              fct~~"
      IUPREME COURT, STATE C1F YINIIIItiiOJI

_.,        DATE      JAN 2 2 2015 J
~~.~1
  CHIEF JUS




           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON



        MICHAEL HENNE,
                                                                NO. 89674-7
                                               Respondent,

                            v.
                                                                ENBANC
        CITY OF YAKIMA, a Municipal
        Corporation,

                                               Petitioner.      Filed   JAN 2 2 2015



                 GORDON McCLOUD, J.-The city of Yakima claims the protection of.

       statutes that were designed to protect the rights of those who engage in First

       Amendment protected communicative activity.           U.S. CONST. amend. I.     Those

       statutes-Washington's "anti-SLAPP" 1 laws-protect speakers against frivolous,

       speech-chilling lawsuits. We hold that a governmental entity like Yakima cannot

       take advantage of the anti-SLAPP statutes at least where, as here, the challenged


                 1
               A "SLAPP" is a '"Strategic Lawsuit[ ] Against Public Participation.''' LAws OF
       2010, ch. 118, § 1(b).
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



lawsuit is not based on the government's own communicative activity. We reverse

the Court of Appeals' decision to dismiss as moot Yakima's appeal of the trial

court's decision to deny Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion. Instead, we hold that the

case is ripe for review and reinstate the trial court's decision to deny Yakima's anti-

SLAPP motion.

                     FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

   I.       A BRIEF HISTORY OF ANTI-SLAPP LAWS IN WASHINGTON STATE

        A SLAPP suit is designed to discourage a speaker from voicing his or her

opinion. See Segaline v. Dep't of Labor and Indus., 169 Wn.2d 467,473,238 P.3d

1107 (20 10). A commonly used example of such suits is a defamation suit, where

the plaintiff brings the suit to silence the defendant through the stress and expense

of litigating, and not because the plaintiff has a legitimate claim of defamation. 2

Both Congress and state legislatures have recognized the potential threat to free

speech-especially the free speech of thos~ lacking financial resources-posed by

such lawsuits, and both have enacted laws to discourage them.

        Washington's first laws of this sort were enacted in 1989. That year, the

legislature passed RCW 4.24.500-.520. LAWS OF 1989, ch. 234, § 1. Those new



        2
       See Tom Wyrwich, A Cure for a "Public Concern": Washington's New Anti-
SLAP? Law, 86 WASH. L. REV. 663, 664 (2011).

                                           2
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



enactments, however, addressed the SLAPP problem indirectly: they offered

protection only to "individuals who make good-faith reports to appropriate

governmental bodies." RCW 4.24.500. Thus, although commentators sometimes

called them Washington's "anti-SLAPP" statutes, "the [1989] legislation more

closely resembles a whistleblower immunity statute." 3

         In 2002, the legislature amended RCW 4.24.51 0. It added a strong policy

statement against SLAPP litigation and large statutory damages for a SLAPP

litigation target who successfully asserts the statutory defense. LAws OF 2002, ch.

232, § 2. And in 2010, the legislature passed RCW 4.24.525; that new law expanded

statutory anti-SLAPP protections beyond suits based on reports to government

bodies to include "any claim, however characterized, that is based on an action

involving public participation and petition." RCW 4.24.525(2). That statute also

establishes procedures independent from those contained in RCW 4.24.500-.520 for

bringing and resolving a motion to strike SLAPP suits and claims, as well as for

obtaining damages, costs, and fees. See generally RCW 4.24.525.

   II.        MICHAEL HENNE'S SUIT AGAINST THE CITY OF YAKIMA




         3
             Michael E. Johnston, A Better SLAPP Trap: Washington State's Enhanced
Statutory Protection for Targets of "Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation," 38
GONZ. L. REV. 263, 282 (2003).


