Ignat v. Yum! Brands, Inc.

214 Cal. App. 4th 808, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 275, 35 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 555, 2013 WL 1095520, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
DocketNo. G046343
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 214 Cal. App. 4th 808 (Ignat v. Yum! Brands, Inc.) 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
Ignat v. Yum! Brands, Inc., 214 Cal. App. 4th 808, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 275, 35 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 555, 2013 WL 1095520, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 210 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[810]*810Opinion

BEDSWORTH, Acting P. J.—

INTRODUCTION

Appellant Melissa Ignat appeals from a judgment of dismissal after the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Yum! Brands, Inc., alleged to be Ignat’s employer, and Mary Shipma,- her immediate supervisor, on Ignat’s single cause of action for public disclosure of private facts. The basis of Ignat’s suit was Shipma’s alleged disclosure to Ignat’s coworkers of her bipolar condition.

This is Ignat’s second trip to our court. She appealed from a prior dismissal on summary judgment after the trial court refused to consider a late-filed opposition. We sent the case back for a decision on the merits. (Ignat v. Yum! Brands, Inc. (Mar. 1, 2011, G043098) [nonpub. opn.].)

That decision took the form of the trial court granting summary judgment on the ground the right of privacy can be violated only by a writing, not by word of mouth.1 Because Ignat had not produced any document disclosing private facts, she could not pursue this cause of action. The trial court lamented the “irrationality” of this rule, but felt itself bound by precedent.

We believe this rule—to the extent it is still observed—is outmoded and interferes with a person’s right to privacy without any corresponding benefit to any other right or policy. Other restrictions on liability for invasion of privacy serve other important interests, such as free speech or freedom of the press. But no one has come up with a good reason for restricting liability to written disclosures, and it has long been acknowledged that oral disclosures can be just as harmful.

Because the lack of a writing was the sole basis for the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, we reverse. We express only one opinion about the other issues raised in respondents’ motion.

FACTS

Yum! Brands is the corporate parent of several fast-food franchises, such as Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, and KFC (formerly known as Kentucky Fried Chicken). Yum employed Ignat between 2005 and 2008 in the Yum real estate title [811]*811department, located in Irvine.2 She assisted paralegals in the department with securing title to the real estate on which Yum’s franchised stores conducted business.

Ignat suffered from bipolar disorder, for which she was being treated with medications. Sometimes these were effective, sometimes not. Side effects of medication adjustments occasionally forced Ignat to miss work.

Ignat alleged that after returning from one such absence in mid-2008, Shipma informed her that Shipma had told everyone in the department Ignat was bipolar. Ignat alleged her coworkers subsequently avoided and shunned her, and one of them asked Shipma if Ignat was likely to “go postal” at work.

Ignat was terminated in early September 2008. She filed suit against Yum! Brands and Shipma on November 12, 2008, alleging one cause of action for invasion of privacy by public disclosure of private facts. Respondents moved for summary judgment or summary adjudication, identifying seven issues, four of which addressed the elements of a cause of action for public disclosure of private facts. These were: (1) Shipma never told the title department about Ignat’s disorder; (2) Shipma did not disclose Ignat’s disorder in writing; (3) the disclosure was not highly offensive to a reasonable person; and (4) Ignat had already revealed her condition to some people in the department and therefore had no expectation of privacy.

The court held a hearing on the merits of respondents’ motion on November 15, 2011. It granted the motion, basing its ruling solely on the lack of a writing disclosing the private facts. The court also addressed Ignat’s argument that respondents had violated her state constitutional right to privacy, which did not require a writing. The problem with that argument, the court held, was that Ignat had not pleaded a violation of a constitutional right in her complaint, which defined the scope of the motion for summary judgment. Ignat has appealed from the judgment entered after the motion was granted.

DISCUSSION

I. Standard of Review

“A trial court properly grants summary judgment where no triable issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. [Citation.] We review the trial court’s decision de novo, considering [812]*812all of the evidence the parties offered in connection with the motion (except that which the court properly excluded) and the uncontradicted inferences the evidence reasonably supports. [Citation.] In the trial court, once a moving defendant has ‘shown that one or more elements of the cause of action, even if not separately pleaded, cannot be established,’ the burden shifts to the plaintiff to show the existence of a triable issue; to meet that burden, the plaintiff ‘may not rely upon the mere allegations or denials of its pleadings . . . but, instead, shall set forth specific facts showing that a triable issue of material fact exists as to that cause of action . . . .’ [Citations.]” (Merrill v. Navegar, Inc. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 465, 476-477 [110 Cal.Rptr.2d 370, 28 P.3d 116].) In the absence of supplemental briefing, we may not affirm a summary judgment on a ground on which the trial court did not rely. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (m)(2).)

II. The Common Law Right to Privacy

As legal lore has it, the first widely recognized call in American law for a right to privacy based on the common law and enforceable in a tort action sounded in an article by Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis in the Harvard Law Review of 1890. (Warren & Brandeis, The Right to Privacy (1890) 4 Harv. L.Rev. 193 (The Right to Privacy).) The authors deplored “[r]ecent inventions and business methods”—namely, advances in photography and the proliferation of newspapers—that “have invaded the sacred precincts of private and domestic life” and “threaten to make good the prediction that ‘what is whispered in the closet shall be proclaimed from the house-tops.’ ”3 (The Right to Privacy, supra, at p. 195.) In light of these new technologies, the established legal protections for individual privacy no longer functioned adequately.4 The new tort, authorized by “the beautiful capacity for growth which characterizes the common law[,] enabled the judges to afford the requisite protection, without the interposition of the [813]*813legislature.”5 (The Right to Privacy, supra, at p. 195.) Warren and Brandeis extracted from existing common law protections for property a right personal to an individual, analogous to the right to reputation protected by defamation law. Although they located its origins in the common law, they sought to cut privacy loose from the law of property and to make it a right enforceable on its own.

Warren and Brandeis recognized that the right to privacy must be subject to conditions if it was to coexist with freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and other established areas of law. Accordingly, they proposed limitations on the right. It does not prevent publication of matters of general or public interest (or, as we would say now, “newsworthy” matters). It does not apply to privileged publications, such as court testimony.

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214 Cal. App. 4th 808, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 275, 35 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 555, 2013 WL 1095520, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ignat-v-yum-brands-inc-calctapp-2013.