Pelz v. Villeda-Weaver CA2/3 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 12/19/13 Pelz v. Villeda-Weaver CA2/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    CARLOS PELZ,                                                             B245043
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                        (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC456491)
    v.
    FRANKO VILLEDA-WEAVER, as
    Personal Representative, etc., et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from judgments of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
    Richard E. Rico, Judge. Affirmed.
    John Elson for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump & Aldisert, Dale Kinsella and Jeremiah Reynolds
    for Defendants and Respondents Franko Villeda-Weaver and Bell-Phillip Television
    Productions, Inc.
    Kelley Drye & Warren, Keri E. Campbell and Damaris M. Diaz for Defendants
    and Respondents CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Jody Lawrence-Miller.
    _________________________
    Defendant Ron Weaver was a senior producer for the television show the Bold and
    the Beautiful, and he published and distributed a memorandum critical of plaintiff Carlos
    Pelz’s job performance as a “key” hair stylist for the television show.1 The memorandum
    contains statements such as Pelz “has a negative attitude, is perceived as a slacker, and is
    not carrying an adequate work load,” and his “hair styling does not match the emotional
    and contextual requirements of the script.” Pelz filed a defamation action against
    Weaver, and the production company that Weaver works for, Bell-Phillip Television
    Productions, Inc. (BPP). Based upon information obtained during discovery, Pelz
    amended his complaint to name his employer CBS Broadcasting, Inc. (CBS) and Jody
    Lawrence-Miller, his supervisor at CBS, alleging slander arising from Lawrence-Miller’s
    statements to Weaver regarding Pelz’s job performance.
    The BPP defendants (Weaver and BPP) and the CBS defendants (Lawrence-Miller
    and CBS) filed separate summary judgment motions, asserting the common-interest
    privilege of Civil Code section 47, subdivision (c), applicable to defamatory statements
    made without malice to one who is interested, barred this action as a matter of law. We
    conclude the BPP defendants and the CBS defendants met their burden to show the
    allegedly defamatory statements were made on a privileged occasion, and Pelz has not
    raised a triable issue of fact to show malice to overcome the privilege. Thus, the trial
    court correctly granted the summary judgment motions on this ground. Accordingly, we
    affirm the judgments.
    UNDISPUTED MATERIAL FACTS
    1. The Parties
    Pelz was a key hair stylist for the Bold and the Beautiful (the Show), a television
    show BPP produced. Weaver was a senior producer at BPP. Rhonda Friedman was a
    supervising producer, and she supervised Pelz’s work on the Show. The Show is filmed
    on a CBS sound stage.
    1
    Ron Weaver is deceased, and Franko Villeda-Weaver, the personal representative
    of the estate of Ron Weaver, has been substituted in as a party to this action.
    2
    Pelz was a CBS employee. CBS provides staff to the Show and bills BPP for the
    labor costs. In 1989, CBS assigned Pelz to the Show. Pelz’s immediate supervisor at
    CBS was Lawrence-Miller. Lawrence-Miller reported to Harvey Holt, the vice president
    of stage operations.
    2. Pelz’s Salary and the Show’s Production Schedule
    In 2008, BPP changed its production schedule to four days per week for
    approximately 32 weeks per year. Because Pelz was a CBS employee, BPP was being
    billed for his annual salary, amounting to approximately four or five months when Pelz
    was not working.
    Weaver tried to reduce the labor costs incurred in paying CBS employee’s salaries
    while the Show was on hiatus. A series of e-mails beginning in January 2008 through
    June 2009 memorializes his efforts. Weaver’s initial e-mail is an inquiry into the cost of
    “putting the CBS staff employees we now cover on a freelance basis . . . .” Weaver
    questioned whether Pelz and others “[c]ould . . . be laid off and re-hired as freelance.” In
    a subsequent e-mail to Holt, Weaver explained that BPP had “no budget” to pay Pelz and
    another hair stylist when the Show was not in production and would no longer pay their
    salary. Weaver, however, suggested Holt come up with a proposal in which BPP might
    contribute to Pelz’s salary. Weaver then sent an e-mail to BPP’s co-owners in which he
    proposed that the production company temporarily cover Pelz’s salary to ensure that he
    remained a CBS employee to keep his health benefits. Weaver informed Holt that BPP
    had agreed to pay Pelz’s salary, at a reduced rate, provided CBS assign Pelz to other
    shows while on hiatus to defer the salary costs. Because Pelz was not assigned to other
    shows, Weaver’s e-mails state that BPP and CBS agreed to split the cost of Pelz’s salary
    during the Show’s hiatus until Pelz became eligible for Medicare benefits.
