Matthew Pollack v. Jessica Fournier , 2020 ME 93 ( 2020 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:    
    2020 ME 93
    Docket:      Sag-19-260
    Submitted
    On Briefs: May 4, 2020
    Decided:     June 25, 2020
    Panel:       MEAD, GORMAN, HUMPHREY, HORTON, and CONNORS, JJ.
    MATTHEW POLLACK et al.
    v.
    JESSICA FOURNIER
    PER CURIAM
    [¶1] Matthew Pollack and Jane Quirion appeal from a judgment of the
    Superior Court (Sagadahoc County, Billings, J.) granting, in part, Jessica
    Fournier’s special motion to dismiss Pollack and Quirion’s amended complaint
    pursuant to Maine’s Anti-SLAPP statute, 14 M.R.S. § 556 (2020), and
    authorizing an award of attorney fees to Fournier.1 They challenge the court’s
    authority to award attorney fees and the court’s application of the anti-SLAPP
    statute to one count of their amended four-count complaint. We vacate the
    1 The court granted, in part, Fournier’s special motion to dismiss pursuant to 14 M.R.S. § 556
    (2020) on June 12, 2019. On that same day, the court also granted Fournier’s separate motion to
    dismiss, see M.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), which disposed of all counts of Pollack and Quirion’s amended
    complaint and constituted a final judgment. Because Pollack and Quirion challenge only the
    anti-SLAPP motion and its award of attorney fees, we do not disturb the court’s separate judgment.
    2
    portion of the judgment granting the special motion to dismiss Count 1 of the
    amended complaint and otherwise affirm the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] The following facts are drawn from the amended complaint, the
    affidavits filed in conjunction with Fournier’s special motion to dismiss, and the
    procedural record. See Hearts with Haiti, Inc. v. Kendrick, 
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 3, 
    202 A.3d 1189
    .
    [¶3] Pollack and Quirion have a child who was a student in a Regional
    School Unit. Between August 2010 and June 2012, Fournier was the child’s
    teacher. On February 10, 2012, an incident occurred while the child was at
    school that resulted in the child acting “extremely distressed” at the end of the
    school day.
    [¶4] Pollack and Quirion believed that Fournier may have caused some
    “physical or psychological harm” to the child that resulted in the distressed
    behavior and, on February 27, 2012, submitted to the school a form requesting
    that Fournier be replaced as the child’s teacher. On March 5, 2012, Quirion
    reaffirmed the request to replace Fournier as the child’s teacher and sent a
    letter to the school’s principal challenging the school’s lack of response to the
    earlier request.
    3
    [¶5] On March 6, 2012, an attorney for the school wrote a letter to
    Quirion, asserting that Quirion’s statements in her letter about Fournier were
    “defamation per se.” On June 6, 2012, the school agreed to assign a new teacher
    to the child.
    [¶6] On August 3, 2012, Fournier served Pollack and Quirion with a
    notice of claim pursuant to 14 M.R.S. § 1602-B (2020), which allows for the
    accrual of prejudgment interest from the date of service of the notice of claim
    “until the date on which an order of judgment is entered,” id. § 1602-B(5). The
    notice asserted claims of defamation, negligent and intentional infliction of
    emotional distress, and interference with contractual relations, and stated that
    these claims arose from Pollack and Quirion’s “threats, intimidation,
    interference, and defamation” of Fournier while she was employed as a teacher.
    The record does not show that Fournier ever filed a complaint after serving the
    notice of claim.2
    [¶7] In the present action, Pollack and Quirion filed a seven-count
    complaint against Fournier on July 27, 2018, in the Superior Court that included
    2 Although Fournier did not file a lawsuit against Pollack and Quirion, Fournier and some parents
    of students at the school sought, and served on Quirion, cease-harassment notices during 2014. In
    connection with her special motion to dismiss, Fournier argued that these cease-harassment notices
    were protected petitioning activity, and Pollack and Quirion do not challenge on appeal the court’s
    dismissal of their complaint as it relates to these cease-harassment notices.
    4
    three counts arising under federal law. On August 10, 2018, Fournier filed a
    notice of removal, and the case was removed to federal court.
    [¶8] In federal court, Fournier filed a motion to dismiss the complaint on
    September 10, 2018. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). On September 25, 2018,
    Pollack and Quirion amended their complaint to omit the three federal claims.
    As amended, their four-count complaint alleged (1) abuse of process in
    Fournier’s service of the 2012 notice of claim, (2) wrongful use of civil
    proceedings by Fournier in “procuring” a harassment action by the parent of
    another student against Quirion, (3) wrongful use of a civil proceeding by
    Fournier in initiating her own harassment action against Quirion, and (4) a
    violation of the Maine Civil Rights Act, 5 M.R.S. § 4682 (2020). On October 8,
    2018, Pollack and Quirion filed a motion to remand the case to state court.
    Fournier then filed a second motion to dismiss, as well as a special motion to
    dismiss pursuant to 14 M.R.S. § 556. The federal court (Torresen, J.) granted
    Pollack and Quirion’s motion to remand the case to state court on January 16,
    2019. See Pollack v. Fournier, 
    2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7532
     (D. Me. Jan. 16, 2019).
    [¶9] Upon remand to the Superior Court, Fournier refiled her motion to
    dismiss and her special motion to dismiss.         See 14 M.R.S. § 556; M.R.
    Civ. P. 12(b)(6). On June 12, 2019, the court (Billings, J.) granted Fournier’s
    5
    special motion to dismiss as to two of the four counts in the amended complaint,
    concluding that her service of the notice of claim (Count 1) and her actions in
    seeking a harassment notice for herself (Count 3) were petitioning activity
    protected by the anti-SLAPP statute. See 14 M.R.S. § 556. As to Count 1, the
    portion of the complaint at issue in this appeal, the court concluded that “[i]t is
    reasonably likely that the Notice could eventually lead to consideration or
    review by a judicial body.” Additionally, the court granted in part and denied
    in part Fournier’s special motion as it related to the alleged violation of the
    Maine Civil Rights Act (Count 4), and denied her motion regarding the count
    alleging that Fournier “procured” a parent’s harassment action against Quirion
    (Count 2). The court also authorized an award of costs and attorney fees to
    Fournier. Pollack and Quirion timely appealed. See 14 M.R.S. § 1851 (2020);
    M.R. App. P. 2B(c)(1).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶10] Pollack and Quirion challenge (1) the court’s dismissal, pursuant
    to 14 M.R.S. § 556, of Count 1 of their complaint regarding Fournier’s service of
    the notice of claim and (2) the court’s authority to award attorney fees to
    Fournier. We address each issue in turn.
    6
    A.    Service of Notice of Claim
    [¶11] Pollack and Quirion contend that Fournier’s service of the notice
    of claim was not “reasonably likely to encourage” consideration by a judicial
    body, arguing that a court could not take action on the notice until a complaint
    was filed and that Fournier never served them with a summons or filed a
    complaint with the court.
    [¶12] We review the trial court’s ultimate decision on an anti-SLAPP
    special motion to dismiss de novo. Gaudette v. Davis, 
    2017 ME 86
    , ¶ 18 n.8, 
    160 A.3d 1190
    ; see Nader v. Me. Democratic Party (Nader II), 
    2013 ME 51
    , ¶ 12,
    
