Appellant Melissa Ignat appeals from a judgment of dismissal after the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Yum! Brands, Inc., alleged to be Ignat's employer, and Mary Shipma, her immediate supervisor, on Ignat's single cause of action for public disclosure of private facts. The basis of Ignat's suit was Shipma's alleged disclosure to Ignat's coworkers of her bipolar condition.
This is Ignat's second trip to our court. She appealed from a prior dismissal on summary judgment after the trial court refused to consider a late-filed opposition. We sent the case back for a decision on the merits. (Ignat v. Yum! Brands, Inc. (Mar. 1, 2011, G043098) [nonpub. opn.].)
That decision took the form of the trial court granting summary judgment on the ground the right of privacy can be violated only by a writing, not by word of mouth.
We believe this rule — to the extent it is still observed — is outmoded and interferes with a person's right to privacy without any corresponding benefit to any other right or policy. Other restrictions on liability for invasion of privacy serve other important interests, such as free speech or freedom of the press. But no one has come up with a good reason for restricting liability to written disclosures, and it has long been acknowledged that oral disclosures can be just as harmful.
Yum! Brands is the corporate parent of several fast-food franchises, such as Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, and KFC (formerly known as Kentucky Fried Chicken). Yum employed Ignat between 2005 and 2008 in the Yum Real Estate Title
Ignat suffered from bipolar disorder, for which she was being treated with medications. Sometimes these were effective, sometimes not. Side effects of medication adjustments occasionally forced Ignat to miss work.
Ignat alleged that after returning from one such absence in mid-2008, Shipma informed her that Shipma had told everyone in the department Ignat was bipolar. Ignat alleged her coworkers subsequently avoided and shunned her, and one of them asked Shipma if Ignat was likely to "go postal" at work.
Ignat was terminated in early September 2008. She filed suit against Yum! Brands and Shipma on November 12, 2008, alleging one cause of action for invasion of privacy by public disclosure of private facts. Respondents moved for summary judgment or summary adjudication, identifying seven issues, four of which addressed the elements of a cause of action for public disclosure of private facts. These were: (1) Shipma never told the title department about Ignat's disorder; (2) Shipma did not disclose Ignat's disorder in writing; (3) the disclosure was not highly offensive to a reasonable person; and (4) Ignat had already revealed her condition to some people in the department and therefore had no expectation of privacy.
The court held a hearing on the merits of respondents' motion on November 15, 2011. It granted the motion, basing its ruling solely on the lack of a writing disclosing the private facts. The court also addressed Ignat's argument that respondents had violated her state constitutional right to privacy, which did not require a writing. The problem with that argument, the court held, was that Ignat had not pleaded a violation of a constitutional right in her complaint, which defined the scope of the motion for summary judgment. Ignat has appealed from the judgment entered after the motion was granted.
"A trial court properly grants summary judgment where no triable issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. [Citation.] We review the trial court's decision de novo, considering
As legal lore has it, the first widely recognized call in American law for a right to privacy based on the common law and enforceable in a tort action sounded in an article by Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis in the Harvard Law Review of 1890. (Warren & Brandeis, The Right to Privacy (1890) 4 Harv. L.Rev. 193 (The Right to Privacy).) The authors deplored "[r]ecent inventions and business methods" — namely advances in photography and the proliferation of newspapers — that "have invaded the sacred precincts of private and domestic life" and "threaten to make good the prediction that `what is whispered in the closet shall be proclaimed from the house-tops.'"
Warren and Brandeis recognized that the right to privacy must be subject to conditions if it was to coexist with freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and other established areas of law. Accordingly, they proposed limitations on the right. It does not prevent publication of matters of general or public interest (or, as we would say now, "newsworthy" matters). It does not apply to privileged publications, such as court testimony. If the person publishes the facts himself, or consents to their publication, they are no longer private. (The Right to Privacy, supra, 4 Harv. L.Rev. at pp. 214-218.)
