Carey v. Siepmann ( 2021 )


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  •                                470
    Argued and submitted March 8, affirmed December 15, 2021
    Kathleen CAREY
    and Corey Goldberg,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    David SIEPMANN,
    an individual;
    McMinnville Imaging Associates, LLC,
    an Oregon limited liability company;
    and McMinnville Imaging Associates, LLP,
    an Oregon limited liability partnership,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Yamhill County Circuit Court
    18CV53480; A172446
    502 P3d 757
    Cynthia L. Easterday, Judge.
    James Mills argued the cause and filed the briefs for
    appellants.
    Matthew J. Kalmanson argued the cause for respondents.
    Also on the brief was Hart Wagner LLP.
    Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge,
    and Aoyagi, Judge.
    PER CURIAM
    Affirmed.
    Cite as 
    316 Or App 470
     (2021)                                          471
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiffs appeal a judgment dismissing their
    claims for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional
    distress (IIED), and loss of consortium, arising out of an
    employment-related dispute with defendants. For the fol-
    lowing reasons, we affirm.
    The following is a summary of the historical facts
    alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint. Plaintiff Carey received her
    Oregon medical license in 2016. In March 2017, she began
    working at McMinnville Imaging Associates, LLP (MIA)—
    initially part-time and later full-time—which was her first
    job as a radiologist. On September 15, 2017, Carey had a neg-
    ative interaction with her supervisor, Siepmann, who was
    dissatisfied with her work. Siepmann berated Carey about
    errors in her work to the point that she cried, and he sent her
    home early. Later that day, Carey voluntarily resigned her
    privileges at a nearby hospital.1 Carey’s employment agree-
    ment with MIA provided that the employment relationship
    would “terminate immediately” in a number of events, one
    of which was her losing privileges to practice at the nearby
    hospital. On September 19, 2017, Siepmann sent an email to
    Carey, in which he acknowledged her resignation of hospital
    privileges and told her that he had “officially terminated”
    her employment with MIA as of September 16, 2017.
    In October 2017, Carey obtained new employment
    with a hospital system in Arizona, with an expected start
    date in 2018. Carey sought to obtain a temporary job for the
    interim, applying first for a job in South Dakota and later
    for a job in Astoria. In connection with the South Dakota
    application, Siepmann completed an employment verifica-
    tion form, answering “no” to a yes/no question as to whether
    Carey’s job performance had been satisfactory and stating,
    in response to a request for explanation, “Employment ter-
    minated because of quality concerns and report accuracy
    issues.” Two weeks later, Siepmann sent a letter detailing
    the circumstances of Carey’s termination, which plaintiffs
    describe as “a belated attempt to correct his false statement
    1
    According to the complaint, Carey resigned her privileges “due to her
    dissatisfaction with the abusive working environment created by [Siepmann].”
    There is no allegation that she communicated that reason to Siepmann or MIA.
    472                                       Carey v. Siepmann
    on the employment verification form, by acknowledging
    the true circumstances of [Carey’s] separation from MIA.”
    Carey did not get the South Dakota job. As for the Astoria
    job, Siepmann submitted an employment verification form
    that stated that there were quality concerns regarding
    Carey’s work. Carey nonetheless got that job. Carey worked
    in Astoria for a month, before starting her permanent job in
    Arizona in April 2018.
    Carey and her husband, Goldberg, filed this action
    against defendants. In the operative complaint, Carey
    asserted claims for defamation and IIED, and Goldberg
    asserted a claim for loss of consortium. Defendants moved to
    dismiss all claims under ORCP 21 A(8), for “failure to state
    ultimate facts sufficient to constitute a claim.” The trial
    court granted the motion and dismissed all three claims
    with prejudice.
    Plaintiffs appeal, raising three assignments of error,
    one as to each claim. We review the dismissal of a claim
    under ORCP 21 A(8) for legal error. Chang v. Chun, 
    305 Or App 144
    , 147, 470 P3d 410 (2020). The question is whether
    the allegations in the complaint are legally sufficient to give
    rise to the stated claim, when those allegations are viewed
    in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, including any rea-
    sonable inferences, and accepted as true. 
    Id.
    Defamation claim. The trial court dismissed Carey’s
    defamation claim on the ground that Siepmann’s statements
    on the employment verification forms (the alleged defama-
    tion) were protected by “absolute privilege.” See Ramstead
    v. Morgan, 
    219 Or 383
    , 387-88, 
    347 P2d 594
     (1959) (explain-
    ing that statements made in quasi-judicial proceedings are
    absolutely privileged, so as to ensure that people may speak
    freely). Carey contests the applicability of that doctrine in
    these circumstances. Defendants defend the court’s ruling
    on absolute privilege, while also asserting “qualified privi-
    lege” as an alternative basis to affirm. See Lewis v. Carson
    Oil Company, 
    204 Or App 99
    , 103, 127 P3d 1207, rev den,
    
