Opinion
In this proceeding we consider the question whether an informer’s communication to an enforcement agency of the United States Treasury Department concerning a possible perpetration of a tax fraud falls within the scope of absolute privilege under the provisions of section 47, subdivision 2, of the Civil Code.
The petition seeking relief in mandamus and prohibition stems from the following sequence of events as reflected in the record before us: On December 11, 1973, petitioner Tiedemann, a disgruntled former business associate of real party in interest Nair, confidentially informed agents of the intelligence division of the federal Internal Revenue Service that Nair (1) failed to report taxable income and overstated allowable deductions in connection with certain mutual business and securities transactions and (2) was obliged to terminate his former employment as a stock brokerage officer due to improperly claiming personal expenditures through the firm's business expense accounts. Through a fortuitous circumstance, Nair learned of the incriminating charge in mid-January 1975; deducing that Tiedemann was the anonymous source of the defamatory statements,
Contentions
Tiedemann first contends that statements made to the Internal Revenue Service agency in order to initiate official action to investigate a possible tax fraud constitutes a “privileged publication . . . made . . . [i]n [an]. . . official proceeding authorized by law;. . .” (§ 47, subd. 2.) Nair, after first demurring that no cause is stated justifying extraordinaiy review, vigorously resists the claim of privilege contending that it may not be invoked where (1) the publication motivated solely by revenge could not achieve a proper objective of the agency; (2) the publisher has no personal stake in the official administrative proceedings; and (3) the statements are wilfully false in violation of federal law. Although other questions of privilege during discovery are also raised, our resolution of the dominant issue of statutory privilege is dispositive herein.
I. Propriety of Extraordinary Review
Preliminarily, we address the challenge raised by real party that review by mandamus is inappropriate. The prerogative writ has long been recognized as an appropriate vehicle to review interlocutory orders where questions of a grave nature and of significant legal impact requiring immediate resolution are presented (Babb v. Superior Court (1971)
II. Absolute Privilege
The thrust of petitioner’s claim is that a communication made to agents of the federal Internal Revenue Service, an official administrative agency, designed to initiate appropriate investigative and enforcement proceedings, constitutes a publication made in an “official proceeding authorized by law” (§ 47, subd. 2) and is cloaked with absolute immunity. We examine that claim in light of existing authority interpreting the scope of absolute privilege provided under the statute.
It is now well established in California case law that the privilege conferred under subdivision 2 is absolute and unaffected by the presence of malice. (Ascherman v. Natanson (1972)
The descriptive statutory phrase “in any other official proceeding authorized by law” has been broadly interpreted to include those proceedings which resemble judicial and legislative proceedings such as administrative boards and quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative proceedings. (Ascherman v. Natanson, supra,
In determining whether an administrative body or agency possesses such quasi-judicial power, the preliminary factors to be determined are “(1) whether the administrative body is vested with discretion based upon investigation and consideration of evidentiary facts, (2) whether it is entitled to hold hearings and decide the issue by the application of rules of law to the ascertained facts and, more importantly, (3) whether its power affects the personal or property rights of private persons [citations].” (Ascherman v. Natanson, supra,
The privilege doctrine embodied in the statute is grounded upon considerations of public policy designed “to afford litigants freedom of access to the courts . . . and to promote the unfettered administration of justice even though as an incidental result it may [sometimes]. . . provide . . . immunity to the . . . malignant slanderer [citations] . . . .” (Bradley v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., supra,
In applying the foregoing principles, we first determine that proceedings undertaken by an official investigative and enforcement branch of the Internal Revenue Service, whose broad duties imposed by law (26 U.S.C. § 7601 et seq.) include authority to conduct investigations to determine tax liability (§ 7601(a)), summon witnesses, subpoena records and take testimony (§§ 7602, 7603), and serve process and perform arrests and seizures in the enforcement of criminal provisions of federal revenue laws (§ 7608(b)), and to pay specified sums in the detection, trial and punishment of criminal offenders (§ 7623), would clearly qualify as a quasi-judicial agency regularly engaged in an “official proceeding authorized by law”; nor does Nair seriously contend otherwise. And communications to such an official agency designed to prompt regulatory enforcement action must be considered a part of the official proceeding itself. (King v. Borges, supra, at p. 34; cf. Katz v. Rosen (1975)
III. Summary Judgment
Tiedemann’s motion for summary judgment based upon the verified pleadings and other papers on file (including Nair’s answers to certain interrogatories that he (Nair) had no knowledge of any other defamatory statement or publication than that, complained of), raised no triable issue of fact concerning the pivotal claim of absolute immunity. On the undisputed facts presented in the record, the claim was applicable as a matter of law; accordingly,' summary relief should have been granted. (See D’Amico v. Board of Medical Examiners (1974)
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing that summary judgment be entered in favor of petitioner Tiedemann.
Elkington, J., and Newsom, J., concurred.
The petition of the real party in interest for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 25, 1978. Newman, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Under the relevant language of Civil Code section 47, subdivision 2, an otherwise defamatory publication is privileged if made “In any (1) legislative or (2) judicial
Nair’s tax returns were audited during the years 1974-1976. In January 1975, he received a copy of an Internal Revenue Service intelligence information report apparently mailed to him by inadvertence. The report revealed the content of the defamatory communication concerning Nair personally furnished by an anonymous informant on December II, 1973. From the general description of the informant and the subject-matter of the disclosure contained in the report, Nair concluded that Tiedemann was the unnamed informant. That assumption was fortified by Nair’s discovery of Tiedemann’s complaint for damages against the federal government filed in December 1976, alleging negligent and intentional disclosure “[o]n or about January 15, 1975,... to said taxpayer” that plaintiff (Tiedemann) had met with intelligence agents of the Treasury Department on or before December 11, 1973, and provided them with information concerning possible fraudulent acts of a “certain” taxpayer on condition of anonymity and confidentiality.
Tiedemann’s answer incorrectly refers to section 47, subdivision 3, as the authority for the absolute privilege asserted; however, it is clear from a review of the supporting and opposing memoranda of points and authorities that the sole issue of absolute privilege was framed and argued and that the reference intended was to that part of section 47, subdivision 2, denominated “(3) in any other official proceeding authorized by law;. . .”
During his deposition, Tiedemann invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege in refusing to answer a series of questions propounded concerning conversations with Internal Revenue Service agents involving treatment of the reported business transactions on Nair’s tax returns. Four questions pertaining to Tiedemann’s own audited tax return were objected to on grounds of irrelevancy.
