Neumann v. Liles ( 2016 )


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  • 706	                           March 3, 2016	                           No. 11
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    Carol C. NEUMANN
    and Dancing Deer Mountain, LLC,
    an Oregon domestic limited liability company,
    Respondents on Review,
    v.
    Christopher LILES,
    Petitioner on Review.
    (CC 121103711; CA A149982; SC S062575)
    On review from the Court of Appeals.*
    Argued and submitted May 12, 2015.
    Linda K. Williams, Portland, argued the cause and filed
    the brief for petitioner on review.
    No appearance contra.
    Derek D. Green, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Portland,
    filed the brief for amici curiae Reporters Committee for
    Freedom of the Press, City of Roses Newspaper Company (dba
    Willamette Week), Gannett Co., Inc., Meredith Corporation
    (dba KPTV), Oregon Association of Broadcasters, Oregon
    Newspaper Publishers Association, Oregon Public Broad-
    casting, Oregonian Publishing Company LLC (dba The
    Oregonian Media Group), and Western Communications,
    Inc. (dba The Bulletin of Bend).
    Daniel W. Meek, Portland, filed the brief for amicus cur-
    iae Policy Initiatives Group.
    Before Balmer, Chief Justice, and Kistler, Walters,
    Landau, Brewer, and Baldwin, Justices, and Linder, Senior
    Judge.**
    ______________
    **  Appeal from Lane County Circuit Court, Charles D. Carlson, Judge. 
    261 Or App 567
    , 323 P3d 521 (2014)
    **  Nakamoto, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision of this
    case.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	707
    BALDWIN, J.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the
    case is remanded to the Court of Appeals. The decision of
    the circuit court that dismissed plaintiffs’ defamation claim
    is affirmed.
    Case Summary: Plaintiffs, a wedding venue and the owner thereof, filed a def-
    amation claim against defendant after defendant posted a negative review of the
    venue on a publicly accessible website. Defendant filed a special motion to strike
    under Oregon’s anti-SLAPP statute, ORS 31.150. The trial court granted the
    motion and dismissed plaintiffs’ defamation claim without prejudice. The Court
    of Appeals reversed. Held: Defendant’s online review is an expression of opinion
    on matters of public concern that is protected under the First Amendment.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded to
    the Court of Appeals. The decision of the circuit court that dismissed plaintiffs’
    defamation claim is affirmed.
    708	                                           Neumann v. Liles
    BALDWIN, J.
    This case requires us to decide whether a defama-
    tory statement made in an online business review is enti-
    tled to protection under the First Amendment. To make that
    decision, we follow the test developed by the Ninth Circuit
    in Unelko Corp. v. Rooney, 912 F2d 1049 (9th Cir 1990), cert
    den, 
    499 US 961
     (1991), to determine whether a reason-
    able factfinder could conclude that an allegedly defamatory
    statement touching on a matter of public concern implies
    an assertion of objective fact and is therefore not consti-
    tutionally protected. Applying that test, we conclude that
    the online review at issue in this case is entitled to First
    Amendment protection. We therefore reverse the decision of
    the Court of Appeals to the contrary and remand the case to
    the Court of Appeals to resolve a disputed attorney fee issue.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff Carol Neumann (Neumann) is an owner
    of plaintiff Dancing Deer Mountain, LLC (Dancing Deer
    Mountain), a business that arranges and performs wed-
    ding events at a property owned by Neumann. Defendant,
    Christopher Liles (Liles), was a wedding guest who attended
    a wedding and reception held on Neumann’s property in
    June 2010. Two days after those events, Liles posted a neg-
    ative review about Neumann and her business on Google
    Reviews, a publicly accessible website where individuals
    may post comments about services or products they have
    received.
    The review was entitled, “Disaster!!!!! Find a differ-
    ent wedding venue,” and stated:
    “There are many other great places to get married, this is
    not that place! The worst wedding experience of my life!
    The location is beautiful the problem is the owners. Carol
    (female owner) is two faced, crooked, and was rude to mul-
    tiple guest[s]. I was only happy with one thing. It was a
    beautiful wedding, when it wasn’t raining and Carol and
    Tim stayed away. The owners did not make the rules clear
    to the people helping with set up even when they saw some-
    thing they didn’t like they waited until the day of the wed-
    ding to bring it up. They also changed the rules as they saw
    fit. We were told we had to leave at 9pm, but at 8:15 they
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	709
    started telling the guests that they had to leave immedi-
    ately. The ‘bridal suite’ was a tool shed that was painted
    pretty, but a shed all the same. In my opinion [s]he will find
    a why [sic] to keep your $500 deposit, and will try to make
    you pay even more.”
    A few months later, Neumann and Dancing Deer
    Mountain filed a defamation claim for damages against
    Liles.1 Liles then filed a special motion to strike under ORS
    31.150, Oregon’s Anti-Strategic Lawsuits Against Public
    Participation (anti-SLAPP) statute.2 Specifically, Liles
    based his motion on provisions of ORS 31.150(2) relating to
    cases involving statements presented “in a place open to the
    public or a public forum in connection with an issue of public
    interest” or “other conduct in furtherance of * * * the con-
    stitutional right of free speech in connection with a public
    issue or an issue of public interest.” ORS 31.150(2)(c), (d). In
    response, Neumann and Dancing Deer Mountain submit-
    ted evidence to support a prima facie case of defamation, as
    required by ORS 31.150(3).
