Wasserman v. Lustigson CA4/1 ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 1/21/21 Wasserman v. Lustigson CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for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.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    RANDALL WASSERMAN,                                                           D076048
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                                (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-
    00058732-CU-DF-CTL)
    ALAN LUSTIGSON,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Katherine A. Bacal, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions.
    Kiamilev Law Group, Chandra Kiamilev and Richard M. Payne for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    James D. Crosby for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Plaintiff Randall Wasserman filed a complaint against defendant Alan
    Lustigson, alleging one cause of action for defamation. Lustigson appeals
    from the trial court’s order denying his special motion to strike the complaint
    under California’s anti-SLAPP statute,1 Code of Civil Procedure
    section 425.16 (section 425.16). The court denied the motion, because the
    complaint alleged two defamatory posts on an Internet website, but
    Lustigson only addressed one post in his motion.
    The trial court erred. As we explain, Lustigson was entitled to rely on
    the complaint’s allegation of the contents of the purportedly defamatory posts
    for purposes of attempting to establish that the challenged claim arose from
    activity protected by the anti-SLAPP statute. Contrary to the court’s ruling,
    Lustigson was not required to produce each of the posts in order to argue that
    the complaint was subject to the anti-SLAPP statute. His motion relied on
    the allegations in the complaint and the evidence he submitted in support,
    and the court erred in ruling that he had not made a sufficient showing to
    reach the merits of the motion. Thus, we will reverse the order denying
    Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion.
    Although the standard of review is de novo, we are unable to reach the
    merits of the issues raised in the anti-SLAPP motion, because we have an
    incomplete record. Lustigson filed, and Wasserman opposed, a request for
    judicial notice; and Wasserman filed, and Lustigson responded to, evidentiary
    objections; yet the court expressly declined to rule on both. Under these
    circumstances, the parties did not waive or forfeit the evidentiary issues they
    presented. Thus, we will remand for the court first to rule on the evidentiary
    issues and then, based on the evidence properly before the court, to rule on
    the merits of Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion.
    1     “ ‘SLAPP’ is an acronym for ‘strategic lawsuit against public
    participation.’ ” (Baral v. Schnitt (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 376
    , 381, fn. 1 (Baral).)
    2
    I. UNDERLYING LEGAL STANDARDS
    Section 425.16, subdivision (b)(1) provides in full: “A cause of action
    against a person arising from any act of that person in furtherance of the
    person’s right of petition or free speech under the United States Constitution
    or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue shall be
    subject to a special motion to strike, unless the court determines that the
    plaintiff has established that there is a probability that the plaintiff will
    prevail on the claim.” The anti-SLAPP statute “shall be construed broadly.”
    (§ 425.16, subd. (a).)
    In applying this statute, a court generally is required to engage in a
    two-step process. “First, the defendant must establish that the challenged
    claim arises from activity protected by section 425.16.” (Baral, supra, 1
    Cal.5th at p. 384.) “If the defendant makes the required showing, the burden
    shifts to the plaintiff to demonstrate the merit of the claim by establishing a
    probability of success.” (Ibid.) “ ‘Only a cause of action that satisfies both
    prongs of the anti-SLAPP statute—i.e., that arises from protected speech or
    petitioning and lacks even minimal merit—is a SLAPP, subject to being
    stricken under the statute.’ ” (Oasis West Realty, LLC v. Goldman (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 811
    , 820.)
    A “ ‘cause of action . . . aris[es] from’ ” protected conduct under
    section 425.16, subdivision (b)(1), when it is “based on” such conduct. (City of
    Cotati v. Cashman (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 69
    , 78 (City of Cotati).) A defendant
    meets the burden of demonstrating that the plaintiff’s cause of action (or
    claim) is based on protected conduct, if it “ ‘fits one of the [four] categories
    spelled out in section 425.16, subdivision (e).’ ” (City of Cotati, at p. 78.) In
    the present case, Lustigson contends that the conduct alleged by Wasserman
    is protected under subdivision (e)(3), which defines an act in furtherance of a
    3
    constitutional right of free speech in connection with a public issue to include
    “any written or oral statement or writing made in a place open to the public
    or a public forum in connection with an issue of public interest.” (§ 425.16,
    subd. (e)(3).) Thus, under section 425.16, subdivision (e)(3), when deciding
    whether the alleged conduct is protected for purposes of prong one, the court
    must determine two issues: (1) whether the statement or writing was “made
    in a place open to the public or a public forum”; and (2) whether the
    statement or writing was “made . . . in connection with an issue of public
    interest.”
