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FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT GOPHER MEDIA LLC, a Nevada No. 24-2626 Limited Liability Corporation D.C. No. formerly known as Local Clicks 3:21-cv-01909- doing business as Doctor Multimedia; RBM-VET AJAY THAKORE, an individual, Plaintiffs - Appellants, OPINION v. ANDREW MELONE, an individual; AMERICAN PIZZA MANUFACTURING, a California business entity also known as American Pizza Mfg., Defendants - Appellees. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of California Ruth Bermudez Montenegro, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted June 24, 2025 Seattle, Washington Filed October 9, 2025 2 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Before: Mary H. Murguia, Chief Judge, and Consuelo M. Callahan, Milan D. Smith, Jr., Michelle T. Friedland, Mark J. Bennett, Daniel P. Collins, Kenneth K. Lee, Daniel A. Bress, Patrick J. Bumatay, Lawrence VanDyke and Holly A. Thomas, Circuit Judges. Opinion by Judge Murguia; Concurrence by Judge Bennett; Concurrence by Judge Bress SUMMARY * Anti-SLAPP Statute / Collateral Order Doctrine Overruling Batzel v. Smith, 333 F.3d 1018 (9th Cir. 2003), and dismissing an appeal for lack of jurisdiction, the en banc court held that a district courtâs denial of a motion to strike under the California anti-SLAPP statute does not satisfy the requirements for an interlocutory appeal under the collateral order doctrine. Agreeing with other circuits, the en banc court held that orders denying anti-SLAPP motions under Californiaâs statute are not immediately appealable because such orders do not resolve issues âcompletely separate from the merits of the actionâ and do not render the decision âeffectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.â * This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 3 For purposes of this opinion, the en banc court assumed that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute applies in federal court. Concurring, Judge Bennett, joined by Judge Callahan, wrote that he joined the majority opinion in full and wrote separately to state that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP special- motion and attorney-fee-shifting provision create a substantive right, and no federal rule controls or directly collides with that right. Thus, the anti-SLAPP provisions apply in federal court under Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), and its progeny. Concurring in the judgment, Judge Bress, joined by Judges Collins, Lee, and Bumatay, wrote that it would have been better for the en banc court to address the issue of federal-court application, join the overwhelming majority view, and hold that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute is a state procedural device that does not apply in federal court. 4 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE COUNSEL Chase A. Cobern (argued), Munck Wilson Mandala LLP, Dallas, Texas; Marina V. Bogorad and Anton N. Handal, Munck Wilson Mandala LLP, Los Angeles, California; Pamela C. Chalk, Doctor Multimedia, La Jolla, California; for Plaintiffs-Appellants. Owen M. Praskievicz (argued) and Daniel E. Gardenswartz, Solomon Ward Seidenwurm & Smith LLP, San Diego, California, for Defendants-Appellees. Grayson Clary, Bruce D. Brown, Lisa Zycherman, Mara Gassmann, and Abigail Sintim, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, Washington, D.C.; Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr., Katie Townsend, Michael H. Dore, and Zachary C. Freund, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Los Angeles, California; for Amici Curiae Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and 25 Media Organizations. Chad E. Deveaux, Patrick M. Ryan, Michael D. Abraham, Tyler M. Cunningham, and Stephen E. Smith, Bartko Pavia LLP, San Francisco, California, for Amici Curiae Los Angeles Times and the California Hospital Association. Daniel A. Laidman, Kelli L. Sager, and Samuel A. Turner, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Los Angeles, California; David Loy and Ann Cappetta, First Amendment Coalition, San Rafael, California; James Daire, Yelp Inc., San Francisco, California; for Amici Curiae First Amendment Coalition and Yelp Inc.. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 5 OPINION MURGUIA, Chief Circuit Judge: We voted to decide this case en banc to reconsider the appropriateness of our courtâs interlocutory review of a district court order denying a motion to strike under Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute. 1 In Batzel v. Smith, 333 F.3d 1018 (9th Cir. 2003), we held that we have jurisdiction to review such orders pursuant to the collateral order doctrine. Upon reexamination, we now conclude that a district courtâs denial of a motion to strike under the California anti-SLAPP statute does not satisfy the requirements for an interlocutory appeal under the collateral order doctrine. We reach this conclusion because such an order does not resolve issues âcompletely separate from the merits of the actionâ and does not render the decision âeffectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.