Balzaga v. Fox News Network, LLC
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
The Fox News Network, LLC, broadcast a four-minute story featuring an anti-illegal immigration activist, John Monti, who claimed he was attacked by several immigrants seeking work as day laborers. During the broadcast, Monti described the attack and showed a poster of photographs he had taken of his alleged attackers. Monti also complained that the police were not taking the matter seriously and discussed the larger problems associated with illegal immigrants living in outdoor âmigrant camps.â During the entire story, the caption âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ was displayed at the bottom of the television screen.
Seven of the individuals whose photographs were shown on the poster (plaintiffs
Plaintiffsâ defamation action against Fox News is predicated on their claim that the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption falsely suggested that law enforcement was conducting a search for plaintiffs. We conclude that, when considered in context of the entire telecast, the caption was not reasonably susceptible of this meaning. Thus, plaintiffs did not meet their burden to establish a probability of prevailing on their defamation claim, and the court properly granted defendantâs anti-SLAPP motion.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
On November 18, 2006, John Monti was taking photographs of several men who work as day laborers, when he became involved in a physical dispute with one or more of these individuals. Later that day, Monti reported to the police that he had been attacked by these men. Police officers arrested
Ten days after the incident, while the police investigation was continuing, Monti appeared on Fox Newsâs Hannity & Colmes television show to discuss his version of the events and other issues related to immigration. Because this telecast is the basis for plaintiffsâ claims against Fox News, we set forth the contents of the show in some detail.
The telecast begins by showing closeups of wounds on a personâs hands and face. Underneath these pictures, the caption states âMANHUNT AT THE BORDER.â This caption remained throughout the four-minute story. While the closeups of the wounds were shown, one of the news anchors, Alan Colmes, stated: âThe San Diego Police are investigating an attack on an anti-illegal immigration advocate near a migrantsâ encampment close to the San Diego/Mexico border. The victim managed to take these photographs of his alleged attackers before the crime took place, and now needs your help. Weâre joined now from the scene of the incident by the assault victim, John Monti. John, thanks for being with us. Explain to us what happened to you, what was going on.â
Monti, who is standing in a canyonlike area, responded: â[Tjhank you for this opportunity to tell my story . . . this is what happened .... I had come out to take pictures of the . . . migrants along . . . Rancho Penasquitos Boulevard here in San Diego .... [T]he reason why we want to do this is because . . . these day labor spots . . . feed these migrant encampments .... I was taking pictures of them, and I wanted to take pictures of some of their employers [who are] employing . . . these men, who are basically living in squalor along the roadsides.â
Monti then described in detail how he was attacked by the men while he was taking the photographs. While Monti was discussing the attack, the cameras showed a poster with the photographs of plaintiffs. The poster was entitled âWanted [â] Robbery, Assault and Battery.â The cameras then showed a closeup of each photograph.
During the description of the attacks, the other news anchor, Sean Hannity, interrupted and said: âYou referred to this as a hate crime. Lieutenant Tom Warden [of the San Diego Police Department] there says itâs not a hate crime, but [the men] were upset because you were taking photographs. Not because what you were doing was illegal, but that clearly sparked their behavior.â
Monti responded: âWell, . . . you know, what I think the real hate crime here ... is how the San Diego Police Department is you know responding to
. Hannity then stated: âI want to make sure for our audienceâs edification, hereâthose pictures that weâre putting up, those are the pictures that you took of the people that eventually attacked you, correct?â