    “We review de novo the grant or denial of an anti-SLAPP motion. . . .
    We exercise independent judgment in determining whether, based on our
    own review of the record, the challenged claims arise from protected
    activity. . . . In addition to the pleadings, we may consider affidavits
    concerning the facts upon which liability is based.” (Park v. Board of Trustees
    of California State University (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 1057
    , 1067 (Park), citations
    omitted.) With regard to the admissibility of evidence, because “[w]e review
    the superior court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion . . . , we will
    not overturn such a ruling on appeal ‘unless “the trial court exceeded the
    bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being considered.” ’ ”
    (Ralphs Grocery Co. v. Victory Consultants, Inc. (2017) 
    17 Cal.App.5th 245
    ,
    255 [review of trial court ruling sustaining evidentiary objections] (Ralphs
    Grocery); accord, Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine v. Los
    Angeles Unified School Dist. (2019) 
    43 Cal.App.5th 175
    , 182 [“We review
    judicial notice rulings for abuse of discretion”] (Physicians Committee).)
    4
    II. STATEMENT OF THE CASE2
    In November 2018, Wasserman filed the underlying complaint, in
    which he asserts one cause of action for defamation (libel per se3) against his
    former employee, Lustigson. As background to the defamatory statements,
    Wasserman alleges that, in 2011, he hired Lustigson as the chief operating
    officer of three companies he (Wasserman) owned and operated. The
    complaint further alleges that, in June 2016, Wasserman terminated
    Lustigson’s employment, and Lustigson “vowed to ‘Take Wasserman and the
    company down.’ ” To this end, paragraph 17 of Wasserman’s complaint
    alleges:
    “[O]n November 21, 2017, defendants Lustigson and Does 1
    through 25, inclusive, posted to a public website entitled
    ‘Pissed Consumer’ two false and defamatory postings
    concerning plaintiff. Said defamatory postings included,
    among things, the following false and defamatory
    statements:
    “- that plaintiff is a ‘fraud’;
    “- that plaintiff ‘stole funds and defrauded investors’;
    “- that plaintiff ‘stole money’;
    “- that plaintiff ‘has run off with millions of dollars from
    investors’;
    2     At all times during the litigation, Wasserman and Lustigson were
    represented by counsel. In the text, we refer only to the parties. We rely on
    context to establish whether we are referring to the party or to his attorney.
    3      Libel per se is defined at Civil Code section 45a, which provides in part:
    “A libel which is defamatory of the plaintiff without the necessity of
    explanatory matter, such as an inducement, innuendo or other extrinsic fact,
    is said to be a libel on its face. Defamatory language not libelous on its face is
    not actionable unless the plaintiff alleges and proves that he has suffered
    special damage as a proximate result thereof.”
    5
    “- that plaintiff ‘defrauded the banking system’;
    “- that plaintiff ‘steals and cheats others’;
    “- that plaintiff should be ‘put behind bars for cheating
    people’; and,
    “- that plaintiff’s life coaching business is ‘absolutely
    FRAUD’.” (Sic.) (Italics added.)
    In response to the complaint, Lustigson filed an anti-SLAPP motion.
    Consistent with the requirements of the anti-SLAPP statute (§ 425.16,
    subds. (b)(1), (e)(3); see pt. I., ante), Lustigson argued both that “the
    statements at issue” were free speech in connection with a public issue
    (because they “were made in a public forum and pertained to a matter of
    public interest”) and that Wasserman could not establish a probability that
    he would prevail on “the entire cause of action.” In support of his motion,
    Lustigson filed a memorandum of points and authorities, two declarations
    (one from him and one from his attorney), an amended notice of lodgment of
    four exhibits, and a request for judicial notice of three of the lodged exhibits.
    Lustigson included as exhibit A, a copy of what he believed was one of the
    posts from the Internet website. He testified that, although he had nothing
    to do with the original post, he did submit an online comment to the post.