The authors also speculated that "[t]he law would probably not grant any redress for the invasion of privacy by oral publication in the absence of special damage. [¶] The same reasons exist for distinguishing between oral and written publications of private matters, as is afforded in the law of defamation by the restricted liability for slander as compared with the liability for libel. The injury resulting from such oral communications would ordinarily be so trifling that the law might well, in the interest of free speech, disregard it altogether." (The Right to Privacy, supra, 4 Harv. L.Rev. at p. 217, fn. omitted.) They then quoted from an article on privacy published a few months earlier: "`But as long as gossip was oral, it spread, as regards any one individual, over a very small area, and was confined to the immediate circle of his acquaintances. It did not reach, or but rarely reached, those who knew nothing of him. It did not make his name, or his walk, or his conversation familiar to strangers. And what is more to the purpose, it spared him the pain and mortification of knowing that he was gossipped about. A man seldom heard of oral gossip about him which simply made him ridiculous, or trespassed on his lawful privacy, but made no positive attack upon his reputation. His peace and comfort were, therefore, but slightly affected by it.'" (Id. at fn. 4, quoting Godkin, The Rights of the Citizen: To his Reputation (July 1890) Scribner's Magazine, at p. 66.)
Prosser identified Melvin v. Reid (1931) 112 Cal.App. 285 [297 P. 91] (Melvin), as the leading case on public disclosure of private facts at that time. (Prosser, Privacy, supra, 48 Cal. L.Rev. at p. 392.) In Melvin, a reformed prostitute who had married and led a respectable life for some years became the subject of a 1925 silent movie, The Red Kimono (Blanc de Chine Films 1925), closely based on the lurid details of her former life. Although an actress played her character, the film used her real name. Inexplicably, it appears that the filmmakers also went out of their way to reveal her married name. (Melvin, supra, 112 Cal.App. at p. 291.) She sued for invasion of privacy and other causes of action.
Although Prosser may have correctly designated it as the leading private-facts case in 1960, Melvin actually did not introduce common law tort liability for public disclosure of private facts into California law. It is easy to see why the opinion lent itself to that interpretation. A large part of the legal analysis dealt with common law privacy cases from other jurisdictions and the general principles about the new tort the court drew from examining these cases. But when it came time for the holding, the Melvin court unequivocally refused to base its decision on any newfangled common law tort: "In the absence of any provision of law[,] we would be loath to conclude that the right of privacy as the foundation for an action in tort, in the form known and recognized in other jurisdictions, exists in California." (Melvin, supra, 112 Cal.App. at p. 291.) Instead, the court based its decision on the California Constitution as it existed at that time, and specifically on a person's "inalienable right" recognized in the Constitution to "pursue and obtain happiness." (112 Cal.App. at p. 292.)
The rest of the opinion bears out this constitutional focus. The court does not discuss issues that would be germane to a right-of-privacy analysis — for example, whether the plaintiff was a public figure or whether her story was newsworthy. The court instead sermonizes on the duty of society to "lift up and sustain the unfortunate rather than tear him down." (Melvin, supra, 112 Cal.App. at p. 292.) Since the plaintiff "had abandoned her life of shame, had rehabilitated herself and had taken her place as a respected and honored
Obviously the court's conception of a right to privacy — based as it is on the right to obtain happiness, on charity, and on the duty to sustain the unfortunate — has little in common with the right to privacy advocated by Warren and Brandeis and recognized in the case law surveyed in Melvin. Unlike the two authors, who acknowledged restrictions on the scope of their new common law right, the Melvin court set no limits or conditions on the constitutional right.
The entire discussion in Melvin of a common law right to privacy, as it was envisioned in the Harvard Law Review article and subsequently put into practice in some jurisdictions, is dictum. The Melvin court clearly declined to get on the Warren/Brandeis bandwagon. If the court had adopted the theory advocated by The Right to Privacy, the "general principles" it derived from the article and the case law would perhaps have some weight. But the court did not adopt this theory. Its discussion of the principles, while interesting, is irrelevant to its holding.
The general principle that interests us here is the writing requirement. After surveying over 20 cases from other American jurisdictions, the court concluded that "[t]he right of privacy can only be violated by printings, writings, pictures or other permanent publications or reproductions, and not by word of mouth." (Melvin, supra, 112 Cal.App. at p. 290.) Two other California cases have followed Melvin on this point: Gautier v. General Telephone Co. (1965) 234 Cal.App.2d 302, 309 [44 Cal.Rptr. 404], and Grimes v. Carter (1966) 241 Cal.App.2d 694, 698-699 [50 Cal.Rptr. 808].