    After a hearing, the trial court allowed Liles’s motion
    to strike and entered a judgment of dismissal of Neumann’s
    defamation claim without prejudice. ORS 31.150(1) (so pro-
    viding when trial court grants special motion to strike).
    Neumann appealed, assigning error to the trial court’s
    ruling.
    The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, rea-
    soning that “the evidence submitted by plaintiffs, if credited,
    would permit a reasonable factfinder to rule in Neumann’s
    favor on the defamation claim, and the evidence submitted by
    [Liles] does not defeat Neumann’s claim as a matter of law.”
    Neumann v. Liles, 
    261 Or App 567
    , 575, 323 P3d 521 (2014).
    The court focused its analysis on whether Liles’s statements
    were capable of a defamatory meaning—that is, whether his
    statements falsely ascribed to Neumann conduct incompati-
    ble with the proper conduct of a wedding venue operator. 
    Id.
    1
    Although Neumann and Dancing Deer Mountain asserted additional
    claims against Liles, only the trial court’s dismissal of the defamation claim was
    challenged by Neumann and Dancing Deer Mountain on appeal. See Neumann v.
    Liles, 
    261 Or App 567
    , 580 n 9, 323 P3d 521 (2014) (so explaining).
    2
    ORS 31.150 to 31.155 are set out in the appendix of this opinion.
    710	                                                     Neumann v. Liles
    at 576-77. The court concluded that several of Liles’s state-
    ments, such as his statements that Neumann was “rude to
    multiple guest[s],” that she is “crooked,” and that she “will
    find a [way] to keep your $500 deposit,” could reasonably be
    interpreted as defamatory. 
    Id.
     The court therefore concluded
    that the trial court had erred when it struck Neumann’s def-
    amation claim. Id.3
    In so concluding, the Court of Appeals rejected Liles’s
    arguments that “his statements were nonactionable opinion”
    and that “his statements are not defamatory because, in his
    view, the context of the statements demonstrates that they
    are figurative, rhetorical, or hyperbolic.” 
    Id. at 578
    . In the
    court’s view, Liles’s statements were not protected as opin-
    ion, because they “reasonably could be understood to state
    facts or imply the existence of undisclosed defamatory facts.”
    
    Id.
     The court also disagreed with Liles that his statements
    were, as a whole, hyperbolic. Rather, the court concluded
    that Liles had included various factual details in his review
    and that a reasonable reader therefore would not interpret
    his statements to be “mere hyperbole.” 
    Id. at 578-79
    .
    We allowed Liles’s petition for review to determine
    how an actionable statement of fact is distinguished from a
    constitutionally protected expression of opinion in a defama-
    tion claim and whether the context in which a statement is
    made affects that analysis.
    II. ANALYSIS
    On review, Liles argues that his online review of
    Neumann’s venue is entitled to protection under the First
    Amendment.4 Specifically, he contends that his review,
    when read in the context of informal online communication,
    is properly understood as expressing merely his subjective
    opinion about the venue that he was reviewing. He also
    3
    As we will later explain, based on its disposition, the court did not reach
    Neumann’s further argument that her claim was not subject to the provisions
    of Oregon’s anti-SLAPP statute, ORS 31.150 - 31.155. Nor did the court resolve
    Liles’s cross-assignment of error relating to the amount of attorney fees awarded
    by the trial court under that statute.
    4
    The parties have not raised the issue of whether Liles’s statements are pro-
    tected under Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution. We therefore do not
    express an opinion on that issue.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	711
    contends that the statements in his review are not prov-
    able as true or false. Regarding the words that the Court
    of Appeals concluded to be capable of defamatory meaning,
    such as “rude” and “crooked,” he argues that those words
    are too vague to imply an assertion of fact.5
    Although our determination of the legal sufficiency
    of Neumann’s defamation claim hinges on whether Liles’s
    statements are protected under the First Amendment, we
    begin our analysis by examining the common-law origins of
    the tort.
    A.  Common Law of Defamation
    This court has recognized a common-law action for
    defamation for injury to reputation for over 150 years. See
    Hurd v. Moore, 
    2 Or 85
     (1863) (false statement by defendant
    that plaintiff had burned defendant’s house). The roots of
    that tort run even deeper: the English common law had rec-
    ognized the tort of defamation long before the formation of
    the American republic. See Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co.,
    
    497 US 1
    , 11, 
    110 S Ct 2695
    , 
    111 L Ed 2d 1
     (1990) (“Since the
    latter half of the 16th century, the common law has afforded
    a cause of action for damage to a person’s reputation by the
    publication of false and defamatory statements.”) (citing L.
    Eldredge, Law of Defamation 5 (1978)).
    To establish a claim for defamation, a plaintiff
    must show that a defendant made a defamatory statement
    about the plaintiff and published the statement to a third
    party. Wallulis v. Dymowski, 
    323 Or 337
    , 342-43, 918 P2d
    755 (1996) (so holding). A defamatory statement is one that
    would subject the plaintiff “to hatred, contempt or ridicule
    * * * [or] tend to diminish the esteem, respect, goodwill or
    confidence in which [the plaintiff] is held or to excite adverse,
    derogatory or unpleasant feelings or opinions against [the
    plaintiff].” Farnsworth v. Hyde, 
    266 Or 236
    , 238, 512 P2d
    1003 (1973) (internal quotation marks omitted). In the pro-
    fessional context, a statement is defamatory if it falsely
    5
    Liles also argues that Neumann is a limited purpose public figure and was
    therefore required under the First Amendment to present evidence of actual mal-
    ice. Because we conclude, as discussed below, that Neumann’s claim is not legally
    sufficient, we do not address that argument.