    Wasserman opposed the anti-SLAPP motion. Prior to presenting his
    position regarding whether Lustigson met his initial burden under prong one,
    Wasserman presented an argument on which the trial court ultimately based
    its ruling. According to Wasserman, Lustigson’s motion was deficient,
    because the complaint alleged two defamatory posts, but Lustigson “only
    consider[ed] one of those posts in his motion.” In support of his opposition,
    Wasserman filed a memorandum of points and authorities, his declaration, a
    notice of lodgment of seven exhibits, an opposition to Lustigson’s request for
    judicial notice of each of the three lodged exhibits, and four evidentiary
    6
    objections to Lustigson’s declaration. Wasserman included as exhibit E a
    copy of the Internet website post that is at issue, but that Lustigson had not
    submitted.
    Lustigson replied, responding to the arguments both on the merits and
    on the perceived deficiency in his initial presentation. In support, he filed a
    memorandum of points and authorities, a declaration, a reply to
    Wasserman’s opposition to the request for judicial notice, and responses to
    Wasserman’s evidentiary objections to Lustigson’s original declaration.
    During the hearing on the anti-SLAPP motion, when Lustigson
    referred to the evidence in support of the anti-SLAPP motion regarding the
    website alleged in the complaint, the court did not allow Lustigson to finish
    his statement, stating, “You haven’t made a request for judicial notice. You
    haven’t put the evidence in front of me in that regard.”4 Later during the
    argument, as Lustigson described the website as “a public consumer review
    board” where “[t]here are public comments about [Wasserman],” the court
    asked, “Where is the evidence of what this is?” When Lustigson responded
    (by referring the court to exhibit B in support of the motion5), Wasserman
    4     Without citing authority, Lustigson later suggested to the court that,
    “in the context of anti-SLAPP [proceedings,] it is well established that the
    court may take judicial notice of websites and blogs we’ve cited to.”
    5     Lodged exhibit B to Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion consists of what
    counsel testified were “true and correct copies of [three] pages from the
    Pissedconsumer.com website.” One page is entitled “About us” and describes
    in more detail how, since 2006, the website “has been one of the leading
    consumer advocacy websites,” posting “reviews [that] give consumers an
    opportunity to learn more about various industries, companies and brands”;
    one page contains the website’s statistics, reflecting 1.1 million “consumer
    reviews,” 67,000 “companies reviewed,” and 3.5 million “monthly visitors”
    (capitalization omitted); and one page explains how to post on the website
    7
    objected (“That’s hearsay, your Honor”), to which the court stated: “You
    didn’t make an objection.” Wasserman reminded the court that he timely had
    objected in writing, and Lustigson reminded the court that he timely had
    responded in writing to the objection. At the conclusion of the hearing, the
    court denied Lustigson’s request for supplemental briefing and took the
    matter under submission.6
    The court later filed an order denying Lustigson’s motion. Before the
    page and a half of “Background” and “Discussion,” the court ruled as follows
    as a “Preliminary Matter[ ]”: “In light of the ruling [below], it is unnecessary
    to rule on the request for judicial notice or evidentiary objections.” In the
    “Discussion,” citing Lustigson’s declaration in support of the motion, the
    court explained that, although the complaint alleged “two defamatory
    posts[, Lustigson’s] moving papers only address[ed] one allegedly defamatory
    post.” Because Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion was directed to the entire
    complaint but contained evidence of only the one post, the trial court ruled
    that Lustigson’s motion necessarily failed. (Citing Baral, supra, 1 Cal.5th at
    p. 396 [anti-SLAPP procedure may be used to eliminate part of a cause of
    action or complaint].)
    Lustigson timely appealed from the order denying his anti-SLAPP
    motion. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 904.1, subd. (a)(13), 425.16, subd. (i).)
    (with the introduction that “PissedConsumer.com is a platform where you can
    be heard and helped”).
    6      At the hearing, the court denied Lustigson’s request to provide either
    supplemental briefing or additional evidence in response to Wasserman
    having provided a copy of the second post. Lustigson raises no issue on
    appeal as to the trial court’s denial of his request to provide supplemental
    briefing or evidence.
