CARLOS ENRIQUE LUNA LAM v. UNIVISION COMMUNICATIONS, INC.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 13, 2021
Docket19-2204
StatusPublished

This text of CARLOS ENRIQUE LUNA LAM v. UNIVISION COMMUNICATIONS, INC. (CARLOS ENRIQUE LUNA LAM v. UNIVISION COMMUNICATIONS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CARLOS ENRIQUE LUNA LAM v. UNIVISION COMMUNICATIONS, INC., (Fla. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed October 13, 2021. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D19-2204 Lower Tribunal No. 19-16891 ________________

Carlos Enrique Luna Lam, et al., Appellants,

vs.

Univision Communications, Inc., et al., Appellees.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Daryl E. Trawick, Judge.

Nelson Mullins Broad and Cassel, and Beverly A. Pohl (Ft. Lauderdale), and Mark F. Raymond, and Amy Steele Donner; Harder LLP, and Charles J. Harder, and Dilan Esper, and Lan P. Vu, and Ryan J. Stonerock (Beverly Hills, CA), for appellants.

Podhurst Orseck, P.A., and Stephen F. Rosenthal, and Peter Prieto, and Alissa Del Riego; Ballard Spahr LLP, and Leita Walker (Minneapolis, MN), Seth D. Berlin, and Lauren Russell (Washington, DC), for appellees.

Before LINDSEY, HENDON, and BOKOR, JJ. LINDSEY, J.

Appellants Carlos Enrique Luna Lam and Iglesia Cristiana Casa de

Dios (Plaintiffs below) appeal from a final order dismissing their defamation

action with prejudice pursuant to Florida’s Anti-SLAPP Statute, section

768.295, Florida Statutes (2021). Though we agree with Appellants that

Florida’s Anti-SLAPP statute does not create a different motion to dismiss

standard, we nevertheless affirm the trial court’s dismissal because

Appellants failed to plead facts that, if proven, would establish actual malice.

However, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal with prejudice, and we

remand without prejudice to amend the Complaint.

I. BACKGROUND

Carlos Enrique Luna Lam is a pastor and co-founder of Iglesia

Cristiana Casa de Dios in Guatemala. In December 2018, Appellee

Univision Communications, Inc. aired a television special that profiled

several Latin American megachurches and pastors, including Luna (the

“Original Broadcast”).1 Univision also published several related articles

1 The special was entitled “Los Magnates de Dios” (Magnates of the Lord). Luna’s segment was called “Todo por Cash” (Everything for Cash), a reference to Luna’s nickname, “Cash Luna.” According to Luna, this nickname came from his inability to pronounce his name “Carlos” when he was a child.

2 online. The Original Broadcast and the written articles include statements

from Jorge Mauricio Herrera Bernal, a pilot who has admitted to transporting

cocaine for a Columbian cartel and who claimed to be a United States Drug

Enforcement Administration informant. 2 Herrera Bernal asserted that Luna

accepted money to build his church complex from his next-door neighbor,

Marllory Chacón, a convicted drug trafficking cartel boss known as the

“Queen of the South.”

Luna and Casa de Dios (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) brought the underlying

defamation action against three Univision entities and two journalists who

worked on the report (collectively, “Univision”). 3 According to the Complaint,

“Univision falsely accused Pastor Luna of, among other things, accepting

and laundering large amounts of money from a convicted drug trafficker,

[Chacón], and using that money to build a new church for Casa de Dios.”

The Complaint goes on to specifically identify many alleged defamatory

statements having to do with Luna’s ties to Chacón. The Complaint further

alleges that Univision’s primary source, Herrera Bernal, was not reliable and

2 Univision also interviewed a second, corroborating source, who appeared anonymously. 3 There are three Univision entities: Univision Communications, Inc.; Univision Interactive Media, Inc.; and The Univision Network Limited Partnership. The two journalists are Gerardo Reyes and Peniley Ramírez. Ramírez was not served below and is therefore not a party to this appeal.

3 provided false information and that Univision “knew the statements were

false, had serious doubts as to their truth, or published them with reckless

disregard for, and in purposeful avoidance of, the truth.”

Univision moved to dismiss the Complaint with prejudice pursuant to

Florida’s Anti-SLAPP statute, section 768.295. In its motion, Univision

argued that Florida’s Anti-SLAPP statute imposed a “materially higher

burden” on Plaintiffs than a typical motion to dismiss. Univision also argued

that because Plaintiffs are public figures, the “actual malice” standard for

defamation applied and that the alleged facts, even if true, were insufficient

as a matter of law to establish actual malice.

In their Response, Plaintiffs argued that the Anti-SLAPP statute does

not create a new, separate Anti-SLAPP motion with different substantive

standards. With respect to the actual malice standard for defamation,

Plaintiffs did not dispute the standard applied, but they asserted the

allegations in the Complaint were sufficient to allege actual malice.

Plaintiffs served over 230 discovery requests, and Univision moved to

stay discovery while its motion to dismiss was pending. The parties

ultimately stipulated to stay discovery. The stipulated order recognized that

the parties “do not agree as to their respective burdens for a motion to

4 dismiss under the Anti-SLAPP Statute.” The parties agreed to limit their

submissions to the following:

(a) Defendants’ motion, (b) the Parties’ respective memoranda of law, (c) the Complaint and its exhibits, (d) the news articles, broadcasts, and/or publications referenced in the Complaint and their certified translations, and (e) items capable of judicial notice. The Parties further agree that the Court may consider only these items in deciding the Motion to Dismiss.

(Emphasis added).

At the conclusion of the hearing on Univision’s motion to dismiss, the

judge asked each side to submit proposed orders. The trial court adopted

Univision’s proposed order, which concludes that Florida’s Anti-SLAPP

statute places the burden on Plaintiffs—not on Univision—to prove their

claims are not without merit. The order also concludes that Plaintiffs did not

adequately plead facts that, if proven, would establish actual malice. Finally,

the order dismisses the Complaint with prejudice “[b]ecause amendment to

the Complaint would be futile . . . .” Plaintiffs timely appealed.

II. ANALYSIS

The order on appeal has two components. First, it determines that

Florida’s Anti-SLAPP statute shifts the burden to Plaintiffs to prove their

claims are not “without merit.” And second, the order concludes that

5 Plaintiffs did not adequately plead facts that, if proven, would establish actual

malice.

A. Florida’s Anti-SLAPP Statute

According to the order on appeal, Florida’s Anti-SLAPP statute

imposes a heightened burden on Plaintiffs by requiring “Plaintiffs—not

Defendants—to prove their claims are not ‘without merit.’” Plaintiffs argue

that a motion to dismiss filed pursuant to the Anti-SLAPP statute is governed

by the same standards as an ordinary motion to dismiss under the Florida

Rules of Civil Procedure. That is, “upon a motion to dismiss a complaint for

failure to state a cause of action, all material allegations of the complaint are

taken as true. Those allegations are then reviewed in light of the applicable

substantive law to determine the existence of a cause of action.” Peeler v.

Indep. Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 206 So. 2d 34, 36 (Fla.

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