    712	                                        Neumann v. Liles
    “ascribes to another conduct, characteristics or a condition
    incompatible with the proper conduct of his lawful business,
    trade, [or] profession.” Brown v. Gatti, 
    341 Or 452
    , 458, 145
    P3d 130 (2006) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Some defamatory statements are actionable per se—
    that is, without proof of pecuniary loss or special harm.
    Libel, that is, defamation by written or printed words, is
    actionable per se. Hinkle v. Alexander, 
    244 Or 271
    , 277, 417
    P2d 586 (1966) (on rehearing). Slander, which is defamation
    by spoken words, also may be actionable per se under cer-
    tain circumstances. For instance, spoken words that injure
    a plaintiff in his or her profession or trade may constitute
    slander per se. See, e.g., Wheeler v. Green, 
    286 Or 99
    , 124, 593
    P2d 777 (1979) (where defendant accuses plaintiff of miscon-
    duct or dishonesty in performance of plaintiff’s profession or
    employment, matter is “actionable without proof of specific
    harm”); see also Barnett v. Phelps, 
    97 Or 242
    , 244-45, 
    191 P 502
     (1920) (discussing classes of spoken words that are
    actionable per se).
    At early common law, defamatory statements were
    generally deemed actionable regardless of whether they were
    statements of fact or expressions of opinion. “However, due
    to concerns that unduly burdensome defamation laws could
    stifle valuable public debate, the privilege of ‘fair comment’
    was incorporated into the common law as an affirmative
    defense to an action for defamation.” Milkovich, 
    497 US at 13
    . Under the “fair comment” privilege, a statement was pro-
    tected if “it concerned a matter of public concern, was upon
    true or privileged facts, represented the actual opinion of the
    speaker, and was not made solely for the purpose of causing
    harm.” 
    Id. at 13-14
    ; see Bank of Oregon v. Independent News,
    
    298 Or 434
    , 437, 693 P2d 35, cert den, 
    474 US 826
     (1985)
    (under qualified privilege of “fair comment and criticism,”
    a defendant is not liable if publication was made in good
    faith and without malice); Peck v. Coos Bay Times Pub. Co.
    et al., 
    122 Or 408
    , 421, 
    259 P 307
     (1927) (same). The “fair
    comment” privilege thus served “to strike the appropriate
    balance between the need for vigorous public discourse and
    the need to redress injury to citizens wrought by invidious
    or irresponsible speech.” Milkovich, 
    497 US at 14
    .
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	713
    B.  First Amendment Limitations
    Since the development of the common-law privilege
    of “fair comment,” the United States Supreme Court has
    determined that the First Amendment places limits on the
    application of the state law of defamation. See Milkovich, 
    497 US at 13-17
     (summarizing common-law origins and First
    Amendment limitations on state defamation law). The pro-
    tection afforded under the First Amendment to statements of
    opinion on matters of public concern reached what one court
    called its “high-water mark” in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
    
    418 US 323
    , 
    94 S Ct 2997
    , 
    41 L Ed 2d 789
     (1974). Keohane
    v. Stewart, 882 P2d 1293, 1298 (Colo 1994), cert den, 
    513 US 1127
     (1995) (so characterizing the Supreme Court’s opinion
    in Gertz). In Gertz, the United States Supreme Court stated
    in dictum:
    “Under the First Amendment there is no such thing as a
    false idea. However pernicious an opinion may seem, we
    depend for its correction not on the conscience of judges and
    juries but on the competition of other ideas. But there is no
    constitutional value in false statements of fact.”
    
    418 US at 339-40
     (footnote omitted). A majority of state and
    federal courts interpreted Gertz to have announced that
    expressions of opinion were absolutely privileged under the
    First Amendment. See, e.g., Yetman v. English, 168 Ariz 71,
    75, 811 P2d 323, 327 (1991) (acknowledging considerable
    body of federal law, emanating from Gertz dictum, “holding
    that the expression of opinion is absolutely privileged under
    the first amendment”); Keohane, 882 P2d at 1298 (“The Gertz
    dicta was read by many courts to establish that statements
    of opinion are not actionable.”); Paint Brush Corp. v. Neu,
    
    1999 SD 120
    , ¶ 42, 599 NW2d 384, 395 (1999) (“Most courts,
    including ours, apparently understood the Gertz passage to
    mean ‘opinions’ (not just ideas) are absolutely protected by
    the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.”);
    see also Rodney A. Smolla, Law of Defamation § 6:11, 6-21 (2d
    ed 1999) (noting that Gertz dictum had appeared to impose
    “upon both state and federal courts the duty, as a matter of
    constitutional obligation, to distinguish facts from opinions
    in order to provide opinions with the requisite absolute First
    Amendment protection”).
    714	                                        Neumann v. Liles
    The Supreme Court in Milkovich, however, dispelled
    the notion that it had announced a “wholesale defamation
    exemption for anything that might be labeled ‘opinion.’ ”
    
    497 US at 18
    . In that case, a newspaper published a column
    that implied that Milkovich, a high school wrestling coach,
    had lied under oath in a judicial proceeding after his team
    was involved in an altercation at a wrestling match and the
    coach’s team was placed on probation. 