    66 A.3d 571
    . We also review de novo whether the claims asserted against the
    moving party are based on “petitioning activity.” Gaudette, 
    2017 ME 86
    , ¶ 16,
    
    160 A.3d 1190
    .
    [¶13] “A Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation (SLAPP) refers to
    litigation instituted not to redress legitimate wrongs, but instead to dissuade or
    punish the defendant’s First Amendment exercise of rights through the delay,
    distraction, and financial burden of defending the suit.” Hearts with Haiti, Inc.,
    
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 9, 
    202 A.3d 1189
     (quotation marks omitted). Although Maine’s
    anti-SLAPP statute, 14 M.R.S. § 556, “purports to provide a means for the swift
    dismissal of such lawsuits early in the litigation as a safeguard on the
    7
    defendant’s First Amendment right to petition,” Gaudette, 
    2017 ME 86
    , ¶ 4, 
    160 A.3d 1190
    , the application of section 556 “results in an inherent tension
    between the coexisting constitutional right to freedom of speech and the right
    to access the courts to seek redress for claimed injuries,” Hearts with Haiti, Inc.,
    
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 10, 
    202 A.3d 1189
    . Accordingly, when reviewing a special
    motion to dismiss pursuant to section 556, a trial court must apply the
    three-step procedure established in Gaudette, 
    2017 ME 86
    , ¶¶ 16-22, 
    160 A.3d 1190
    .
    [¶14] At issue in this appeal is the first step in this process: whether
    Fournier, as the moving party, has “demonstrate[d], as a matter of law, that the
    anti-SLAPP statute applies to the conduct that is the subject of the plaintiff’s
    complaint by establishing that the suit was based on some activity that would
    qualify as an exercise of the defendant’s First Amendment right to petition the
    government.”     Hearts with Haiti, Inc., 
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 11, 
    202 A.3d 1189
    (quotation marks omitted). Further, “discrete claims within a single action may
    be individually dismissed pursuant to a special motion to dismiss, and only the
    claims specifically based on the moving party’s petitioning activity are properly
    considered for dismissal.” Camden Nat’l Bank v. Weintraub, 
    2016 ME 101
    , ¶ 9,
    
    143 A.3d 788
     (emphasis omitted). “If the defendant fails to meet [this] initial
    8
    burden, the special motion to dismiss must be denied.” Desjardins v. Reynolds,
    
