Via Overlawyered, Eric Goldman and others favor HR 4364, the “Citizen Participation Act of 2009,” which would establish a federal anti-SLAPP law.

Around half the States have anti-SLAPP (i.e., Anti-"Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation") statutes which make it easier to dismiss suits allegedly filed to chill freedom of speech. If the lawsuit arises from the Defendants’ exercise of their rights to free speech — which in the post-Citizens United era means virtually every time a corporation advances an agenda — then the Defendant can file, at the very beginning of the lawsuit, a "special motion" that requires the Plaintiff show concrete evidence proving each element of their claims.

The laws make sense, in theory. “The hallmark of a SLAPP suit is that it lacks merit, and is brought with the goals of obtaining an economic advantage over a citizen party by increasing the cost of litigation to the point that the citizen party’s case will be weakened or abandoned, and of deterring future litigation.” United States ex rel. Newsham v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., 190 F.3d 963, 972-73 (9th Cir.1999). The purpose of anti-SLAPP laws is to ensure the prompt dismissal of “legally meritless suits filed in order to obtain a political or economic advantage over the defendant, not to vindicate a legally cognizable right of the plaintiff.” Condit v. Nat’l Enquirer, Inc., 248 F. Supp. 2d 945, 952 (E.D. Cal. 2002)(internal quotation omitted). “The paradigm SLAPP suit is an action filed by a land developer against environmental activists or objecting neighbors of the proposed development.” Id.

All well and good. Indeed, anti-SLAPP Acts are sometimes used to dismiss bogus suits in which one side really was trying "to obtain a political or economic advantage" over someone with inadequate resources to defend themselves. See Melius v. Keiffer, 980 So. 2d 167, 170 (La. Ct. App. 2008)(granting motion to strike complaint brought by owners of a bar against area resident who had opposed an expansion of the bar); Lamz v. Wells, 938 So. 2d 792, 794 (La. Ct. App. 2006)(dismissing case filed one week before election by one judicial candidate against another); Darden v. Smith, 879 So. 2d 390, 393 (La. Ct. App. 2004)(dismissing case filed by public official against individual who filed a complaint with the Louisiana Board of Ethics).

Goldman gives his own example where an anti-SLAPP motion allowed a party with limited legal resources to avoid the cost and burden of full-fledged litigation:

All too often, vendors use actual or threatened litigation to take down content that criticizes their offerings. The proposed federal anti-SLAPP law applies to those lawsuits. Thus, if enacted, the federal anti-SLAPP law will help consumers share their true feeling about marketplace offerings with less fear of meritless lawsuits from vendors who would rather fight in court than compete.

BoingBoing’s recent resolution of a lawsuit brought by MagicJack nicely illustrates the virtues of anti-SLAPP laws. BoingBoing blogged some criticisms of MagicJack’s offerings, and MagicJack unwisely responded to that post with a lawsuit. Fortunately for BoingBoing, MagicJack sued it in California, which has a robust anti-SLAPP law. As a result, BoingBoing was able to end the lawsuit early (BoingBoing won its anti-SLAPP motion less than 3 months from complaint filing) and get the court to order MagicJack to pay its attorneys’ fees of over $50k.

But it’s not always David using anti-SLAPP laws against Goliath; it’s often the other way around.

Consider the BoingBoing case. Let’s assume that, instead of suing BoingBoing, MagicJack retaliated by secretly hiring a spam company to inundate BoingBoing and other widely-read blogs with hostile comments questioning BoingBoing’s motives and favorably referring to MagicJack.

BoingBoing, having no other options, sues MagicJack.

Would those allegations show MagicJack’s "acts" were "in furtherance of the right of free speech?" Sure; MagicJack has just as much a right as BoingBoing to talk about other companies. So the anti-SLAPP Act would be available.*

At the beginning of the case, then, BoingBoing would be required to prove — prior to conducting any discovery, since HR 4364 automatically stays all discovery — that MagicJack was behind the posts, that the posts were false, that the posts were capable of a defamatory meaning, and that MagicJack was at "fault" in publishing the comments (defined in many states as "acting with malice or reckless intent").

How could BoingBoing prove all that immediately after filing suit? Most of that information would be in MagicJack’s possession.

Odds are, BoingBoing wouldn’t be able to do it. Their case would be dismissed, and MagicJack could continue to harass BoingBoing at will.