The American cases surveyed in Melvin do not support a "general principle" that only written publications can violate the common law right to privacy. None of the cases addresses a distinction between oral and written publication at all. Most of them involve "unauthorized advertising," which we would now categorize under the right of publicity. (See Civ. Code, § 3344.) Three cases involved a right to privacy not dependent on a written publication. In De May v. Roberts (1881) 46 Mich. 160 [9 N.W. 146], a woman's right to privacy was violated when a man who was not a doctor assisted her at childbirth. (Id., 9 N.W. at p. 148.) In Schultz v. Frankfort Marine, Accident & Plate Glass Ins. Co. (1913) 151 Wis. 537 [139 N.W. 386], a man's right to
The concentration on written publications in the cases cited in Melvin appears to be simply an accident of the kinds of privacy violations prevalent at the time.
Some cases have credited Melvin with establishing the common law right of privacy in California or have listed it among the cases endorsing this right. (See Katzberg v. Regents of University of California (2002) 29 Cal.4th 300, 324, fn. 23 [127 Cal.Rptr.2d 482, 58 P.3d 339]; Briscoe v. Reader's Digest Association, Inc. (1971) 4 Cal.3d 529, 534 [93 Cal.Rptr. 866, 483 P.2d 34] (Briscoe), overruled on other grounds in Gates v. Discovery Communications, Inc. (2004) 34 Cal.4th 679, 697, fn. 9 [21 Cal.Rptr.3d 663, 101 P.3d 552]; Lugosi v. Universal Pictures (1979) 25 Cal.3d 813, 833, fn. 9 [160 Cal.Rptr. 323, 603 P.2d 425]; Coverstone v. Davies (1952) 38 Cal.2d 315, 322-323 [239 P.2d 876]; Gionfriddo v. Major League Baseball (2001) 94 Cal.App.4th 400, 408 [114 Cal.Rptr.2d 307]; Diaz v. Oakland Tribune, Inc. (1983) 139 Cal.App.3d 118, 125 [188 Cal.Rptr. 762]; Carlisle v. Fawcett Publications, Inc. (1962) 201 Cal.App.2d 733, 744 [20 Cal.Rptr. 405]; Metter v. Los Angeles Examiner (1939) 35 Cal.App.2d 304, 308-309 [95 P.2d 491] (Metter).) Actually, the first California Supreme Court case to endorse the right seems to us to be Gill v. Curtis Publishing Co. (1952) 38 Cal.2d 273, 276-278 [239 P.2d 630].
In Bowden v. Spiegel, Inc., supra, 96 Cal.App.2d 793, the plaintiff sued for emotional distress after a debt collector telephoned a neighboring family and asked to speak to the plaintiff, falsely telling the neighbors that it was an emergency call. When the plaintiff came to the phone, the collector berated her for not paying a bill, while the neighbor family listened to the plaintiff's side of the conversation. Although the case was decided on emotional distress grounds, the parties also disputed whether the complaint stated a cause of action for violation of the right to privacy, the defendant, of course, maintaining that oral statements cannot support such a cause of action.
While it was unnecessary for the court to decide this issue — having based its holding on emotional distress — the court observed, "The historic article on the subject by Brandeis and Warren ... suggests this limitation in the absence of special damage ... and there are dicta in Melvin ... and Metter ... which state the rule baldly without including the exception for the case of special damage. If it were necessary to decide the question we would incline to repudiate this qualification as so broadly stated. The oral dissemination of private matter may be as rapid as the wagging tongue of gossip and as devastating as the printed page; and, to confine the question to the facts in hand, what logical distinction can be found between writing a letter to the [neighbor family] telling them that plaintiff owes defendant a bill and is a deadbeat and summoning her to the telephone before the same family where her spontaneous replies to statements of defendant over the telephone will
In Linehan v. Linehan (1955) 134 Cal.App.2d 250 [285 P.2d 326], the plaintiff recovered damages for invasion of privacy and defamation from her husband's ex-wife, who repeatedly, and orally, maintained that she was the rightful wife and the plaintiff was living in sin. (Id. at pp. 251-252.) The oral nature of the statements had no effect on the cause of action for invasion of privacy.