                                           3
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



      In 2011, Michael Henne, a Yakima police officer, filed an employment-

related lawsuit against his employer, the city of Yakima. Several other officers had

filed complaints about Henne's behavior, resulting in internal investigations of

Henne. Henne's lawsuit alleged that those other officers' complaints lodged against

him formed a pattern of harassment and retaliation that amounted to a hostile

workplace. He sued Yakima for negligent hiring, training, and supervision of its

employees, which, he asserted, perpetuated a hostile work environment and entitled

him to damages.

      Yakima responded to Henne's complaint not with an answer but with a motion

to strike under RCW 4.24.525, the 2010 anti-SLAPP statute. Yakima's motion

asserted that because Henne's claims were based on coworker complaints and the

city's resulting internal investigations, the new, broader anti-SLAPP statute applied

to those claims. In other words, Yakima claimed the protection of the anti-SLAPP

suit law because it received controversial communications from others; Yakima

made no communications of its own.

       Henne filed a response to the anti-SLAPP motion along with a motion to

amend his complaint. Henne argued that his suit was "not, as characterized by the

Defendant, a complaint about the YPD [Yakima Police Department] internal

investigations (the heart of the Defendant's anti-SLAPP allegations), but rather the


                                          4
Henne v. City ofYakima, No. 89674-7



1mproper acts of omission and commission by city employees that negatively

impacted the life and employment of the Plaintiff." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 130.

Henne asked the court to permit him to amend his complaint to clarify the basis for

his claims and to deny Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion.

      The trial court denied Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion. It found that "if this

statute can be used to recover penalties and attorney fees from an individual who's

petitioning the government for redress of grievances, that's exactly the opposite of

the purpose of the statute." CP at 321. It also granted Henne's motion to amend. 4

!d.

      Yakima appealed under the anti-SLAPP statute's expedited appeal provision,

RCW 4.24.525(5)(d). At the Court of Appeals, Henne argued that Yakima was not

a "person" as defined in the 2010 anti-SLAPP statute, RCW 4.24.525, and therefore

could not bring an anti-SLAPP motion in the first place. Yakima contended that

governmental entities are among those who may claim the statute's protection. The

Court of Appeals held that Yakima was a "person" within the meaning of the anti-

SLAPP law and could therefore file an anti-SLAPP motion, but it also held that


       4 I agree with Justice Fairhurst's concurrence (at 2) that Henne's amended complaint
did not clearly eliminate all the claims that Yakima targeted in its anti-SLAPP motion.
Hence, the question of whether Yakima could take advantage of the 2010 anti-SLAPP
statute is squarely before us. And the question of whether an amended complaint that
deletes all allegedly objectionable SLAPP claims is not.

                                            5
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



Henne's amendment to his complaint rendered Yakima's appeal moot due to the

"removal of the allegations relating to the City's internal investigations of Officer

Henne." Henne v. City ofYakima, 177 Wn. App. 583,588,313 P.3d 1188 (2013).

It therefore dismissed the appeal. !d. at 585. Yakima sought review from this court,

and we granted it. 179 Wn.2d 1022, 320 P.3d 718 (2014).

                                       ANALYSIS

   I.       STANDARD OF REVIEW

         This court reviews questions of statutory interpretation de novo. State v.

Wentz, 149 Wn.2d 342, 346, 68 P.3d 282 (2003). In interpreting statutes, we strive

to discern and implement the legislature's intent. State v. J.P., 149 Wn.2d 444, 450,

69 P.3d 318 (2003). Where the plain language of a statute is unambiguous, and "the

legislative intent is apparent, ... we will not construe the statute otherwise." !d.

(citing State v. Wilson, 125 Wn.2d 212,217, 883 P.2d 320 (1994)). However, plain

meaning may be gleaned "from all that the Legislature has said in the statute and

related statutes which disclose legislative intent about the provision in question."

Dep't of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn.2d 1, 11,43 P.3d 4 (2002).