Monti responded: âYeh, yeh that is correct. I took their pictures.â Monti then engaged in a lengthy narrative about the problems of âmigrant campsâ in San Diego County. During this narrative, the news anchors attempted to interrupt Monti, but they were unable to do so. Montiâs narrative was as follows: âNow what you have to understand here is that, in San Diego County, there is a tremendous problem with these migrant camps, these shanty towns that exist where you have groups of men you know who live outdoors. [][]... PH] And the reason why they live here, you knowâthey live there for a number of reasons. Now, the popular belief is to say, oh, it has to be all poverty because theyâre all poor migrants. But the thing is though . . . many of them choose to live out there because, you know, they donât want to pay rents, or they have personal problems, [f] . . . [(J[] And what we want to see happen is we want these migrant camps removed; you know, the men should have to live in apartments and houses like everyone else. [][]... [][] These are crime zones. It has to be understood. We have ... all sorts of crimes. Recently NBC reporter [Ana] Garcia did reports on these . . . encampments. You know we find drag abuse there. You know, every, it seems that every . . . child prostitution spot in the County seems to have a migrant camp associated with it. You know and we want to end you know these crimes. And ending these crimes is going to involve removing these camps. And thatâs why, you know, we uh, I came out here, and I was going to come out here with other activists to take pictures in order to let people know, you know, youâre feeding those camps. . . . And you know there is just, you know, and I mean thereâs more to it than just .... You know there is.â
Finally, Colmes interrupted and said: âWeâre just out of time for this segment. I know thereâs a lot more to the storyâweâll be following it, and we thank you very much for coming and telling your story to us tonight, John. Thank you very much. . . .â
Several months after the show, plaintiffs demanded a retraction, but Fox News declined. Fox News instead invited plaintiffs and their counsel to appear on a show to address Montiâs allegations and present their side of the incident. This show aired in March 2007.
The next month, plaintiffs filed the lawsuit that is the subject of this appeal. The complaint alleged the following: On November 18, 2006, Monti went to a âday laborer siteâ in northern San Diego County, and taunted the day laborers, called them derogatory names, and photographed them. When one of the plaintiffs attempted to hide his face, Monti grabbed his arm and then chased him, tackled him and punched him several times. Monti then falsely reported to the San Diego Police Department that he had been âattackedâ by the day laborers. Shortly after, Monti created a poster with photographs of nine men whom he had encountered at the day laborer site. The photographs were arranged under a caption stating plaintiffs were âWanted [for] Robbery, Assault and Battery.â The bottom of the poster stated that the men in the photographs were â âsuspects,â â and directed anyone who saw or had information about them to call the San Diego Police Department. Monti and others then handed out copies of the posters, and Monti worked with the San Diego Minutemen organization to identify and locate the alleged â âsuspects.â â About 10 days after the incident, Monti appeared on the Hannity & Colmes television show, and falsely accused plaintiffs of attacking him. The broadcast showed Montiâs wanted poster with the photographs, but did not show the bottom statement that plaintiffs were â âsuspects.â â
Based on these facts, plaintiffs asserted a defamation cause of action against Fox News. Plaintiffs claimed that Fox News âmisrepresented that plaintiffs had committed violent crimes and falsely described them as âwantedâ criminals,â and these statements were âunprivileged, untrue, and naturally harmful to plaintiffsâ reputations.â Plaintiffs alleged the â âManhunt at the Borderâ â caption was false because police were merely investigating the crime and were not conducting an organized search for plaintiffs at the time of the broadcast. Plaintiffs alleged that they âwere not wanted by law enforcement for assaulting, battering, or robbing Monti .... Nor was there ever a âmanhunt at the borderâ as stated by Hannity & Colmes. In fact, . . . when Fox News aired this false statement, the San Diego Police Department was focusing its investigation solely on Monti.â Plaintiffs alleged that as a result of the defamation, they suffered economic damages in lost wages and general damages for emotional distress.
In support, Fox News lodged transcripts and computer discs of the November 28 telecast with Monti and the March 2007 telecast with plaintiffsâ counsel. Fox News additionally submitted a declaration of a senior producer who stated that before the November 28 broadcast, Fox News contacted the San Diego Police Department, and the department âwould confirm only that there was an investigation in progressâ based on Montiâs police report. Fox News also asked the court to take judicial notice of numerous documents, including various newspaper articles regarding migrant encampments, several police and arrest reports concerning the incident, documents pertaining to the criminal prosecution of Monti for the November 18 incident, and several online dictionary definitions of the word âmanhunt.â Under the submitted dictionary definitions, a manhunt most commonly refers to an organized, extensive search for a person, usually a fugitive criminal.
