Two More Cases Hold That Anti-SLAPP Laws Protect Consumer Reviews
By Eric Goldman
Colocation America, Inc. v. Archie Garga-Richardson, 2012 WL 6098545 (Cal. App. Ct. December 10, 2012)
Garga-Richardson was the plaintiff’s customer until they had a falling-out (over Colocation America’s termination of Garga-Richardson’s colocation account after he allegedly launched a DoS attack). He posted negative reviews all over the Internet (see, e.g., the Yelp review), including at his personal website ScamFraudAlert.com, containing the following assessment:
When dealing or conducting business with Mr. Albert Ahdoot dba Colocation America, Inc … and his related businesses or data centers, please exercise CAUTION AND CARE as Mr. Ahdoot is not a man of his word.
The parties dispute whether this posting involves an “issue of public interest.” Citing Chaker v. Mateo, the court says yes:
Consumer information is generally viewed as a matter of public interest. (Wilbanks v. Wolk, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 898.) The server hosting provided by Colocation America potentially attracted a large number of possible customers, since many if not most businesses now rely on servers for storing data and facilitating Internet connectivity. A comment (whether fair or not) on the business practices and honesty of a server hosting provider is indisputably a form of consumer information, and it therefore concerns a matter of public interest. (emphasis added)
AR Pillow Inc. v. Maxwell Payton, LLC, 2:11-cv-01962-RAJ (W..D. Wash. Dec. 4, 2012) [warning: 6MB file]
I previously blogged this dispute. The plaintiff makes foam wedge pillows to combat infant reflux. The defendant isn’t a typical consumer; instead, she resold the pillow until she decided it wasn’t advisable for her audience, so she dropped the pillow from her product line and wrote a negative review of the pillow.
The court says the review “provides a general warning to consumers visiting her website regarding her concerns with the performance of another company’s product,” and thus it qualifies as a matter of public concern. The court doesn’t expressly base this conclusion on the underlying childrens’ health issue, though that certainly didn’t hurt. Because the review qualified for anti-SLAPP protection, the court dismisses the defamation and tortious interference claims and awards the defendants their attorneys’ fees plus Washington’s statutory anti-SLAPP bonus of $10,000 per defendant (a total of $30,000).
More Reading
* Ripoff Report and Topix Postings Protected by California’s Anti-SLAPP Law–Chaker v. Mateo
* Ninth Circuit Upholds Anti-SLAPP Ruling for Blogger/Griper–Sedgwick v. Delsman
* CA Anti-SLAPP Cases Involving Consumer Reviews as Matters of Public Concern
* Dentist Review on Yelp Gets Partial Anti-SLAPP Protection–Wong v. Jing
* Recent Anti-SLAPP Developments
* Why I Support HR 4364, the Proposed Federal Anti-SLAPP Bill
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