â Will v. Hallock, 546 U.S. 345, 349 (2006) (quoting P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 506 U.S. 139, 144 (1993)). Accordingly, we overrule Batzel and dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction. 2 1 The SLAPP acronym stands for âStrategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation.â Manzari v. Associated Newspapers Ltd., 830 F.3d 881, 886 (9th Cir. 2016). Anti-SLAPP statutes have been passed in various states, including California, to combat âa disturbing increase in lawsuits brought primarily to chill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances.â Id. (citing Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a)); see also FilmOn.com Inc. v. DoubleVerify Inc., 439 P.3d 1156, 1160â61 (Cal. 2019). 2 We do not reconsider our precedent in United States ex rel. Newsham v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., 190 F.3d 963 (9th Cir. 1999), and we assume for purposes of this opinion that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute 6 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE I Although we are deciding this case as an initial matter en banc, our jurisdictional analysis does not turn on the particular factual allegations here. Therefore, we only briefly recount the factual allegations and procedural details. In July 2020, Appellee Andrew Melone opened Appellee American Pizza Manufacturing (âAPMâ) in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego, California. APM serves uncooked pizzas and pasta that customers can bake at home. This is commonly referred to as a âtake-n-bakeâ business model. Appellant Ajay Thakore is a La Jolla resident and the owner of Appellant Gopher Media LLC. Gopher Media âis a digital marketing agency.â This caseâs history began in late 2020 when the City of San Diego converted the parking spaces outside of APM to 15-minute parking zones. As alleged in the underlying countercomplaint, Thakore frequented businesses near APM, including a competing business in which Thakore is alleged to own a 25% financial stake, and parked his car in the spaces outside of APM for extended periods of time. Apparently upset with the new 15-minute time limit, Thakore initiated a series of odd exchanges between the parties, which culminated in this litigation. Thakore and Gopher Media filed a lawsuit against Melone and APM in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, alleging harassment, discrimination, unfair competition, and other claims. Specifically, Thakore and Gopher Media alleged that Melone called Thakore a racial applies in federal court based on the principles set forth in Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938). See Newsham, 190 F.3d at 972â73. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 7 slur, tried to intimidate Thakore from parking in front of APM, and kicked Thakoreâs handicapped dog. They also alleged that APM falsely advertised its use of fresh ingredients when the restaurant really uses âfrozen crust.â Melone and APM filed a countercomplaint alleging defamation, trade libel, and unfair business practices. Relevant to this appeal, the operative countercomplaint alleges that Gopher Media, under the control of Thakore, paid its employees to leave over one hundred negative reviews of APM on websites such as Yelp.com and Google.com, and that Thakore made false statements about Melone and APM on his Instagram social media account. In response to the countercomplaint, Thakore and Gopher Media filed an anti-SLAPP motion to strike the countercomplaint under California Civil Procedure Code § 425.16. They asserted that the internet reviews and other comments were speech in relation to a public issue, and therefore, the comments constituted protected First Amendment speech. The district court denied the motion, and Thakore and Gopher Media filed this interlocutory appeal. After hearing oral argument, a three-judge panel of this court refrained from issuing a decision and instead directed the parties âto file supplemental briefs addressing whether this case should be heard en banc to reconsider (1) whether Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute applies in federal court, and (2) whether the denial of a motion to strike under Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute is immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine.â As to the first question posed by the three-judge panelâs order, neither side argues in favor of overruling our precedent holding that the California anti-SLAPP statute applies in federal court under the Erie doctrine. As to the second question, Thakore and 8 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Gopher Media argue that Batzel was correctly decided and that the importance and independence of anti-SLAPP rights make their denial subject to immediate appeal. In contrast, Melone and APM assert that an order denying an anti- SLAPP motion is unappealable under the collateral order doctrine. They also highlight the potential for a defendant to abuse the rule we adopted in Batzel by using the interlocutory appeal process to unnecessarily delay progression of a lawsuit. A majority of the non-recused active judges agreed that this case should be decided en banc so that our governing precedent could be reconsidered. Gopher Media LLC v. Melone, 129 F.4th 1196 (9th Cir. 2025) (mem.); Fed. R. App. P. 40(g). II Generally, our jurisdiction is limited to appeals from a final decision by the district court. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. But the collateral order doctrine establishes âa narrow class of decisions that do not terminate the litigation, but must, in the interest of achieving a healthy legal system, nonetheless be treated as final.â Digit. Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 511 U.S. 863, 867 (1994) (citation modified). To fall into this narrow class of appealable nonfinal orders, a district court decision must â[1] conclusively determine the disputed question, [2] resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action, and [3] be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.â Will, 546 U.S. at 349 (alterations in original) (quoting P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 506 U.S. 139, 144 (1993)); see also Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 546â47 (1949). An issue is completely separate from the merits if it is âsignificantly differentâ and GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 9 âconceptually distinctâ from the âfact-related legal issues that likely underlie the plaintiffâs claim on the merits.â Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 314 (1995) (citation omitted). A court considers whether an order is âeffectively unreviewableâ by considering âthe value of the interests that would be lost through rigorous application of a final judgment requirement.â Will, 546 U.S. at 351â52 (quoting Digit. Equip. Corp., 511 U.S. at 878â79). In making the âeffectively unreviewableâ determination, âwe do not engage in an individualized jurisdictional inquiry. Rather, our focus is on the entire category to which a claim belongs.â Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U.S. 100, 107 (2009) (citation modified). âThe Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that these requirements are stringent and that the collateral-order doctrine must remain a narrow exception.â SolarCity Corp. v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., 859 F.3d 720, 724 (9th Cir. 2017). In Batzel, we held that we have jurisdiction to review orders denying anti-SLAPP motions under Californiaâs statute pursuant to the collateral order doctrine. We concluded that the â[d]enial of an anti-SLAPP motion resolves a question separate from the merits in that it merely finds that such merits may exist, without evaluating whether the plaintiffâs claim will succeed.â Batzel, 333 F.3d at 1025. We also reasoned that â[i]f the defendant were required to wait until final judgment to appeal the denial of a meritorious anti-SLAPP motion, a decision by this court reversing the district courtâs denial of the motion would not remedy the fact that the defendant had been compelled to defend against a meritless claim brought to chill rights of free expression.â Id. To that end, we found it âinstructiveâ that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute expressly provides that an order denying an anti-SLAPP motion may be appealed immediately in 10 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE California state court. Id. A decade later, in DC Comics v. Pacific Pictures Corp., 706 F.3d 1009 (9th Cir. 2013), we reaffirmed Batzel, holding that the Supreme Courtâs intervening decision in Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U.S. 100 (2009), did not disturb our earlier decision. Since that time, several members of our court have called for reconsideration of Batzel due to an enduring disagreement about whether the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion meets the collateral order doctrineâs stringent requirements. See, e.g., Planned Parenthood Fedân of Am., Inc. v. Ctr. for Med. Progress, 890 F.3d 828, 835â38 (9th Cir. 2018) (Gould, J., concurring); Travelers Cas. Ins. Co. of Am. v. Hirsh, 831 F.3d 1179, 1182â86 (9th Cir. 2016) (Kozinski, J., concurring); Makaeff v. Trump Univ., LLC, 736 F.3d 1180, 1188â92 (9th Cir. 2013) (Watford, J., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc); Martinez v. ZoomInfo Techs., Inc., 82 F.4th 785, 794, 796â97 (9th Cir. 2023) (McKeown, J., concurring, and Desai, J., concurring), vacated, 90 F.4th 1042 (9th Cir. 2024) (mem.). In addition, other circuits have held that the denial of an anti- SLAPP motion does not satisfy the collateral order doctrine. E.g., Ernst v. Carrigan, 814 F.3d 116, 119 & n.1 (2d Cir. 2016) (discussing Vermontâs anti-SLAPP statute); Coomer v. Make Your Life Epic LLC, 98 F.4th 1320, 1328â 29 (10th Cir. 2024) (discussing Coloradoâs anti-SLAPP statute). We have noted these developments and now hold that orders denying anti-SLAPP motions under Californiaâs GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 11 statute are not immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine. 3 III A To begin, orders denying anti-SLAPP motions under Californiaâs statute do not resolve questions âcompletely separate from the merits.