    3. Pelz’s Performance Issues Addressed in Weaver’s Memorandum
    In March 2010, Weaver sent a memorandum to Holt in which he raised several
    issues related to Pelz’s poor job performance. Weaver drafted the memorandum after
    consulting with Friedman and Lawrence-Miller.
    3
    a. March 18, 2010 Memorandum (Allegedly Published March 22)
    In a memorandum addressed to Holt and dated March 18, 2010 (March 18
    memorandum), Weaver described seven issues related to Pelz’s job performance:
    (1) “[Pelz] is coasting toward retirement,” and he “has a negative attitude, is perceived as
    a slacker, and is not carrying an adequate work load”; (2) “he often signs out well before
    the wrap”; (3) “[w]hen he does cover the stage he is often not on stage,” requiring stage
    managers to track him down; (4) “[h]e has been told that reading scripts is part of his
    job,” but “[o]n many occasions, the hair styling does not match the emotional and
    contextual requirements of the script”; (5) “[m]ost of the women on the show prefer to
    have their hair done by others on the staff”; (6) “[a]s key, an essential part of the job is
    continuity,” and “[w]e’ve been advised that actresses have been taking their own pictures
    in order to remember how they’re supposed to appear when scenes are taped on different
    days”; and (7) his “work has a ‘dated’ look.” The March 18 memorandum asked Holt to
    replace Pelz as the key hair stylist.2
    Weaver sent copies of the March 18 memorandum to Brad Bell, one of BPP’s
    owners, Friedman, and Lawrence-Miller.
    b. Draft of Weaver’s March 18 Memorandum
    In an e-mail to Bell, Weaver attached a draft of the March 18 memorandum
    (hereafter Draft). The e-mail states that Weaver and Friedman met with Lawrence-Miller
    to discuss Pelz’s performance. Weaver further states in the e-mail that both Lawrence-
    Miller and Holt “concur” that Pelz “needs to go.” Weaver wrote: “We and CBS have
    tried to protect him by agreeing to split with CBS his salary during dark weeks. No good
    deed goes unpunished, as they say. He’s become bitter, is bad for morale, and his work is
    inadequate.”
    2
    The March 18 memorandum further states: “If we do not see a complete
    turnaround in attitude, work habits, and the quality of his work sufficient to ensure that he
    is carrying a reasonable share of the workload of the department, we request that he be
    removed from the show.”
    4
    c. Republication of the March 18 Memorandum
    In October 2010, Weaver sent the March 18 memorandum to Ed Scott, a newly
    hired booth producer.
    4. Pelz Receives the March 18 Memorandum
    Pelz was given a copy of the March 18 memorandum and was counseled to
    improve his work performance. Upon return from hiatus, Pelz was injured when he
    tripped and fell at work. While he attempted to return after his injury, he has not been
    able to return to work and is collecting long-term disability benefits.
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1. The Third Amended Complaint
    Pelz’s third amended complaint (complaint) for libel and slander is based on
    Weaver’s March 18th memorandum, Weaver’s e-mail and the attached Draft, and
    Lawrence-Miller’s statements to Weaver concerning Pelz’s job performance.
    a. Libel Claims against Weaver and BPP (First, Second, Third Causes of Action)
    Pelz alleges three separate libel claims arising from (1) the March 18
    memorandum, (2) the Draft and e-mail attaching the Draft, and (3) the republication of
    the March 18 memorandum. Pelz alleges that the statements in the March 18
    memorandum were false “and were made with malice, and were understood by all to
    whom the memo was shown as claims that plaintiff (a) was lazy, (b) did not care about
    his work, (c) produced poor quality work, (d) was incompetent, (e) was unfit to continue
    to function as the ‘key’ hairstylist [sic] for The Bold and The Beautiful, and (f) should be
    removed as a hair stylist . . . .” Pelz alleged Weaver and BPP published the March 18
    memorandum because they wanted to get rid of him, despite the quality of his work.
