Opinion
SUMMARY
These appeals are from the trial court’s grant of two special motions to strike. We affirm as to respondents Baker, Baker & Baker, Shomaker, and Haynie & Company; we reverse as to Martin R. Scalzo.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SYNOPSIS
In July 2008, Frederick T. Scalzo and Donna M. Ostermiller filed a complaint against Martin R. Scalzo, Martin J. (Marty) Scalzo; William E. Baker, Jr. (Martin’s attorney); Baker & Baker (the law firm representing Martin); David Shomaker (a certified public accountant working for Martin “in connection with a different litigation”); and Haynie & Company (the accounting firm where Shomaker was employed), alleging causes of action relating to Martin’s 1 successful and unsuccessful efforts to obtain Frederick and Donna Ostermiller’s American Express credit card statements and his “dissemination]” of these statements to additional persons, including his attorneys, accountants, family members and other unknown persons, causing damage to their credit and identity theft. 2 (We include Donna in our further references to Frederick unless otherwise indicated.)
According to the complaint, on December 4, 2007, Martin contacted American Express by telephone to obtain private financial information about Frederick’s credit card account. Martin was not at that time a cardholder on
On December 14, Martin again called American Express to obtain additional statements, claiming he needed them to address tax problems. When he requested that the statements be sent to his address, American Express declined to do so. On December 15, Martin made a third recorded phone call to American Express, again attempting to obtain additional statements on Frederick’s account, indicating he needed them to do his books and taxes. On this occasion, he told American Express Frederick was on a trip and unable to request the records himself. When he asked that the statements be sent to his home address, American Express again declined to do so.
As to Martin, Frederick asserted causes of action for invasion of privacy (first), violation of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C. § 6821 et seq.) (second), violation of the California Financial Information Privacy Act (Fin. Code, § 4050 et seq.) (fourth) and injunctive relief (ninth). In the ninth cause of action for injunctive relief, as to the attorney and accountant defendants as well as Martin, Frederick sought the return of all of his private financial information and an injunction against the use of any such information. 3
The attorney and accountant defendants filed a special motion to strike the ninth cause of action for injunctive relief (the only cause of action asserted against them), arguing the complaint arose from defendants’ furtherance of' constitutional rights, that Frederick could not prevail on his claims and that defendants’ conduct was absolutely privileged under Civil Code section 47, subdivision (b).
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(Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16.) According to the declaration of Attorney Robert Tan of Baker & Baker, Martin had filed a complaint
(Scalzo v. Scalzo
(Super. Ct. Orange County, 2008, No. 07CC03159)), attached as an exhibit to Tan’s declaration), seeking an accounting relating to funds generated from commercial property held in Martin’s, Frederick’s and Donna’s names (the Scalzo/Ostermiller Properties (SOP)). Information indicated funds of the SOP’s business had been used to make payments on an American Express account. Certain American Express statements were obtained in discovery, and Martin obtained other American Express statements. These records related to finding out what happened to funds generated from the properties. Shomaker and Haynie & Company were retained as experts to
In opposition, Frederick argued defendants’ acts were not protected activities under the anti-SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16) as the records were not obtained in connection with any litigation; they were “stolen” by Martin (as Frederick learned in deposing Shomaker) and thеn disseminated by the attorney defendants “with full knowledge [they had not been] rightfully obtained in the first place.” Further, the account number was redacted for the records obtained by subpoena, further evidencing the privacy interests at stake. The matter pending at the time, Scalzo v. Scalzo, settled in early 2008, yet defendants refused to return the documents, continuing to use them in yet another matter, Martin E. and Marion E. Scalzo Trust, dated January 27, 1987 (Super. Ct. Orange County, No. A223823). Martin’s attorneys subpoenаed the audio recordings of Martin’s three telephone calls seeking Frederick’s records, and submitted transcriptions to the trial court in support of Martin’s opposition.
After hearing argument on the special motion to strike, the trial court (Hon. Joseph Kalin) granted the attorney and accountant defendants’ special motion to strike and awarded attorney fees in the amount of $8,851.50.
In ruling on the demurrer to the complaint, the trial court grantеd Frederick leave to amend. Frederick filed a first amended complaint, asserting (as to Martin and as relevant here) causes of action for invasion of privacy (first), intentional infliction of emotional distress (second), negligent infliction of emotional distress (third), violation of the California Financial Information Privacy Act (Fin. Code, § 4050 et seq.) (fourth) and injunctive relief (ninth). (The ninth cause of action was asserted against “all defendants,” including Marty.)
Martin (and Marty) filed a special motion to strike the first amended complaint, arguing, as the attorney and accountant defendants had argued in their motion, that Frederick’s complaint arose out of protected activity, that Frederick could not demonstrate a probability of prevailing on his claims and that Martin’s communications were absolutely privileged. Martin submitted a declaration stating he contacted American Express on December 4, 2007, to obtain account records for an account he had with Frederick and Donna, his brother and sister, which was partially used to pay for expenses on rent-producing properties the three siblings co-owned. He claimed the jointly owned property and the accounting for this real property was at issue in the case he filed in Orange County, Scalzo v. Scalzo, supra, No. 07CC03159 (the SOP case).
Frederick filed an ex parte applicatiоn to stay the hearing on the special motion to strike to conduct discovery pursuant to subdivision (g) of Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16. Frederick requested leave to depose Martin and the person most knowledgeable at American Express. At that time, the trial court stated: “[Y]ou may be entitled to that discovery!,] but I think it’s better for the court to consider that at the time when I hear the SLAPP motion.”
