Lakireddy v. Soto-Vigil CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 2014
DocketA138675
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lakireddy v. Soto-Vigil CA1/5 (Lakireddy v. Soto-Vigil CA1/5) 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
Lakireddy v. Soto-Vigil CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 4/16/14 Lakireddy v. Soto-Vigil CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

SIDHARDHA LAKIREDDY, Plaintiff and Respondent, A138675 v. A138822 ALEJANDRO SOTO-VIGIL et al., (Alameda County Defendants and Appellants. Super. Ct. No. RG12655745)

In a contested municipal rent board election, respondent Sidhardha Lakireddy publicly supported candidates challenging a slate of candidates consisting mostly of incumbents (incumbent slate). One incumbent slate candidate sent an e-mail to supporters attacking Lakireddy and referencing a criminal case involving relatives of Lakireddy. Lakireddy sued three of the incumbent slate candidates for defamation, claiming the reference implied that he was personally involved in crimes of “human trafficking” and was “complicit in murder.” Two of the three defendants, appellants Alejandro Soto-Vigil and Asa Dodsworth, moved to strike the complaint pursuant to the anti-SLAPP law (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16).1 The trial court denied the motion. We reverse. Lakireddy failed to establish a probability he would succeed on his claims against these two defendants because he cites no persuasive authority that they can be held liable for the e-mail, which was authored and linked to the campaign Web site solely by the third defendant. 1 SLAPP refers to strategic lawsuit against public participation. (Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer Cause, Inc. (2002) 29 Cal.4th 53, 57 & fn. 1.)

1 I. BACKGROUND In 2012, commissioner candidates for election to the Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board (Berkeley Rent Board) ran as two opposing slates—the incumbent slate (formally known as the Progressive Affordable Housing Slate) and the Berkeley Tenants United for Fairness Slate (reform slate). Soto-Vigil, Dodsworth, and Igor Tregub (collectively Defendants), were three of the four incumbent slate candidates. Lakireddy, president of the Berkeley Property Owners Association (BPOA), supported the reform slate. In the October 2012 edition of the BPOA newsletter, Lakireddy wrote: “[T]here has been a big coup for the reform slate running for the Berkeley Rent Board . . . . Three out of the four candidates on the reform slate were endorsed by the Berkeley Democratic Club. . . . [¶] At the same time, incumbent . . . Tregub also vied for the endorsement of the [Berkeley Democratic Club] and was rejected. . . . [This] is significant. [Tregub] was California Democrat delegate to the Charlotte [Democratic national] convention. . . . [¶] This, my friends, is progress. So I urge you, I plead with you, please go to [the reform slate’s Web site] and donate what you can to each individual candidate. . . . [¶] This is the best chance we have to change things and they need your help!” Later in October 2012, an e-mail was sent to incumbent slate supporters entitled, “It’s Getting Nasty—Stand with Supervisor Keith Carson, Stand with Labor, Stand with Us!” (hereafter “It’s Getting Nasty” e-mail). The e-mail included the following language: “Dear Supporters, [¶] You can’t make this stuff up! . . . [T]he [BPOA] President—the same guy whose family was caught in a human trafficking ring and was complicit in murder—sent out a notice to mega-landlords attacking me for, among other things, being elected as your [Democratic national convention] Obama Delegate! [¶] Well, my friends, as the only all-Democratic slate running, we are proud to stand with our President and continue to push him in a more progressive direction. . . . [¶] . . . [W]e don’t have the BPOA’s megabucks, so we desperately need your help! I hope you have by now seen to what lengths [our] opponents will go to stretch the truth to get themselves elected.” (Blue hyperlinked text replaced by boldface.) The e-mail message appeared under the banner heading, “Elect the Progressive Affordable Housing Slate for Rent

2 Board,” which included pictures and the names of all four incumbent slate candidates. The e-mail also bore the signature line: “With gratitude, [¶] Alejandro Soto-Vigil, Judy Shelton, Asa Dodsworth, and Igor Tregub” and “Soto-Vigil, Shelton, Dodsworth, and Tregub for Rent Board 2012.” The phrase in boldface contained an embedded Internet hyperlink to an article entitled, “How Lakireddy Case Spurred California Sex Trafficking Laws.” Lakireddy does not dispute the accuracy of the article, which reported that in 2001 a Berkeley landlord, identified as Lakireddy Balireddy,2 was convicted of two counts of transportation of minors for illegal sexual activity, part of a larger conspiracy since 1986 to bring at least 25 Indian laborers into the United States through false pretenses, subject them to sexual servitude, and require them to work in Bali Reddy’s restaurants and rental properties. “The abuse might have gone undetected even longer but for a carbon monoxide leak in November 1999 in one of [Bali Reddy’s] Berkeley apartments that killed Chanti Pratipatti, 17, whom he had trafficked months earlier,” an incident the article identified as an “accidental death.” The article stated that several members of Bali Reddy’s family participated in the conspiracy, including his sons and his brother and sister-in-law. Not all of those family members were identified by name, and “Sidhardha Lakireddy” was not mentioned in the article. Lakireddy avers that he had virtually no contact with Bali Reddy or other relatives implicated in the scandal before they were arrested and that he had no prior knowledge of their criminal activities. On October 23, 2012, Lakireddy’s lawyer e-mailed and mailed a letter to all four incumbent slate candidates alleging that the “It’s Getting Nasty” e-mail was defamatory of Lakireddy because it “strongly suggest[ed] that Mr. Lakireddy was involved ‘in a human trafficking ring and was complicit in murder.’ ” He demanded the candidates publish a specifically-worded retraction. Tregub replied, denying that the e-mail was

2 Respondent Lakireddy’s father is one of Lakireddy Balireddy’s brothers. Lakireddy spells his uncle’s name “Bali Reddy,” whereas the article used a “Balireddy” spelling. We assume Lakireddy’s spelling is correct and use it for the remainder of the opinion.

3 defamatory of Lakireddy, apologizing “that this reference to his family has been brought up in this way,” and offering to circulate a letter explaining the statement was not meant to imply Lakireddy was involved in the family scandal. Soto-Vigil and Dodsworth did not publish the retraction demanded by Lakireddy, but Soto-Vigil apologized to Lakireddy by e-mail in January 2013. Litigation Lakireddy sued Tregub, Soto-Vigil and Dodsworth for libel.3 He alleged that “defendants” sent out the e-mail, that the e-mail was signed by all three Defendants, and that the e-mail was posted on their “joint” Web site. He alleged that Defendants’ election campaigns paid for the production and distribution of the e-mail. He further alleged that Defendants refused to retract the e-mail and continued to post it on their Web site even after he had informed them of its libelous nature. Lakireddy later averred: “I suffer greatly from this smear. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . Stirred up by people like [Defendants], people in Berkeley freely accuse me, and my own nephews and nieces, of these crimes even though we may not even have been born when the crimes occurred.” He cited three situations in which he allegedly lost business opportunities because he had been “linked” to criminal behavior.

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