    In his e-mail attaching the Draft, Weaver allegedly made false statements that
    CBS management agreed that Pelz should be removed from the Show, and falsely
    claimed that Pelz “had ‘become bitter, is bad for morale, and his work is inadequate.’ ”
    The BPP defendants raised as an affirmative defense that the challenged
    communications were protected by the common-interest privilege.
    5
    b. Slander Claim against Lawrence-Miller and CBS (Fourth Cause of Action)
    Pelz repeats the allegations in the complaint regarding the statements in the
    March 18 memorandum in his slander cause of action against Lawrence-Miller and CBS.
    Pelz further alleged Lawrence-Miller falsely stated that her statements regarding Pelz’s
    job performance were reported to her by other employees.
    The CBS defendants raised the affirmative defense that the challenged
    communications were protected by the common-interest privilege, and also asserted that
    any alleged statement, if made, was an expression of opinion.
    2. Motions for Summary Judgment
    a. BPP Defendants’ Motion Based on the Common-Interest Privilege
    The BPP defendants moved for summary judgment on their defense that Weaver’s
    communications were privileged under the common-interest privilege of Civil Code
    section 47, subdivision (c). The BPP defendants argued that Weaver was responding to
    Holt’s request regarding Pelz’s poor job performance, and the March 18 memorandum
    and e-mail with the attached Draft were sent to people who had a common interest in
    evaluating Pelz’s performance. In support of the motion, the BPP defendants presented
    evidence that Weaver had reasonable grounds for his belief in the truth of his statements
    in the March 18 memorandum.
    b. CBS Defendants’ Motion
    The CBS defendants moved for summary judgment by raising defenses to the
    slander cause of action, arguing Lawrence-Miller did not make the comments as alleged
    in the complaint, and any criticism she may have communicated to Weaver regarding
    Pelz’s job performance was privileged. The CBS defendants also argued that based upon
    Jensen v. Hewlett-Packard Co. (1993) 
    14 Cal.App.4th 958
    , an employer’s performance
    evaluation of an employee cannot support a cause of action for libel. In support of the
    motion, the CBS defendants presented evidence that Lawrence-Miller had reasonable
    grounds for her belief in the truth of her statements to Weaver.
    6
    3. Summary Judgment Motions Granted, Appeal
    The trial court granted the BPP defendants’ and the CBS defendants’ motions for
    summary judgment on the ground that the common-interest privilege was a complete
    defense to the complaint. Judgments were entered. Pelz’s motion for new trial was
    denied, and he timely filed this appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Standard of Review
    A “party moving for summary judgment bears the burden of persuasion that there
    is no triable issue of material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 826
    , 850; Code Civ. Proc., § 437c,
    subd. (c).) A defendant satisfies this burden by showing that there is a complete defense
    to the complaint. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p)(2).)
    We independently determine whether, as a matter of law, summary judgment was
    properly granted. (Merrill v. Navegar, Inc. (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 465
    , 476.)
    2. Conditional Common-Interest Privilege
    “Defamation is effected either by libel or slander.” (Noel v. River Hills Wilsons,
    Inc. (2003) 
    113 Cal.App.4th 1363
    , 1368.) Libel is a “false and unprivileged publication
    by writing . . . which exposes any person to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy, or
    which causes him to be shunned or avoided, or which has a tendency to injure him in his
    occupation.” (Civ. Code, § 45.) Slander is a “false and unprivileged” oral
    communication that “[t]ends directly to injure [a person] in respect to his office,
    profession, trade or business . . . .” (Civ. Code, § 46, subd. (3).)
    Civil Code section 47, subdivision (c) is a conditional privilege against defamatory
    statements made without malice between persons on a matter of common interest.3
    3
    Civil Code section 47 provides in part: “A privileged publication or broadcast is
    one made: [¶] . . . [¶] (c) [i]n a communication, without malice, to a person interested
    therein, (1) by one who is also interested, or (2) by one who stands in such a relation to
    the person interested as to afford a reasonable ground for supposing the motive for the
    communication to be innocent, or (3) who is requested by the person interested to give
    the information.”