In response to the motion, plaintiffs asked for a continuance to conduct âsome fairly limited quick discoveryâ to obtain evidence showing that law enforcement was not conducting a âmanhuntâ for plaintiffs at the time of the Fox News broadcast. In support, plaintiffsâ counsel clarified that âfor the purposes of the anti-SLAPP motion, [pjlaintiffs limit their allegation that Fox News defamed them to one single statement. Specifically, \p]laintiffs allege that on .. . the date of the Fox News broadcast at issue, there was no law enforcement âManhunt at the Borderâ for any or all of the seven \p\laintiffs that Fox News showed pictures of during its broadcast. Consequently, that single statement is the only allegedly defamatory statement at issue in Fox Newsâ anti-SLAPP motion.â (Italics added.) In their papers, plaintiffs explained that âFox Newsâ assertionââ âManhunt at the Borderâ ââis a provably false statement of fact that defames them by accusing them of being the subject of a law enforcement criminal âmanhunt.â â Plaintiffs argued they
In response to the discovery request, Fox News argued there was no need for the discovery, but stated that if the court believed discovery was necessary on the âtruthâ issue, it would waive this defense for purposes of the anti-SLAPP motion. After a hearing, the court found plaintiffs presented sufficient grounds for a continuance to conduct the requested discovery, but denied plaintiffsâ motion based on Fox Newsâs willingness to withdraw its truth defense for purposes of the anti-SLAPP motion.
Plaintiffs then filed an opposition to Fox Newsâs anti-SLAPP motion. In the opposition, plaintiffs did not dispute the applicability of the anti-SLAPP statute, but argued the court should deny the motion because there was a probability they would prevail on the claim. In support, plaintiffs reiterated that they were ânot claiming Fox News defamed them based on anything Mr. Monti saidâ during the broadcast, but that they were seeking to prevail based solely on Fox Newsâs â âManhunt at the Borderâ â caption while showing Montiâs wanted poster. Plaintiffs then argued that the caption was not privileged as a âfair and true reportâ under Civil Code section 47, subdivision (d)(1) because there was no evidence in the police reports that the police were conducting any type of âmanhuntâ for plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also argued: (1) the caption was âdefamatory per seâ because it referred to a manhunt by law enforcement officials', (2) Fox News had waived its truth defense; and (3) the caption was not âopinionâ or âhyperboleâ because the âstatement that there was a law enforcement âManhunt at the Borderâ for Plaintiffs is a demonstrably true or false statement of fact.â In filing this opposition, plaintiffs did not present any additional supporting evidentiary materials. Instead, they based their arguments on the pleadings and evidence already before the court.
In reply, Fox News asserted numerous arguments. Of particular relevance here, Fox News argued that the telecast âdid not attribute the caption âManhunt at the Borderâ to the police, but instead showed Montiâs âWanted Posterâ and stated: âThe victim managed to take these photographs of his alleged attackers before the crime took place, and now needs your help.â . . . Thus, the broadcast suggests not a law enforcement search, but a search by Monti and the Minutemen[].â Fox News argued that the âbroadcast does not imply what Plaintiffs say it does, but even if it did, such an implication is not actionable.â
At the hearing on the anti-SLAPP motion, the court stated that after watching the video, âItâs pretty clear if there is a manhunt, itâs by this guy
After the hearing, the trial court granted Fox Newsâs motion, and dismissed the complaint against it. The court found the â âManhunt at the Borderâ â caption was privileged under Civil Code section 47, subdivision (d)(1) because the caption was a â âfair and true reportâ (of the âmanhuntâ undertaken by Defendant Monti) to a public journal (Fox News) about official proceedings or a verified charge or complaint (the arrest of Plaintiff Balzaga and police investigation of the incident involving Defendant Monti).â The court alternatively found the caption was privileged as âfair comment, opinion, and hyperbole.â The court reasoned that âGiven the context of Fox Newsâ use of the caption âManhunt at the Borderâ it is unlikely a viewer would have understood âManhunt at the Borderâ as referring to a police or law enforcement manhunt. Rather, a viewer more likely perceived âManhunt at the Borderâ as ârhetorical hyperbole[,]â a âvigorous epithetâ or âloose and figurative language.â [Citation.]â
DISCUSSION
I. Anti-SLAPP Legal Principles
The Legislature enacted section 425.16 to deter lawsuits âbrought primarily to chill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances.â (§ 425.16, subd. (a).) â â âBecause these meritless lawsuits seek to deplete âthe defendantâs energyâ and drain âhis or her resourcesâ [citation], the Legislature sought â âto prevent SLAPPs by ending them early and without great cost to the SLAPP target.â ââ â (Flatley v. Mauro (2006) 39 Cal.4th 299, 312 [46 Cal.Rptr.3d 606, 139 P.3d 2].) To achieve the goal of encouraging participation in matters of public significance, the statute must be construed broadly. (§ 425.16, subd. (a); Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 192, 199 [46 Cal.Rptr.3d 41, 138 P.3d 193].)