   II.      A GOVERNMENTAL ENTITY CANNOT BE A MOVING PARTY UNDER RCW
            4.24.525 IF IT Is NOT THE SPEAKER




                                          6
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



        Henne argues that Yakima lacked standing to file an anti-SLAPP motion

because Yakima is not a "person" under RCW 4.24.525. 5 Henne notes that in a

previous case this court determined that "a government agency is not a 'person'

under RCW 4.24.510." Segaline, 169 Wn.2d at 473. Therefore, we continued, the

Department ofLabor and Industries could not take advantage of"the RCW 4.24.510

immunity" that was designed "to protect the exercise of individuals' First

Amendment rights ... and rights under article I, section 5 of the Washington State

Constitution." Id. (citing RCW 4.24.510, Historical and Statutory Notes). Henne

argues that if a governmental entity is not a person under our anti-SLAPP immunity

statutes (RCW 4.24.500-.520), then it cannot ever be a person entitled to sue under

the broader 2010 anti-SLAPP statute (RCW 4.24.525).

        Yakima responds that the new RCW 4.24.525 differs significantly from RCW

4.24.510 because the older statute does not define "person," while the newer statute

does.       That new definition states, '"Person' means an individual, corporation,

business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association, joint

venture, or any other legal or commercial entity." RCW 4.24.525(1 )(e). Yakima


        5
         Yakima and Henne also argue about whether the Court of Appeals erred when it
held that Henne's amendments to his complaint cured any possible SLAPP problem. But
as discussed above, supra note 4, Yakima had the same complaints about the amended
complaint. Whether voluntary amendment to delete objectionable claims moots an anti-
SLAPP motion is thus an issue left for another day.

                                            7
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



argues that it is a municipal corporation, or at the very least a legal entity, and

therefore government entities will always fit the plain language definition of

"person" under the statute. Yakima's statutory interpretation argument does not

consider the portion of that newer anti-SLAPP statute that explicitly distinguishes

between the governmental entity and a "moving party" who can bring an anti-

SLAPP suit. RCW 4.24.525(4)(e). Nor does it consider the portions of that newer

anti-SLAPP statute stating that it protects the "right of free speech" and "the

constitutional right of petition," (RCW 4.24.525(2)), rights that the constitution

grants to individuals against the government not to the government against

individuals. 6

       But we need not reach that broad question of whether Yakima can ever be a

moving party under RCW 4.24.525, because there is a more narrow, preliminary

question presented here.     That question is whether the party being sued-here,

Yakima-engaged in any communicative activity that the statute protects.               As

discussed below, the answer to that question is no.


       6
          See United States v. Stevens, 559 U.S. 460, 480, 130 S. Ct. 1577, 176 L. Ed. 2d
43 5 (20 10) ("[T]he First Amendment protects against the government."); Women Strike for
Peace v. Morton, 153 U.S. App. D.C. 198, 472 F.2d 1273, 1280 (1972) ("The First
Amendment was not designed to protect the voice of government or government-approved
speech. The First Amendment in this country protects the voice of the people, even against
government.").


                                            8
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



         a. RCW 4.24.525 Protects Speakers Engaged in Communicative Activity

      The legislature enacted Washington's first anti-SLAPP laws, RCW 5.24.500-

.520, because it "was concerned with civil lawsuits that were being used to intimidate

citizens from exercising their First Amendment rights and rights under article I,

section 5 of the Washington State Constitution." Segaline, 169 Wn.2d at 473.

      Similarly, the legislature expanded our anti-SLAPP laws in RCW 4.24.525

because it was "concerned about lawsuits brought primarily to chill the valid

exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress

of grievances." LAWS OF 2010, ch. 118, § 1(a) (legislative findings and declaration

of intent). The legislature continued, "Such lawsuits, called 'Strategic Lawsuits

Against Public Participation' or 'SLAPPs,' are typically dismissed as groundless or

unconstitutional, but often not before the defendants are put to great expense,

harassment, and interruption of their productive activities."       !d. § 1(b).    The

legislature further explained, "The costs associated with defending such suits can

deter individuals and entities from fully exercising their constitutional rights to

petition the government and to speak out on public issues." !d. § 1(c) (emphasis

added). Thus, the legislature made clear that the purpose of RCW 4.24.525 was to

prevent frivolous SLAPP suits from deterring individuals and entities from

exercising their constitutional speech rights-that is, their communicative activity.