The law of unintended consequences, as they say.

Put simply, the problem with HR 4364 is that it’s an extraordinarily powerful deviceone that substantially increases the costs of bringing meritorious cases and will undoubtedly result in the inadvertent dismissal of many meritorious cases — with few limitations on its use.

Often the only means that "David" has to challenge "Goliath" is through a lawsuit, like when ordinary individuals are powerless to repair the damage caused by sloppy or sensationalized journalism. Yet, if Goliath wants to use the Act to dismiss David’s lawsuit, he can and will.Continue Reading The Problem With HR 4364, The Proposed Federal Anti-SLAPP Law

The producers of the Oscar-nominated The Hurt Locker, which Roger Ebert* deemed the second best film of the decade, were just sued by Sgt. Jeffrey Sarver, a former explosive ordinance disposal technician with the 788th Ordinance Company, with whom journalist Mark Boal — the writer of The Hurt Locker — was “embedded” on assignment for Playboy Magazine.

The complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (where Sgt. Sarver lived during the relevant times), gives some examples of the similarities:

The title “The Hurt Locker” – Plaintiff originated this term and said it often around colleagues while in Iraq. Defendant BOAL took interest in this phrase and asked Plaintiff what the phrase meant. Because Plaintiff was told Defendant BOAL was collecting information for the sake of documenting a factual report about Army EOD in general, Plaintiff acquiesced with BOAL’s request, which he said often while during his deployment in Iraq;

“War is a Drug” – Another phrase Plaintiff used when talking to Defendant BOAL;

“Will James”, played by Jeremy Renner” – Mr. Renner is essentially the same age and height; to personate Sgt. Sarver, Renner’s hair was dyed blonde, and Renner impersonated Sgt. Sarver’s persona down to the smallest detail, including the replication of Sgt. Sarver’s West Virginia accent, dialect, expressions, mannerisms, personality, and even dress habits (i.e. rolling his sleeves in the exact same manner as Sarver); succinctly stated, Renner acts and behaves just like Plaintiff5 throughout the movie;

Same Military & Family Background – Just like Plaintiff, character “Will James” is a former Army Ranger who has a young son who lives with his ex-wife back home; Renner is also referenced as a “red neck” and “trailer trash”;

Same EOD Missions – Most of the EOD missions depicted in the movie are identical to Plaintiff’s, including the same camps where the EOD team was based (ie Camp Victory), and the same manner in which they were handled – as documented in the Playboy Article;

[…]

Renner struggles with personal, family relationships just like, and in the same manner as, Plaintiff;

Renner drinking alcohol after successful missions;

Renner setting the record for the most IEDs disarmed by any single soldier;

As THR, Esq. notes,

According to legal experts on this topic, Sarver will need to overcome First Amendment protections that give broad protections on speech. Just putting someone’s life story up on screen may not be enough.

Sarver’s claims may be stronger if he, himself, had written about his experience in Iraq. Had Sarver written about his war stories, he might have been able to pursue a copyright claim that producers of “Hurt Locker” had violated his expression.

Sarver’s best case may actually be if producers of “Hurt Locker” got things wrong. Potentially, Sarver could claim that “Will James” is just a thinly veiled depiction of him, but that they had put him in false light and defamed him with dishonest treatment about his character. We have seen these types of “libel-in-fiction” claims come up recently.

Hence, the complaint continues:

Though the movie clings to the plaintiff’s likeness and personal circumstances throughout the movie, Plaintiff is also defamed in placed in a false light in several scenes, such as (1) the scene where Plaintiff explains to his young son that he essentially does not love him, and that the only thing plaintiff loves now is “war”. The movie ends by showing Plaintiff back in Iraq, starting another deployment mission; and (2) the portrayal of Plaintiff as a reckless, gung-ho war addict who has a morbid fascination with death which causes him to carelessly risk both his and his colleagues’ lives in the theater of war, simply to feel the thrill of cheating death.