II. Probability of Prevailing
The parties agree plaintiffsâ defamation claim arises from acts in furtherance of Fox Newsâs free speech rights and therefore plaintiffsâ complaint is subject to the anti-SLAPP statute. Thus, the legal issue here is whether plaintiffs met their burden to show a âprobabilityâ they will âprevailâ on the defamation claim. (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(1).)
A. Legal Standards
To meet their burden to show a probability of prevailing, plaintiffs were required to present evidence to demonstrate that their defamation claim was â â âsupported by a sufficient prima facie showing of facts to sustain a favorable judgment if the evidence submitted . . . was credited.â â â (Taus v. Loftus (2007) 40 Cal.4th 683, 713-714 [54 Cal.Rptr.3d 775, 151 P.3d 1185]; see Zamos v. Stroud (2004) 32 Cal.4th 958, 965 [12 Cal.Rptr.3d 54, 87 P.3d 802].) In deciding the potential merit issue, the trial court considers the partiesâ pleadings and admissible evidentiary submissions. (Wilson v. Parker, Covert & Chidester (2002) 28 Cal.4th 811, 821 [123 Cal.Rptr.2d 19, 50 P.3d 733].) The court does not weigh the credibility or compare the strength of competing evidence, but merely determines if there is sufficient evidence to show plaintiffs can satisfy each element of their claim. (Ibid.)
B. Plaintiffs Did Not Meet Burden to Support Defamation Claim
In their complaint, plaintiffs based their defamation claim against Fox News on various alleged false statements made during the broadcast. But in opposing the anti-SLAPP motion, plaintiffs clarified that the sole factual basis for their defamation claim against Fox News was the assertion that law enforcement was conducting an organized search for plaintiffs (a â âManhunt
Based on these limited factual allegations, plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in concluding that Fox Newsâs alleged defamatory statements were privileged as a âfair and true reportâ under Civil Code section 47, subdivision (d)(1).
Civil Code section 47, subdivision (d)(1) makes privileged âa fair and true report in, or a communication to, a public journal, of [a] public official proceeding, or . . . anything said in the course thereof.â A âpublic official proceedingâ includes a police investigation. (Howard v. Oakland Tribune (1988) 199 Cal.App.3d 1124, 1128 [245 Cal.Rptr. 449].) Thus, an article or broadcast about statements made in the context of a police investigation is privileged and cannot support a defamation claim. (Ibid.) The privilege applies if the substance of the publication or broadcast captures the gist or sting of the statements made in the official proceedings. (See Carver v. Bonds (2005) 135 Cal.App.4th 328, 351 [37 Cal.Rptr.3d 480].)
Plaintiffs argue that this privilege is inapplicable here because there was no evidence of any statements made in the police reports or in any other official proceeding that the police were conducting a âmanhunt.â We need not reach the merits of this argument because plaintiffsâ burden in opposing an anti-SLAPP motion was to substantiate each element of their cause of action, and not merely to counter defendantâs affirmative defenses. One essential element of plaintiffsâ defamation claim (as limited in their anti-SLAPP motion papers) was to establish that Fox News did in fact make the statement alleged to be falseâthat law enforcement officials were conducting a âmanhuntâ for plaintiffs. As both parties recognize, Fox News never expressly stated that law enforcement officials were conducting a manhunt for plaintiffs. Plaintiffs argue, however, that this statement can be reasonably implied from the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption.
