Federal Court Examines Illinois’ Savings Clause, Job-Related Per Se Defamation in Warring Yelp.com Posts

Shortly after their business relationship imploded, the parties in Levin v. Abramson, 2020 WL 249649, brought dueling defamation claims in Federal court premised on March 2017 Yelp posts by the parties.

The former client defendant (the “Client”) skewered the plaintiffs lawyer and her law firm (“Lawyer”) on Yelp.com in which he braded the Lawyer, among other things, an incompetent predator who defrauded Client.

The Lawyer responded with a post of her own the same day.  She added some factual context to Client’s screed and portrayed the reason behind Client’s vitriol as a simple billing dispute.  Lawyer also added in her retort that Client had a pattern of suing all of his lawyers.

Lawyer’s Complaint alleged claims for defamation and false light invasion of privacy.  Client counter-sued for defamation, too, and added legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty claims based on Lawyer’s Yelp response.

The Lawyer moved to dismiss Client’s counterclaims and both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

Lawyer’s Motion to Dismiss

Rejecting the Lawyer’s argument that the Client’s defamation suit was untimely, the Court examined the interplay between Code Sections 13-201 [735 ILCS 5/13-201], the one-year statute of limitations for defamation suits and 13-207 [735 ILCS 5/13-207], the Illinois “savings” statute that permits otherwise time-barred counterclaims in certain circumstances.

The Court noted that each side’s alleged defamatory Yelp posts were published on March 22, 2017.  So the defamation one-year limitation period would normally expire March 22, 2018.  The Lawyer filed her defamation suit on March 8, 2018 – two weeks before the defamation statute lapsed while Client filed his counter-claim in January 2019 – almost 10 months after the limitations ran.

However, since the Lawyer’s defamation claim accrued before the defendant’s defamation counter-suit lapsed – March 22, 2018 – Section 13-207 preserved or “saved” the defendant’s countersuit even though it wasn’t filed until 10 months later.

The court then focused on whether the Client sufficiently alleged per se defamation against the Lawyer’s Rule 12(b)(6) attack.

Two salient stripes of per se defamation include statements (1) that impute a plaintiff’s inability to perform or want of integrity in the discharge of his duties of office or employment and (2) that prejudice a plaintiff or impute a lack of ability in his or her trade.  These particular per se claims must directly involve a plaintiff’s job performance;  generalized personal attacks on a plaintiff’s integrity and character are non-actionable.

The Court rejected Lawyer’s truth defense argument – that her Yelp retort was substantially true.  The Court found that whether, as Lawyer said in her post, that Client had in fact sued all of his other lawyers, lost his bid to reverse his credit card payment to Lawyer, and that his complaints to ARDC and CBA were rejected, were questions more appropriate for a summary judgment motion and not a dismissal motion.

Next, the Court addressed Lawyer’s argument that Client failed to properly allege in his Counterclaim what his job was and therefore couldn’t make out a claim that Lawyer’s Yelp response prejudiced Client in his work.  The Court held that when considering Client’s Counterclaim exhibits and supporting affidavit [both of which established that client owned a record label] Client plausibly pled Lawyer’s Yelp statements could prejudice him in his role as business owner.  On this point, the Court also credited Client’s argument that plaintiff’s Yelp response could cause the record company to lose current and future clients.

Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment

Both sides moved for summary judgment on plaintiff’s defamation and false light claims.  The Court considered Lawyer’s argument that Client’s Yelp post contained actionable facts as opposed to non-actionable opinions.

Black-letter defamation law cautions that opinions that do not misstate facts are not actionable. Whether a given statement consists of a factual (and therefore actionable) assertion, the court considers (1) whether the statement has a precise and readily understood meaning, (2) whether the statement is verifiable, and (3) whether the statement’s literary or social context signals it has factual content.

The Court found that Client’s Yelp review contained both opinion and factual elements.  The Client’s statements that Lawyer illegally charged Client’s credit card, exceeded a $4,000 ghost-writing budget by nearly $10,000, and that Client’s credit card sided with him in his dispute with Lawyer were all verifiable enough to be factual.  The Court also found that defendant’s branding plaintiff a “con artist” – normally non-actionable name-calling or opinion – rose to the level of actionable fact when viewed in context with other aspects of the Yelp review.

According to the Court, for the Lawyer to win summary judgment on her defamation claim, she must show that no reasonable jury fact could decide that Client’s Yelp statements were substantially true. Conversely, on the Client’s cross-motion, the Court noted that he must establish that a jury could only conclude that his Yelp review statements were substantially true for him to prevail on his cross-motion.