    Id. at 3-5
    . Milkovich
    filed a libel action against the newspaper and a reporter,
    alleging that the defendants had accused him of committing
    the crime of perjury, thereby damaging him in his occupa-
    tion of coach and teacher. 
    Id. at 6-7
    .
    The Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ argu-
    ment that all defamatory statements that are categorized as
    “opinion” as opposed to “fact” enjoy blanket First Amendment
    protection. 
    Id. at 17-18
    . The Court clarified that the oft-cited
    passage in Gertz had been “merely a reiteration of Justice
    Holmes’ classic ‘marketplace of ideas’ concept.” 
    Id. at 18
     (cit-
    ing Abrams v. United States, 
    250 US 616
    , 630, 
    40 S Ct 17
    , 
    63 L Ed 1173
     (1919) (Holmes, J., dissenting) (“[T]he ultimate
    good desired is better reached by free trade in ideas—* * *
    the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself
    accepted in the competition of the market[.]”)). Thus, Gertz
    had not created an additional separate constitutional privi-
    lege for anything that might be labeled an “opinion.” In the
    Court’s view, such an interpretation of Gertz would “ignore
    the fact that expressions of ‘opinion’ may often imply an
    assertion of objective fact.” 
    Id.
    Ultimately, the Court refused to create a separate
    constitutional privilege for “opinion,” concluding instead
    that existing constitutional doctrine adequately protected
    the “uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” debate on public
    issues. Id. at 20-21. Under that existing doctrine, full con-
    stitutional protection is afforded to statements regarding
    matters of public concern that are not sufficiently factual to
    be capable of being proved false and statements that cannot
    reasonably be interpreted as stating actual facts. Id. at 19-20
    (citing Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps, 
    475 US 767
    ,
    
    106 S Ct 1558
    , 
    89 L Ed 2d 783
     (1986), and Hustler Magazine,
    Inc. v. Falwell, 
    485 US 46
    , 
    108 S Ct 876
    , 
    99 L Ed 2d 41
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	715
    (1988)). The dispositive question in determining whether a
    defamatory statement is constitutionally protected, accord-
    ing to the Court, is whether a reasonable factfinder could
    conclude that the statement implies an assertion of objective
    fact about the plaintiff. Id. at 21.
    Applying that rule to the facts of Milkovich, the
    Court determined that a reasonable factfinder could con-
    clude that the statements in the newspaper column implied
    a factual assertion that Milkovich had perjured himself in
    a judicial proceeding. Id. The Court considered various fac-
    tors. First, the Court noted that the column had not used
    “the sort of loose, figurative, or hyperbolic language” that
    would negate the impression that the writer was seriously
    maintaining that Milkovich had committed the crime of
    perjury. Id. Second, the Court concluded the “general tenor
    of the article” did not negate that impression. Id. Third, in
    the Court’s view, the accusation that Milkovich had com-
    mitted perjury was “sufficiently factual to be susceptible of
    being proved true or false.” Id. Accordingly, the Court held
    that the column did not enjoy constitutional protection.
    The analytical response of both lower federal courts
    and state courts to Milkovich has been varied. See David A.
    Elder, Defamation: A Lawyer’s Guide § 8:15 (2003) (noting
    that courts have interpreted Milkovich in “widely varying
    ways,” from viewing Milkovich as not changing the law but
    rather merely ensconcing pre-Milkovich opinion-fact crite-
    ria to viewing Milkovich as effectively overruling existing
    doctrine). Many courts have concluded that, although the
    Court in Milkovich rejected a strict dichotomy between
    fact and opinion, the Court left the constitutional frame-
    work otherwise intact. Those courts generally have con-
    tinued to apply the factors that they had developed before
    Milkovich for identifying constitutionally protected expres-
    sions of opinion. See, e.g., Yates v. Iowa West Racing Ass’n,
    721 NW2d 762, 771 (Iowa 2006) (concluding that four-
    factor test developed before Milkovich was still good law and
    applying that test). Other courts, however, have interpreted
    Milkovich as rendering obsolete the various tests that courts
    had adopted after Gertz for distinguishing fact from opin-
    ion. See, e.g., Bentley v. Bunton, 
    94 SW3d 561
    , 580-81 (Tex
    716	                                                   Neumann v. Liles
    2002) (concluding that Milkovich analysis supplants tests
    previously used by lower courts for distinguishing fact from
    opinion). Still other courts have looked to their state con-
    stitutions to determine whether liability may be imposed
    for statements of opinion. See, e.g., Vail v. The Plain Dealer
    Publ’g Co., 72 Ohio St 3d 279, 281, 
    649 NE2d 182
    , 185 (Ohio
    1995), cert den, 
    516 US 1043
     (1996) (state constitution pro-
    vides separate and independent guarantee of protection for
    opinion, ancillary to freedom of press).
    This court has had only one prior occasion to inter-
    pret and apply Milkovich, in Reesman v. Highfill, 
    327 Or 597
    ,
    965 P2d 1030 (1998). In that case, an air-show pilot brought
    a defamation claim against members of a citizens’ commit-
    tee that opposed an airport expansion. 
    Id. at 599
    . The defen-
    dants had published and distributed a flyer to residents of
    towns near the airport; that flyer included statements about
    the plaintiff and attributed certain statements to him. 