â Will, 546 U.S. at 349 (quotation marks omitted). In Batzel, we held that a ruling under Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute involves a question completely separate from the merits because âit merely finds that such merits may exist, without evaluating whether the plaintiffâs claim will succeed.â 333 F.3d at 1025. But our experience with anti-SLAPP cases over the ensuing two decades has shown that the questions that must be answered to resolve an anti-SLAPP motion are in fact âinextricably intertwined with the merits of the litigation.â Planned Parenthood, 890 F.3d at 836 (Gould, J., concurring). Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute requires a two-step analysis. At the first step, a court must decide whether a plaintiffâs claim arises from any act âin furtherance of the personâs right of petition or free speech,â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), which necessarily involves reviewing the âcontentâ and âcontextâ of the factual allegations in a plaintiffâs complaint. FilmOn.com Inc., 439 P.3d at 1160, 1165. At the second step, a court must decide whether âthe plaintiff has established that there is a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim.â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1). These questions are not âneat abstract issues 3 To be sure, nothing in our holding abrogates a district courtâs ability to certify a question for immediate interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). 12 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE of lawâ that can be decided once and will not reemerge at trial. Johnson, 515 U.S. at 317 (citation omitted); Coomer, 98 F.4th at 1328 (â[A] principal purpose of the separability requirement[] [is] preventing piecemeal appellate review.â); cf. Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 527â28 (1985) (explaining that a question of law satisfies the âconceptually distinctâ requirement under the collateral order doctrine because a court âneed not consider the correctness of the plaintiffâs version of the facts, nor even determine whether the plaintiffâs allegations actually state a claimâ). Instead, the anti-SLAPP analysis intertwines factual and legal questions, which requires a court to go beyond âmerely find[ing] that such merits may exist.â Batzel, 333 F.3d at 1025. Even purely legal issues bearing on whether there âis a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim,â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), are likely to reemerge at later procedural stages, which would unnecessarily create the need for âpiecemeal appellate review.â Coomer, 98 F.4th at 1328. Therefore, â[g]iven the fact-dependent nature of the anti-SLAPP analysis,â the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion is not âconceptually distinctâ from the merits of a plaintiffâs claims. Coomer, 98 F.4th at 1326, 28 (citing Johnson, 515 U.S. at 314). B Additionally, orders denying California anti-SLAPP motions are not âeffectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.â Will, 546 U.S. at 349 (quoting Metcalf & Eddy, 506 U.S. at 144). The Supreme Court has âroutinely require[d] litigants to wait until after final judgment to vindicate valuable rights, including rights central to our adversarial system.â Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 108â 09. Although we still recognize that some important interest may be lost if a defendant must wait to appeal a final GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 13 judgment in an anti-SLAPP caseâsuch as the potential unfairness of having to defend a meritless action all the way through trialâthis lost interest does not render the decision âeffectively unreviewableâ for purposes of the collateral order doctrine because deferring review of these motions until final judgment will not âso imperil[] the interest as to justify the cost of allowing immediate appeal of the entire class of relevant orders.â 4 Id. at 108. Indeed, our court has already reached this conclusion about orders granting an anti-SLAPP motion under Californiaâs statute. Hyan v. Hummer, 825 F.3d 1043, 1046â47 (9th Cir. 2016) (per curiam) (holding that the district courtâs order granting an anti-SLAPP motion against two out of three defendants was not immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine because an erroneous grant of an anti-SLAPP motion is âfully reviewableâ and âcan be fully remedied on appealâ). Thus, our holding in this case unifies the approach we use for anti-SLAPP motions under the California statute; whether the motion is granted or denied, a party may not take an interlocutory appeal as of right from that decision under the collateral order doctrine. See Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 107. 