct as far as Gu[n]nallenlies and Veritasconari are concerned.”
The district court nonetheless went on to order Verizon to comply with the subpoena, finding no abridgement of subscribers’ First Amendment rights and construing the DMCA to authorize disclosure of an anonymous user’s identity. The court of appeals, however, disagreed with the district court’s construction of the DMCA and reversed the district court’s order on that ground alone. (Recording Industry of America v. Verizon Internet, supra, 351 F.3d at pp. 1231-1238.)
