Stеphen Gregory SLOAT, Ed Bryan, Church of Scientology International, David J. Lubow, and Monty Drake, Appellants v. Monique RATHBUN, Appellee
NO. 03-14-00199-CV
Court of Appeals of Texas, Austin.
November 6, 2015
501 S.W.3d 500
Ricardo G. Cedillo, L. J. Strieber, III, Isaac J. Huron, Davis, Cedillo & Mendoza, George H. Spencer, Jr., Clemens & Spencer, P.C., San Antonio, TX, Gary D. Sarles, O. Paul Dunagan, Sarles & Ouimet, Thomas S. Leatherbury, Marc A. Fuller, Vinson & Elkins, LLP, Dallas, TX, Stephanie S. Bascon, Law Office of Stephanie S. Bascon, PLLC, Jonathan H. Hull, Ashley Bowen, Reagan Burrus PLLC, New Braunfels, TX, for appellants.
Leslie Sara Hyman, Elliott S. Cappuccio, Etan Tepperman, Pulman, Cappuccio, Pullen, Benson & Jones, LLP, Marc F. Wiegand, San Antonio, TX, A. Dannette Mitchell, Ray B. Jeffrey, Bulverde, TX, for appellee.
OPINION
Scott K. Field, Justice
Monique Rathbun sued Stephen Gregory Sloat, Ed Bryan, Church of Scientology International, David J. Lubow, and Monty Drake (collectively, “the Scientology Defendants“) alleging causes of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy by public disclosure of private facts and by intrusion on seclusion, and tortious interference with contract. In this accelerated appeal, the Scientology Defendants challenge the trial court‘s denial of their motions to dismiss the claims against them pursuant to
The Scientology Defendants’ various appellate issues reduce to the argument that the trial court reversibly erred by denying their motions to dismiss because (1) they properly invoked the TCPA by establishing, by a “preponderance of the evidence,” that Rathbun‘s claims against them are “based on, relate to, or are in response to” their “exercise of their rights” of “free speech,” “association,” and “to petition,” and that neither the statute‘s “commercial transaction” nor “bodily injury” exemption applies, and (2) Rathbun failed to establish by “clear and specific evidence” a “prima facie” case for each essential element of
BACKGROUND1
Monique Rathbun is married to Marty Rathbun, a former member of and official in the Church of Scientology. Until December 2012, the Rathbuns resided at their home in Ingleside on the Bay, Texas. In her petition, Rathbun alleged that, due to relentless harassment and surveillance of her home and activities by the Scientology Defendants beginning in February 2009, she and her husband moved to a wooded lot near Bulverde, Texas, where they hoped to avoid further contact between them and the Scientology Defendants. According to Rathbun, after a brief respite the surveillance and “tailing” activities continued and, in July 2013, Rathbun discovered a high-tech surveillance camera mounted on a tree near their new property and aimed at their house. Rathbun claimed that Sloat contacted her using a false identity and “provided preposterous, false stories to explain the surveillance cameras and why he was moving an RV onto this undeveloped property.”
Having failed at the efforts to avoid further contact with the Scientology Defendants and seeking to put an end to what she described as constant harassment, Rathbun filed the underlying suit, alleging causes of action against the Scientology Defendants for intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy by public disclosure of private facts and by intrusion on seclusion, and tortious interference with contract. Rathbun also sought a temporary restraining order and a temporary injunction preventing the Scientology Defendants from interfering with her employment, invading her privacy, and inflicting emotional distress on her. The trial court signed a temporary restraining order enjoining the Scientology Defendants from conducting electronic surveillance of Rathbun‘s home, workplace, or public activities; making telephoniс or electronic threats to her; following, pursuing, stalking, or “tailing” her; or contacting her employer, co-workers, family members or friends.
