Filed 7/26/2017
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
ARAM BONNI,
Plaintiff and Appellant, G052367
v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2014-00758655)
ST. JOSEPH HEALTH SYSTEM et al., OPINION
Defendants and Respondents.
Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Andrew P.
Banks, Judge. Reversed.
Greene, Broillet & Wheeler, Mark T. Quigley, Scott H. Carr, Christian T.F.
Nickerson; Esner, Chang & Boyer, Stuart B. Enser and Joseph S. Persoff for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
Arent Fox, Lowell Brown, Debra J. Albin-Riley and Diane Roldan for
Defendants and Respondents.
* * *
Plaintiff Aram Bonni, a surgeon, sued St. Joseph Hospital of Orange
(St. Joseph), Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center (Mission), and other defendants
for, inter alia, retaliation under Health and Safety Code, section 1278.5 (the
1
whistleblower statute). Plaintiff alleged defendants retaliated against him for his
whistleblower complaints by summarily suspending his medical staff privileges and
conducting hospital peer review proceedings.
In response to plaintiff‟s filing of his first amended complaint (FAC),
defendants filed a special motion under Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (the anti-
2
SLAPP statute) to strike plaintiff‟s retaliation cause of action, asserting his claim arose
from the protected activity of hospital peer review proceedings.
The court granted defendants‟ anti-SLAPP motion as to both St. Joseph and
Mission. The court determined, first, that defendants had met prong one of the anti-
SLAPP statute‟s two-part test, which requires a moving defendant to show the plaintiff‟s
claim arose from activity protected under that statute. (Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer
Cause, Inc. (2002) 29 Cal.4th 53, 67 (Equilon).)
The court then proceeded to prong two of the anti-SLAPP test, which
requires a plaintiff to show a probability of prevailing on his or her claim. (Equilon,
supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 67.) The court concluded plaintiff‟s proof failed as to both
defendants.
1
Plaintiff‟s operative complaint also named as defendants some other
entities and individuals related to Mission and/or St. Joseph.
The whistleblower statute prohibits health facilities from retaliating against,
inter alia, a member of the medical staff of the health facility because that person
has presented a grievance, complaint, or report to the facility or its medical staff. (Health
& Saf. Code, § 1278.5, subd. (b)(1)(A).)
2
The acronym SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) refers
to a harassing lawsuit brought to challenge the exercise of constitutionally protected free
speech rights. (Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist. (2006) 39 Cal.4th
192, 196 (Kibler).)
2
We conclude plaintiff‟s retaliation claim under the whistleblower statute
arose from defendants‟ alleged acts of retaliation against plaintiff because he complained
about the robotic surgery facilities at the hospitals, and not from any written or oral
statements made during the peer review process or otherwise. Discrimination and
retaliation claims are rarely, if ever, good candidates for the filing of an anti-SLAPP
motion. This case is no exception. Accordingly, defendants‟ motion to strike fails on
prong one of the anti-SLAPP test and we reverse the order granting defendants‟ motion.
FACTS
Plaintiff’s FAC
Plaintiff‟s FAC alleged, inter alia, that defendants violated the
whistleblower statute by retaliating against him for reporting “suspected unsafe and
substandard conditions and services” at defendants‟ hospitals, including defendants‟ lack
of committed assistants for robotic surgical procedures, and defendants‟ malfunctioning
robot, camera, and bleeding-control devices. The FAC alleged defendants retaliated
against plaintiff for his whistleblower complaints by, inter alia, suspending and ultimately
denying him his medical staff privileges, after subjecting him to a lengthy and
humiliating peer review process.
Defendants‟ Anti-SLAPP Motion
In response, defendants filed an anti-SLAPP motion to strike the FAC‟s
retaliation cause of action. Defendants argued: “Plaintiff . . . exhibited consistent
patterns of poor judgment and surgical techniques that caused serious complications —
and in some cases near death — for his patients. . . . In light of the imminent danger to
future patients of these serious and life-threatening behaviors, Defendants summarily
suspended Plaintiff and thereafter conducted peer review proceedings according to
3
California law and the Hospitals‟ bylaws, to ensure patient safety.” Defendants further
argued that (1) plaintiff‟s retaliation claim arose from defendants‟ peer review processes;
(2) such processes constitute protected activity under the anti-SLAPP statute; and (3)
plaintiff could not show a probability of success on his retaliation claim because he
3
lacked “admissible evidence indicating Defendants acted to retaliate against him.”