The Complaint alleges seven counts:

  • Misappropriation of Name & Likeness
  • False Light Invasion of Privacy
  • Defamation
  • Breach of Contract
  • Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
  • Fraud
  • Negligent Misrepresentation

As far as I can tell, Sgt. Sarver will have little trouble meeting most of the elements of misappropriation, with one exception:

In order that there may be liability under the rule stated in this Section, the defendant must have appropriated to his own use or benefit the reputation, prestige, social or commercial standing, public interest or other values of the plaintiff’s name or likeness. It is not enough that the defendant has adopted for himself a name that is the same as that of the plaintiff, so long as he does not pass himself off as the plaintiff or otherwise seek to obtain for himself the values or benefits of the plaintiff’s name or identity. Unless there is such an appropriation, the defendant is free to call himself by any name he likes, whether there is only one person or a thousand others of the same name. Until the value of the name has in some way been appropriated, there is no tort.

Restatement of the Law, Second, Torts, § 652, cmt c (emphases added); see Jeffries v. Whitney E. Houston Acad. P.T.A., 2009 N.J. Super. Unpub. LEXIS 1895, at *9 (App. Div. Jul. 20, 2009)(“the purpose of an appropriation of likeness claim is to vindicate the property interest the plaintiff has in his or her name or likeness.”). Misappropriation claims typically arise from false endorsements; here, however, Sarver certainly was not represented as directly endorsing the film. The challenge for his lawyers will be arguing that the use of his life story is sufficient “likeness” that it constitutes a de facto endorsement of the story.

False light and defamation are highly similar claims, and often analyzed together. As THR, Esq. said, there’s precedent out there for “libel-in-fiction,” and Sgt. Sarver’s case seems similar to the The Red Hat Club case linked above: taking an already incredible, but nonetheless real, story and scandalizing it some more. It’s a little bit harder for Sgt. Sarver here, though, since it seems that anyone who recognized him from the film would also know the differences between him and the character, and the complaint admits that he already had substantial family troubles and that he broke military regulations, such as drinking after missions. Those issues, however, are typically issues for a jury, not a judge, to decide.

The remaining claims are intriguing, though none are a good fit to the facts. Regarding breach of contract, it doesn’t appear that Sgt. Sarver was an intended third-party beneficiary to Boal’s “embedding” agreement with the U.S. Department of Defense, though he might be an implied third-party beneficiary. Without the contract in hand, it’s hard to say what will happen here. (One of the commentators at THR, Esq., linked to some of the Department of Defense embedding guidelines, which don’t seem to be as strict as the complaint implies.)

The intentional infliction of emotional distress claim will likely go nowhere. The complaint essentially admits there’s no evidence the producers of the film intended to cause Sgt. Sarver harm. See Ortiz v. Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29274, at *15–16 (D.N.J. Nov. 22, 2005)(“To sustain such a claim, the conduct at issue must be ‘so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.”).

Similarly, the fraud and negligent misrepresentations claims will likely be dismissed. Most courts require some degree of explicit economic loss for these claims. McClellan v. Feit, 376 N.J. Super. 305, 313, 870 A.2d 644, 648 (App. Div. 2005)(“Negligent misrepresentation constitutes an incorrect statement, negligently made and justifiably relied on, which results in economic loss.”). It might be morally wrong to trick someone into revealing their personal story, but it’s not legally compensable as fraud or misrepresentation unless they’re also tricked out of some money.

An interesting case to watch. Depending on Sgt. Sarver’s goals / demands, I’d expect a somewhat prompt settlement, though perhaps not until after the inevitable motion to dismiss is decided.Continue Reading A Detailed Look At The Hurt Locker Lawsuit

[UPDATE: Welcome, Boing Boing readers! The below post was written before the South Korean edition of W Magazine was spotted out in the wild with Demi Moore’s hip re-attached. As you can imagine, one of the most important parts of a retraction demand is that you get your facts straight.]

Lawyers are

All’s fair in love, war and litigation:

An arbitrator cannot sue a lawyer for wrongful use of civil proceedings, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled, even if the lawyer allegedly lodged false accusations in court papers to have the arbitrator disqualified, because lawyers enjoy an "absolute privilege" that immunizes them from

Fresh off the presses is Acumed LLC v. Advanced Surgical Servs., 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 5854 (3d Cir., March 20, 2009), a charming setup in the insanely hostile and competitive world of medical devices:

Acumed is a manufacturer of surgical implants and related devices, and appellant [Morris] and [Advanced Surgical Services] are in the

Above The Law refers us to Newsday’s coverage of the ugly mess that has become of the Martin Garbus, Esquire vs. Samantha Ronson vs. Perez Hilton suits, which now stand a good chance of becoming far more embarrassing for Lindsay Lohan than the blog post which prompted the original defamation suit.

Here are the facts