    7
    Communications by employers about employee conduct, made without malice to persons
    who have a common interest or a need to know as a matter of business necessity are
    presumptively privileged. (Manguso v. Oceanside Unified School Dist. (1984)
    
    153 Cal.App.3d 574
    , 580-581; see also King v. United Parcel Service, Inc. (2007)
    
    152 Cal.App.4th 426
    , 440-441 [privilege applies to an employer’s statements to
    employees regarding the reasons for terminating another employee]; Deaile v. General
    Telephone Co. of California (1974) 
    40 Cal.App.3d 841
    , 845-846, 847 [privilege applies
    to statements by management to supervisors who repeated statements to employee
    explaining why an employer disciplined an employee].)
    Malice is not inferred from the communication in statements falling within the
    conditional common-interest privilege. (Civ. Code, § 48.) “For purposes of this statutory
    privilege, malice has been defined as ‘ “a state of mind arising from hatred or ill will,
    evidencing a willingness to vex, annoy or injure another person.” ’ [Citations.]”
    (Lundquist v. Reusser (1994) 
    7 Cal.4th 1193
    , 1204; Brown v. Kelly Broadcasting Co.
    (1989) 
    48 Cal.3d 711
    , 723; McGrory v. Applied Signal Technology, Inc. (2013)
    
    212 Cal.App.4th 1510
    , 1538-1539 & fn. 18.)
    A shifting burden generally applies to establish the common-interest privilege
    defense. The defendant bears the initial burden of demonstrating that the allegedly
    defamatory communication was made upon a privileged occasion, and the plaintiff then
    bears the burden of proving the defendant made the statement with malice. (Lundquist v.
    Reusser, supra, 7 Cal.4th at pp. 1210-1214.) As shall be shown, Pelz has not established
    that a triable issue of fact exists to show malice to defeat the common-interest privilege.
    3. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Granting the BPP Defendants’ Motion
    a. The Common-Interest Privilege Applies
    Pelz contends summary judgment was improperly granted because the BPP
    defendants did not establish that the common-interest privilege applied to all three libel
    causes of action alleged in the complaint. As to the first two causes of action, Pelz does
    not dispute that the allegedly defamatory statements in the March 18 memorandum and
    Draft, made by Weaver in a memorandum to Pelz’s employers concerning his
    8
    performance, were made upon a “privileged occasion” for purposes of the common-
    interest privilege. With respect to the third cause of action, alleging republication of the
    March 18 memorandum to Scott, Pelz contends it was not made upon a “privileged
    occasion,” because Scott was not employed when Weaver circulated the memorandum.
    The circulation of the March 18 memorandum to Scott is a “privileged occasion”
    for purposes of the common-interest privilege. (See Cuenca v. Safeway San Francisco
    Employees Fed. Credit Union (1986) 
    180 Cal.App.3d 985
    , 995-996 [“[c]ommunications
    made in a commercial setting relating to the conduct of an employee have been held to
    fall squarely within the qualified privilege for communications to interested persons”].)
    Scott, as a new booth producer, supervised Pelz. Scott had an interest in Pelz’s past
    performance issues, and he was in the best position to observe whether Pelz’s
    performance improved. The BPP defendants met their burden.
    b. Pelz Did Not Meet His Burden to Raise a Triable Issue of Fact
    Pelz raises several arguments to contend he has presented sufficient evidence to
    raise a triable issue of fact that Weaver acted with malice in publishing the March 18
    memorandum, publishing the e-mail with the attached Draft, and republishing the
    March 18 memorandum to Scott. None of Pelz’s arguments has merit.
    (1).   The Primary Motivation for the March 18 Memorandum
    Pelz contends he “alleged in some detail malice sufficient to prevent the common
    interest privilege from even arising,” that is, “Weaver wanted to get rid of Pelz to avoid
    paying his salary expense during hiatuses which CBS would charge back to Bell-Phillip.”