    2017 ME 99
    , ¶ 8, 
    162 A.3d 228
    .
    [¶15] “The right to petition allows citizens to express their ideas, hopes,
    and concerns to their government and their elected representatives . . . . [It] is
    generally concerned with expression directed to the government seeking
    redress of a grievance.” Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri, 
    564 U.S. 379
    , 388
    (2011). Section 556, in relevant part, defines a party’s “exercise of its right of
    petition” as “any statement reasonably likely to encourage consideration or
    review of an issue by a legislative, executive or judicial body, or any other
    governmental proceeding.”3 14 M.R.S. § 556 (quotation marks omitted). The
    statute’s definition of petitioning activity “is informed by the First Amendment,
    and therefore, a petition conveys the special concerns of its author to the
    government and, in its usual form, requests action by the government to
    3   For purposes of the anti-SLAPP statute, “a party’s exercise of its right of petition” is defined as
    any written or oral statement made before or submitted to a legislative, executive or
    judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding; any written or oral statement
    made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative,
    executive or judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding; any statement
    reasonably likely to encourage consideration or review of an issue by a legislative,
    executive or judicial body, or any other governmental proceeding; any statement
    reasonably likely to enlist public participation in an effort to effect such
    consideration; or any other statement falling within constitutional protection of the
    right to petition government.
    14 M.R.S. § 556 (quotation marks omitted).
    9
    address those concerns.” Hearts with Haiti, Inc., 
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 12, 
    202 A.3d 1189
     (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶16] Here, the petitioning activity asserted by Fournier in support of
    her special motion to dismiss included the service of the notice of claim on
    Pollack and Quirion in August 2012. A notice of claim served pursuant to
    14 M.R.S. § 1602-B allows for the accrual of prejudgment interest “from the
    time of notice of claim setting forth under oath the cause of action . . . until the
    date on which an order of judgment is entered.” 14 M.R.S. § 1602-B(5). In
    general, the assessment of prejudgment interest serves two purposes: “first, it
    compensates an injured party for the inability to use money rightfully
    belonging to that party between the date suit is filed and the date judgment is
    entered, and second, it encourages the defendant to conclude a pretrial
    settlement of clearly meritorious suits.” Jasch v. Anchorage Inn, 
    2002 ME 106
    ,
    ¶ 13, 
    799 A.2d 1216
     (citations omitted) (quotation marks omitted). Thus, a
    notice of claim “represents a procedural device to control the conduct of the
    litigation by penalizing delay.” Purwin v. Robertson Enters., 
    506 A.2d 1152
    ,
    1155 (Me. 1986).
    [¶17] In this case, however, Fournier’s service of the notice of claim could
    not “control the conduct of the litigation,” 
    id.,
     because Fournier did not
    10
    thereafter file a complaint.    Even when considering section 556’s “broad
    definition” of petitioning activity, Desjardins, 
    2017 ME 99
    , ¶ 18, 
    162 A.3d 228
    ,
    a notice of claim for prejudgment interest cannot, by itself, “convey[] the special
    concerns of its author to the government” or “request[] action by the
    government to address those concerns,” Hearts with Haiti, Inc., 
    2019 ME 26
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    202 A.3d 1189
     (quotation marks omitted). Here, the notice of claim was
    directed solely at Pollack and Quirion, not a governmental entity.
    [¶18] Likewise, a notice of claim is not a “statement reasonably likely to
    encourage consideration or review of an issue by a . . . judicial body.” 14 M.R.S.
    § 556. Although such a notice “could eventually lead to consideration or review
    by a judicial body,” as the trial court concluded, this is not what section 556
    requires. Rather, to be “a party’s exercise of its right to petition,” a party’s
    statement must “encourage consideration or review of an issue by a . . . judicial
    body.” Id. (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted). When analyzing the
    plain meaning of the statute, as we must, see Teele v. West-Harper, 
    2017 ME 196
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    170 A.3d 803
    , the word “encourage” means “[to] help or stimulate
    (an activity, state, or view) to develop,” Encourage, New Oxford American
    Dictionary (3d ed. 2010). Thus, just as a notice of claim cannot “convey[] the
    special concerns of its author to the government,” Hearts with Haiti, Inc.,
    11
    
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶ 12, 
    202 A.3d 1189
     (quotation marks omitted), when it is not
    accompanied by the subsequent filing of a complaint, a notice of claim cannot,
    by itself, “help or stimulate” the consideration of an issue by a judicial body.
    [¶19] Fournier’s notice of claim is not petitioning activity as defined in
    Maine’s Anti-SLAPP statute.              See 14 M.R.S. § 556; Hearts with Haiti, Inc.,
    