    Id. at 600-01
    . This court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that
    those statements had defamatory implications. 
    Id.
     at 604-
    06. Additionally, the court concluded that two of those state-
    ments were constitutionally protected expressions of opinion:
    “Such statements, which cannot be interpreted reasonably
    as stating actual facts, are not actionable because they are
    constitutionally protected.” 
    Id.
     at 606 (citing Milkovich, 
    497 US at 20
    , for proposition that statement of opinion relating
    to matters of public concern that does not contain a prov-
    ably false factual connotation will receive full constitutional
    protection). The court in Reesman did not, however, analyze
    Milkovich in any detail.
    This case therefore presents the first occasion for
    this court to announce a framework for analyzing whether
    a defamatory statement is entitled to First Amendment pro-
    tection.6 In the absence of existing law from this court, we
    look to the approaches of other jurisdictions for guidance. Of
    those, we find particularly persuasive the approach articu-
    lated by the Ninth Circuit.
    6
    Ordinarily, we would look to our state constitution before addressing any
    federal constitutional issues. As noted, however, the parties to this case have
    argued this issue solely under the First Amendment and have not invoked
    Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	717
    In Unelko, 912 F2d 1049, decided shortly after
    Milkovich, the Ninth Circuit addressed whether certain
    statements that Andy Rooney had made during two broad-
    casts of “60 Minutes” were protected as opinion under the
    First Amendment. The court concluded that, after Milkovich,
    “the threshold question in defamation suits is not whether
    a statement might be labeled ‘opinion,’ but rather whether
    a reasonable factfinder could conclude that the statement
    impl[ies] an assertion of objective fact.” Id. at 1053 (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted). To resolve that threshold
    question, the Ninth Circuit drew from the factors that the
    Supreme Court had considered in Milkovich and announced
    a three-part test: (1) whether the general tenor of the entire
    work negates the impression that the defendant was assert-
    ing an objective fact; (2) whether the defendant used figu-
    rative or hyperbolic language that negates that impression;
    and (3) whether the statement in question is susceptible of
    being proved true or false. Id. at 1053.
    Since Unelko, the Ninth Circuit has consistently
    used that three-part inquiry to determine whether a rea-
    sonable factfinder could conclude that a statement implies
    an assertion of objective fact. E.g., Obsidian Finance Group,
    LLC v. Cox, 740 F3d 1284, 1293 (9th Cir 2011), cert den,
    ___ US ___, 
    134 S Ct 2680
     (2014); Gardner v. Martino, 563
    F3d 981, 986-87 (9th Cir 2009); Partington v. Bugliosi, 56
    F3d 1147, 1152-53 (9th Cir 1995); see also Knievel v. ESPN,
    393 F3d 1068, 1074-75 (9th Cir 2005) (articulating court’s
    three-part “totality of the circumstances” test as examining
    (1) “the statement in its broad context, which includes the
    general tenor of the entire work, the subject of the state-
    ments, the setting, and the format of the work”; (2) “the
    specific context and content of the statements, analyzing
    the extent of figurative or hyperbolic language used and
    the reasonable expectations of the audience in that par-
    ticular situation”; and (3) “whether the statement itself is
    sufficiently factual to be susceptible of being proved true or
    false”); Underwager v. Channel 9 Australia, 69 F3d 361, 366
    (9th Cir 1995) (same).
    Several other courts also have expressly adopted
    the Ninth Circuit’s test. See, e.g., Adelson v. Harris, 973 F
    Supp 2d 467, 488-89 (SDNY 2013) (applying Ninth Circuit’s
    718	                                        Neumann v. Liles
    three-part test, noting that test, “while not binding on this
    court, is instructive”); Dodson v. Dicker, 
    306 Ark 108
    , 111,
    
    812 SW2d 97
    , 98 (1991) (concluding that “the Ninth Circuit’s
    method of analysis is a reasonable extension of the Milkovich
    doctrine” and following that method); Gold v. Harrison, 88
    Haw 94, 101, 962 P2d 353, 360 (1998), cert den, 
    526 US 1018
     (1999) (adopting “three-part test as set forth by the
    Ninth Circuit to determine whether a statement is false and
    defamatory” under First Amendment and equivalent provi-
    sion of state constitution); Marchant Inv. & Mgmt. Co. v. St.
    Anthony West Neighborhood Org., 694 NW2d 92, 96 (Minn
    Ct App 2005) (finding federal, post-Milkovich consider-
    ations instructive and applying them to determine whether
    defendant’s statements constitute defamation; citing Ninth
    Circuit’s decision in Partington, 56 F3d at 1153); Moats v.
    Republican Party of Nebraska, 281 Neb 411, 425-26, 796
    NW2d 584, 596, cert den, ___ US ___, 
    132 S Ct 251
     (2011)
    (applying three-part test to determine whether statement
    implied false assertion of fact or protected opinion; citing
    Ninth Circuit’s decision in Gardner, 563 F3d at 987).
    We agree with those courts that have found the
    Ninth Circuit’s three-part inquiry to be a sound approach
    for determining whether a statement is entitled to First
    Amendment protection. The Ninth Circuit’s test appropri-
    ately considers the totality of the relevant circumstances,
    including the context in which particular statements were
    made and the verifiability of those statements. The Ninth
    Circuit’s test is also a reasonable interpretation of Milkovich.