    Stated another way, Pelz argues Weaver was motivated not for purposes of chronicling
    Pelz’s poor performance, but for an economic purpose, which to be actionable would
    have to fall into the category of hatred or ill will for the purpose of injuring Pelz. (See
    Lundquist v. Reusser, supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 1206, fn. 12 [“ ‘Conditionally privileged
    occasions are created in order to permit the publisher of the defamation to protect the
    interest which is entitled to protection. . . . [W]here the primary purpose is another
    9
    purpose, e.g., a desire to injure the defamed person, this is an abuse of the occasion and
    no privilege comes into being.’ ”].)4
    The state-of-mind Pelz attributes to Weaver is not supported by the undisputed
    facts and the reasonable inferences drawn from these undisputed facts. Pelz was not a
    BPP employee, so BPP did not need a pretext to remove him from the Show. It is
    undisputed that by the terms of the agreement with CBS, BPP did not have to use Pelz’s
    services. Pelz would receive his salary even if he did not work on the Show. Thus,
    Pelz’s belief that Weaver had an improper motive for writing the March 18 memorandum
    is mere speculation and conjecture, which is legally insufficient to defeat a summary
    judgment motion. (See Roberts v. Assurance Co. of America (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 1398
    , 1404.)
    Because Pelz has no evidence of an improper motive, this case is distinguishable
    from Cloud v. Casey (1999) 
    76 Cal.App.4th 895
    , a case Pelz relies on to show Weaver’s
    March 18 memorandum identifying performance issues was a pretext to remove him
    from the Show. In Cloud v. Casey, the plaintiff was denied a promotion because she
    purportedly lacked operational experience, but the jury also heard evidence that the
    operational criterion was developed after the successful candidate obtained the position.
    (Id. at pp. 900, 912.) “From this [evidence] the jury could conclude that operational
    experience was not a real requirement for the position, but a pretext utilized by the
    corporations to explain away its gender-based decision.” (Id. at p. 912.) Here, unlike
    Cloud v. Casey, where the decisionmaker attempted to hide the unlawful basis with a
    false explanation, no unlawful or unprivileged motive can be inferred from the March 18
    4
    The parties dispute whether malice also may be shown by establishing that the
    allegedly defamatory statement was made for a reason other than to protect the interest
    that is entitled to protection. (See Manguso v. Oceanside Unified School Dist., supra,
    153 Cal.App.3d at pp. 580-581.) As the California Supreme Court stated in Lundquist v.
    Reusser, supra, 
    7 Cal.4th 1193
    , the “good faith” requirement of the common-interest
    privilege distinguishes a conditional or qualified privilege from an absolute one. (Id. at
    p. 1206, fn. 12.) “ ‘The difference between absolute and qualified privilege lies in the
    effect of the motive and purpose of the defamer.’ ” (Ibid.)
    10
    memorandum. Moreover, unlike Cloud, Pelz suffered no adverse employment action –
    he was not replaced on the Show, and he remained a CBS employee.
    (2).    Reasonable Grounds for Belief
    Pelz next contends that Weaver had no reasonable grounds to believe the
    statements in the March 18 memorandum, citing to contradictory evidence. This misses
    the point. The BPP defendants presented evidence that Weaver had a reasonable belief
    the statements in the March 18 memorandum were true following his meeting and
    discussions with Pelz’s supervisors. While Pelz may disagree with the issues raised in
    the March 18 memorandum, or present evidence to suggest that the criticism was not
    justified, this is not the relevant question in the context of libel. “For purposes of
    establishing a triable issue of malice, ‘the issue is not the truth or falsity of the statements
    but whether they were made recklessly without reasonable belief in their truth.’ ”
    (McGrory v. Applied Signal Technology, Inc., 
    supra,
     212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1540.)
    Pelz counters that there was no reasonable basis for Weaver’s belief that Pelz’s
    performance was lacking because during this time period, he won back-to-back Emmy
    awards for hair styling. This evidence is undisputed, but it does not raise a triable issue
    of fact that Weaver lacked a reasonable belief in the statements made in the March 18
    memorandum. Many of the points raised in the March 18 memorandum addressed
    performance issues unrelated to hair styling. Pelz has presented no evidence giving rise
    to a reasonable inference that Weaver wrote the March 18 memorandum without a
    reasonable belief in the content.
    (3).    Weaver’s Alleged Falsehoods
    Pelz also contends there is a triable issue of fact that Weaver acted with malice in
    drafting the March 18 memorandum because Weaver (1) falsely claimed in verified
    interrogatory responses that he had spoken to Laura Yale, a stage manager, and Christine
    Lai-Johnson, a CBS employee and make-up artist on the Show, regarding Pelz’s job
    performance, and (2) falsely stated in his e-mail attaching the Draft that both Lawrence-
    Miller and Holt agreed that Pelz “needs to go.”