Defense counsel filed a declaration in support of defendants‟ anti-SLAPP
motion. Exhibit 1 to counsel‟s declaration was the decision of St. Joseph‟s judicial
review hearing committee, which stated that plaintiff experienced complications in three
of the first six robotic procedures he performed at St. Joseph. Exhibit 3 to counsel‟s
declaration included Mission‟s appellate committee report, which stated that the “focused
review process was triggered by a December, 2009 case in which [plaintiff] perforated
the patient‟s mesentery and bowel tissue five . . . times. The patient suffered various
complications following the procedure, required a second surgery to repair the
perforations, . . . and endured a protracted hospital stay.”
Plaintiff’s Opposition
Plaintiff opposed defendants‟ anti-SLAPP motion, arguing defendants
failed to show his claim was a SLAPP, and alternatively, that plaintiff could make “the
minimal showing necessary to establish a probability of prevailing on the merits.”
In plaintiff‟s declaration supporting his opposition, he declared, inter alia:
“In or about March of 2009, I became aware of numerous patient safety issues involving
the da Vinci robot . . . robotic surgery program at Mission Hospital. Specifically, the
robotic surgery program at Mission was grossly understaffed and underfunded, which had
a direct and adverse impact on patient safety. At times, I was unable to complete
3
Defendants further argued, as to St. Joseph, that plaintiff had signed a
release. Plaintiff‟s declaration supporting his opposition to defendants‟ anti-SLAPP
motion contended St. Joseph breached the “settlement agreement.”
4
scheduled surgeries due to inadequate staffing. On October 19, 2009, I reported these
patient safety concerns to Dennis Haghighat M.D., vice president of medical affairs at
Mission. I requested that these issues be corrected in order to improve the safety of
patients at Mission and St. Joseph. A true and correct copy of this report is attached
hereto as Exhibit 2. Unfortunately, Mission and St. Joseph did nothing to correct or
address these patient safety concerns.”
Exhibit 2 is plaintiff‟s October 19, 2009 e-mail message to Haghighat, in
which plaintiff stated he had been forced to cancel a few robotic surgeries due to the
unavailability of an assistant surgeon and asking if Mission could allocate a scrub
technician to serve as the assistant. The subject line of plaintiff‟s e-mail message is
“Robotic Surgery at Mission.” In this e-mail message, plaintiff never mentions St.
Joseph.
Plaintiff‟s declaration continued: “On December 22, 2009, I performed a
robotic surgical procedure at Mission on an elderly woman . . . . During this surgery, the
da Vinci robot malfunctioned which caused serious patient safety issues, including
complications during the surgery, as well as a 42 minute delay. Specifically, the 3D
Camera on the robot malfunctioned. Due to inadequate staffing and training, the Mission
Staff had extreme difficulties correcting the problem with the robot. After some delay,
the Mission Staff finally located the replacement camera and brought it in.
Unfortunately, the Mission Staff were unfamiliar with [the] existence and location of that
camera. Following the issue with the camera, the Monopolar scissors, as well as the
cautery, on the robot malfunctioned. This is the instrument that is used to cauterize and
cut tissues. This instrument was later recalled by Intuitive Surgical Inc., the manufacturer
of the da Vinci robot. . . . [¶] . . . Once again, I reported these patient safety concerns
regarding the malfunctioning da Vinci robot to Dennis Haghighat, M.D on January 11,
2010. . . . A true and correct copy of this report is attached hereto as Exhibit 3. Instead
of addressing these issues, Mission referred the case to the Quality Review Committee
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for outside review of my performance of the December 22, 2009 surgery. I believe that
this was done in retaliation for my reports regarding the inadequate robotics program and
substandard hospital equipment and staff.”
Exhibit 3 is a string of e-mail messages, starting with plaintiff‟s December
22, 2009 e-mail statement to an alleged da Vinci representative that the camera, port
assistant, and other problems had consumed 42 minutes. The da Vinci representative
acknowledged “the camera had some issues,” but also stated “no other robotically trained
surgeons at Mission [have had] this many repeated issues on every case.” Plaintiff then
e-mailed Haghighat that “[w]e need some people that are well trained robotically to be in
the room to help trouble shoot the problems that are encountered” and that “losing about
42 minutes to side issues during an already long and winding surgery could and should be
avoided.”