To evaluate this contention, we employ settled legal principles of defamation law. In determining whether a publication has a defamatory meaning, the courts apply a totality of the circumstances test to review the meaning of the language in context and whether it is susceptible of a meaning alleged by the plaintiff. (See Monterey Plaza Hotel v. Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees (1999) 69 Cal.App.4th 1057, 1064-1065 [82 Cal.Rptr.2d 10] (Monterey Plaza Hotel); Morningstar, Inc. v. Superior Court (1994) 23 Cal.App.4th 676, 686-694 [29 Cal.Rptr.2d 547]; see also Moyer v. Amador Valley J. Union High School Dist. (1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 720,
However, ânot every word of an allegedly defamatory publication has to be false and defamatory to sustain a libel action. . . . â[T]he test of libel is not quantitative; a single sentence may be the basis for an action in libel even though buried in a much longer text . . . â (Kaelin, supra, 162 F.3d at p. 1040, citation omitted.) âThe defamatory character of language is measured âaccording to the sense and meaning . . . which such language may fairly be presumed to have conveyed to those to whom it was published.â â (Savage v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (1993) 21 Cal.App.4th 434, 447 [26 Cal.Rptr.2d 305].) âIn determining whether statements are of a defamatory nature, and therefore actionable, â âa court is to place itself in the situation of the hearer or reader, and determine the sense or meaning of the language of the complaint for libelous publication according to its natural and popular construction.â â â (Morningstar, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 23 Cal.App.4th at p. 688.)
In reviewing an alleged defamatory meaning, â âthe context in which the statement was made must be considered . . . . [f] This contextual analysis demands that the courts look at the nature and full content of the communication and to the knowledge and understanding of the audience to whom the publication was directed. [Citation.] â â[T]he publication in question must be considered in its entirety; â[i]t may not be divided into segments and each portion treated as a separate unit.â [Citation.] It must be read as a whole in order to understand its import and the effect which it was calculated to have on the reader [citations], and construed in the light of the whole scope [of the publication]. [Citation.]â â â â (Monterey Plaza Hotel, supra, 69 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1064-1065.)
Thus, when the alleged defamatory statement is contained in a headline, the headline must be read in conjunction with the entire article, and when so read the conclusion and inferences alleged by the plaintiff must be supported. (Morningstar, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 23 Cal.App.4th at p. 692; Selleck v. Globe International, Inc. (1985) 166 Cal.App.3d 1123, 1132-1133 [212 Cal.Rptr. 838] [court must examine newspaperâs headlines, caption and article as a whole to determine whether it is âreasonably susceptible of a
Likewise, when the alleged false statement is contained in a television broadcast, the court must examine the statement in context with the remainder of the news report to determine if it has the meaning attributed to it by the plaintiff. (See Monterey Plaza Hotel, supra, 69 Cal.App.4th at p. 1065; see also Ramsey v. Fox News Network (D.Colo. 2005) 351 F.Supp.2d 1145, 1151; Lal v. CBS, Inc. (E.D.Pa. 1982) 551 F.Supp. 356, 361 [â[t]he error in [plaintiffâs] argument lies in plaintiffâs failure to consider [the alleged false] statement in context with the remainder of the news reportâ]; Harrison v. Washington Post Co. (D.C. 1978) 391 A.2d 781, 783-784 [âno reasonable person who viewed and heard the broadcast could have received [the alleged false] impressionâ].) âTo determine defamation, the Court must view the broadcast as a whole rather than dwell upon specific parts of the broadcast. The Court must give each part its proper weight and the entire broadcast the meaning that people of average intelligence and understanding would give it. [Citations.]â (Ramsey; supra, 351 F.Supp.2d at p. 1151.)