    8
    III. DISCUSSION
    On appeal, the parties repeat most of the same arguments they
    presented to the trial court on the following issues: whether Lustigson’s
    presentation allowed the court to reach the merits; and, if so, whether the
    parties met their respective burdens under the anti-SLAPP statute. As we
    explain, the trial court erred in denying Lustigson’s motion on the basis that
    he directed it to both posts, but only presented evidence and argument of
    what was contained in one of the posts. The exact language used in each post
    is not necessary to reach and determine the substantive issues raised in
    Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion.
    As we further explain, we cannot reach the merits despite our de novo
    review. By failing to rule on both Lustigson’s opposed request for judicial
    notice and Wasserman’s evidentiary objections to Lustigson’s declaration, the
    trial court has left us (and the parties) unable to determine whether the
    ruling was within the court’s legal authority and, if so, whether it was
    correct. Thus, without the trial court’s exercise of discretion in determining
    what evidence to consider, we have no choice but to remand for further
    proceedings.
    A.    The Trial Court Erred
    For purposes of the application of the anti-SLAPP statute,
    section 425.16, subdivision (b)(1) does not define “cause of action.” (Thomas
    v. Quintero (2005) 
    126 Cal.App.4th 635
    , 646.) In fact, section 425.16 uses the
    term “ ‘cause of action’ ” interchangeably with the words “ ‘claim’ ” (§ 425.16,
    subd. (b)(3)), “ ‘complaint’ ” (§ 425.16, subd. (f)), “ ‘action’ ” (§ 425.16,
    subd. (c)(1)), and the phrase “ ‘the facts upon which the liability or defense is
    based’ ” (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(2)). (Thomas, at p. 646.) “Section 425.16 is not
    concerned with how a complaint is framed, or how the primary right theory
    9
    might define a cause of action”; section 425.16, subdivision (b)(1) “target[s]
    . . . claims that are based on the conduct protected by the statute.” (Baral,
    supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 382.) Thus, a section 425.16 motion may be directed to
    all or part of a complaint or cause of action. (See Baral, at pp. 392
    [anti-SLAPP motion may “reach distinct claims within pleaded counts”], 393
    [“an anti-SLAPP motion, like a conventional motion to strike, may be used to
    attack parts of a count as pleaded”], 394 [“motions to strike [are] . . . a way of
    challenging particular allegations within a pleading”].)
    According to the trial court’s ruling: Wasserman’s complaint contained
    only one cause of action, and it alleged “two false and defamatory postings
    concerning [Wasserman]” on the public website; Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP
    motion was directed to “the Defamation cause of action . . . , as well as the
    entire complaint as it contains only one cause of action”; yet, “[Lustigson’s]
    moving papers only address[ed] one allegedly defamatory post.” (Italics
    added.) The court based its ruling on the fact that, in support of his
    anti-SLAPP motion, Lustigson included as an exhibit a copy of only one of the
    allegedly defamatory posts from the website. This is where the court erred.
    For prong one purposes, in determining whether a cause of action
    arises from the defendant’s constitutional right of petition or free speech,
    “a court considers ‘the pleadings, and supporting and opposing affidavits
    stating the facts upon which the liability or defense is based.’ ” (City of
    Cotati, 
    supra,
     29 Cal.4th at p. 79, quoting § 425.16, subd. (b)(2).) These
    documents necessarily include the complaint here, since that is the only
    document which “ ‘state[s] the facts upon which the liability . . . is based.’ ”
    (Ibid.) In fact, given Lustigson’s uncontradicted declaration testimony that
    he did not write, provide assistance in writing, or direct someone else to write
    10
    either of the posts alleged in the complaint, the statements alleged at
    paragraph 17 are the only potential source of the alleged libel.
    Lustigson, who Wasserman accuses of defaming him, has no duty or
    obligation to put before the court the defamatory language that Wasserman
    alleges to be libelous.7 The exact words of the posts may need to be known in
    prong two—where Wasserman, the plaintiff, has the burden of establishing a
    probability of success. However, because he filed the action and alleged the
    defamatory posts, Wasserman knows what they say; and, in fact, he
    presented evidence of the second post (ex. E) in his effort to meet his
    responsive (prong two) burden of establishing a prima facie case of
    defamation.
    Very simply “a defendant [like Lustigson here] who denies engaging in
    the alleged conduct ‘may rely on the plaintiff’s allegations alone’ in assessing
    whether the conduct at issue is protected activity.” (Abir Cohen, supra, 40
    Cal.App.5th at p. 888, italics added, quoting Bel Air Internet, supra, 20
    Cal.App.5th at p. 929.) “That is because it is ‘[the] plaintiff’s complaint [that]
    ultimately defines the contours of the claims.’ ([Bel Air Internet,] at p. 936.)