                                           9
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



      The statute's plain language reflects the legislature's stated purpose. It applies

to "any claim, however characterized, that is based on an action involving public

participation and petition."    RCW 4.24.525(2).       An "action involving public

participation and petition" is defined as (1) "[a]ny oral statement made, or written

statement or other document submitted" in various circumstances, RCW

4.24.525(2)(a)-(d), and as (2) "[a]ny other lawful conduct in furtherance of the

exercise of the constitutional right of free speech in connection with an issue of

public concern, or in furtherance of the exercise of the exercise of the constitutional

right of petition," RCW 4.24.525(2)(e). The statute thus provides protection for a

person engaged in some communicative activity-"ma[king]" an oral statement,

"submit[ing]" a written statement or document, or engaging in other "lawful conduct

in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of free speech." RCW

4.24.525(2).

          b. No Provision in RCW 4.24.525 Permits a Nonspeaker To Assert the
             Rights of a Speaker

       Yakima argues that a claim can be "based on" communicative activity even if

it is not directed against the speaker, i.e., the person engaged in that communicative

activity. Thus, Yakima contends, the statute's protections apply to it, even though

it only received communications and did not make any communications of its own.



                                           10
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



         We disagree. Such an interpretation stands in stark contrast to the legislature's

concern that SLAPP suits "can deter individuals and entities from fully exercising

their constitutional rights ... to speak out." LAws OF 2010, ch. 118, § 1(c).

         Moreover, the statute itself makes clear that it does not apply to protect

someone other than the speaker whose communicative activity forms the basis of the

claim. RCW 4.24.525(1)(c) explains that a "'[m]oving party' means a person on

whose behalf the motion described in subsection (4) ofthis section is filed seeking

dismissal of a claim." We may therefore frame the question in this case as whether

Yakima may be a "moving party" on whose behalf an anti-SLAPP motion may be

filed.

         RCW 4.24.525(4)(e) provides guidance on how to answer that question. It

states, "The attorney general's office or any government body to which the moving

party's [communicative] acts were directed may intervene to defend or otherwise

support the moving party."          (Emphasis added.)       The statute thus expressly

distinguishes the "moving party" from the "government body to which the moving

party's acts were directed." Under the statute, Yakima would be free to intervene to

"defend or otherwise support" the officers who submitted reports to the city, had

Henne sued those officers. Certainly the officers themselves, had they been sued,

would have standing to challenge the lawsuit under RCW 4.24.525. But the statute


                                             11
Henne v. City ofYakima, No. 89674-7



does not contemplate that the government body to which speech is directed may

itself be a "moving party." Instead, it recognizes that the speaker is the "moving

party" and the governmental entity to which the speech is directed is not the "moving

party." 7 Because Yakima is the government entity to which the speech at issue in

this case was directed, and not the speaker, it cannot take advantage of RCW

4.24.525's anti-SLAPP protections for speakers.

           c. California Law Does Not Control Our Interpretation ofRCW 4.24.525

      Yakima urges us to follow California's law by holding that governmental

entities can take advantage of anti-SLAPP laws. Yakima is correct that RCW

4.24.525 is based in part on California's similar law. As a result, commentators have

noted, Washington "courts have begun using California law to interpret the

Washington [anti-SLAPP] Act." Wyrwich, supra, at 672.

      But despite some similarities, the laws also have significant differences. Id.

at 682 (noting that the Washington statute "differs in several respects" from the

California statute). Most relevant to this case, the California anti-SLAPP statute

states that it "shall be construed broadly." CAL. CODE CN. PROC. § 425.16(a). Our



       7 For this reason, we reject Yakima's argument that its employees are its agents, and
its agents' actions of submitting reports may thus be considered Yakima's actions. Yakima
cannot avoid the fact that the statute distinguishes between the speaker and the receiver of
speech.