Under these principles, the fact that a statement â[standing aloneâ could be construed as false is not sufficient to support a defamation claim. (Monterey Plaza Hotel, supra, 69 Cal.App.4th at p. 1065.) Instead, the court must consider the alleged false statement in âthe context of the entire broadcast.â (Ibid.) An alleged defamatory statement is actionable only if the statement, âconsidered within the context of the entire broadcast,â could be reasonably interpreted in the manner alleged by the plaintiff. (Ibid.) If no reasonable viewer could have reasonably understood the statement in the alleged defamatory sense, the matter may be decided as a question of law. (Id. at pp. 1064-1066.)
Applying these principles here, we conclude that a person who viewed the Fox News broadcast would not have reasonably concluded that law enforcement officers were conducting a âmanhuntâ for plaintiffs. Instead, viewed in context, the manhunt caption was an attention-grabbing or colorful way of referring to Montiâs own attempts to bring to justice the alleged perpetrators of the attack against him.
The caption âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ appeared throughout the telecast. The report begins with Colmes stating that the police are âinvestigatingâ an attack on an anti-illegal immigration advocate (Monti), and then showing photographs taken by Monti of âhis alleged attackers.â Monti then
On our review of this telecast, it is not reasonably probable that a viewer would conclude that the manhunt caption was characterizing the actions of law enforcement officials. Instead, the only reasonable conclusion is that the caption refers to Montiâs own search for plaintiffs and his belief that they should be charged with an assault crime.
Plaintiffs argue that although it is possible the âaverage television viewer, or average juror . . . [could] glean from the broadcast that the manhunt was by Monti, not the police . . . ,â the issue presents a question of fact for the jury. Plaintiffs emphasize that when the television viewer saw the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption in conjunction with the âwantedâ poster containing plaintiffsâ photographs, it would be reasonable for the viewer to conclude that âthe police [were] actively searching the U.S./Mexico border for the[se] menâ who âwere wanted by the police for crimes and were fugitives from the law.â
Although this argument may be persuasive when viewing the caption with the photographs in isolation, that is not how the story was presented. The story was not a single photograph; rather it was a four-minute telecast of many different images and concepts. The audio did not contain any suggestion that the police were conducting an organized search for these men at the border. In fact, the newscasters said just the opposite: that the police officers were investigating the incident and the police lieutenant did not necessarily agree with Montiâs version of the events. As plaintiffs have repeatedly argued in this case, an âinvestigationâ is very different from a âmanhunt.â Moreover, because the caption appeared on the screen during the entire time of the broadcast, the fact that it was shown while the photographs were displayed did not have a special meaning. Used in this way, a reasonable viewer would understand the captionâs purpose was to highlight and draw attention to the story, rather than as a vehicle for communicating an objective fact that was
In this respect, plaintiffsâ reliance on McNair v. Hearst Corporation (9th Cir. 1974) 494 F.2d 1309 is misplaced. In McNair, a newspaper published an article in which the headline and the first two paragraphs could have been interpreted as stating that the plaintiff (an attorney) received an unreasonable amount of fees to represent a woman in a divorce case, and that, as a result of these high fees, the plaintiff now owned the clientâs home. (Id. at pp. 1310-1311.) However, if a reader had read the lengthy article to its conclusion, the reader would understand that the clientâs loss of her home was a result of her former husbandâs failure to meet his financial obligations. (Ibid) The lower court granted summary judgment in favor of the newspaper, on the basis that âthe article read in its entirety was actually true.â (Id. at p. 1311.) The Ninth Circuit reversed, concluding that it was a jury question whether the entire article âeliminated the impact of any false impression created at the outset.â (Ibid) The court emphasized that to understand the true story, a reader would be required to read the entire story, which consisted of âabout fifty more paragraphs ... on three different pages of the newspaper.â (Id. at p. 1310.)