    11
    Weaver’s discovery response regarding Yale and Lai-Johnson was amended to
    correct the mistake. Weaver amended his response to state that “[s]ome of the assertions
    in the memorandum may have been communicated to Jody Lawrence or Rhonda
    Friedman by Laura Yale, Stage Manager, employed by CBS, and Christine Lai-Johnson,
    employed by CBS and other employees of CBS and Bell-Phillip.” At most, Weaver’s
    earlier and mistaken response was mere negligence. As noted, the malice standard, not
    negligence, governs whether the common-interest privilege applies. (See Noel v. River
    Hills Wilsons, Inc., 
    supra,
     113 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1370-1372.)
    To further support the point that Weaver’s discovery response shows he lacks
    credibility, Pelz relies on Donchin v. Guerrero (1995) 
    34 Cal.App.4th 1832
    , a dog-attack
    case, arguing evidence of a witness’s “falsehood creates a triable issue as to any fact to be
    proved by the testimony of that witness.” (Capitalization omitted.) Donchin held that a
    false exculpatory statement of the landlord’s lack of knowledge of the dogs’ existence at
    the premises is evidence of a guilty conscience. (Id. at p. 1841.)
    In Donchin, the landlord initially denied, but later admitted that he knew the dogs
    lived on the rental property. (Donchin v. Guerrero, supra, 34 Cal.App.4th at p. 1835.)
    The initial denial, which the court termed a “false exculpatory statement,” was evidence
    attempting to show he had no liability. A false exculpatory statement is “evidence of a
    declarant’s state of mind and demonstrates his knowledge he has committed a wrong.”
    (Id. at p. 1841.). The court held that when combined with the other evidence concerning
    the dogs’ behavior, a trier of fact could infer that when the landlord lied about knowing
    that the dogs were living at the property, his denial may be used to infer that the landlord
    had a guilty conscience about the dogs’ dangerous propensities. (Id. at pp. 1842-1845.)
    Donchin does not apply here because Weaver’s initial interrogatory response is
    not a false exculpatory statement, tending to show a guilty conscience. Whether Weaver
    did or did not talk to Yale or Lai-Johnson has no bearing on proving or disproving
    malice. Weaver’s initial interrogatory response, followed by his amended response does
    not lead to an inference that the statements in the March 18 memorandum were recklessly
    made without reasonable belief in their truth.
    12
    As for Weaver’s statement about Pelz, Weaver testified that he could not recall
    whether either Lawrence-Miller or Holt told him that Pelz “needs to go,” but Weaver
    formed that opinion. Weaver testified: “Jody Lawrence had . . . told us, Rhonda and me,
    in the meeting, that she had spoken with Carlos [Pelz] about many of these issues many
    times . . . and that was my speculation, that, you know . . . there had been no
    change . . . in many of these issues, and . . . it was my speculation that it was time for him
    to – to be done.” This testimony (and the other testimony cited on this point) does not
    raise a triable issue of fact as to whether Weaver acted with malice. Weaver’s
    speculation and opinion was reasonably based upon his conversations with Pelz’s
    supervisors. (See Noel v. Rivers Hills Wilsons, Inc., 
    supra,
     113 Cal.App.4th at p. 1371.)
    (4).   Exaggerated Tone of the March 18 Memorandum
    Finally, Pelz contends Weaver’s exaggerations and tone in the March 18
    memorandum raise a triable issue of fact as to the existence of malice. In support of this
    contention, Pelz principally relies on Brewer v. Second Baptist Church (1948) 
    32 Cal.2d 791
    , in which the Supreme Court noted that although malice may not be inferred from
    communicating a defamatory statement, the tenor of the defamatory statement may be
    evidence of malice. (Id. at p. 799.) In Brewer, the church’s charges to expel the
    plaintiffs after they had joined a lawsuit against the church were designed to injure their
    reputation in the church and to cause them to be shunned and avoided. (Id. at p. 796.)