    It explicitly incorporates the factors that the Supreme Court
    itself considered in deciding Milkovich—i.e., the general
    tenor of a defendant’s publication, whether the publica-
    tion uses figurative or hyperbolic language, and whether
    the publication is susceptible of being proved true or false.
    See Milkovich, 
    497 US at 21-22
     (applying those factors).
    Accordingly, we follow the Ninth Circuit’s three-part frame-
    work for whether a reasonable factfinder could conclude that
    a given statement implies a factual assertion.
    In summary, to determine whether a defamatory
    statement is protected under the First Amendment, the
    first question is whether the statement involves a matter
    of public concern. If it does, then the dispositive question
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	719
    is whether a reasonable factfinder could conclude that the
    statement implies an assertion of objective fact. To answer
    that question, we adopt the following three-part inquiry:
    (1) whether the general tenor of the entire publication
    negates the impression that the defendant was asserting
    an objective fact; (2) whether the defendant used figura-
    tive or hyperbolic language that negates that impression;
    and (3) whether the statement in question is susceptible of
    being proved true or false. Under that framework, we do
    not consider the defendant’s words in isolation. Rather, we
    must consider “the work as a whole, the specific context in
    which the statements were made, and the statements them-
    selves to determine whether a reasonable factfinder could
    conclude that the statements imply a false assertion of objec-
    tive fact and therefore fall outside the protection of the First
    Amendment.” Partington, 56 F3d at 1153.
    C.  Application of First Amendment Limitations
    Before we apply that test to the facts of this case,
    we repeat, for convenience, Liles’s review of Dancing Deer
    Mountain that he posted on Google.com:
    “Disaster!!!!! Find a different wedding venue
    “There are many other great places to get married, this is
    not that place! The worst wedding experience of my life!
    The location is beautiful the problem is the owners. Carol
    (female owner) is two faced, crooked, and was rude to mul-
    tiple guest[s]. I was only happy with one thing. It was a
    beautiful wedding, when it wasn’t raining and Carol and
    Tim stayed away. The owners did not make the rules clear
    to the people helping with set up even when they saw some-
    thing they didn’t like they waited until the day of the wed-
    ding to bring it up. They also changed the rules as they saw
    fit. We were told we had to leave at 9pm, but at 8:15 they
    started telling the guests that they had to leave immedi-
    ately. The ‘bridal suite’ was a tool shed that was painted
    pretty, but a shed all the same. In my opinion [s]he will find
    a why [sic] to keep your $500 deposit, and will try to make
    you pay even more.”
    Initially, we conclude that, if false, several of Liles’s
    statements are capable of a defamatory meaning. Throughout
    his review, Liles ascribed to Neumann conduct that is
    incompatible with the proper conduct of a wedding venue
    720	                                        Neumann v. Liles
    operator and, as the Court of Appeals noted, “inconsistent
    with a positive wedding experience.” Neumann, 261 Or App
    at 577. As a result, a reasonable factfinder could conclude
    that Liles’s statements were defamatory if he or she found
    that the statements were false. See Brown, 
    341 Or at 458
    (statement is defamatory in professional context if it falsely
    ascribes to the plaintiff conduct that is incompatible with
    proper conduct of her lawful business). Moreover, because,
    if false, Liles’s defamatory statements were written and
    published—and therefore libelous—they are actionable
    per se. See Hinkle, 244 Or at 277 (libel is actionable per se).
    The question remains, however, whether they are neverthe-
    less protected under the First Amendment.
    To resolve that question, we must first determine,
    by examining the content, form, and context of Liles’s state-
    ments, whether those statements involve matters of public
    concern. Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders, 
    472 US 749
    , 761, 
    105 S Ct 2939
    , 
    86 L Ed 2d 593
     (1985) (whether
    statement addresses matter of public concern must be deter-
    mined by statement’s content, form, and context, as revealed
    by whole record). Neumann has not disputed that Liles’s
    statements involve matters of public concern, and we readily
    conclude that they do. Liles’s review was posted on a publicly
    accessible website, and the content of his review related to
    matters of general interest to the public, particularly those
    members of the public who are in the market for a wedding
    venue. See Unelko, 912 F2d at 1056 (Andy Rooney’s state-
    ment on “60 Minutes” that a consumer product “didn’t work”
    involved matter of public concern, because it “was of general
    interest and was made available to the general public”).
    Next, we must determine whether a reasonable
    factfinder could interpret Liles’s statements as implying
    assertions of objective fact. Applying the three-part inquiry
    that we articulated above, we first consider whether the gen-
    eral tenor of the entire work negates the impression that
    Liles was asserting objective facts about Neumann. From
    the outset, it is apparent that the review is describing Liles’s
    personal view of Neumann’s wedding venue, calling it a
    “Disaster!!!!!” The general tenor of the piece, beginning with
    the word “Disaster,” is that, in Liles’s subjective opinion,
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	721
    the services were grossly inadequate and that the business
    was poorly operated. However, read independently, two sen-
    tences in the review could create the impression that Liles
    was asserting an objective fact: “Carol (female owner) is two
    faced, crooked, and was rude to multiple guest[s]. * * * In
    my opinion [s]he will find a [way] to keep your $500 deposit,
    and will try to make you pay even more.” Standing alone,
    those statements could create the impression that Liles
    was asserting the fact that Neumann had wrongfully kept
    a deposit that she was not entitled to keep. In the context
    of the entire review, however, those sentences do not leave
    such an impression. Rather, the review as a whole reveals
    that Liles was an attendee at the wedding in question and
    suggests that he did not himself purchase wedding services
    from Neumann. The general tenor of the review thus reflects
    Liles’s negative personal and subjective impressions and
    reactions as a guest at the venue and negates the impression
    that Liles was asserting objective facts.
