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- Jacobson v. Clack
About this case
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
02/15/2024
Decision
Attorneys' fees awards affirmed.
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed the awarding of attorneys’ fees in an action brought by a climate scientist who alleged that the defendants’ publication of an article in a scientific journal criticizing the scientist’s research paper constituted defamation. The plaintiff’s paper “concluded that the U.S. power grid could inexpensively move to “100% wind, water, and solar” energy sources by 2050 without the need for “natural gas, biofuels, nuclear power, or stationary batteries.” The article at issue—which was co-authored by one of the defendants and published in a journal published by the other defendant—contended that the paper “used invalid modeling tools, contained modeling errors, and made implausible and inadequately supported assumptions.” The plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his suit after a hearing at which the trial court hinted it was likely to grant the defendants’ special motions to dismiss under D.C.’s Anti-Strategic Litigation Lawsuits Against Public Participation Act (Anti-SLAPP Act). The trial court subsequently granted the defendants’ motions for attorneys’ fees under the Anti-SLAPP Act, finding that they had prevailed in whole or in part. The Court of Appeals first concluded that the Anti-SLAPP Act permitted an award of attorneys’ fees against a plaintiff who voluntarily dismisses his suit. The court further concluded that the defendants had prevailed under either the “merits-based” approach (whether the motion to dismiss would have succeeded but for the voluntary dismissal), the “catalyst” approach (whether the motion to dismiss prompted the voluntary dismissal), or a modified catalyst approach based on a rebuttable presumption that the defendant prevailed when the special motion to dismiss precedes the voluntary dismissal. Regarding the merits-based approach, the court found that the plaintiff “has no plausible hope” of showing that the defendants made a false and defamatory statement and did so with actual malice. The court said the plaintiff had instead asked the courts “to resolve a scientific debate, and that is something we are generally neither equipped to do, nor permitted to do by the First Amendment.” The court affirmed the award of $428,723 and $75,000 to the two defendants and remanded to the trial court for a determination of whether the defendants were entitled to additional attorneys’ fees incurred for the defense of the trial court’s award.
Summary
Action brought by scientist against journal and another scientist in connection with publication of article critiquing plaintiff-scientist's work.