Barker v. Huang

610 A.2d 1341, 1992 Del. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 11, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 610 A.2d 1341 (Barker v. Huang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Huang, 610 A.2d 1341, 1992 Del. LEXIS 231 (Del. 1992).

Opinion

HORSEY, Justice:

This is an appeal from Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants, Dr. Peter S. Huang (“Huang”) and Insurance Corporation of America (“ICA”). The plaintiff, Ellen Barker (“Barker”), filed a complaint in Superior Court, seeking damages for defamation of character, libel, slander, tortious invasion of privacy, wrongful use of civil proceedings, abuse of process, intentional infliction of emotional distress, outrageous conduct and civil conspiracy to engage in each of the foregoing torts. The defendants moved for summary judgment and for dismissal, on grounds of absolute privilege. Accompanying her response to defendants’ motions, Barker filed a supporting affidavit, alleging statements by Huang which would not be protected by an absolute privilege. We affirm Superior Court’s decision finding meritless Barker’s claims against Huang as originally stated in her complaint, and Barker’s claims against ICA. However, we find Superior Court to have erred by failing to properly consider Barker’s affidavit as a motion to amend her complaint, raising new claims against Huang to which Huang has asserted no defense. To the extent that Barker’s affidavit makes a claim of defamation arising from statements made by Huang unprotected by an absolute privilege, summary judgment was inappropriate. We therefore reverse in part, and remand.

*1343 Background

In June 1987, defendant Huang, a Wilmington, Delaware, physician, was sued in Superior Court by four former patients, charging him with various intentional torts arising from an alleged series of sexual assaults. Rochen v. Huang, C.A. No. 87C-JN-96 (“the Rochen litigation”). Defendant ICA was at that time Huang's medical liability insurance carrier. Defendant Huang, represented by an attorney provided by ICA, later filed a counterclaim against the Rochen plaintiffs, alleging that they had conspired to falsely accuse Huang of sexual assault. Barker was not a party to the Rochen litigation. However, in support of defendant’s counterclaim, Huang alleged in a deposition that Barker had conspired with the Rochen plaintiffs against Huang. The Rochen pleadings were ordered to be placed under seal on July 15, 1987. That order was vacated, however, on September 14, 1988. Shortly thereafter, on September 25 and 27,1988, a Wilmington newspaper, The News Journal, published two articles concerning the Ro-chen suit and Huang’s counterclaim implicating Barker. Both articles referred to Huang’s allegation, as contained in his pleadings and deposition testimony, that Barker was conspiring against Huang. One article reported that Huang claimed Barker was carrying out a “vendetta” against him because she was bitter over his having stopped a medical study that she was coordinating with him. The article also reported that Huang claimed that Barker had slept with Huang in an effort to persuade him to continue the study. Similar articles in other newspapers followed, as did radio and television broadcasts. Shortly before the Rochen trial was to begin, the court, on Huang’s motion, dismissed the counterclaim with prejudice. Barker filed this suit in May 1990.

On July 10, 1990, Huang, without answering the complaint, filed a motion for summary judgment under Superior Court Rule 56(b). Huang asserted that any statements he had made regarding Barker had been made exclusively during the course of legal proceedings, in the course of the Ro-chen counterclaim, and were therefore protected by an “absolute privilege.” Nearly contemporaneously, ICA filed a motion under Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.

Shortly thereafter, when Barker served Huang with interrogatories, Huang moved for a protective order barring discovery. Huang asserted that discovery should be postponed until resolution of his motion for summary judgment, and that Barker’s interrogatories requested material protected by the attorney-client privilege. On July 20, 1990, defendant Huang filed a pleading styled as an amended motion for dismissal and summary judgment, in which he restated his prior motion but sought in the alternative to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim for relief.

On August 29, 1990, Barker filed a “Consolidated Response to Defendants’ Pending Motion for Dismissal, Summary Judgment and for a Protective Order,” with supporting affidavit, ostensibly to counter Huang’s defense of absolute privilege. In her affidavit, Barker averred (arguably for the first time) 1 that Huang had, “on at least one occasion,” made numerous defamatory statements about plaintiff while being interviewed by a newspaper reporter. Barker alleged that these interviews “occurred wholly outside of the course of any judicial proceeding,” and that many of Huang’s statements were “wholly unrelated to any issue involved in any judicial proceeding.”

On October 30, 1990, Superior Court held a recorded office conference on the defendants’ then pending motions for dismissal, summary judgment, and a protective order. Barker there asserted that a Chinese newspaper had published, in Chinese, an interview with Huang, portions of which were later republished by the News Journal. Barker argued that the information in the Chinese newspaper was not derived from *1344 court records; Barker implied that this was the interview to which she had referred in her earlier affidavit.

Later, on January 2, 1991, Barker served Huang with a request for admission. Attached to the request were three pages of text printed in Chinese, from an October 1988 issue of a publication called the World Journal. Plaintiff requested that Huang admit that the articles “accurately report the substance of two interviews of Huang that were conducted by the author of the two articles.” Huang objected to the request and declined to respond on the ground that the request was irrelevant and vague.

By order dated February 22, 1991, the Superior Court granted defendants’ motions for summary judgment 2 on all of Barker’s claims. The court found that the defendant Huang’s motions for protective orders were therefore moot. Barker then docketed this appeal.

1. Barker’s Defamation Claims

Barker first contends that Superior Court erred in granting summary judgment with respect to her defamation claims against Huang. There are two parts to this claim, which must be examined separately. First, Barker argues that the court’s grant of summary judgment of her claim that Huang made defamatory statements during the course of the Rochen litigation was in error because the court failed to give her an opportunity through discovery to establish facts in support of the applicability of a “sham litigation” exception to Huang’s defense of absolute privilege. Second, Barker argues that the court’s grant of summary judgment of her claim that Huang made defamatory statements wholly outside the judicial context was in error because Huang had failed to come forward with any denial of having made such statements. Where Superior Court grants summary judgment, “[t]he scope of our review is ... unqualified.”

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Bluebook (online)
610 A.2d 1341, 1992 Del. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-huang-del-1992.