Similarly, in Kaelin, supra, 162 F.3d 1036, the court stated that a headline in the National Examiner could be reasonably interpreted as stating that police officers believe that Kato Kaelin committed the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. (Id. at pp. 1037, 1039-1040.) However, the court assumed a person who read the article would understand the true factsâthat the police officers believed that Kaelin committed perjury (and not murder). (Id. at pp. 1037-1039.) Despite this, the court found the headline could be the basis of a libel claim, emphasizing the article was âlocated 17 pages away from the cover. In this respect, the National Examinerâs front page headline is unlike a conventional headline that immediately precedes a newspaper story, and nowhere does the cover headline reference the internal page where readers could locate the article. A reasonable juror could conclude that the Kaelin article was too far removed from the cover headline to have the . . . effectâ of âclearing] up any false and defamatory meaning that could be found on the cover.â (Id. at p. 1041.) The court noted that although a âheadline[] alone may be enough to make libelous per se an otherwise innocuous article,â the test is that the alleged defamation âmust be judged by the publication as a whole.â (Ibid., italics omitted.)
In this case, unlike McNair and Kaelin, the caption cannot be reasonably viewed apart from the rest of the story because a viewer who saw the caption
To the extent that plaintiffs argue Fox News waived the argument as to the meaning of the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption by agreeing not to assert a âtruthâ defense, we find this contention without merit. For purposes of the anti-SLAPP motion, Fox News agreed not to rely on the truth defense with respect to the statement alleged to be false. The only statement alleged to be false was the statement that police officers were conducting an extensive organized search (a âmanhuntâ) for plaintiffs. Fox News agreed it would not assert that the alleged statement was true, i.e., that law enforcement officials were conducting a âmanhuntâ for plaintiffs. This is very different from conceding (for purposes of the motion) that the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption could be interpreted by a reasonable viewer to mean that police were conducting a manhunt. To establish a defamation in this case, plaintiffs had the burden of making a predicate showing the caption meant that police officials were conducting a manhunt for plaintiffs.
III. Conclusion
A defamation claim fails as a matter of law if the publication â â âis not reasonably susceptible of a defamatory meaning and cannot be reasonably understood in the defamatory sense pleadedâ â â by the plaintiffs. (Baker v. Los Angeles Herald Examiner (1986) 42 Cal.3d 254, 261 [228 Cal.Rptr. 206, 721 P.2d 87].) We determine there is an insufficient basis for a fact finder to conclude that the âMANHUNT AT THE BORDERâ caption, when viewed in context with the entire story, was reasonably susceptible of the false and defamatory meaning attributed to it by plaintiffs. We thus hold the court properly granted Fox Newsâs anti-SLAPP motion.
In reaching this conclusion, we emphasize that an owner of a cable television news program has broad First Amendment rights to present information in the manner it chooses. The use of captions and graphics has
DISPOSITION
Judgment affirmed. Appellants to pay respondentâs costs on appeal.
McConnell, P. J., concurred.
Plaintiffs are Jose Balzaga, Estanislao Gonzalez, Alberto Jimenez, Ascension Hernandez, Aristeo Lopez, Roberto Pena, and Ricardo Valle.
Plaintiffs also sued John Monti and Jeff Schwilk, a leader of the San Diego Minutemen, an immigration-related organization. Plaintiffsâ claims against these defendants are not before us on this appeal.
SLAPP is an acronym for strategic lawsuit against public participation. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16 (section 425.16).)
This summary of the complaintâs factual allegations focuses on plaintiffsâ claims against Fox News. We discuss the allegations pertaining to the other defendants (Monti and Schwilk) only to the extent the allegations are relevant to the claims against Fox News.
Fox News submitted definitions from the following sources: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Cambridge Dictionary of American English, Cambridge Advanced Learnerâs Dictionary, Wiktionary, and Wordsmyth.
In reaching these conclusions, the trial court granted Fox Newsâs request to take judicial notice of two exhibits, exhibit 11 (not guilty verdicts in Montiâs trial) and exhibit 12 (dictionary definitions of the word âmanhuntâ), but denied Fox Newsâs request to take judicial notice of the remainder of its exhibits. The court also denied plaintiffsâ request for judicial notice of the facts alleged in the complaint. Plaintiffs do not challenge these rulings.