Thе trial court overruled a demurrer by cross-defendant Elias Shahvar to a libel claim in a cross-complaint by ASP Computer Products, Inc., Amnon Even-Kesef, Ellen Sigal, and Gerald Sigal (cross-complainants). Shahvar seeks a writ of mandate. At issue is whether Shahvar was privileged under Civil Code section 47 to transmit a facsimile copy of a complaint to a newspaper. Cross-complainants contend that this facsimile communication was not privileged because it preceded the filing of the complaint. Shahvar asks us to take judicial notice that the complaint was filed the same day as the facsimile communication. For the reasons stated below, we conclude that the time of the complaint’s filing is unimportant and that the conduct was not privilеged because the communication was made to someone unrelated to the litigation. In reaching this conclusion, we disagree with
Abraham
v.
Lancaster Community Hospital
(1990)
Discussion
“A general demurrer presents the same question to the appellate court as to the trial court, namely, whether the plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts to justify any relief, notwithstanding superfluous allegations or claims for unjustified relief.”
(B & P Development Corp.
v.
City of Saratoga
(1986)
ASP Computer Products, Inc., was formed by Even-Kesef, Shahvar, and another person in early 1987 to market printer sharing and connectivity products. Even-Kesef was and is the president, chief executive officer, and a shareholder of ASP. Ellen Sigal is a sharеholder and director of ASP. Gerald Sigal is her husband. The Sigáis invested in ASP. Shahvar held several positions with ASP over the years. ASP eventually terminated Shahvar for poor performance and misconduct.
On April 2, 1993, Shahvar had his lawyer transmit a facsimile copy of a complaint to the San Francisco Examiner newspaper (the Examiner). This complaint falsely alleged, among other things, that Ellеn and Gerald Sigal submitted invoices to ASP for work they did not do and that Gerald Sigal violated ASP’s by-laws by transferring stock to Ellen Sigal for consideration in an effort to avoid shareholder or director liability to Shahvar. Shahvar’s facsimile communication induced the Examiner to publish an article on Sunday, April 4, 1993, that summarized the complaint’s allegations. On
1. The litigation privilege
Civil Code section 47 shields certain statements from defamation liability. “A privileged publicаtion or broadcast is one made . . . [i]n any . . . judicial proceeding . . . .” “ ‘[T]he obvious purpose of section 47 [is] to afford litigants the utmost freedom of access to the courts to secure and defend their rights without fear of being harassed by actions for defamation.’
(Albertson
v.
Raboff
(1956)
“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
[sic]
some connection or logical relation to the action.”
(Silberg
v.
Anderson, supra,
“A document is not privileged merely because it has been filed with a court or in an action. The privileged status of a particular statement therein depends on its relationship to an actual or potential issue in an underlying action.”
(Financial Corp. of America
v.
Wilburn, supra,
The basis for cross-complainants’ libel cause of action is
not
that Shahvar filed a false complaint in court. Rather, the libel claim is based on Shahvar’s communication of a copy of the complaint to the newspaper, which induced the newspaper to publish an article summarizing the complaint’s allegations. Cross-complainants contend that Shahvar’s communication of his allegations to a third party, the Examiner, was unrelated to this litigation and therefore not covered by the litigation privilege. We agree. “[R]epublications to nonparticipants in the action are generally nоt privileged under section 47 (2), and are thus actionable unless privileged on some other basis.”
(Silberg
v.
Anderson, supra,
Our position is further supported by two other cases which have applied this limitation of the privilege. The first of the two,
Financial Corp. of America, supra,
considered the privileged nature of allegedly defamatory statements made by an attorney prior to filing a complaint. This court concluded that settlement dеmands to the opponent and evidence-gathering statements to potential witnesses were privileged “so long as litigation is seriously anticipated in good faith.” (
In the second case,
Susan A.
v.
