Camden National Bank v. Ilene F. Weintraub

2016 ME 101, 143 A.3d 788, 2016 Me. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 7, 2016
DocketDocket Kno-15-375
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2016 ME 101 (Camden National Bank v. Ilene F. Weintraub) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camden National Bank v. Ilene F. Weintraub, 2016 ME 101, 143 A.3d 788, 2016 Me. LEXIS 111 (Me. 2016).

Opinion

HUMPHREY, J.

[¶ 1] Camden National Bank appeals from the Superior Court’s (Knox County, Billings, J.) denial of its special motion to dismiss llene Weintraub’s counterclaim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. See 14 M.R.S. § 556 (2015). On appeal, the Bank contends that the court erred in determining that section 556, Maine’s “anti-SLAPP” 1 statute, prohibits selective dismissal of claims and in concluding that Weintraub met her burden of demonstrating a prima facie case of actual, injury and causation. We clarify that the anti-SLAPP statute allows for dismissal of some but not all claims in a multi-count complaint, and we affirm the court’s denial of the Bank’s motion.

I, BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] The following facts, relevant to this appeal, are alleged in ’the parties’ pleadings and are part of the motion record in this action. See Nader v. Me. Democratic Party (Nader II), 2013 ME 51, ¶ 2, 66 A.3d 571 (per curiam). llene Wein-traub and her brother had two mortgage *791 loans with the Bank; and, when they fell into arrears, Weintraub. began, receiving phone calls from the Bank’s collections department. Weintraub alleged that a particular collections specialist was verbally abusive and rude to her. Another employee of the Bank attested in an affidavit that, during a phone call in August 2010, Weintraub stated that she “would like to murder” that collections specialist when the collections specialist calls, Concerned for her coworker’s safety, the employee called the Rockport Police Department and reported Weintraub’s threat. The police advised Weintraub that she was being investigated for criminal threatening, and they instructed her not to call the collections department but to conduct her banking business in person at a local branch, instead.

[¶ 3] The Bank filed a complaint, for foreclosure in July 2013, 2 and thereafter the parties engaged in the processes required by the foreclosure diversion program for nearly a year. In March 2014, Weintraub filed an amended answer bringing , several counterclaims against , the Bank, including violations of the Maine Consumer Credit Code, breach of contract, and a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. She alleged that, as a direct and proximate result of the abusive conduct of the collections department and the false accusation 'of criminal' conduct, she suffered “physical and personal injuries” resulting in emotional distress and loss of enjoyment of life and requiring an increase of her diabetes medication. In April of 2014, the Bank filed a motion to dismiss these counterclaims but, in that motion, it did not rely on Maine’s anti-SLAPP statute as a ground for dismissal The court denied that motion on December 1,2014.

[¶ 4] Three weeks later, the Bank filed a motion for leave, to file a special motion to dismiss, coupled with a special motion to dismiss pursuant to 14 M.R.S. § 556. The Bank argued-in its special motion to dismiss that Maine’s anti-SLAPP statute protects its right to make an accurate report to the police of matters of public safety without suffering the burden of a lawsuit, and that Weintraub’s counterclaims were based on its exercise of petitioning rights. See Lynch v. Christie, 815 F.Supp.2d 341, 346 n. 6 (D.Me.2011) (stating that “reports to [law enforcement] ... would clearly be covered [by the statute] as well”). Wein-traub opposed the Bank’s motion for leave to file on the ground that the special motion to dismiss was untimely. 3 After a hearing on several pending motions, Wein-traub was granted leave to file amended counterclaims,- and the Bank was granted leave to “reassert any.-pending motions,” including, presumably, its special motion to dismiss. In its renewed special motion to dismiss, the Bank requested dismissal of Count II, violation of Mainé Consumer Credit Code, Count III, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and Count IV, punitive damages flowing from the intentional infliction of emotional distress, on the basis that the conduct complained of constituted protected petitioning activity. The Bank did not request dismissal of Count I, breach of contract.

*792 [¶ 5] In July 2015, the court held a hearing on the Bank’s motion. In its consideration of the special motion, which requested dismissal of only Counts II, III, and IV, the court stated that the anti-. SLAPP statute did not allow for “selective dismissal of only certain claims.” It reasoned that the language of the statute, “When a moving party asserts that the civil claims, counterclaims or cross claims against the moving party,” was meant to guard against “meritless lawsuits,” and therefore allowing a party to use a “special motion to summarily dispose of only some claims ... would appear to further the ‘abuse and tactical manipulation’ with which anti-SLAPP litigation has become associated.” The court denied the Bank’s special motion “because it [did] not address all of Weintraub’s claims as required for the statute to be applicable.”

[¶ 6] The court also addressed the merits of the motion, however, and concluded that Weintraub’s affidavit alleged physical injury and missed work due to the Bank’s actions, which were more than just claims of mental suffering and embarrassment that were not. sufficient in Schelling v. Lindell, 2008 ME 59, ¶ 18, 942 A.2d 1226. It found that Weintraub’s claims were of a kind for which damages may be established without mere guess or conjecture; that the statute did not require expert medical testimony on causation at this point, as the Bank contended; and that Weintraub’s “affidavit [made] a sufficient connection between [the Bank’s] actions and her injuries to meet her burden of establishing a prima facie case of actual injury.” The Bank timely appealed to us.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Dismissal of Some But Not All Counts

[¶ 7] The Bank argues that the trial court erred when it held that “selective dismissal of only certain claims” was unavailable as a matter of law under Maine’s anti-SLAPP statute because the plain meaning of the statute indicates that it applies to any claims that seek to punish petitioning activity and does not require that all claims asserted in the complaint be directed at petitioning activity for the statute to apply. We review a trial court’s ruling on a special motion to dismiss de novo. See Town of Madawaska v. Cayer, 2014 ME 121, ¶ 8, 103 A.3d 547. We review the interpretation of a statute de novo as a question of law. See Strout v. Cent. Me. Med. Ctr., 2014 ME 77, ¶ 10, 94 A.3d 786.

[¶ 8] We have adopted a two-step analysis for determining whether a special motion to dismiss should be granted.

The first step requires the court to determine whether the moving party has demonstrated that the nonmoving party’s claim is “based on the moving party’s exercise of the right ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 ME 101, 143 A.3d 788, 2016 Me. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-national-bank-v-ilene-f-weintraub-me-2016.