Thereafter, the Scientology Defendants filed motions to dismiss Rathbun‘s suit pursuant to the TCPA, contending that her claims were “based on, related to, or were in response to” conduct constituting the exercise of their “right of free speech,” “right of association,” and “right to petition.” See
DISCUSSION
As the movants, the Scientology Defendants bore the initial burden of demonstrating, by a “preponderance of the evidence,” that Rathbun had asserted a “legal action” that was “based on, related to, or in response to” their exercise of their right of “free speech,” right of “association,” or right “to petition” as the TCPA defines those rights. See
It is beyond dispute that Rathbun‘s lawsuit would represent one or more “legal actions” under the TCPA barring an applicable exemption, an issue we will leave aside for now. See
In sum, our inquiry is: (1) what the factual bases for Rathbun‘s claims are, based on the pleadings and evidence viewed in the light most favorable to her; and (2) the extent to which these factual bases, as a matter of law, are protected expression within the TCPA‘s definitions.
Implicit in this analysis is that we do not blindly accept attempts by the Scientology Defendants to characterize Rathbun‘s claims as implicating protected expression. To the contrary, we view the pleadings in the light most favorable to Rathbun; i.e., favoring the conclusion that her claims are not predicated on protected expression. Likewise, any activities by the Scientology Defendants that are not a faсtual predicate for her claims are simply not pertinent to the inquiry. See
Viewed in the light most favorable to Rathbun, she bases her claims on the following alleged facts. Rathbun married Marty Rathbun in 2005. In 2004, Marty Rathbun had left his position as the second highest ranking official in the Church of Scientology‘s organization and was living in anonymity in South Texas. Marty Rathbun averred that in 2009 he was approached by the media requesting to interview him about Scientology and he granted those requests in an attempt to temper what he perceived as escalating mistreatment of members of thе Church of Scientology‘s clergy at the direction of David Miscavige, the highest ranking Scientology official. According to Marty Rathbun, media interest in him waned by the end of 2010, but was revived by the Scientology Defendants’ activities at Ingleside on the
Rathbun‘s petition further alleges:
[The Scientology Defendants] have worked around the clock for three years to destroy Mrs. Rathbun. She has been harassed, insulted, surveilled, photographed, videotaped, defamed, and humiliated to such a degree as to shock the conscience of any decent, law-abiding person. She has been subject to numerous, aggressive attempts to intimidate her. Each and all of the [Scientology Defendants] have participated enthusiastically in this abuse, without regard to Mrs. Rathbun‘s basic rights as a human being. She has been targeted at home, at work, and anywhere else that she happens to be.
In support of her petition, Rathbun attached her own affidavit detailing the specifics of the conduct she alleges was abusive and harassing and, according to her petition, constitutes intentional infliction of emotional distress, tortious interference with contract, and invasion of privacy by intrusion on seclusion and public disclosure of private facts. These include:
- Scientologists appearеd at her home after dark to interrogate her aggressively, refusing to provide their names and fleeing when Rathbun called the police.
- Scientology “operatives” openly followed her as she drove to and from work and when she and her husband took evening walks with their dog, these “operatives” would approach them in a golf cart with up to six cameras filming them and shout in-
sults and rude questions relating to Scientology. - Rathbun and her husband were publicly harassed by Scientology “agents” wherever they went, including at restaurants and at the beach.
- Scientology “investigators” have visited Rathbun‘s mother, father, former husband, friend, and co-workers and informed them that Rathbun‘s life was at risk as long as she remained married to Marty Rathbun.
- The Scientоlogy Defendants sent a sex toy to Rathbun at her workplace and, when she was away from the office, sent flowers to one of her female co-workers with a “romantic” message purporting to be from Rathbun.
- Scientology websites published allegations against Rathbun, including that she was a “sexual pervert” and is in reality a “man who has had a secret sex-change operation.”
- A Scientology private investigator had, from 2009 through 2012, leased a residence across the street from their Ingleside on the Bay home and installed high-powered still and video cameras pointed at and into Rathbun‘s home.
- After the Rathbuns moved from their Ingleside on the Bay home to seek seclusion in a wooded lot in Comal County, they discovered that one of the Scientology Defendants had leased undeveloped property next to their home and installed a surveillance camera directed at their property.