County of Sonoma
(1991)
As Silberg, Financial Corp. of America and Susan A. illustrate, statements about existing or anticipated litigation by a party or the party’s attorney to the news media, when the news media is neither a party to nor a participant in the litigation, are not privileged. Such statements are extraneous to the action and are not made “[i]n any . „ . judicial proceeding.” Here the facsimile communication of the complaint to the newspaper was nothing more than a republication of the complaint’s allegations to an unrelated person. Whether the complaint was filed before or after the transmission of the facsimile, the communication to the newspaper was not protected by the litigation privilege in Civil Code section 47. 1
2. Abraham v. Lancaster Community Hospital
Shahvar claims that
Abraham
v.
Lancaster Community Hospital, supra,
We see no way to reconcile
Abraham’s
conclusions with this court’s holding in
Financial Corp. of America
and the California Supreme Court’s persuasive dictum in
Silberg. Abraham’s
conclusions are unsupported by case law, policy, or statute.
Abraham’s
quotation of
Albertson
v.
Raboff
(1956)
Abraham’s
citation to
Costa
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Costa’s reference to the lodge members’ “substantial interest in the outcome of the pending litigation” was to an interest of a different nature than the “interest” cited in Abraham. The Abraham opinion failed to establish that the interest of the local medical community in the underlying litigation was anything more than simple curiosity. The facts stated in the Abraham opinion do nоt reflect that members of the local medical community were actually parties to the underlying litigation or had any financial interest at stake in that litigation. Thus, Abraham erred in characterizing people who were merely curious about the underlying litigation as participants therein, and its citations of Albertson and Costa do not support its conclusions.
Abraham
also placed undue reliance on its concern that public discussion of litigation would be chilled absent proteсtion by the litigation privilege. However,
Abraham
failed to consider the extensive constitutional privileges
We find guidance in
Brown
v.
Kelly Broadcasting Co., supra,
although it involved a separate defamation privilege also set forth in Civil Code section 47.
Brown
was concerned with file privilege provided by formеr subdivision 3, now subdivision (c), for “a communication, without malice, to a person interested therein, (1) by one who is also interested or (2) by one who stands in such relation to the person interested as to afford a reasonable ground for supposing the motive for the communication innocent, or (3) who is requested by the person interested to give the information.” (
For all these reasons, we disagree with Abraham’s holding that a party’s reports about litigation to the news media are privileged. We conclude that transmitting a facsimile copy of a complaint to a newspaper is not privileged under Civil Code section 47, former subdivisions 2 and 4. 3 Hence, the trial court did not err in overruling the demurrer on this basis. Therefore, petitioners have failed to establish a basis for extraordinary relief.
Disposition
The petition for writ of mandate is denied.
Cottle, P. J., and Bamattre-Manoukian, J., concurred.
Notes
Shahvar’s reply brief requests that we take judicial nоtice of the fact that he filed a copy of his complaint in Marin County Superior Court on April 2, 1993. This is the same date he allegedly transmitted a copy to the newspaper and three days before he filed the complaint in Santa Clara County. This fact is subject to judicial notice on appeal even though Shahvar did not ask the trial court to take judicial notice оf it. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (d), 459.) A demurrer can be based on facts judicially noticed, even if those facts contradict the allegations of the complaint. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 430.30, subd. (a), 430.70;
B & P Development Corp.
v.
City of Saratoga, supra,
Cross-complainants contend that the Marin County complaint does not count as a complaint, because it was captioned as filed in Santa Clara County. (Code Civ. Proc., § 422.30, subd. (a).) A trivial caption defect doеs not affect the nature of a filed document. (Code Civ. Proc., § 475; cf.
Ex parte Fil Ki
(1889)
We note that
Susan
A.,
supra,
characterized
Costa, supra,
as extending the litigation privilege to “publication to nonparties with a substantial interest in the proceedings.” (
We recognize that it may be difficult for cross-complainants to prove that what injured their reputations was Shahvar’s conduct in transmitting a facsimile copy of the complaint rather than the Examiner’s decision to publish an article. However, Shahvar’s demurrer was based only on the Civil Code section 47 privileges discussed above.