Plaintiff‟s declaration continued: “On or about April 30, 2010, in the
interest of patient safety, I once again reported my concerns regarding the malfunctioning
da Vinci robot and inadequate robotic program to [Nolan, Mission‟s chief of staff, and
Kenneth Rexinger, M.D., Mission‟s chief of quality review]. . . . Specifically, I again
reported the following patient safety concerns: (1) the lack of a committed assistant for
the procedure, (2) lack of committed [operating room] staff, (3) lack of appropriately
trained scrub techs, (4) lack of availability of appropriate instruments in general, (5) the
malfunctioning camera on the da Vinci robot and (6) the malfunctioning of the devices on
the da Vinci robot to control bleeding. A true and correct copy of this report is attached
hereto as Exhibit 4. . . .”
Exhibit 4 is plaintiff‟s letter to Nolan, explaining the circumstances
surrounding the December 22, 2009 robotic surgery and reciting the above six patient
safety concerns. The letter is undated, but allegedly sent in March 2010.
Plaintiff‟s declaration continued: “On August 20, 2010, I reported my
concerns regarding the malfunctioning robot again to Defendant Dr. Juan Velez, Chief of
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Obstetrics/Gynecology at St. Joseph. On September 15, 2010 I reported these same
concerns to Defendant Randy Fiorentino at St. Joseph. As outlined in further detail
below, I also reported these patient concerns yet again to Mission on October 1, 2010 and
November 11, 2010. See Exhibits 5 and 6.” (Italics added.)
Exhibit 5 is plaintiff‟s October 1, 2010 letter to Thomas Bailey, M.D., chief
of Mission‟s department of women and infants, attaching a copy of plaintiff‟s March
2010 letter to Nolan and a copy of an October 1, 2010 letter to Bailey from Dr. Michael
Hibner of the Creighton University School of Medicine, opining that “during the
December 2[2], 2009 surgery,” plaintiff “did not deviate from the standard of care.”
(Italics added.)
Exhibit 6 consists of plaintiff‟s November 11, 2010 e-mail communications
with Jane Kessinger of Mission‟s medical staff office, attaching copies of documents for
purposes of plaintiff‟s peer review process.
Plaintiff‟s declaration continued: “The December 22, 2009 case . . . was
reviewed by Mission‟s own expert Dr. Moses, who determined that my performance
during this surgery was within the standard of care. . . . Dr. Hibner also reviewed my
performance during this surgery, and found that I was within the standard of care. Dr.
Hibner is double board certified in Urogynecology and minimally invasive surgery. He
teaches robotic surgery to advanced pelvic surgeons, and has performed thousands of
robotic surgeries. . . . Further, and perhaps most telling, on March 22, 2010, Mission
Director of Medical Staff Services Denise Rollins reported to St. Joseph that I was a
member in good standing at Mission, that there were no disciplinary actions against me,
and that there were no significant issues with respect to me or my practice at Mission.”
Defendants‟ Reply
In their reply memorandum, defendants argued that all activities at issue in
plaintiff‟s retaliation claim constituted protected peer review activities at Mission and St.
7
Joseph. Plaintiff could not show a probability of success because he had no admissible
evidence that such “peer review activities were motivated by retaliatory animus.”
Defendants‟ actions “were motivated by concerns for patient safety because of Plaintiff‟s
poor surgical technique . . . .” As to St. Joseph, plaintiff failed to submit any admissible
evidence “that he actually made a complaint to St. Joseph‟s Dr. Velez on August 20,
2010 or to Dr. Fiorentino on September 15, 2010.” As to Mission, even assuming
Mission took adverse actions within 120 days of plaintiff‟s reporting patient safety
concerns (so as to trigger the rebuttable presumption of retaliation under subdivision
(d)(1) of the whistleblower statute), an employer can rebut the presumption “by
articulating a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the challenged action.” “Once the
employer does so, the presumption disappears and the employee must point to evidence
which nonetheless raises a rational inference that retaliation occurred.”
The Court‟s Ruling
The court granted defendants‟ anti-SLAPP motion as to both Mission and
St. Joseph. Applying the first prong of the anti-SLAPP test, the court determined that the
gravamen of plaintiff‟s retaliation claim was based on defendants‟ protected hospital peer
review activities.
Proceeding to the second prong of the anti-SLAPP statute, the court ruled
that the plaintiff had failed to meet his burden to demonstrate a probability of prevailing
on his retaliation claim.
