Jewish Defense Organization, Inc. v. Superior Court

85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 611, 72 Cal. App. 4th 1045, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4457, 99 Daily Journal DAR 5673, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 557
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1999
DocketB129319
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 611 (Jewish Defense Organization, Inc. v. Superior Court) 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
Jewish Defense Organization, Inc. v. Superior Court, 85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 611, 72 Cal. App. 4th 1045, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4457, 99 Daily Journal DAR 5673, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 557 (Cal. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Opinion

LILLIE, P. J.

By this petition for writ of mandate, defendants in a defamation action seek to vacate the trial court’s order of January 25, 1999, denying their motion to quash service of summons for lack of jurisdiction over them, or in the alternative, to stay or dismiss the action on the ground of forum non conveniens. The principal issue for review is whether California can properly assert jurisdiction over nonresident defendants based on *1050 their contract with several Internet service providers with offices in California to operate World Wide Web sites from New York; defendants’ Web site allegedly contained defamatory statements about plaintiff.

Factual and Procedural Background

In October 1997, plaintiff Steven Rambam filed an unverified complaint against Jewish Defense Organization, Inc. (JDO) and Mordechai Levy (Levy) for defamation and related causes of action, alleging that in 1997 and continuing to the present time, JDO and Levy posted a World Wide Web page containing defamatory statements about Rambam, including the statements that Rambam is a government informant and a “snitch”; Rambam is a dangerous psychopath who tried to kill his mother; Rambam kidnapped people but was never charged by the police; Rambam secretly admires the Nazis and hates Jews; and Rambam is an anti-Semite who has been known to entrap Jews with no prior criminal record into committing crimes.

Levy and JDO filed a motion to quash service of summons or in the alternative a motion to stay or dismiss the action as brought in an inconvenient forum. The declarations and exhibits offered in support of, or in opposition to, the motions reveal the following.

Levy has been a resident of New York City since about 1985 and earns his living as an accountant. He conducts no commercial activities in California and owns no property in California; the last time Levy came to California was in 1989, for the purpose of making a public speech on an issue of public concern; between 1984 and 1989, Levy would come to California from time to time to make public speeches.

Levy lived in California from 1982 to 1984, when he was an undergraduate college student at California State University at Los Angeles; at some time in the early 1980’s, Levy was associated with the Los Angeles chapter of a militant Jewish activist organization, the Jewish Defense League (JDL), headed by Irving Rubin. According to plaintiff, Levy was kicked out of the JDL “for refusing to accept organizational discipline”; according to Levy, he left the JDL voluntarily in 1981, and formed his own group in Los Angeles, known as the JDO. In the early 1980’s Barry Krugel participated in the JDO in Los Angeles; according to Krugel, the JDO “had meetings, conducted self-defense education classes, prepared political literature, participated in and conducted demonstrations, [and] wrote articles.” After Levy left Los Angeles in 1984, there was no longer any presence by JDO in Los Angeles. When Levy and the JDO left California, JDO no longer maintained any California telephone number or post office box. There is currently no *1051 California chapter of the JDO; since the JDO left California in 1984, Krugel has not been in any way associated with JDO.

According to Levy, the JDO, an organization dedicated to fighting antiSemitism, has been operating in New York City since 1985; the JDO conducts no commercial activities or services anywhere, and its only operation is to disseminate information concerning the status of Jewish affairs. Levy incorporated JDO in New York in 1989. The JDO maintains a World Wide Web site for the dissemination of information to anyone in the world where the Internet is available; the Web site is “passive,” in that the JDO does not seek to attract readers or others to the site and does not capture or receive any information from those who may “hit” its Web site; the Web site “merely provides information for those people who seek access to it”; as far as Levy can ascertain, the only reaction from California with respect to the Web site has been the instant lawsuit. To set up JDO’s Internet Web site, JDO established its domain names with Network Solutions, Inc., which apparently has offices in Virginia; all of JDO’s negotiations and activities with Network Solutions were conducted by JDO in New York; one of the domain names registered by JDO was “RAMBAM-STEVE.COM.” JDO’s administrative and billing contact for the Web sites is listed on the Network Solutions contracts as Alan J. Weberman, a New York resident; Levy declared that Weberman is not an officer, employee, or agent of JDO and is not authorized to speak on behalf of JDO.

From 1988 to the present, Rambam was the president of a licensed private investigative agency, Pallorium, Inc., located in Brooklyn, New York; in 1989, Rambam was employed by Jan Tucker, a California licensed investigator, to locate and serve process on Levy in New York on behalf of Irving Rubin of the JDL, who was suing Levy for libel in a California court; in August 1989, while Rambam and Rubin were on a public street in front of Levy’s New York residence, Levy opened fire on them, missed them, but wounded an innocent bystander; Levy was allegedly convicted of assault with a deadly weapon and sentenced to prison. Rubin’s libel action against Levy was dismissed.

In the aftermath of Rubin’s libel action, and in 1991, a lawyer, Mark Schapiro, sued Levy and Bertram Zweibon, seeking about $9,500 in contract damages; in 1993, Schapiro obtained a judgment of about $11,000 against Levy and Zweibon; Zweibon was allegedly the attorney who represented Levy in his criminal trial involving his shooting at Rambam and Rubin. Levy declared that although a judgment was entered against him in the Schapiro suit, he was never served with the Schapiro suit, did not appear, and did not know of its existence until plaintiff mentioned it in the instant lawsuit.

*1052 Sometime prior to the time Rambam filed the instant lawsuit against Levy and JDO, Rambam had filed in California a similar defamation lawsuit against the JDL and Rubin arising out of an allegedly defamatory Web page; during the discovery stage of the JDL action, Krugel contacted Levy in New York about the lawsuit; in 1997, after Rambam filed the instant lawsuit against Levy, Levy sent him (Krugel) some documents purporting to be about Rambam, which documents Krugel then passed on to Rubin to use in defense of Rambam’s lawsuit. Krugel also testified in deposition that sometime in about 1997 a woman telephoned him about a speaking engagement by Levy in Orange County, but Krugel had no personal information about whether Levy came to Orange County; Levy denied coming to California at any time after 1989.

After Rambam filed the instant lawsuit against Levy and the JDO, defamatory information about Rambam similar to that on the JDO Web sites allegedly appeared on several “mirror” Web pages served by providers Xoom, Inc., Geocities, Inc., and Whowhere? Inc., located in California.

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85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 611, 72 Cal. App. 4th 1045, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4457, 99 Daily Journal DAR 5673, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewish-defense-organization-inc-v-superior-court-calctapp-1999.