Rathbun averred that these activities have caused her great distress and disrupted her privacy and peace of mind and, in her view, are calculated to damage her relationship with her husband and his relationship with her family and friends so as to cause her further harm. Rathbun sought damages for mental anguish, loss of earning capacity, damage to reputation, and the financial loss she alleges resulted from the Scientology Defendants’ conduсt set forth in her petition.
The Scientology Defendants moved to dismiss Rathbun‘s claims pursuant to the TCPA, arguing that the pleadings and the evidence they filed in support of their motion to dismiss show, by a “preponderance of the evidence,” that the lawsuit was “based on, relates to, or is in response to” their exercise of their rights of “free speech” and “association” and the right “to petition.” See
To support their contention that Rathbun‘s petition is in response to protected “Squirrel Buster” activity, the Scientology Defendants point to paragraph 28 of Rathbun‘s petition, which states:
The Squirrel Busters operation against the Rathbuns is an important basis of this lawsuit. Ed Bryan was sent to OSA from California to join the Squirrel Busters in Texas. On July 13, 2011, Mr. Bryan wrote the following concerning the Church‘s Texas operation against the Rathbuns:
“This is in co-ordination with OSA Int. [Office of Special Affairs—Church of Scientology International]. They are calling the shots and quite frankly I don‘t think it is very effective. The reporters came to our house the other day and we didn‘t tell them very much. Our main guy went back to discuss with them a different strategy. The rat [Marty Rathbun] is getting more brazen and yesterday I actually had a 1 minute comm cycle [conversation] with him while he was on a walk. This guy is nuttier than a fruitcake. He‘s gone off the deep end. Taking him down will be no easy task. I just hope he self destructs before he does more damage to our church. He has gotten to some OTVIII‘s and I just can‘t think with how stupid they are to actually believe what hе is saying.” Bracketed information added.
According to the Scientology Defendants, the inclusion of this paragraph in Rathbun‘s petition reveals that her suit is based on, related to, or in response to their peaceful demonstrations in protest of Marty Rathbun‘s attack on the Church of Scientology, i.e., the activities of the “Squirrel Busters.”
We disagree that the allegations in the petition can fairly be read, in the light most favorable to Rathbun, to support the Scientology Defendants’ characterization of the factual basis for her claims. Significantly, paragraph 28 appears in a section of Rathbun‘s petition titled “Additional Jurisdictional Facts.” Rathbun‘s petition states that the additional factual allegations made in that section, including those contained in paragraph 28, were made in response to complaints by defendants David Miscavige and the Religious Technology Center that she had failed to plead specific facts to support personal jurisdiction over them in Texas.6 The “Additional Jurisdictional Facts” section of the petition includes twenty-one paragraphs that attempt to demonstrate that, while Miscavige remains physically outside the State of Texas, he directed a “planned, calculated, multiyear operation” against the Rathbuns in Texas, which included but was not limited to the “Squirrel Busters” campaign,7 such that he is subject to the jurisdiction of a Texas court. Rathbun‘s inclusion in her petition of jurisdictional allegations regarding Miscavige‘s allegedly tortious conduct committed in Texas, including orchestrating the “Squirrel Busters” campaign, does
Other than argue that the “protest and film production” endeavors of the “Squirrel Busters” are protected rights of free speech and thus within the scope of the TCPA, the Scientology Defendants do not directly address the specific conduct Rathbun complains of, which includes following her while she went to and from work, shopping, out to dinner with friends, and walking her dog. Nor do they explain how alleged visits to Rathbun‘s family members, friends, and co-workers during which they allegedly gave warnings about Rathbun‘s personаl safety while married to Marty Rathbun, constitute conduct covered by the TCPA. Moreover, other than deny having done so, the Scientology Defendants do not address Rathbun‘s allegations that they sent a sex toy to her at work and sent flowers with a “romantic” message purportedly from her to a female co-worker.