The Court found the record revealed genuine disputed fact questions as to (1) who severed the Lawyer-Client relationship and when, (2) whether the Lawyer agreed to cap her fees at $4,000 [which Lawyer disputed], (3) whether there was in fact a $4,000 budget for Lawyer’s ghost-writing work and (4) whether Lawyer had authority to charge Client’s credit card once the $4,000 retainer was exhausted.  These factual discrepancies led the Court to deny the warring summary judgment motions.

Afterwords:

Levin meticulously dissects the governing legal standards that control pleadings and dispositive motion practice in Federal courts.

The case also provides a trenchant analysis of Illinois per se defamation law, particularly the contours of job performance-related per se defamation, the truth defense, and the importance of the fact-versus-opinion analysis inherent in such a claim.

 

 

Set-off Is Counterclaim; Not Affirmative Defense – IL Court Rules in Partition Suit

Stadnyk v. Nedoshytko, 2017 IL App (1st) 152103-U views the counterclaim-versus-affirmative defense distinction through the prism of a statutory partition suit involving co-owners of a Chicago apartment building.

The plaintiff sued to declare the parties’ respective ownership rights in the subject property.  After the court issued a partition order finding the plaintiff and defendants had respective 7/8 and 1/8 ownership interests.  After the trial court ordered a partition of the property, the defendants filed affirmative defenses titled unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty and equitable accounting.  Through all the “defenses” defendants sought to recoup property maintenance and repair expenses they made through the years.

The trial court struck defendants’ affirmative defenses on the basis that they were actually counterclaims and not defenses. The court also refused to award statutory attorneys’ fees to the plaintiff.  Each side appealed.

Affirming the trial court’s striking of the defendants’ affirmative defenses, the First District initially considered the difference between an affirmative defense and a counterclaim.

Code Section 2-608 provides that counterclaims in the nature of “setoff, recoupment, cross-claim or otherwise, and whether in tort or contract, for liquidated or unliquidated damages, or for other relief, may be pleaded as a cross claim in any action, and when so pleaded shall be called a counterclaim.” 735 ILCS 5/2-608

Code Section 2-613 governs affirmative defenses and requires the pleader to allege facts supporting a given defense and gives as examples, payment, release, satisfaction, discharge, license, fraud, duress, estoppel, laches, statute of frauds, illegality, contributory negligence, want or failure of consideration. 735 ILCS 5/2-613.

Counterclaims differ from affirmative defenses in that counterclaims seek affirmative relief while affirmative defenses simply seek to defeat a plaintiff’s cause of action.  In this case, the defendants’ did not seek to defeat plaintiff’s partition suit.  Instead, the defendants sought post-partition set-offs against sale proceeds going to plaintiff for defendants’ property maintenance and repair expenses.

A setoff is a counterclaim filed by a defendant on a transaction extrinsic to the subject of plaintiff’s suit.  Since the defendants styled their affirmative defenses as sounding in setoff and accounting – two causes of action (not defenses) – the Court affirmed the trial court’s striking the defenses.

The Court also reversed the trial court’s order refusing to apportion plaintiff’s attorneys fees.  Section 17-125 of the partition statute provides that a partition plaintiff’s attorney can recover his fees apportioned among the various parties since, in theory, the attorney acts for all interested parties.  However, where a party mounts a “good and substantial defense to the complaint,” the plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees should not be spread among the litigants. 735 ILCS 5/17-125.

Here, the defendants attempted to raise defenses (setoff and public sale, as opposed to private, was required) but only after the trial court entered the partition order.  Since the defendants didn’t challenge plaintiff’s partition request but instead sought a setoff for defendants’ contributions to the property and a public sale of the property, the trial court correctly concluded the defendants failed to raise good and substantial defenses under the partition statute.  As a consequence, the trial court should have apportioned plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees.

Afterwords:

Stadnyk cements the proposition that a counterclaim differs from an affirmative defense and that setoff fits into the former category.  The case also stresses that where a defendant seeks to recover damages from a plaintiff based on a collateral transaction (other than the one underlying the plaintiff’s lawsuit), defendant should file a counterclaim for a setoff rather than attempt to raise the setoff as a defense.

Other critical holdings from the case include that a court of equity lacks power to go against clear statutory language that require a public sale and partition plaintiff attorneys’ fees should only be apportioned where a defendant doesn’t raise a substantial defense to the partition suit.