Over Frederick’s opposition (including a request for the two depositions), the trial court (Hon. Amy Hogue) granted Martin and Marty’s special motion to strike and awarded attorney fees in the amount of $9,577. 6
Frederick appeals from the trial court’s orders granting both special motions to strike and awarding attorney fees.
DISCUSSION
Section 425.16 of the Code of Civil Procedure
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provides, “A cause of action against a person arising from any act of that person in furtherance of the person’s right of petition or free speech under the United States Constitution or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue shall be subject to a special motion to strike, unless the court determines that the plaintiff has established that there is a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim.”
8
(§ 425.16, subd. (b)(1).) In ruling on a defendant’s
According to Frederick, the trial court erred in concluding Martin had met his threshold burden in demоnstrating the challenged causes of action arose from protected activity.
As we stated in
Fox Searchlight Pictures, Inc. v. Paladino
(2001)
As our Supreme Court noted in
Flatley, supra,
“The usual formulation is that the privilege applies to any communication (1) made in judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings; (2) by litigants or other participants authorized by law; (3) to achieve the objects of the litigation; and (4) that have some connection or logical relation to the action. [Citations.]”
(Silberg v. Anderson
(1990)
However, the privilege does not protect illegal conduct that results in damages unrelated to the use of the fruits of that conduct in litigation. Where, as here, damages separate from the litigation are demonstrated, the alleged wrongful, potentially criminal activity, is not immunized.
In
Kimmel
v.
Goland
(1990)
The court continued: “Finally, we note that the result urged by plaintiffs, an extension of section 47(2) to unlawful conduct undertaken to obtain evidence in anticipation of litigation, would lead to unacceptable consequences. Suppose ... a prospective defendant kept important documents at home. If a prospective plaintiff, in anticipation of litigation, burglarized defendant’s premises in order to obtain evidence, plaintiffs here would apparently apply the privilege to protect the criminal conduct. Such an extension of section 47(2) is untenable. The instant case and the example are comparable in that both involve violation of a penal statute, and in both cases the offending party
In light of this authority, Martin’s attempt to assert the privilege must fail. Martin’s challenge rests on two assumptions: first that his purрose in obtaining the documents from American Express was to obtain information for the litigation between the parties; and second that the damages asserted rested on the use of the documents in that litigation. Neither provides a basis for the absolute bar he asserts.
First, Martin told both American Express, and the court below, that he needed to obtain the documents to prepare his taxes. That is not a purpose that has any relation to judiciаl proceedings. When he did need documents for the litigation, moreover, he successfully used the subpoena process, which permits parties to obtain necessary records, while providing protection to the party whose records are involved in the form of notice and the ability to obtain protective orders concerning the information produced and its use.
Second, Frederick asserted damages arising from the act itself, as well as damages unrelated to the use of the documents in litigation, namely identity theft and damage to credit caused by the use and dissemination of the documents outside of litigation.
Even if the asserted illegality were not clear on its face, that fact would allow the motion to survive the required analysis under the first prong, but would not mean that the method of obtaining the information is irrelevant to the second-prong analysis. Although Frederick was inhibited in his showing by the refusal tо grant the requested discovery, the record he was able to establish demonstrated that, at least from the first recorded call on, Martin knew he was not a current cardholder, and thus was not entitled to the information he sought. As to the earlier calls, the current record does not indicate that they were transcribed, but it appears to be a fair inference from the record before us that Martin had been unsuccessful in obtaining the information in those prior attempts, and thus had knowledge that he might not, in fact, be a cardholder entitled to the information he sought. In light of these facts, Frederick’s evidentiary support is sufficient to establish the requisite prima facie showing, and Martin has failed to establish as a matter of law that Frederick cannot succeed on the merits in showing that the claimed illegal acts occurred and caused damage unrelated to the underlying litigation.
(Wilson v. Parker, Covert & Chidester, supra,
In light of this determination, the award of attorney fees to Martin is also reversed. The claim of error concerning the discovery request is moot.
DISPOSITION
The judgment as to Martin R. Scalzo is reversed and the matter remanded for further proceedings сonsistent with this opinion. As to the remaining respondents the judgment is affirmed. Appellant is to recover his costs on appeal as to Martin R. Scalzo. All other respondents are to recover their costs on appeal from appellant.
Woods, Acting R J., and Jackson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 14, 2010.
Notes
Because several of the parties share the same last name, we refer to them by their first names for the sake of clarity only. No disrespect is intended.
Frederick and Donna also named American Express Company as a defendant, but it is not a party to this appeal. (We refer to the Scalzo/Ostermiller parties by their first names as the parties have done in their briefing; Frederick, Donna and Martin are siblings; Marty is Martin’s adult son.) Another named defendant (Robert Burleson, Martin’s personal accountant) was dismissed (after returning his copies of the records at issue).
Two additional causes of action against Martin and Marty relate to ownership of а 1963 Corvette, but these claims are not involved in this appeal.
Martin (and Marty) filed a demurrer to the complaint.
In fact, during that call, American Express confirmed that he did not have a card on that account, as the card he was referring to was an old card, which had been cancelled. There is also an indication that he had already been denied access to the information in three earlier calls.
The claims involving the Corvette remain.
Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
Under the statute an “ ‘act in furtherance of a person’s right of petition or free speech under the United States or California Constitution in connection with a public issue’ includes: (1) any written or oral statement or writing made before a legislative, executive, or judicial
As to this threshold issue, the moving party’s burden is to show “the challenged cause of action arises from protected activity.”
(Rusheen v. Cohen
(2006)
Once the defendant establishes the anti-SLAPP statute applies, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to demonstrate a “probability” of prevailing on the claim.
(Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer Cause, Inc.
(2002)