    Not allowing the defendant to rely on the allegations alone . . . ‘would have
    the perverse effect of making anti-SLAPP relief unavailable when a plaintiff
    alleges a baseless claim, which is precisely the kind of claim that [the anti-
    SLAPP law] was intended to address.’ ” (Abir Cohen, at p. 888, quoting Bel
    7      This is especially true where, as here, the plaintiff does not include the
    specific language in the complaint, and the defendant denies having written
    (or, as in the present case, posted) the allegedly offensive language. (See text,
    post, citing and quoting Abir Cohen Treyzon Salo, LLP v. Lahiji (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 882
    , 888 (Abir Cohen); Bel Air Internet, LLC v. Morales (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 924
    , 929 (Bel Air Internet).)
    11
    Air Internet, at p. 929.)8 To the extent Lustigson relied on other “pleadings,
    and supporting and opposing affidavits” (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(2)), he did so in
    his attempt to establish why the activity is protected, not what the activity
    communicated. (See Bel Air Internet, at p. 936 [in attempting to establish
    that “the complaint itself shows that a claim arises from protected conduct,”
    the defendant may “supplement[ ]” its showing with facts from evidence
    submitted by the parties].)
    In his anti-SLAPP motion and supporting points and authorities on
    prong one, Lustigson consistently refers to the “statements” (plural) that
    were posted on the website. (Italics added.) Thus, contrary to the trial court’s
    ruling, Lustigson’s “moving papers” did not “only address one allegedly
    defamatory post.” To the extent his points and authorities refer to the
    evidence of the post he submitted (ex. A), Lustigson did not rely on the post
    for purposes of establishing what was said. Rather, Lustigson relied on that
    evidence to establish his prong one contention under section 425.16,
    subdivision (e)(3) that the website was a public forum in which members of
    the public exchanged statements on issues of public interest.9
    8     In response to Wasserman’s argument in the trial court, Lustigson
    cited and discussed Bel Air Internet, supra, 
    20 Cal.App.5th 924
    , in some
    detail. Likewise, at the hearing on the anti-SLAPP motion, Lustigson argued
    that, under the Bel Air Internet opinion, he was entitled to rely on the
    allegations in the complaint. Consistently, in his opening brief in this court,
    Lustigson also cited and discussed the Bel Air Internet opinion. Wasserman
    ignored this authority and the reasoning it employs in the trial court and
    does so again on appeal.
    9     For example, when Lustigson submitted the one post (ex. A), he
    acknowledged that he and another person added comments to the allegedly
    offending post. On appeal, Lustigson contends that, together, the post and
    12
    By requiring Lustigson to have submitted a copy of the second post
    alleged by Wasserman in the complaint, the court placed a burden on
    Lustigson that is not required under the anti-SLAPP statute or case law.
    We are not saying that Lustigson met his prong one burden, only that,
    contrary to the trial court’s ruling, Lustigson was not required to submit
    detailed evidence of what Wasserman generally alleged was said in the second
    post. Denying any knowledge of the second post, Lustigson had no choice but
    to attempt to establish that the second post was protected conduct for
    anti-SLAPP purposes from the allegations in the complaint.
    By contrast, the merits of Wasserman’s claims—for which Wasserman
    would have to produce evidence of what was said in both posts alleged in his
    complaint—“should play no part in the first step of the anti-SLAPP analysis.”
    (City of Costa Mesa v. D’Alessio Investments, LLC (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 358
    , 371.) “The first step only determines whether section 425.16’s
    procedural protection applies; the second step of the analysis addresses
    whether there is sufficient merit to the claims at issue to allow the litigation
    to proceed.” (Ibid.)
    In short, in the prong one analysis, the moving defendant need not
    establish that the plaintiff violated or chilled a constitutional right, only that
    the plaintiff’s action arises from the defendant’s constitutionally protected
    petitioning or free speech activity. (Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer Cause,
    Inc. (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 53
    , 67; City of Cotati, 
    supra,
     29 Cal.4th at pp. 75-76.)
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court erred in denying Lustigson’s
    anti-SLAPP motion on the basis that “[Wasserman’s] complaint here alleges
    comments constitute evidence that the allegedly offending post “started an
    open discussion on the website.”