    We next consider whether Liles used figurative or
    hyperbolic language that negates the impression that he
    was asserting objective facts. Although the general tenor of
    the review reveals its hyperbolic nature more clearly than do
    the individual statements contained therein, several state-
    ments can be characterized as hyperbolic. In particular, the
    title of the review—which starts with the word “Disaster”
    and is followed by a histrionic series of exclamation marks—
    is hyperbolic and sets the tone for the review. The review
    also includes the exaggerative statements that this was
    “The worst wedding experience of [Liles’s] life!” and that
    Liles was “only happy with one thing” about the wedding.
    Such hyperbolic expressions further negate any impression
    that Liles was asserting objective facts.
    Finally, we consider whether Liles’s review is sus-
    ceptible of being proved true or false. As discussed, Liles’s
    statements generally reflect a strong personal viewpoint as
    a guest at the wedding venue, which renders them not sus-
    ceptible of being proved true or false. Again, the sentences
    quoted above referring to Neumann as “crooked” and stat-
    ing that, “[i]n my opinion [s]he will find a [way] to keep your
    $500 deposit, and will try to make you pay even more” could,
    722	                                       Neumann v. Liles
    standing alone, create the impression that Liles was assert-
    ing facts about Neumann. However, viewed in the context of
    the remainder of the review, those statements are not prov-
    ably false. The general reference to Neumann as “crooked”
    is not a verifiable accusation that Neumann committed a
    specific crime. Moreover, in light of the hyperbolic tenor of
    the review, the use of the word “crooked” does not suggest
    that Liles was seriously maintaining that Neumann had,
    in fact, committed a crime. Similarly, Liles’s statement that
    “[i]n my opinion [Neumann] will find a [way] to keep your
    $500 deposit, and will try to make you pay even more” is not
    susceptible of being proved true or false. That statement is
    explicitly prefaced with the words, “In my opinion”—thereby
    alerting the reader to the fact that what follows is a subjec-
    tive viewpoint. Of course, those words alone will not insulate
    an otherwise factual assertion from liability. See Milkovich,
    
    497 US at 19
     (simply couching statements in terms of opin-
    ion does not dispel their defamatory implications). However,
    given that Liles—as a mere guest at the wedding—presum-
    ably did not pay the deposit for the wedding involved in this
    case, his speculation that Neumann would try to keep a cou-
    ple’s deposit is not susceptible of being proved true or false.
    Based on the foregoing factors, we conclude that a
    reasonable factfinder could not conclude that Liles’s review
    implies an assertion of objective fact. Rather, his review is
    an expression of opinion on matters of public concern that
    is protected under the First Amendment. We therefore fur-
    ther conclude that the trial court did not err in dismissing
    Neumann’s claim, and we reverse the Court of Appeals
    determination to the contrary.
    D.  Remaining Attorney Fee Dispute
    As noted, the trial court granted Liles’s special
    motion to strike under the provisions of Oregon’s anti-
    SLAPP statute, ORS 31.150 to 31.155, and entered a judg-
    ment of dismissal of Neumann’s action without prejudice
    under ORS 31.150(1). SLAPP, as earlier noted, is an acro-
    nym that stands for “strategic lawsuit against public partic-
    ipation.” See generally George W. Pring, SLAPPs: Strategic
    Lawsuits Against Public Participation, 7 Pace Envtl L Rev 3
    (1990).
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	723
    Oregon’s anti-SLAPP statute creates an expedited
    procedure for dismissal of certain nonmeritorious civil
    cases without prejudice at the pleading stage. See Staten v.
    Steel, 
    222 Or App 17
    , 29, 191 P3d 778 (2008), rev den, 
    345 Or 618
     (2009) (purpose of ORS 31.150 is “to provide for the
    dismissal of claims against persons participating in pub-
    lic issues * * * before the defendant is subject to substantial
    expenses in defending against them”); Horton v. Western
    Protector Ins. Co., 
    217 Or App 443
    , 452, 176 P3d 419 (2008)
    (“[I]t is apparent that the legislature envisioned a process
    that would provide an expedited resolution to the litigation
    that is the subject of ORS 31.150 to 31.155.”) (citing legisla-
    tive history).
    On appeal, the Court of Appeals summarized the
    issues presented as follows:
    “On appeal, plaintiffs assert that the trial court erred in
    two respects: by concluding that their action was subject
    to the anti-SLAPP procedures, and by concluding that
    Neumann had not established a prima facie case of defa-
    mation. On cross-appeal, defendant contends that the trial
    court erred by awarding him less than the full amount of
    attorney fees that he requested.”
    Neumann, 261 Or App at 572. The court reached only the
    question of whether Neumann had established a prima facie
    case of defamation, concluding that she had and reversing
    the trial court on that ground. Id. at 575. The court did not
    resolve the question of whether Neumann’s action was of a
    type subject to the provisions of the anti-SLAPP statute.
