Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2020, Volume 33, Number 2
Content
- A Long and Winding Road to Undo Bad Supreme Court Law
- Stringfellow Acid Pits: the Toxic and Legal Legacy By Brian Craig
- That Family Is Wrong for You: Religious Objections Before the Supreme Court
- Intellectual Property Litigation and Other Updates in the Video Game Industry as of April 2020
- Navigating the New Settled Statement Procedures
- Recent Legislative Changes Affect Long-Standing Pre-Trial Discovery Practice
- Nuts and Bolts of Videoconference Dispute Resolution in the Time of Covid-19
- Showing Lack of Probable Cause: Plaintiff's Burden of Proof in Opposing an Anti-Slapp Motion Attacking a Malicious Prosecution Claim
- Table of Contents
- McLe Article Threats, Extortion and Legitimate Advocacy
- Navigating the New Settled Statement Procedures
- Insurance Coverage Analysis Avoids Malpractice Landmines
- Nuts and Bolts of Videoconference Dispute Resolution in the Time of Covid-19
- Masthead
- Intellectual Property Litigation and Other Updates in the Video Game Industry as of April 2020
- That Family Is Wrong for You: Religious Objections Before the Supreme Court
- Affirmative Action Quandaries the Affirmative Action Puzzle: a Living History from Reconstruction to Today (Pantheon:322 Pages) By Melvin I. Urofsky
- Stringfellow Acid Pits: the Toxic and Legal Legacy By Brian Craig
- Insurance Coverage Analysis Avoids Malpractice Landmines
- Recent Legislative Changes Affect Long-Standing Pre-Trial Discovery Practice
- A Long and Winding Road to Undo Bad Supreme Court Law
- From the Section Chair News for a New World
- Editor's Foreword Sweet Successes — On or About 31 Flavors
- Showing Lack of Probable Cause: Plaintiff's Burden of Proof in Opposing an Anti-Slapp Motion Attacking a Malicious Prosecution Claim
- McLe Article Threats, Extortion and Legitimate Advocacy
- Masthead
- Affirmative Action Quandaries the Affirmative Action Puzzle: a Living History from Reconstruction to Today (Pantheon:322 Pages) By Melvin I. Urofsky
- Table of Contents
- From Cla's Ceo a Personal Plea for Addressing the Root Causes of Racism
- From the Section Chair News for a New World
- The Puzzle of Precedent in the California Court of Appeal
- Editor's Foreword Sweet Successes — On or About 31 Flavors
- The Puzzle of Precedent in the California Court of Appeal
- From Cla's Ceo a Personal Plea for Addressing the Root Causes of Racism
Showing Lack of Probable Cause: Plaintiff’s Burden of Proof in Opposing an Anti-SLAPP Motion Attacking a Malicious Prosecution Claim
By Mark T. Drooks and Sharon Ben-Shahar Mayer
Mark T. Drooks is a partner at Bird Marella in Los Angeles.
Sharon Ben-Shahar Mayer is a partner at Bird Marella in Los Angeles.
An anti-SLAPP motion is a critical phase in a malicious prosecution case. Courts have long held that malicious prosecution claims fall within the purview of the anti-SLAPP statute, which gives the defendants an extraordinary tool to force plaintiffs to establish the prima facie merits of their case before discovery even starts. An anti-SLAPP motion can be case dispositive and, if successful, entitles the moving party to attorneys’ fees. An order granting or denying the motion is immediately appealable and appellate review is de novo. It is therefore not surprising that anti-SLAPP motions are frequently filed in malicious prosecution cases, and there is substantial case law analyzing the elements of malicious prosecution. But analyzing the plaintiff’s burden in establishing a lack of probable cause on an anti-SLAPP motion can get tricky.