    13
    [Lustigson] made two defamatory posts,” but “[Lustigson’s] moving papers
    only address one allegedly defamatory post.”
    B.    Remand of the Case for Further Proceedings
    Although we review the trial court’s ruling de novo, we must remand
    for further proceedings rather than reaching the merits of Lustigson’s
    motion. Very simply, in our de novo review, we are unable to apply the
    requisite legal standard (on either prong), since we do not know what
    evidence is in the record.
    Lustigson requested that the court take judicial notice of three lodged
    exhibits, Wasserman filed written opposition, and Lustigson replied to the
    opposition. In addition, Wasserman filed written objections to four
    paragraphs of Lustigson’s declaration testimony, and Lustigson filed a
    written response. Despite this record, at the hearing on the motion, the court
    was unaware of either the request for judicial notice or the evidentiary
    objections; and when issuing its ruling, the court expressly declined to rule on
    the request or the objections.
    As a general rule, where a party files a written request for judicial
    notice (or an objection to such a request) or a written objection to evidence (or
    a reply to such an objection) and the court fails to rule, the request or
    objection is deemed forfeited. (See Flatley v. Mauro (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 299
    ,
    306, fn. 4 [evidentiary objections; anti-SLAPP appeal]; Ross v. Creel Printing
    & Publishing Co. (2002) 
    100 Cal.App.4th 736
    , 744 [burden on party seeking
    judicial notice; demurrer appeal].) In the present case, however, we decline
    to find a waiver or forfeiture. The parties here provided the court with timely
    detailed written statements requesting rulings, and they could not press the
    court for rulings, since the court issued its written ruling after the matter
    was submitted. Moreover, and most persuasively, this is not an instance
    14
    where the court forgot about the issues; to the contrary, in the first sentence
    of the court’s order, the court acknowledged the request for judicial notice and
    the evidentiary objections and expressly declined to rule on them.
    Despite our de novo review of the merits of an order granting or
    denying an anti-SLAPP motion (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1067), we do not
    have that independence for most evidentiary issues, where we must review
    decisions already made for an abuse of discretion (e.g., Ralphs Grocery, supra,
    17 Cal.App.5th at p. 255 [evidentiary objections]; Physicians Committee,
    supra, 43 Cal.App.5th at p. 182 [request for judicial notice]). Because these
    types of evidentiary rulings “involve an exercise of discretion, . . . it is the
    trial court’s responsibility to rule on the objections in the first instance.”
    (Hall v. Time Warner, Inc. (2007) 
    153 Cal.App.4th 1337
    , 1348.) “The trial
    court must rule on written evidentiary objections made prior to and oral
    objections made at the hearing on a motion.” (Martin v. Inland Empire
    Utilities Agency (2011) 
    198 Cal.App.4th 611
    , 630 [anti-SLAPP appeal].)
    “ ‘When that duty is not performed, appellate courts are left with the
    nebulous task of determining whether the ruling that was purportedly made
    was within the authority and discretion of the trial court and was correct.’ ”
    (Ibid., quoting Sambrano v. City of San Diego (2001) 
    94 Cal.App.4th 225
    , 235
    [“it was error for the trial court to omit to perform its duty to rule on
    evidentiary objections”].) Accordingly, on remand, the court first should rule
    on Lustigson’s request for judicial notice and Wasserman’s evidentiary
    objections to Lustigson’s declaration. The court then should consider the
    15
    parties’ positions on the merits and rule on Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP
    motion.10
    IV. DISPOSITION
    The order denying Lustigson’s anti-SLAPP motion is reversed. The
    matter is remanded to the trial court with the following directions: First, the
    court should rule on Lustigson’s request for judicial notice and Wasserman’s
    objections to evidence; and, second, based on the evidence properly before the
    court and the arguments already presented in the parties’ briefing, rule on
    the merits of Lustigson’s motion. Lustigson is entitled to his costs on appeal.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(2).)
    IRION, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    DATO, J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    10    We express no view as to how the court should rule on any of the issues
    in the remanded proceedings.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D076048

Filed Date: 1/21/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/21/2021