                                            12
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



legislative findings, on the other hand, state, "This act shall be applied and construed

liberally to effectuate its general purpose of protecting participants in public

controversies from an abusive use of the courts." LAWS         OF   2010, ch. 118, § 3

(emphasis added). Our legislature thus phrased its findings more narrowly than

California's, emphasizing that the protection extends to "participants"-the actors

who speak out on public affairs.

      Moreover, California's case law does not address the question at issue here;

that is, whether the government can take advantage of the anti-SLAPP statute when

it was not even the speaker who exercised speech rights. To be sure, some California

cases have found that a defendant governmental entity may bring an anti-SLAPP

motion under California's statute. E.g., Bradbury v. Superior Court, 49 Cal. App.

4th 1108, 1117, 57 Cal. Rptr. 2d 207 (1996) ("The anti-SLAPP suit statute is

designed to protect the speech interests of private citizens, the public, and

governmental speakers."). And some California cases have found that a defendant

governmental agency may rely on California's anti-SLAPP statute even where it

appears from the facts of the case that the governmental agency received, rather than

made, communications. E.g., Hansen v. Cal. Dep 't of Carr. & Rehab., 171 Cal.

App. 4th 1537, 1544-45, 90 Cal. Rptr. 3d 381 (2008).




                                           13
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7



      But in no California case did the court ever expressly consider whether a silent

governmental defendant could take advantage of an anti-SLAPP statute designed to

protect the defendant's speech. And even if California had considered the question

and decided that its statute-a statute "designed to protect the speech interests of ..

. governmental speakers," Bradbury, 49 Cal. App. 4th at 1117 (emphasis added)-

also protected governmental nonspeakers, such a conclusion would not be

persuasive to our interpretation of our own statute given the difference in legislative

findings discussed above.

                                   CONCLUSION

       Given the plain language of RCW 4.24.525 and the legislative findings

enacted in Laws of2010, chapter 118, section 1, we hold that a governmental entity

lacks standing to bring an anti-SLAPP motion under RCW 4.24.525 where the

governmental entity has not engaged in the communicative activity on which the suit

is based. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals to dismiss the

appeal. We reinstate the trial court's orders denying the anti-SLAPP motion and

granting the motion to amend. Since Yakima does not prevail, it is not entitled to

attorney fees.




                                          14
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7




 WE CONCUR:




                                            <-S~-9

                                             rr~·(J·




                                       15
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7
Fairhurst, J. (concurring in the result)




                                           No. 89674-7

        FAIRHURST, J. (concurring in the result)-The majority correctly concludes

that the trial court properly denied the city ofYakima's special motion to strike (anti-

SLAPP 1 motion). As Michael Henne argued to the trial court, he did not bring a

SLAPP claim. It was Yakima's burden to show that Henne's complaint contained

SLAPP claims, and the record shows it failed to do so as a matter of law. I concur.

I.      We should hold Yakima is a "person" under the anti-SLAPP statute

        Whether Yakima is a "person" here is a matter of statutory construction

dependent on the statutory language. RCW 4.24.525(1)(e) defines a "'[p]erson"' in

plain, broad language as "an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust,

partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture, or any other legal

or commercial entity." (Emphasis added.) Yakima is a municipal corporation and

clearly a legal entity, so it is a "person" within the meaning ofRCW 4.24.525(1)(e).

Our decision in Segaline v. Department ofLabor & Industries, 169 Wn.2d 467, 238



        1
         Strategic lawsuit against public participation.


                                                  1
Henne v. City ofYakima, No. 89674-7
Fairhurst, J. (concurring in the result)


P.3d 1107 (2010), is not controlling on this issue. That case addressed a different

statute, RCW 4.24.51 0, that did not define the word "person" and used that word

ambiguously. Id. at 473. Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion was not brought under RCW

4.24.510.