In Smith v. National Broadcasting Co. (1956) 138 Cal.App.2d 807 [292 P.2d 600], the plaintiff claimed his privacy had been violated when NBC broadcast an episode of Dragnet (the radio version) based on a police incident in which he was involved. The court held the facts disclosed were not private and the plaintiff had become a public figure, at least with respect to this incident. (Id. at pp. 811-812.) Although the court cited Melvin several times, the fact the alleged invasion came through an oral radio broadcast, not a written publication, did not figure at all in the analysis.
The court in H & M Associates v. City of El Centro (1980) 109 Cal.App.3d 399 [167 Cal.Rptr. 392], based its privacy analysis on the voters' amendment to the California Constitution, which added "privacy" to the inalienable rights of all people. (109 Cal.App.3d at p. 411.) The Melvin principle was raised, only to be discarded. After quoting Prosser on its obsolete nature, the court stated, "In this electronic age, where oral statements may ultimately receive wider coverage than a printed statement, there is no reason to immunize parties making such statements from liability. The test should turn on the nature of the privacy invaded and not on the means of communication." (Id. at p. 412.)
In Taus v. Loftus (2007) 40 Cal.4th 683 [54 Cal.Rptr.3d 775, 151 P.3d 1185], the court discussed whether a disclosure in a speech at a professional conference qualified as public disclosure of private facts. (Id. at pp. 706, 715-716, 717-719.) The court determined it did not, because the statements were newsworthy. (Id. at pp. 718-719.) Although the court mentioned other potential problems with the cause of action (id. at pp. 717-718), the fact that the statements were oral rather than written was not among them. (See Morrow v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist. (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 1424, 1429, 1440 [57 Cal.Rptr.3d 885] [school district sued by principal for oral statements made to press; statements newsworthy].)
We conclude that limiting liability for public disclosure of private facts to those recorded in a writing is contrary to the tort's purpose, which has been since its inception to allow a person to control the kind of information about himself made available to the public — in essence, to define his public persona. (See Briscoe, supra, 4 Cal.3d at p. 534; The Right to Privacy, supra, 4 Harv. L.Rev. at pp. 198-199.) While this restriction may have made sense in the 1890's — when no one dreamed of talk radio or confessional television — it certainly makes no sense now. Private facts can be just as widely disclosed — if not more so — through oral media as through written ones. To allow a plaintiff redress for one kind of disclosure but not the other, when both can be equally damaging to privacy, is a rule better suited to an era when the town crier was the principal purveyor of news. It is long past time to discard this outmoded rule.
Ignat argued to the trial court that her cause of action was based on the guarantee of privacy found in the California Constitution. When the court pointed out that Ignat had failed to allege a cause of action based on the Constitution, Ignat argued that constitutional privacy and common law privacy were, in essence, the same thing, and the distinction was merely a matter of "labels." The court was not persuaded.
In White v. Davis (1975) 13 Cal.3d 757 [120 Cal.Rptr. 94, 533 P.2d 222], our Supreme Court explored the origins of a constitutional right of privacy. The voters amended the California Constitution in 1972 to include "privacy" among people's "inalienable rights." The court examined the materials presented to the voters during the initiative to determine the amendment's purpose. The materials identified "`government snooping'" and collecting and stockpiling unnecessary information by government and businesses as the impetus behind the initiative. (White, at p. 774.) "`The proliferation of government and business records over which we have no control limits our ability to control our personal lives.'" (Ibid.) The initiative proponents also cited a person's inability to check the accuracy of records of which he is ignorant and the danger of information collected for one purpose being used improperly for another as dangers of snooping, collecting, and stockpiling. (Id. at p. 775; see Hill, supra, 7 Cal.4th at pp. 16-17, 21.)
The court discussed the intersection of the common law right of privacy with the constitutional variety in Shulman, supra, 18 Cal.4th 200. While observing that the two means of protecting privacy "are not unrelated," Shulman held the framework developed for resolving constitutional privacy claims was not intended to supplant the common law tort or preclude its independent development. (Id. at p. 227.)
The judgment of dismissal is reversed. Appellant is to recover her costs on appeal. Because this reversal represents a change in the law upon which the trial court relied, disposition is without prejudice to Yum renewing its motion on any grounds not previously addressed by the court.
Ikola, J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
Another early privacy case, Metter, supra, 35 Cal.App.2d at pages 308-312, relied heavily on Melvin for its analysis.