4 One way the California Legislature sought to protect the interest of having to defend a meritless action is through the right to recover attorneysâ fees, and our decision today does not affect that protection. FilmOn.com Inc., 439 P.3d at 1161 (â[T]he Legislature shifted . . . fees onto the lawsuit filer to compensate the prevailing defendant for the undue burden of defending against litigation designed to chill the exercise of free speech and petition rights.â (citation modified)). If a defendant successfully challenges the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion on appeal after a final judgment, then the defendant is entitled to obtain the attorneysâ fees required to defend against the SLAPP-related appeal. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(c)(1). 14 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Moreover, the California anti-SLAPP statuteâs provision allowing for an interlocutory appeal of denials of anti- SLAPP motions in state court does not alter our conclusion on this issue. In Batzel, we found it âinstructiveâ that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute expressly provides for an immediate interlocutory appeal upon denial of an anti- SLAPP motion in California state court because it âdemonstrates that California lawmakers wanted to protect speakers from the trial itself rather than merely from liability.â 333 F.3d at 1025. We characterized Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute âin the nature of immunityâ and reasoned that the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion should be immediately appealable for the same reasons that a denial of an immunity defense is. Id. However, since Batzel, California has discussed anti-SLAPP protection in a way that casts doubt on our analogy between anti-SLAPP protection and immunity defenses. See Ernst, 814 F.3d at 121 (âWhile anti-SLAPP statutes have much in common with immunity statutes, the California courts have ruled that the California statute . . . does not provide . . . âa substantive immunity from suit.ââ (quoting Liberty Synergistic Inc. v. Microflo Ltd., 718 F.3d 138, 148 n.9 (2d. Cir. 2013) (discussing Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche, 74 P.3d 737 (Cal. 2003)). Even if that analogy were correct, the Supreme Court has ruled that not every district court decision denying immunity is entitled to an interlocutory appeal under the collateral order doctrineâif there are fact-based issues entangled in the immunity determination, then the decision does not satisfy the collateral order doctrineâs requirements. See Johnson, 515 U.S. at 307. It remains that the collateral order doctrine does not extend to denials of anti-SLAPP motions under the California statute because â[e]ffective appellate review can GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 15 be had by other means.â Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 114. IV For the foregoing reasons, we overrule Batzelâs holding, but we confine our en banc consideration to orders denying motions to strike under Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute. We do not address the application of the collateral order doctrine to other statesâ anti-SLAPP statutes because those statutes are not currently before us. APPEAL DISMISSED AND CASE REMANDED. Each side shall bear their own costs. BENNETT, Circuit Judge, joined by CALLAHAN, Circuit Judge, concurring: I join the majority opinion in full. But I write separately because I believe that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP 1 special-motion and attorney-fee-shifting provisions, Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), (c)(1) (together, the âanti-SLAPP provisionsâ), create a substantive right. 2 In substance, these provisions provide defendants with a pretrial claim for attorneysâ fees for plaintiffsâ abuse of the judicial process by filing a meritless SLAPP suit. No federal rule controls or directly collides with that right. Thus, the anti-SLAPP provisions apply in federal court under Erie 1 A âSLAPPâ is a âstrategic lawsuit against public participation.â Ketchum v. Moses, 17 P.3d 735, 738 (Cal. 2001). 2 My concurrence addresses only the special-motion and attorney-fee-shifting provisions under Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), (c)(1). 16 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), and its progeny. I âThe [California] Legislature enacted [the anti-SLAPP statute] to prevent and deter â[SLAPP] lawsuits brought primarily to chill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances.ââ Varian Med. Sys., Inc. v. Delfino, 106 P.3d 958, 966 (Cal. 2005) (alteration omitted) (quoting Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a)). âThe hallmark of a SLAPP suit is that it lacks meritâ and is instead brought for the purpose of âobtaining an economic advantage over a citizen party by increasing the cost of litigation to the point that the citizen partyâs case will be weakened or abandoned, and of deterring future litigation.â United States ex rel. Newsham v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., 190 F.3d 963, 970â71 (9th Cir. 1999). The California Legislature determined that a SLAPP suit is an âabuse of the judicial process.â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a). But â[b]ecause winning is not a SLAPP plaintiffâs primary motivation, defendantsâ traditional safeguards against meritless actions, (suits for malicious prosecution and abuse of process, requests for sanctions) are inadequate to counter SLAPPs.â Wilcox v. Superior Ct., 33 Cal. Rptr. 2d 446, 450 (Ct. App. 1994), disapproved of on other grounds by Equilon Enters. v. Consumer Cause, Inc., 52 P.3d 685 (Cal. 2002). âBy the time a SLAPP victim can win a âSLAPP-backâ suit years later the SLAPP plaintiff will probably already have accomplished its underlying objective.â Id. To remedy that problem, the California Legislature enacted the anti-SLAPP statute, which includes the special-motion and attorney-fee-shifting provisions. Cal. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 17 Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), (c)(1). The special-motion provision allows a court to strike any cause of action that âaris[es] from any act of [the defendant] in furtherance of the [defendant]âs right of petition or free speech under the United States Constitution or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue,â âunless the court determines that the plaintiff has established that there is a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim.â 3 Id. § 425.16(b)(1). If successful, with some exceptions, the âprevailing defendant on a special motion to strike shall be entitled to recover [his or her] attorneyâs fees.â Id. § 425.16(c)(1). The fee-shifting provision âdiscourage[s] [SLAPPs] by imposing the litigation costs on the party seeking to âchill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances.ââ Ketchum, 17 P.3d at 741 (quoting Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a)). âThe fee-shifting provision also encourages private representation in SLAPP cases, including situations when a SLAPP defendant is unable to afford fees or the lack of potential monetary damages precludes a standard contingency fee arrangement.â Id. Together, these anti-SLAPP provisions promote Californiaâs goals of deterring SLAPPs, Varian Med. Sys., 106 P.3d at 966, and âcompensating the prevailing defendant for the undue burden of defending against 3 As discussed below, in Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. v. Center for Medical Progress, we reconciled the special-motion provision with Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12 and 56 by holding that the Rule 12(b)(6) standard applies âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges only the legal sufficiency of a claim,â and the Rule 56 standard applies âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges the factual sufficiency of a claim.â 890 F.3d 828, 834 (9th Cir.), amended by 897 F.3d 1224 (9th Cir. 2018). 18 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE litigation designed to chill the exercise of free speech and petition rights,â Barry v. State Bar of Cal., 386 P.3d 788, 794 (Cal. 2017). II A To determine whether the anti-SLAPP provisions may be properly applied in federal court, we must first ask whether a federal rule âanswers the question in dispute.â Shady Grove Orthopedic Assocs., P.A. v. Allstate Ins., 559 U.S. 393, 398 (2010). The federal rule must be ââsufficiently broadâ to cause a âdirect collisionâ with the state law or, implicitly, to âcontrol the issueâ before the court, thereby leaving no room for the operation of that law.â Burlington N. R.R. Co. v. Woods, 480 U.S. 1, 4â5 (1987) (quoting Walker v. Armco Steel Corp., 446 U.S. 740, 749, 750 n.9 (1980)). If such a federal rule exists, it âcontrols âunless it exceeds statutory authorization or Congressâs rulemaking power.ââ Ellis v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., 24 F.4th 1262, 1269 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 398). But if no federal rule answers the question in dispute, we âproceed to determine whether the state law applies in federal court under the Erie doctrine.â Id. at 1270. âUnder the Erie doctrine, federal courts sitting in diversity apply state substantive law and federal procedural law.â Gasperini v. Ctr. for Humans., Inc., 518 U.S. 415, 427 (1996). âA substantive rule is one that creates rights or obligations . . . .â In re County of Orange, 784 F.3d 520, 527 (9th Cir. 2015). âA procedural rule, by contrast, defines âa form and mode of enforcingâ the substantive right or obligation.â Id. (quoting Byrd v. Blue Ridge Rural Elec. Co-op., Inc., 356 U.S. 525, 536 (1958)). Ultimately, though, âthe line between GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 19 substance and procedure must be drawn so as to ensure that âthe outcome of the litigation in the federal court should be substantially the same, so far as legal rules determine the outcome of a litigation, as it would be if tried in a State court.