DISCUSSION
General Principles of Applicable Law
In evaluating an anti-SLAPP motion, the court conducts a potentially two-
step inquiry. (Equilon, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 67.) First, the court must decide whether
8
the defendant has made a threshold showing that the plaintiff‟s claim arises from
protected activity. (Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 29 Cal.4th 82, 88.) To meet its burden
under the first prong of the anti-SLAPP test, the defendant must demonstrate that its act
underlying the plaintiff‟s claim fits one of the categories spelled out in subdivision (e) of
the anti-SLAPP statute. (Navellier, at p. 88.) One such category of protected activity
includes “any written or oral statement or writing made in connection with an issue under
consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial body, or any other
proceeding authorized by law.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16, subd. (e)(2).)
Second — if the defendant meets its burden of showing all or part of its
activity was protected — then the court proceeds to the next step of the inquiry. At this
stage — applying the second prong of the anti-SLAPP test — the court asks “whether the
plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the claim.” (Equilon, supra, 29
Cal.4th at p. 67.)
An appellate court reviews a trial court‟s ruling on an anti-SLAPP motion
de novo, applying the legal principles and two-prong test discussed above. (Schaffer v.
City and County of San Francisco (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 992, 998.) Here, we conclude
defendants‟ motion fails on the first prong. Plaintiff‟s cause of action for retaliation
under the whistleblower statute is not a SLAPP. It does not arise from protected activity.
Thus, we need not analyze whether plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing.
Plaintiff’s Retaliation Claim Does Not Arise From Protected Activity
We turn then to the first prong of the anti-SLAPP test, i.e., whether
plaintiff‟s retaliation claim arose from protected activity under the anti-SLAPP statute.
Plaintiff concedes he alleged retaliatory acts by defendants “that arose during [hospital]
peer review proceedings.” (Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 198.) But he argues his
retaliation claim against defendants “arises out of [their] decisions to initiate the summary
suspensions.”
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Recently, in Park v. Board of Trustees of California State University (2017)
2 Cal.5th 1057 (Park), our Supreme Court reiterated and clarified what it had said 15
years ago in City of Cotati v. Cashman (2002) 29 Cal.4th 69, 78: “„[T]he defendant‟s act
underlying the plaintiff‟s cause of action must itself have been an act in furtherance of the
right of petition or free speech.‟” (Park, at p. 1063.) The plaintiff in Park was a tenure-
track assistant professor at the defendant university. When the university denied his
application for tenure, Park, who was of Korean national origin, sued the university for
national origin discrimination. The university responded with an anti-SLAPP motion.
(Id. at p. 1061.) Our Supreme Court concluded the plaintiff‟s claim did not arise from an
act in furtherance of speech or petitioning activity and therefore was not subject to the
anti-SLAPP statute. (Id. at pp. 1060-1061.) The Park decision was issued after oral
argument in this case. At our request, the parties submitted supplemental letter briefs on
the applicability, if any, of the Park decision to the issues presented by this appeal.
In Park, the high court examined the nexus that must be shown “between a
challenged claim and the defendant‟s protected activity,” and held that “a claim is not
subject to a motion to strike simply because it contests an action or decision that was
arrived at following speech or petitioning activity, or that was thereafter communicated
by means of speech or petitioning activity.” (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1060.) “Rather,
a claim may be struck only if the speech or petitioning activity itself is the wrong
complained of, and not just evidence of liability or a step leading to some different act for
which liability is asserted.” (Ibid.) The lower appellate court in Park had ruled that a
“claim alleging a discriminatory decision is subject to a motion to strike so long as
protected speech or petitioning activity contributed to that decision.” (Id. at p. 1061.)
The Supreme Court reversed that reasoning as erroneous. (Ibid.)
Thus, the Park court made clear that in evaluating whether plaintiff‟s claim
is a SLAPP, it is not sufficient merely to determine whether plaintiff has alleged activity
protected by the statute. The alleged protected activity must also form the basis for
10
plaintiff‟s claim. The Park court counseled that “in ruling on an anti-SLAPP motion,
courts should consider the elements of the challenged claim and what actions by the
defendant supply those elements and consequently form the basis for liability.” (Park,
supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1063.)
Accordingly, as suggested by Park, we first consider the elements of a
claim under the whistleblower statute at issue here, Health and Safety Code, section
1278.5. As relevant to our inquiry, it provides, “No health facility shall discriminate or
retaliate, in any manner, against any . . . member of the medical staff . . . of the health
facility because that person has” “[p]resented a grievance, complaint, or report to the
facility . . . or the medical staff of the facility . . . .” (Health & Saf. Code, § 1278.5, subd.
