Rall v. Tribune 365 LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 17, 2019
DocketB284566
StatusPublished

This text of Rall v. Tribune 365 LLC (Rall v. Tribune 365 LLC) 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
Rall v. Tribune 365 LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 1/17/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

FREDERICK THEODORE B284566 RALL III, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. BC613703)

v.

TRIBUNE 365 LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Joseph R. Kalin, Judge. Affirmed. Roger A. Lowenstein and Jeffrey Lewis for Plaintiff and Appellant. Davis Wright Tremaine, Kelli L. Sager, Rochelle Wilcox, Dan Laidman, Diana Palacios; Jeff Glasser, Los Angeles Times Communications LLC for Defendants and Respondents. Jassy Vick Carolan, Jean-Paul Jassy; Nikki Moore and David Snyder, for California News Publishers Association and First Amendment Coalition as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendants and Respondents. __________________________ SUMMARY Plaintiff Frederick Theodore Rall III, a political cartoonist and blogger, sued Los Angeles Times Communications LLC (The Times) after it published a “note to readers” and a later more detailed report questioning the accuracy of a blog post plaintiff wrote for The Times. The Times told its readers that it had serious questions about the accuracy of the blog post; that the piece should not have been published; and that plaintiff’s future work would not appear in The Times. Plaintiff sued The Times, related entities, and several individual defendants, alleging causes of action for defamation and for wrongful termination in violation of public policy, among other claims. All defendants filed anti-SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) motions to strike plaintiff’s complaint (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16). The trial court granted the motions. We affirm the trial court’s orders. FACTS We summarize the facts, and then describe the moving and opposition papers. We will elaborate on the facts as necessary in our discussion of the legal issues. 1. The Plaintiff and the Publications Plaintiff is a freelance editorial cartoonist who lives in New York, and is “one of the most widely syndicated cartoonists in the United States.” He is the author of 19 books, including a New York Times bestselling comics biography. Between 2009 and 2015, his cartoons were drawn exclusively for The Times, but after his work was published in The Times, he was free to publish it elsewhere. Beginning in 2013, plaintiff also wrote blog posts for publication in conjunction with his cartoons. Plaintiff drew about 300 cartoons and wrote about 150 blog posts for the Times.

2 As of 2013, he was paid $200 for each cartoon and $100 for each blog post. He drew numerous cartoons criticizing the police in general, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) in particular, and then-LAPD Chief Charles Beck specifically. a. Plaintiff’s May 2015 blog post In May 2015, the LAPD was enforcing the city’s laws against jaywalking, and The Times reported on the effects of costly jaywalking fines on poor and working class Angelenos. After that report, plaintiff submitted and The Times published a cartoon mocking the LAPD for its jaywalking policy (“LAPD’s Crosswalk Crackdown; Don’t Police Have Something Better to Do?”), along with a May 11, 2015 blog post that described plaintiff’s own arrest for jaywalking in 2001. In the blog post, plaintiff wrote that he had crossed the street properly (“I was innocent of even jaywalking”) when a motorcycle officer “zoomed over, threw me up against the wall, slapped on the cuffs, roughed me up and wrote me a ticket. It was an ugly scene, and in broad daylight it must have looked like one, because within minutes there were a couple of dozen passersby shouting at the cop. [¶] Another motorcycle officer appeared, asked the colleague what the heck he was thinking and ordered him to let me go, which he did. But not before he threw my driver’s license into the sewer.” Plaintiff’s blog also stated he had filed a formal complaint with the LAPD, and when he called a few months later, he was told the complaint had been dismissed, and “[t]hey had never notified me.” b. The Times’s July 2015 “note to readers” On July 28, 2015, The Times published, in its opinion section, an “Editor’s Note[:] A note to readers.” The note to readers described plaintiff’s May 11, 2015 blog post, and then

3 described records that the LAPD provided to The Times about the incident plaintiff had recounted in his blog post. These included the complaint plaintiff filed at the time, and “[a]n audiotape of the encounter recorded by the police officer.” The note to readers stated the audiotape “does not back up [plaintiff’s] assertions; it gives no indication that there was physical violence of any sort by the policeman or that [plaintiff’s] license was thrown into the sewer or that he was handcuffed. Nor is there any evidence on the recording of a crowd of shouting onlookers.” The note to readers continued: “In [plaintiff’s] initial complaint to the LAPD, he describes the incident without mentioning any physical violence or handcuffing but says that the police officer was ‘belligerent and hostile’ and that he threw [plaintiff’s] license into the ‘gutter.’ The tape depicts a polite interaction. [¶] In addition, [plaintiff] wrote in his blog post that the LAPD dismissed his complaint without ever contacting him. Department records show that internal affairs investigators made repeated attempts to contact [plaintiff], without success. [¶] Asked to explain these inconsistencies, [plaintiff] said he stands by his blog post. [¶] As to why he didn’t mention any physical abuse in his letter to the LAPD in 2001, [plaintiff] said he didn’t want to make an enemy of the department, in part because he hosted a local radio talk show at the time. After listening to the tape, [plaintiff] noted that it was of poor quality and contained inaudible segments.” The note to readers concluded: “However, the recording and other evidence provided by the LAPD raise serious questions about the accuracy of [plaintiff’s] blog post. Based on this, the piece should not have been published. [¶] [Plaintiff’s] future work will not appear in The Times. [¶] The Los Angeles Times is

4 a trusted source of news because of the quality and integrity of the work its journalists do. This is a reminder of the need to remain vigilant about what we publish.” c. The Times’s August 2015 report reaffirming its decision that plaintiff’s blog post did not meet its standards On August 19, 2015, in response to questions from readers, The Times published a piece that provided “a detailed look at the matter by Times editors” (the Times report). After describing the blog post and its note to readers, the Times report stated that plaintiff had “complained that The Times acted unjustly, based on flawed evidence,” and “demanded that the paper retract its note to readers and reinstate him as a contributor. [¶] In response, The Times has reexamined the evidence and found no basis to change its decision.” The Times report recounted the evidence The Times examined, and makes these principal points. i. Plaintiff’s complaint to the LAPD and his later descriptions of the incident Plaintiff’s original complaint to the LAPD, “written days after the jaywalking stop, when the encounter was fresh in his mind,” “accused the officer of rudeness but not of any physical abuse.”1 “In published accounts years later, [plaintiff] added

1 The Times report provided further details of plaintiff’s letter of complaint to the LAPD. Plaintiff stated he had not jaywalked, the officer (Willie Durr) became “ ‘belligerent and hostile’ when [plaintiff] asked him how to deal with the citation,” Officer Durr “refused to answer when asked if the ticket could be paid by mail and then threw [plaintiff’s] driver’s license into the gutter.” Plaintiff asked the LAPD “to consider dismissing Durr, whom he described as ‘an ill-tempered excuse for a police officer’ ”

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