    The plaintiffs were charged with “having ‘revealed themselves as totally unworthy of the
    continued confidence, respect, and fellowship of a great church,’ ” and “willing to lie in
    order to injure their church.” (Id. at p. 796.) One of the plaintiffs was charged with a
    “vile spirit,” and both were associated with one who “ ‘under the role of a minister of
    Jesus, is one of Satan’s choicest tools.’ ” (Ibid.)
    The tenor of the March 18 memorandum addressing Pelz’s poor job performance
    is quite different from the church’s charges in the Brewer case. Pelz quotes the following
    statements that undercut his reliance on Brewer: (1) “When he does cover the stage he is
    often not on stage”; (2) “[m]ost of the women on the show prefer to have their hair done
    by others on the staff”; and (3) “[a]s key, an essential part of the job is continuity.” Pelz
    13
    claims these statements are untrue and contradicted, but unlike charges of a “vile spirit,”
    and a “liar,” no inference can be drawn from the tenor of the March 18 memorandum to
    create a triable issue of fact as to malice.5
    Because Pelz did not raise a triable issue of fact to show the existence of malice,
    the BPP defendants established the common-interest privilege was a complete defense to
    the complaint. Accordingly, summary judgment was properly granted.
    4. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Granting the CBS Defendants’ Motion
    The slander action against the CBS defendants is based upon Weaver’s and
    Friedman’s testimony that Lawrence-Miller made comments regarding Pelz’s job
    performance. There is no dispute that Lawrence-Miller’s communications fall within the
    common-interest privilege.6 (King v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 
    supra,
     152 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 440.)
    a. Russell v. Geis Does Not Defeat the Common-Interest Privilege
    Citing Russell v. Geis (1967) 
    251 Cal.App.2d 560
    , Pelz contends that the CBS
    defendants are precluded as a matter of law from raising the common-interest privilege
    defense because Lawrence-Miller did not believe the statements attributed to her were
    actually true. In Russell v. Geis, the court held that when a defendant testified that he did
    not believe the allegedly defamatory statement to be true, he may not assert the privilege.
    (Id. at pp. 566-567.) “[T]he reason for the rule is that ‘there is no social advantage in the
    5
    We have considered and rejected the remaining arguments Pelz raises in his briefs
    to attempt to establish a triable issue of fact to show the existence of malice.
    6
    The CBS defendants also moved for summary judgment based on Jensen v.
    Hewlett-Packard Co., 
    supra,
     
    14 Cal.App.4th 958
    , which held that unless an “employer’s
    performance evaluation falsely accuses an employee of criminal conduct, lack of
    integrity, dishonesty, incompetence or reprehensible personal characteristics or
    behavior . . . , it cannot support a cause of action for libel.” (Id. at p. 965.) The trial court
    did not grant the motion on this ground. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (m)(2).) We
    need not reach this issue, having concluded the motion was properly granted on the
    common-interest privilege defense.
    14
    publication of a deliberate lie, the privilege is lost if the defendant does not believe what
    he says.’ ” (Id. at p. 566.)
    While Pelz argues that Lawrence-Miller denied making the statements in the
    March 18 memorandum or believing the statements to be true, his focus is on Lawrence-
    Miller’s responses to deposition questions in which she was asked whether she used the
    specific phrases in the March 18 memorandum. Lawrence-Miller did not draft the
    March 18 memorandum, nor does the memorandum specifically attribute verbatim any of
    these statements to Lawrence-Miller. It is undisputed that Lawrence-Miller had
    criticisms concerning Pelz’s performance and discussed some of her concerns about Pelz
    with Weaver.7 Lawrence-Miller also testified that to her knowledge, there was nothing
    false or incorrect in the March 18 memorandum. For these reasons, Russell v. Geis,
    supra, 
    251 Cal.App.2d 560
    , is inapposite.
    b. Pelz Did Not Meet His Burden to Establish a Triable Issue of Fact
    Pelz raises several arguments to contend he has presented sufficient evidence to
    raise a triable issue of fact that Lawrence-Miller acted with malice when she discussed
    Pelz’s performance issues with Weaver. None has merit.