(b)(1)(A).) Plainly, a defendant health facility may take all manner of adverse actions
against an employee or medical staff member (including protected activities defined in
subdivision (e) of the anti-SLAPP statute) without violating section 1278.5, so long as the
adverse action is not taken to discriminate or retaliate because the employee or staff
member made a complaint to the facility. In the absence of a retaliatory or discriminatory
purpose motivating the adverse action, there is simply no liability under Health and
Safety Code section 1278.5. Thus, the basis for a retaliation claim under section 1278.5
is the retaliatory purpose or motive for the adverse action, not the adverse action itself. In
the language of the anti-SLAPP statute, the claim under section 1278.5 arises from
defendants‟ retaliatory purpose or motive, and not from how that purpose is carried out,
even if by speech or petitioning activity.
In defendant‟s letter brief, they argue that summary suspensions and
terminations of a physician‟s medical privileges are protected activities under prong one
of the anti-SLAPP test. Defendants attempt to distinguish the hospital peer review
4
process from the “deliberative process involving a university president‟s tenure” that
4
Park involved the denial of tenure to “a tenure-track assistant professor,”
not a university president. (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1061.)
11
was at issue in Park. Defendants note that the “complex, multi-faceted” hospital peer
review process is based on a statutory scheme intended to “protect the health and welfare
of the people of California.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 809, subd. (a)(6).) Defendants
conclude, “Given the critical public interest in patient safety, [defendants] contend that
notwithstanding the Park decision, all acts in furtherance of the [hospital] peer review
process — including preliminary physician reviews, initial investigations, summary
suspensions, committee hearings, and a hospital governing board‟s decision to accept
disciplinary recommendations such as termination of privileges — are „subject to a
special motion to strike.‟”
But the defendant in Park, supra, 2 Cal. 5th 1057, similarly argued “that
decisions and the deliberations that underlie them are indistinguishable for anti-SLAPP
purposes” (id. at p. 1069), relying on Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist.
(2006) 39 Cal.4th 192, which involved hospital peer review proceedings. (Park, at p.
1069.) The Supreme Court rejected the defendant‟s argument. The Park court clarified
that the only issue decided in Kibler was whether a hospital peer review proceeding was
an “„“official proceeding”‟” within the meaning of the anti-SLAPP statute. Kibler did
not “consider whether the hospital‟s peer review decision and statements leading up to
that decision were inseparable for purposes of the arising from aspect of an anti-SLAPP
motion.” (Park, at p. 1069.) Park disapproved Nesson v. Northern Inyo County Local
Hospital Dist. (2012) 204 Cal.App.4th 65, and DeCambre v. Rady Children’s Hospital-
San Diego (2015) 235 Cal.App.4th 1, to the extent they “overread Kibler,” noting that
Kibler does not stand for “the proposition that disciplinary decisions reached in a peer
review process, as opposed to statements in connection with that process, are protected.”
(Park, at p. 1070.) To that we would add: It matters not whether activity can be
described as “protected” as meeting one of the definitions of protected activity in
subdivision (e) of the anti-SLAPP statute. What matters is whether plaintiff‟s claim
arises from that activity. Here, where liability under the whistleblower statute is
12
premised on retaliatory adverse action taken in response to a protected complaint, the
plaintiff‟s claim arises from the retaliatory motive or purpose.
Here, defendants‟ motion to strike was premised on their somewhat ipse
dixit notion that because of the “critical public interest in patient safety,” and “the courts‟
overriding goal of „protect[ing] the health and welfare of the people of California,‟” the
peer review decision, and the statements leading up to that decision are “an inherently
communicative process based on free speech and petitioning rights,” and “should thus be
„subject to a special motion to strike.‟” But merely because a process is communicative
does not mean that plaintiff‟s claim necessarily arises from those communications, and
merely because the peer review process serves an important public interest does not make
it subject to the anti-SLAPP statute where the process is employed for a retaliatory
purpose. The anti-SLAPP statute protects “any written or oral statement or writing made
in connection with an issue under consideration or review by [an] official proceeding
authorized by law.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16, subd. (e)(2), italics added.) Plaintiff did
not allege any specific “written or oral statement or writing” which allegedly formed the
basis of his retaliation claim. Instead, he alleged that an abusive peer review process was
initiated by the hospitals because he made complaints about unsafe conditions at the
hospitals. Thus, his claim was not based merely on defendant‟s act of initiating and
pursuing the peer review process, or on statements made during those proceedings — but
on the retaliatory purpose or motive by which it was undertaken.
