Cannella v. Brennan, No. 2:12-CV-1247 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 5,
2014)
Plaintiffs First Senior Financial Group, Phillip Cannella,
and Joann Small sued “Watchdog,” an anonymous blogger, and Doe defendants,
ultimately identifying Krista Brennan as Watchdog and the Doe defendants as Granite
Financial Solutions (a competitor of First Senior) and its employee Harry
McWilliams. First Senior is an insurance
agency, and Cannella and Small are its employees. Plaintiffs alleged that Brennan created TruthaboutCannella.com
and TruthaboutCannella.net to disseminate false and misleading statements about
plaintiffs and their services. They sued
for false advertising under the Lanham Act, tortious interference, civil
conspiracy, and unfair competition.
The court rejected defendants’ arguments that the Lanham Act
claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations. The Lanham Act has no limitations period
itself, but subjects claims to principles of equity. For limitations purposes, this means looking
to the analogous state law. Here, the
court rejected the argument that the one-year limitations period for defamation
applied. Rather, the six-year “catch all” statute of limitations under the Pennsylvania
Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (UTPCPL), was most analogous
to Lanham Act violations. The UTPCPL
governs unfair competition and deceptive business practices, including
disparaging another’s goods and services.
Given that the parties were competitors, that the harm alleged was not
just reputational but economic, and that the defamation allegedly occurred in
commercial speech, this was the appropriate analogy.
On the merits, plaintiffs sufficiently pled the elements of
a false advertising claim. They
identified four specific statements:
(a) “They take
every shortcut in financial planning they can certainly, why wouldn’t they take
shortcuts for cosmetic vain purposes too? Speaks to character ... or lack
thereof.”
(b) “These are the
days Cannella is most dangerous. His game is fear peddling. He motivates people
to buy from him through creating and fostering fear.”
(c) “999am [sic]
is willingly embracing a known criminal as an advertiser who continues to abuse
elderly victims.”
(d) “I wouldn’t
put it past old Slippery Phil, Captain Crash Proof if he showed the agents one
app and filed another to get them off of the application and so he KNOWS he
doesn’t to pay them.”
Defendants alleged that these statements were opinion, not
factual claims. The court found that at
least some were explicitly factual and verifiable, such as the claims that
plaintiffs took “shortcuts” in the financial planning business and that
Cannella was a “known criminal” who “abuse[s] elderly victims.” (That statement didn’t specifically use
Cannella’s name, but since it was posted on a website with the URL TruthaboutCannella.com,
context made it plausible that this was a reference to him.) Comment: I wonder whether there really are
industry standards against which one could identify “shortcuts.” Also, sometimes statements about criminality
are taken to be mere hyperbole, especially online/anonymous statements—but that may be better left for a jury, or at
least summary judgment.
The court then said that even assuming these statements were
ambiguous and not literally false, plaintiffs met their burden by pleading
consumer deception. They pled that
prospective customers cancelled appointments and existing clients terminated
contracts as a result of defendants’ statements. That was enough to plead misleadingness. (This goes to an issue not often
discussed—sometimes the fact/opinion line may be a factual question rather than
one of law. If reasonable consumers
could take away a specific factual claim or a general opinion from a statement,
then showing that they took away a specific (false) factual claim should
justify liability. But what if they took
away a general negative opinion and nonetheless relied on it, because consumers
do not behave completely like rational automatons? Is harm enough to show falsifiability, or
does harm sometimes just mean nonredressable, opinion-based harm?)
Turning to “commercial advertising or promotion”: the test
for commercial speech looks to whether the speech is an ad, whether it refers
to a specific product or service, and whether the speaker has an economic
motivation for the speech. Content is
the most significant factor, and statements “related solely to the economic
interests of the speaker and its audience” are indications of “commercial speech.” Plaintiffs sufficiently pled that the
defendants, their commercial competitors, used the website to damage
plaintiffs’ reputation and in turn attract clients. That sufficed.
Nor was the website too sporadic or isolated to count as
advertising or promotion; it allegedly contained over one hundred statements
about plaintiffs. The court also noted
allegations that “[t]he website was accessible world-wide and was the first
result to appear in a Google search for ‘Phil Cannella,’ ‘Joann Small,’ or ‘First
Senior.’” Comment: Not that I think this should make a difference, but note the
misunderstanding of how Google search results are varyingly presented to
individuals—we don’t know that it’s the first result to appear when other
people search. If plaintiffs had been
investigating the site before, it would probably come up higher for them than
for people newly curious about plaintiffs. FWIW, it’s not the first result for
“Phil Cannella” when I search, but Ripoff Report is; it’s not on the first page
for “Joann Small,” nor “First Senior,” which for me brings up mostly entirely
unrelated entities.
Plaintiffs alleged that at least 30-50 customers cited the
website as a reason to cancel their business relationships with Plaintiffs. Defendants
argued that there was no allegation that the four identified statements were
the cause of that loss, but the court found it to be a reasonable inference at
this stage that they were at least a partial cause.
Tortious interference: defendants argued that plaintiffs
shouldn’t be able to circumvent the one-year defamation limitations period by
recharacterizing their allegations as stating a claim for tortious interference
when it was essentially defamation. But
when the gravamen of a claim was injury to economic interests or when the
alleged non-defamation-related facts sufficiently supported a tortious
interference claim, that reasoning didn’t apply. The former rationale applied here and
justified using the two-year limitations period for tortious interference.
However, plaintiffs failed to plead sufficient facts to
support tortious interference with existing contractual relationships: they
didn’t identify the people with whom they had contractual relations. While they
did identify two insurance carriers allegedly contacted by defendants, they
didn’t allege that the carriers did in fact terminate their business
relationships. References to “existing
clients” or “various vendors” were insufficient to identify specific contracts.
By contrast, plaintiffs did sufficiently plead tortious
interference with prospective contractual relations, which by definition are
more difficult to identify precisely and thus require less specificity. More than a “mere hope” of a future contract
is required—instead, a plaintiff needs an objectively reasonable probability
that a contract would come into existence, based on the parties’ then-current
dealings. Pleading that 30-50 potential
customers cancelled follow-up appointments or decided not to do business with
plaintiffs based on the website was sufficient to be more than a mere hope.
These pleadings indicated that “potential customers were interested in
Plaintiffs’ products or services, scheduled second appointments, and then
cancelled these appointments in view of the contents that Defendants had posted
on their website.” (Given my personal
experience with insurance pitches, I hope that factfinding includes inquiry
into what plaintiffs counted as a showing of interest by a consumer.)
As a result of the holdings above, civil conspiracy and
unfair competition claims also survived.
3 comments:
Dear Rebecca,
As you probably know the Ninth Circuit does not apply a SOL to the Lanham Act but, instead, uses the applicable state SOL as the benchmark for the laches presumption. Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. Nutrition Now, Inc., 304 F.3d 829, 835 (9th Cir. 2002).
Regards
Paul
Thanks for the reminder and clarification!
Just as a point of reference… This case was dropped.
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