For a communication to qualify for protection under the TCPA as the exercise of the right of free speech, the communication must be “made in connection with a matter of public concern.” See
The Scientology Defendants also argued in their motions to dismiss that Rathbun‘s allegations comрlaining of video surveillance by a private investigator reveal that her claims are in fact based on their retention and use of licensed private investigators, which they maintain is protected conduct under the TCPA‘s definition of the “right to petition.” The Scientology Defendants argued that they were investigating Marty Rathbun‘s activities, including their claims that he solicited individuals to steal materials and information from the Church of Scientology International and other churches, misappropriated Scientology intellectual property, made defamatory statements about Scientology churches and officials, and attempted to instigate criminal investigations of Scientоlogy churches and officials. According to the Scientology Defendants, they conducted their surveillance of Marty Rathbun as part of “pre-litigation or pre-petition investigation” that was necessarily incidental to, pertains to, and is in connection with a potential judicial proceeding and, consequently, is within the ambit of the TCPA‘s definition of the right to petition. See
Whether such pre-suit investigation does or does not fall within the statute‘s admittedly broad definition of the “right to petition” is a question we need not address because, again, Rathbun‘s suit is not based on the Scientology Defendants’ attempts to discover facts related to Marty Rathbun‘s alleged cloak-and-dagger activities.9 Rather, hers are garden-variety tort claims based on specific conduct that the Scientology Defendants have failed to demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, implicates the exercise of their rights of “free speech,” “association,” or “to petition.” The trial court did not err in concluding that the TCPA does not apply to Rathbun‘s suit against the Scientology Defendants.10
Having concluded that the Scientology Defendants failed to establish that the TCPA applies to Rathbun‘s claims, we need not address their arguments that the trial court erred in finding that the statute‘s “commercial speech” and “bodily in-
Award of Attorneys’ Fees to Rathbun
The trial court‘s order awarded Rathbun her court costs and attorneys’ fees pursuant to section 27.009(b) of the TCPA. This section provides:
If the court finds that a motion to dismiss filed under this chapter is frivolous or solely intended to delay, the court may award court costs and reasonable attorney‘s fees to the responding party.
The instant record is voluminous, and counsel for all parties have been extremely thorough in their resрective arguments and materials provided the Court. Accordingly, the Court has endeavored to be just as thorough not only in reading the evidence, the objections, and the briefs presented but also in conducting independent research on this relatively new aspect of Texas law. As a result, the Court declines to conclude the Defendants’ motions, in and of them-selves, are frivolous, but the Court does conclude that the method in which the motions were litigated, from the discovery to the objections, etc., resulted in hours upon hours of courtroom time that could have been better spent elsewhere.
The Scientology Defendants assert that the award of attorneys’ fees was not authorized by the statute because the trial court expressly found that the motions were not frivolous and did not find that they were solely intended to delay. Rathbun counters that the trial court found that “the motions were litigated in such a way as to intentionally cause delay,” and that such a finding was supported by the evidence.
We do not agree that the trial court‘s order can be construed in a manner that could support an award of attorneys’ fees under
CONCLUSION
The Scientology Defendants failed to demonstrate, by a “preponderance of the evidence,” that Rathbun‘s causes of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy by intrusion on seсlusion and by public disclosure of private facts, and tortious interference with contract were “based on, related to, or in response to” the Scientology Defendants’ “exercise of their right of free speech, right to petition, or right of association.” They have therefore failed to establish that the TCPA applies to this case. Consequently, we affirm the trial court‘s order denying the Scientology Defendants’ motions to dismiss. Because the trial court did not find that the motions were frivolous or solely intended to delay, the award of attorneys’ fees pursuant to the TCPA was not authorized. We therefore reverse
Notes
- These persons can always lose their jobs. These jobs, permitting them power to destroy, are valuable to them. This is a POINT OF VULNERABILITY.
- If the person‘s job is аlso not valuable to him or if he cannot be made to lose his job, something can be found which he is seeking to protect and it can be threatened.
- COUNTERATTACK TO OBTAIN THE REMOVAL OF THE PERSON with a product of DISMISSED ATTACKER.
- If on test, A is not feasible, SURVEY TO FIND OUT WHAT THE PERSON CONSIDERS VALUABLE AND USE IT FOR RESTRAINT.