The Park decision cannot be easily distinguished. Although Park involved
a university tenure process conducted in an allegedly discriminatory fashion, its rationale
translates easily to the allegedly retaliatory peer review process at issue here. Here is
what the court said in Park, “The elements of Park‟s claim . . . depend not on the
grievance proceeding, any statements, or any specific evaluations of him in the tenure
process, but only on the denial of tenure itself and whether the motive for that action was
impermissible. The tenure decision may have been communicated orally or in writing,
13
but that communication does not convert Park‟s suit to one arising from such speech.
The dean‟s alleged comments may supply evidence of animus, but that does not convert
the statements themselves into the basis for liability.” (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1068,
italics added.)
The high court‟s analysis in Park relied in part on the recent case of Nam v.
Regents of University of California (2016) 1 Cal.App.5th 1176 (Nam), a case not
involving a peer review process, but nevertheless bearing similarity to the case at bar.
(Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1066.) As described in Park, the Nam case concerned a
“plaintiff, a University of California, Davis, medical resident, [who] sued for sexual
harassment, discrimination, and wrongful termination. The defendant Regents of the
University of California‟s (Regents) anti-SLAPP motion contended the suit arose from
communicated complaints about the plaintiff‟s performance, written warnings it issued
her, an investigation it conducted, and the written notice to the plaintiff of her
termination. Not so; the basis for liability was instead the Regents‟ alleged retaliatory
conduct, including „“subjecting [the plaintiff] to increased and disparate scrutiny,
soliciting complaints about her from others, removing [her] from the workplace, refusing
to permit her to return, refusing to give her credit towards the completion of her
residency, failing to honor promises made regarding her treatment, and ultimately
terminating her . . . .”‟” (Park, at p. 1066.) The Park court summed up its analysis of the
Nam decision stating, “Nam illustrates that while discrimination may be carried out by
means of speech, such as a written notice of termination, and an illicit animus may be
evidenced by speech, neither circumstance transforms a discrimination suit to one arising
from speech. What gives rise to liability is not that the defendant spoke, but that the
defendant denied the plaintiff a benefit, or subjected the plaintiff to a burden, on account
of a discriminatory or retaliatory consideration.” (Park, at p. 1066, italics added.)
The Nam court itself was quite direct in announcing its decision: “[W]e
conclude the anti-SLAPP statute was not intended to allow an employer to use a
14
protected activity as the means to discriminate or retaliate and thereafter capitalize on the
subterfuge by bringing an anti-SLAPP motion to strike the complaint. In that case, the
conduct giving rise to the claim is discrimination and does not arise from the exercise of
free speech or petition.” (Nam, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1190-1191.) The Nam court
further observed that to ignore the defendant‟s alleged motive in a harassment,
discrimination, or retaliation case “would subject most, if not all, harassment,
discrimination, and retaliation cases to motions to strike. Any employer who initiates an
investigation of an employee, whether for lawful or unlawful motives, would be at liberty
to claim that its conduct was protected and thereby shift the burden of proof to the
employee, who, without the benefit of discovery and with the threat of attorney fees
looming, would be obligated to demonstrate the likelihood of prevailing on the merits.
Such a result is at odds with the purpose of the anti-SLAPP law, which was designed to
ferret out meritless lawsuits intended to quell the free exercise of First Amendment rights,
not to burden victims of discrimination and retaliation with an earlier and heavier burden
of proof than other civil litigants and dissuade the exercise of their right to petition for
fear of an onerous attorney fee award.” (Nam, at p. 1189.)
We agree with the Nam court‟s observation. Discrimination and retaliation
claims are rarely, if ever, good candidates for the filing of an anti-SLAPP motion.
Accordingly, we conclude that defendants‟ alleged retaliatory motive in
suspending plaintiff‟s staff privileges and subjecting him to a lengthy and allegedly
abusive peer review proceeding is the basis on which liability is asserted. The alleged
liability does not arise from the statements made during those proceedings. The court
erred in ruling otherwise.
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DISPOSITION
The order granting defendants‟ anti-SLAPP motion is reversed. Plaintiff
shall recover his costs on appeal.
IKOLA, J.
WE CONCUR:
O‟LEARY, P. J.
MOORE, J.
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