    (1).    The Primary Motivation for Lawrence-Miller’s Comments
    Pelz contends that like Weaver, Lawrence-Miller’s comments were not motivated
    for the purpose of discussing Pelz’s job performance but to punish him because he
    declined her request to answer her phone during the Show’s hiatus. The cited evidence
    does not support this contention. Pelz testified that Lawrence-Miller was upset with him,
    but he did not know why, stating “that’s the only thing I can think of.” Pelz’s suspicions
    of improper motives primarily based upon conjecture and speculation are not sufficient to
    raise a triable issue of fact.
    7
    Lawrence-Miller recalls a telephone conversation with Weaver, but Weaver and
    Friedman recall a person-to-person meeting. This testimony only establishes that
    Lawrence-Miller cannot recall where she talked to Weaver or if she also talked to
    Friedman, which is not a material fact.
    15
    (2).    Reasonable Grounds for Belief
    Pelz next contends Lawrence-Miller had no reasonable grounds for her criticism
    of his performance because during this period he won back-to-back Emmy awards.
    Lawrence-Miller testified that (1) Pelz was not handling his responsibilities as key hair
    stylist; (2) he left early, which was inconsistent with his role as a key hair stylist; (3) she
    received complaints that he could not be located, which caused problems on the set;
    (4) other hair stylists told her that Pelz was not carrying his fair share of the work load;
    and (5) the Show’s actresses preferred to have their hair done by other stylists.
    Lawrence-Miller’s concerns about Pelz’s job performance were either based on her own
    personal observations or were reported to her by other CBS employees working on the
    Show. Pelz has presented contradictory evidence, including his Emmy awards, to show
    these criticisms were unfounded or false, but for purposes of establishing malice, the
    issue is whether the statements were made recklessly without reasonable belief in their
    truth. (McGrory v. Applied Signal Technology, Inc., 
    supra,
     212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1540.)
    Pelz has not met his burden to raise a triable issue of fact.
    (3).    Lawrence-Miller’s Falsehoods
    Pelz also contends he has established a triable issue of fact as to the existence of
    malice because Lawrence-Miller made false statements (1) denying the comments
    attributed to her by Friedman and Weaver, and (2) denying meeting with Weaver to
    discuss Pelz’s performance issues.
    First, Pelz’s numerous citations to the record do not support his contention that
    Lawrence-Miller categorically denied she had discussed Pelz’s performance issues with
    Weaver, or she did not believe the content of the March 18 memorandum. Lawrence-
    Miller denied making or believing Weaver’s statement in his e-mail to Bell that Pelz had
    “become bitter, is bad for morale, and his work is inadequate.” This statement was
    Weaver’s opinion and was not attributed to Lawrence-Miller. As to the contents of the
    March 18 memorandum, Lawrence-Miller denied making certain statements as phrased
    and denied using certain phrases to describe her concerns regarding Pelz’s performance,
    but she did not deny the truth of statements made in Weaver’s March 18 memorandum.
    16
    As previously noted, many of Lawrence-Miller’s concerns regarding Pelz’s performance
    were points Weaver raised in the March 18 memorandum.
    Second, Lawrence-Miller does not remember having a person-to-person meeting
    with Weaver and Friedman. The place of the discussion or whether Friedman was
    present is not a material fact tending to raise a triable issue as to the existence of malice.
    (4).    False Exculpatory Statement
    Citing Donchin v. Guerrero, supra, 
    34 Cal.App.4th 1832
    , Pelz contends
    Lawrence-Miller’s deposition testimony creates a triable issue of fact as to her credibility
    because she denied “having made the accusations, thinking they were true, or even
    hearing of them from others which Friedman testified came from Lawrence-Miller.”
    What Friedman testified to or attributed to Lawrence-Miller is not relevant to the
    Donchin analysis as to Lawrence-Miller’s liability.8
    Because Pelz did not raise a triable issue of fact to show the existence of malice,
    the CBS defendants established the defense of the common-interest privilege.
    Accordingly, summary judgment was properly granted.
    8
    We have considered and rejected the remaining arguments Pelz raises in his briefs
    to attempt to establish a triable issue of fact to show the existence of malice.
    17
    DISPOSITION
    The judgments are affirmed. The parties are to bear their own costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    ALDRICH, J.
    We concur:
    CROSKEY, Acting P. J.
    KITCHING, J.
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B245043

Filed Date: 12/19/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021