II.     We should not reach the issue of mootness

        We should not reach the question of whether Henne's voluntarily amending

his complaint rendered Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion moot. In this case, Yakima

contends that if the trial court had granted its motion, its decision would "carry

through to the amended pleading," which Yakima asserts did not clearly eliminate

all the alleged SLAPP claims. Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, Henne v. City

of Yakima, No. 89674-7 (May 29, 2014), at 42 min., 34 sec., audio recording by

TVW, Washington State's Public Affairs Network, available at http://www.tvw.org.

We are not presented with a case where the amended complaint definitely did

remove all alleged SLAPP claims and should therefore not reach the issue of whether

such an amended complaint would moot a pending anti-SLAPP motion.

III.    The trial court properly denied Yakima's anti -SLAPP motion because Yakima
        failed to meet its initial burden

        The majority reaches the correct conclusion. Henne argued to the trial court

that Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion must fail, in part, because Henne did not make

any SLAPP claims. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 129-30. The record amply supports the



                                           2
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7
Fairhurst, J. (concurring in the result)


conclusion that Henne was correct on that point. Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion thus

fails as a matter of law.

       It is apparent from the face of Henne's complaint that while some of his

alleged injuries are connected to internal employee complaints, Henne asserts his

injuries were caused by how Yakima responded to the complaints in its capacity as

an employer. That is the basis of the challenged claims. CP at 13 (Henne's complaint

(alleging his damages are "[a]s a direct and proximate result of [Yakima's] acts" and

seeking relief in the form of "enjoining [Yakima] from perpetuating the

discrimination, harassment and hostile work environment" created by other

employees)), 130 (Henne's response to Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion ("Plaintiff

does not allege that complaints should not be investigated. On the contrary, he is

concerned that complaints are not always followed-up in a professional and impartial

manner.")).

        It is clear that the actions forming the basis of Henne's claims do not meet any

of the five definitions of"action involving public participation and petition" in RCW

4.24.525(2). Four of the statutory definitions refer to "[a]ny oral statement made, or

written statement or other document submitted" in various types of proceedings.

RCW 4.24.525(2)(a)-(d). None of Henne's claims against Yakima can fall within

these first four definitions because they are based on Yakima's conduct, not its




                                            3
Henne v. City ofYakima, No. 89674-7
Fairhurst, J. (concurring in the result)


statements. 2 The final definition of "action involving public participation and

petition" does refer to conduct, but it also does not apply because Yakima's alleged

conduct was not "lawful conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional

right of free speech in connection with an issue of public concern, or in furtherance

of the exercise ofthe constitutional right of petition." RCW 4.24.525(2)(e). Even if

Yakima had in fact responded properly to internal complaints, such that Henne's

allegations would ultimately prove meritless, Yakima's conduct was responsive to,

not in furtherance of, protected speech.

        At most, Yakima's anti-SLAPP motion shows that Henne's complaint should

have been more artfully worded. 3 It cannot be contended that the substantial

penalties in the anti-SLAPP statute were intended to prevent mere unartful

pleadings. Yakima failed to meet its initial burden of showing Henne brought any

SLAPP claims against it.




        2
         1 agree with the majority that we should reject Yakima's argument that its employees'
internal complaints should be considered Yakima's own statements under agency principles.
        3
          While Yakima is correct that informally contacting the other party is not a prerequisite to
filing an anti-SLAPP motion, it is good practice to ensure that the motion, which carries potentially
severe consequences for both the moving and responding parties under RCW 4.24.525(6)(a)-(b),
is based on something more substantial than misinterpretations of unartful pleadings.


                                                 4
Henne v. City of Yakima, No. 89674-7
Fairhurst, J. (concurring in the result)


                                           CONCLUSION

          I agree with the majority that the trial court properly denied Yakima's anti-

SLAPP motion. Because I cannot agree with the majority's analysis, I concur in the

result.




                                                5
Henne v. City ofYakima, No. 89674-7
FairhursJ, J.(concurring in the result)




                                          6