    341 Or 245
     (2006) (“A qualified privilege to make a defama-
    tory statement arises when the statement is made to protect
    the interests of the plaintiff’s employer or it is on a subject
    of mutual concern to the defendant and those to whom it
    Cite as 
    316 Or App 470
     (2021)                                                    473
    is made.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)); ORS 30.178
    (regarding qualified privilege for employers to disclose
    information about a former employee’s job performance to
    a prospective new employer). Defendants argued qualified
    privilege in their motion to dismiss, but the trial court did
    not rule on it.
    Carey acknowledges that Siepmann’s statements are
    subject to qualified privilege, but she contends that the facts
    contained in the complaint, if proved, would allow a jury
    to find that Siepmann “lied” on the employment verification
    forms, thereby abusing the privilege and losing its protec-
    tion. See Lewis, 
    204 Or App at 104
     (stating that, “[w]hen
    a defendant properly raises a qualified privilege, the plain-
    tiff has the burden of proving that the defendant lost that
    privilege,” and describing how the privilege may be lost).
    “ ‘Unless only one conclusion can be drawn from the evi-
    dence, the determination of the question whether the privi-
    lege has been abused is for the jury.’ ” Murphy v. Harty, 
    238 Or 228
    , 248, 
    393 P2d 206
     (1964) (quoting Prosser on Torts
    (2d ed) 629 § 95).2
    We need not decide the correctness of the trial
    court’s ruling on absolute privilege. At the least, Siepmann’s
    statements on the employment verification forms were
    protected by qualified privilege, and we agree with defen-
    dants that the facts contained in the complaint would be
    insufficient, if proved, to establish abuse of the privilege.
    The trial court did not err in dismissing the defamation
    claim.3
    2
    Because of the burden shifting involved, qualified-privilege issues are often
    decided on summary judgment, rather than a motion to dismiss. See, e.g., Lewis,
    
    204 Or App at 104
     (affirming grant of summary judgment to the defendant,
    where the plaintiff argued that a jury could find that the defendant abused the
    qualified privilege, but the evidence was insufficient to create a triable fact issue).
    In this case, the parties agree that the dispositive question is whether the factual
    allegations in plaintiffs’ second amended complaint, if proved, would allow a jury
    to find abuse. Because the parties agree on the framing of the issue, we address
    the issue as framed. We need not consider and express no opinion on whether the
    court’s ruling might be better characterized as a summary judgment ruling.
    3
    The qualified-privilege issue was argued below and is properly before us as
    an alternative basis to affirm. See Sherertz v. Brownstein Rask, 
    314 Or App 331
    ,
    341, 498 P3d 850 (2021) (summarizing when and how we consider alternative
    bases to affirm). In other circumstances, we might affirm the dismissal of the def-
    amation claim but remand for the trial court to consider allowing leave to amend
    474                                                   Carey v. Siepmann
    IIED claim. The trial court dismissed Carey’s IIED
    claim for failure to allege facts sufficient to state a claim.
    Carey argues that her allegations were legally sufficient. We
    agree with the trial court that they were not. The trial court
    did not err in dismissing Carey’s IIED claim.
    Loss-of-consortium claim. The trial court dismissed
    Goldberg’s loss-of-consortium claim for failure to allege
    facts sufficient to state a claim. Goldberg makes a mini-
    mally developed argument that his allegations were legally
    sufficient. We agree with the trial court that they were not.
    The trial court did not err in dismissing Goldberg’s loss-of-
    consortium claim.
    Affirmed.
    the complaint. Here, however, plaintiffs were already given the opportunity to
    amend after their first amended complaint was dismissed on immunity grounds,
    the trial court expressly denied further leave to amend because plaintiffs “had
    three opportunities to allege facts in their complaint sufficient to establish a
    claim but were unable to do so,” and plaintiffs have not assigned error to that
    ruling.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A172446

Filed Date: 12/15/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024