    2019 ME 26
    , ¶¶ 13, 15, 
    202 A.3d 1189
    . Accordingly, we vacate that portion of
    the court’s judgment granting Fournier’s special motion to dismiss Count 1 of
    Pollack and Quirion’s amended complaint pursuant to Maine’s Anti-SLAPP
    statute.
    B.       Authorizing Award of Attorney Fees
    [¶20] We next address Pollack and Quirion’s contention that the court
    erred in authorizing an award of attorney fees to Fournier. They argue that the
    court did not have the authority to award attorney fees because the special
    motion was granted only “in part” and because Fournier did not provide any
    reasons to support an award of attorney fees.4
    Fournier has not yet filed an application for attorney fees and, thus, the court has not calculated
    4
    an amount to be awarded. See M.R. Civ. P. 54(b)(3). We therefore address only the court’s authority
    to award attorney fees when reviewing a special motion to dismiss and its determination, in the
    circumstances of this case, that an award of such fees is warranted. See 14 M.R.S. § 556.
    12
    [¶21] We review a court’s authority to award attorney fees de novo, see
    True v. Harmon, 
    2015 ME 14
    , ¶ 7, 
    110 A.3d 650
    ; Gibson v. Farm Family Mut. Ins.
    Co., 
    673 A.2d 1350
    , 1354 (Me. 1996) (stating that “the court’s authority to
    award attorney fees is a matter of law”), and review a court’s decision to award
    attorney fees for an abuse of discretion, see Estate of Gagnon, 
    2016 ME 129
    ,
    ¶ 15, 
    147 A.3d 356
    . “To the extent that interpretation of a statute is required
    in conjunction with the award or denial, we review the statutory construction
    de novo.” Kilroy v. Northeast Sunspaces, Inc., 
    2007 ME 119
    , ¶ 6, 
    930 A.2d 1060
    .
    [¶22] A trial court’s authority “to award attorney fees may be based on
    (1) a contractual agreement between the parties; (2) a specific statutory
    authorization; or (3) the court’s inherent authority to sanction serious
    misconduct in a judicial proceeding.” Sebra v. Wentworth, 
    2010 ME 21
    , ¶ 17,
    
    990 A.2d 538
     (quotation marks omitted). Section 556 provides that, “[i]f the
    court grants a special motion to dismiss, the court may award the moving party
    costs and reasonable attorney’s fees, including those incurred for the special
    motion and any related discovery matters.”
    [¶23] Here, Fournier requested an award of attorney fees in her special
    motion to dismiss, the court had the statutory authority to authorize an award
    of attorney fees pursuant to section 556, and the court did so only after
    13
    granting, in part, Fournier’s special motion to dismiss. Because “discrete claims
    within a single action may be individually dismissed pursuant to a special
    motion to dismiss,” Weintraub, 
    2016 ME 101
    , ¶ 9, 
    143 A.3d 788
     (emphasis
    omitted), we are not persuaded by Pollack and Quirion’s contention that
    attorney fees may be awarded only when a court grants, in full, a special motion
    to dismiss. Therefore, the court did not err in determining that it could award
    attorney fees to Fournier. See 14 M.R.S. § 556; Sweet v. Breivogel, 
    2019 ME 18
    ,
    ¶ 23, 
    201 A.3d 1215
     (“[T]he trial court is in the best position to observe the
    unique nature and tenor of the litigation as it relates to a request for attorney
    fees . . . .”).
    [¶24] Having previously concluded that the court erred in determining
    that Fournier’s service of the notice of claim (Count 1) was petitioning activity,
    an award of attorney fees as to that count is not authorized by section 556.
    However, the trial court did not expressly articulate whether its decision to
    award attorney fees was based in whole or in part on Count 1. Therefore,
    because the court was authorized to award attorney fees, and because the court
    did grant Fournier’s special motion to dismiss as to Count 3 and, in part, as to
    Count 4, we remand for the court to decide whether an award of attorney fees
    is warranted as to the two remaining counts and, if so, to determine an
    14
    appropriate award of attorney fees in proportion to them. See Maietta Constr.,
    Inc. v. Wainwright, 
    2004 ME 53
    , ¶ 12, 
    847 A.2d 1169
     (holding that a court may
    use the merit of a case “as a measure of whether attorney fees are appropriate
    . . . because the anti-SLAPP statute is aimed at preventing litigation that has no
    chance of succeeding on the merits”).
    The entry is:
    Judgment granting special motion to dismiss
    Count 1 of amended complaint vacated.
    Judgment affirmed in all other respects.
    Remanded for the court to determine attorney
    fees.
    Matthew Pollack, appellant pro se
    Jane Quirion, appellant pro se
    Daniel A. Nuzzi, Esq., and Nathaniel A. Bessey, Esq., Brann & Isaacson, Lewiston,
    for appellee Jessica Fournier
    Sagadahoc County Superior Court docket number CV-2018-24
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY