H.S. v. A.C. CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 23, 2025
DocketC095425
StatusUnpublished

This text of H.S. v. A.C. CA3 (H.S. v. A.C. CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.S. v. A.C. CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/23/25 H.S. v. A.C. CA3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

H.S., C095425

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2021- 70008487-CU-HR-GDS) v.

A.C.,

Defendant and Appellant.

This case arises from a civil harassment restraining order (CHRO) (Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 527.6) issued to protect H.S.2 from A.C. The parties first came into contact

1 Undesignated section references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 2 To protect their privacy, we refer to the parties by their initials. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(a)(1), (b)(5), (10) & (11).) Further undesignated rule references are to the California Rules of Court.

1 when A.C. focused her amateur investigative reporting on H.S.’s personal life and business activities. A.C. dedicated an Instagram page to reporting on H.S., which accumulated thousands of followers. While much of the evidence and argument offered in the trial court concerned A.C.’s allegedly defamatory reporting on H.S., the trial court recognized there had been no judicial determination concerning the veracity of those statements and thus focused on A.C.’s speech and conduct that would constitute harassment regardless of a finding on the truth of the matters at issue. On that basis, the court determined that A.C. engaged in a course of behavior warranting the CHRO. A.C. appeals in propria persona, raising multiple arguments that fall into four main categories:3 (1) her speech was protected, (2) substantial evidence does not support the trial court’s order, (3) the court improperly limited her cross-examination, and (4) H.S. should not have been awarded attorney’s fees. H.S. has not filed a responsive brief, but A.C. bears the burden of demonstrating prejudicial trial court error. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13.) We shall affirm. BACKGROUND The evidentiary hearings concerning H.S.’s CHRO request spanned five days over a period of four months. A.C. obtained settled statements for the first two hearings (rules 8.121, 8.130 & 8.137), and court reporters captured the remaining three hearings. This summary is comprised of the evidence presented at these hearings and the parties’ filings. Consistent with the trial court’s approach in this case, this factual summary focuses on the portion of the parties’ dispute that does not require a prior adjudication of the truth of H.S.’s alleged actions and attendant possible defamation. We include some information concerning the larger dispute only for context.

3 A.C.’s argument that the trial court failed to make credibility determinations is both belied by the record and unsupported by citations to legal authority, such that we will not address it further.

2 A. The CHRO Petition and Associated Temporary Restraining Order In early January 2021, H.S. requested the CHRO, asserting A.C. harassed him directly and indirectly through her Instagram “ ‘hate page’ ” that disparaged H.S. (including his businesses) and called her Instagram followers to action. As a result, H.S. had received “credible threats of death, violence, and obscenities.” H.S. complained that A.C. and her followers caused him extreme emotional distress “due to the threats of death, violence, and constant harassment and libelous claims about [his] business. . . .” H.S. had suffered sleep disturbance, loss of appetite, and business losses. The harassment began in February 2020 and continued through January 5, 2021, with A.C. and her Instagram followers spreading “false and misleading information” about H.S. and his companies, as well as A.C. and her followers sending “rude, threatening, violent, and obscene” Instagram messages. The trial court partially granted H.S.’s request for a temporary restraining order (TRO), denying the portion pertaining to A.C.’s online posting of false or misleading information. The court noted, H.S. “requests an order prohibiting [A.C.] from publishing false or misleading information and to remove statements and posts of violence, harassment, or those that demean or disturb the peace of [H.S.].” The court denied the first part of the requested TRO as a prior restraint on speech and the second part as overly broad. The court granted the remaining personal conduct orders and prohibited A.C. from coming within 100 yards of H.S., his home, business, and vehicle. A.C. was further prohibited from taking “any action to obtain [H.S.’s] address or location.” B. Instagram’s Operation & A.C.’s Instagram Page According to evidence offered to educate the trial court, tagging a person in a post on Instagram results in a notification in that person’s activity feed. Any Instagram user may follow another user unless the Instagram account is private, in which case, the private account holder must accept the request. Material posted to public Instagram accounts could be viewed by anyone, even if that user was blocked by the page’s

3 controller. Instagram also features a direct messaging option that enables users to message anyone following their account. When direct messaging a user who does not follow the sender, the person receiving the message must accept it. Once initiated, the conversation does not restrict the messages that may be sent. Stories posted on Instagram disappear within a day unless they are permanently published, but the stories are maintained in the poster’s archives. A.C. owned the Instagram page “People of Sacramento_Scams,” which added the word “scams” to a posting of H.S.’s business. She admitted the posts from that Instagram page belonged to her. Although A.C. used the word “private” when discussing her Instagram page, she clarified it was a public account with 6,500 followers. A.C. saved her posts starting in February 2020 unless she was specifically told to take something down. In addition to her own content, A.C. admitted to reposting content from two meme accounts dedicated to “roasting” H.S. While not an Instagram follower of A.C., H.S. received the complained-of public posts from his followers on Instagram and by being tagged in the post. H.S. further received notifications from different Instagram accounts concerning A.C.’s posts during the trial court proceedings. H.S. considered A.C.’s Instagram posts direct communications. C. A.C.’s Amateur Online Reporting A.C.’s online amateur reporting began in February 2020 after H.S. opened an animal shelter allegedly in violation of local zoning ordinances and without appropriate legal paperwork. A.C. asserted this business was really an illicit “ ‘puppy flipping’ ” operation and that community concerns across numerous social media platforms grew over time. H.S. served A.C. with a “cease-and-desist” letter in March 2020 complaining of A.C.’s libelous social media posts and copyright infringement. A.C., however, believed the letter “was purely and simply a shakedown attempt,” and A.C. shared the letter with her social media audience. Ultimately, the animal shelter closed.

4 A.C. also posted concerning H.S.’s alleged hypocrisy from March to December 2020; specifically, that H.S. made social media posts supporting public health officials and pandemic restrictions but then kept his business open selling t-shirts and masks. Further, A.C. asserted that a review of social media posts by H.S., his friends, and relatives showed noncompliance with and contempt for COVID-19 pandemic rules and directives. A.C. also criticized H.S. for attending a “ ‘super-spreader’ ” party on New Year’s Eve, which was widely denounced on local news media. A.C.

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