    Id. at 573-74. The trial court made an award of attorney
    fees to Liles under ORS 131.152(3), after Liles prevailed
    on his special motion to strike. Further, based on its dis-
    position, the court did not reach Liles’s cross-appeal chal-
    lenging the amount of the attorney fee award in his favor
    and instead vacated that award. Id. at 580-81. Ordinarily,
    having affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Neumann’s
    action, we would not need to determine whether her claim
    was subject to the anti-SLAPP statute. Because the trial
    court awarded attorney fees under the anti-SLAPP statute,
    however, we remand the remaining issues under that stat-
    ute to the Court of Appeals for decision.
    724	                                      Neumann v. Liles
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons we have explained, we conclude that
    the trial court did not err in dismissing Neumann’s defama-
    tion claim, because Liles’s statements are entitled to First
    Amendment protection. We therefore reverse the decision of
    the Court of Appeals on that issue. We remand to the Court
    of Appeals to resolve Neumann’s argument that her claim is
    not subject to the provisions of Oregon’s anti-SLAPP statute,
    and to resolve Liles’s cross-appeal relating to the amount of
    attorney fees awarded by the trial court.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed,
    and the case is remanded to the Court of Appeals. The deci-
    sion of the circuit court that dismissed plaintiffs’ defama-
    tion claim is affirmed.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	725
    APPENDIX
    ORS 31.150 provides:
    “(1)  A defendant may make a special motion to
    strike against a claim in a civil action described in sub-
    section (2) of this section. The court shall grant the motion
    unless the plaintiff establishes in the manner provided by
    subsection (3) of this section that there is a probability that
    the plaintiff will prevail on the claim. The special motion to
    strike shall be treated as a motion to dismiss under ORCP
    21 A but shall not be subject to ORCP 21 F. Upon granting
    the special motion to strike, the court shall enter a judgment
    of dismissal without prejudice. If the court denies a special
    motion to strike, the court shall enter a limited judgment
    denying the motion.
    “(2)  A special motion to strike may be made under
    this section against any claim in a civil action that arises
    out of:
    “(a)  Any oral statement made, or written state-
    ment or other document submitted, in a legislative, execu-
    tive or judicial proceeding or other proceeding authorized by
    law;
    “(b)  Any oral statement made, or written state-
    ment or other document submitted, in connection with an
    issue under consideration or review by a legislative, execu-
    tive or judicial body or other proceeding authorized by law;
    “(c)  Any oral statement made, or written state-
    ment or other document presented, in a place open to the
    public or a public forum in connection with an issue of public
    interest; or
    “(d)  Any other conduct in furtherance of the exer-
    cise of the constitutional right of petition or the constitu-
    tional right of free speech in connection with a public issue
    or an issue of public interest.
    “(3)  A defendant making a special motion to strike
    under the provisions of this section has the initial burden of
    making a prima facie showing that the claim against which
    the motion is made arises out of a statement, document or
    conduct described in subsection (2) of this section. If the
    726	                                         Neumann v. Liles
    defendant meets this burden, the burden shifts to the plain-
    tiff in the action to establish that there is a probability that
    the plaintiff will prevail on the claim by presenting substan-
    tial evidence to support a prima facie case. If the plaintiff
    meets this burden, the court shall deny the motion.
    “(4)  In making a determination under subsection
    (1) of this section, the court shall consider pleadings and
    supporting and opposing affidavits stating the facts upon
    which the liability or defense is based.
    “(5)  If the court determines that the plaintiff has
    established a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on
    the claim:
    “(a)  The fact that the determination has been
    made and the substance of the determination may not be
    admitted in evidence at any later stage of the case; and
    “(b)  The determination does not affect the burden
    of proof or standard of proof that is applied in the proceeding.”
    ORS 31.152 provides:
    “(1)  A special motion to strike under ORS 31.150
    must be filed within 60 days after the service of the com-
    plaint or, in the court’s discretion, at any later time. A hear-
    ing shall be held on the motion not more than 30 days after
    the filing of the motion unless the docket conditions of the
    court require a later hearing.
    “(2)  All discovery in the proceeding shall be stayed
    upon the filing of a special motion to strike under ORS 31.150.
    The stay of discovery shall remain in effect until entry of the
    judgment. The court, on motion and for good cause shown,
    may order that specified discovery be conducted notwith-
    standing the stay imposed by this subsection.
    “(3)  A defendant who prevails on a special motion
    to strike made under ORS 31.150 shall be awarded reason-
    able attorney fees and costs. If the court finds that a special
    motion to strike is frivolous or is solely intended to cause
    unnecessary delay, the court shall award costs and reason-
    able attorney fees to a plaintiff who prevails on a special
    motion to strike.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 706
     (2016)	727
    “(4)  The purpose of the procedure established by
    this section and ORS 31.150 and 31.155 is to provide a defen-
    dant with the right to not proceed to trial in cases in which
    the plaintiff does not meet the burden specified in ORS
    31.150 (3). This section and ORS 31.150 and 31.155 are to
    be liberally construed in favor of the exercise of the rights of
    expression described in ORS 31.150 (2).”
    ORS 31.155 provides:
    “(1)  ORS 31.150 and 31.152 do not apply to an
    action brought by the Attorney General, a district attor-
    ney, a county counsel or a city attorney acting in an official
    capacity.
    “(2)  ORS 31.150 and 31.152 create a procedure for
    seeking dismissal of claims described in ORS 31.150 (2) and
    do not affect the substantive law governing those claims.”