ââ Ellis, 24 F.4th at 1270 (quoting Felder v. Casey, 487 U.S. 131, 151 (1988)). This ââoutcome-determinationâ test must not be applied mechanically.â Gasperini, 518 U.S. at 428. â[I]nstead, its application must be guided by âthe twin aims of the Erie rule: discouragement of forum-shopping and avoidance of inequitable administration of the laws.ââ Id. (quoting Hanna v. Plumer, 380 U.S. 460, 468 (1965)). B As discussed above, the California Legislature views SLAPP suits as an âabuse of the judicial process.â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a). To protect defendants from this improper conduct, the California Legislature created a meaningful remedy: a defendant may file a special motion to strike and, if the defendant prevails, then the court shall strike the claim and award defendant his attorneysâ fees. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), (c)(1). In substance, these anti-SLAPP provisions provide defendants with a claim for attorneysâ fees for the pretrial dismissal of a meritless SLAPP suit. Thus, the âquestion in dispute,â Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 398, is whether defendants may obtain attorneysâ fees for the pretrial dismissal of a meritless suit. 4 No federal rule 4 Because this is the proper question, I find unpersuasive the out-of-circuit cases that Judge Bressâs concurrence cites. Bress Concurrence at 36. Those cases framed the question differently in holding that various state anti-SLAPP statutes conflicted with a federal rule. See La Liberte v. Reid, 966 F.3d 79, 87 (2d Cir. 2020) (identifying the question as âthe circumstances under which a court must dismiss a 20 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE answers that question. Judge Bressâs concurrence points to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12 and 56. Bress Concurrence at 33â34. But those rules do not control, as they establish no entitlement to a claim for attorneysâ fees. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12, 56. For the same reason, Rules 12 and 56 do not conflict with the attorney-fee-shifting provision. Nor do Rules 12 and 56 directly collide with the special-motion provision. In Planned Parenthood, we inspected the standards to be applied under the special-motion provision and Rules 12 and 56 and confirmed that they could be reconciled. 5 890 F.3d at 833â34. There, we held that âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges only the legal sufficiency of a claim, a . . . court should apply the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) standard and consider whether a claim is properly stated.â plaintiffâs claim before trialâ (quoting Abbas v. Foreign Polây Grp., LLC, 783 F.3d 1328, 1333 (D.C. Cir. 2015))); Klocke v. Watson, 936 F.3d 240, 245 (5th Cir.), as revised (Aug. 29, 2019) (same); Carbone v. Cable News Network, Inc., 910 F.3d 1345, 1350 (11th Cir. 2018) (identifying the question as âwhether [a] complaint states a claim for relief supported by sufficient evidence to avoid pretrial dismissalâ); Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1333â34 (identifying the question as âthe circumstances under which a court must dismiss a case before trialâ). 5 The Supreme Court has directed that âif the federal and state rules âcan be reconciled,â then they do not qualify as in conflict.â Hamilton v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 39 F.4th 575, 585 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 410 (plurality opinion)) (first citing Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 421 (Stevens, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment); and then citing Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 437 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting)); see also Gasperini, 518 U.S. at 437 n.22 (â[The] Court âhas continued since [Hanna] to interpret the federal rules to avoid conflict with important state regulatory policiesâ . . . .â (quoting R. Fallon, D. Meltzer, & D. Shapiro, Hart and Wechslerâs The Federal Courts and the Federal System 729â30 (4th ed. 1996))). GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 21 Id. at 834. But âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges the factual sufficiency of a claim, then the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 standard will apply.â Id. Thus, there is no direct collision between Californiaâs anti-SLAPP provisions and Rules 12 and 56. See CoreCivic, Inc. v. Candide Grp., LLC, 46 F.4th 1136, 1143 (9th Cir. 2022) (explaining that, under Planned Parenthood, no âconflict exists in this Circuitâ between Californiaâs anti-SLAPP special-motion provision and the standards under Rules 12 and 56). C Because no federal rule controls or directly conflicts with the anti-SLAPP provisions, âwe must make the âtypical, relatively unguided Erie choice.ââ Newsham, 190 F.3d at 973 (quoting Hanna, 380 U.S. at 471). The anti-SLAPP provisions provide defendants with a pretrial claim for attorneysâ fees for plaintiffsâ abuse of the judicial process. This is a substantive rule. See Alaska Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Avis Budget Grp., Inc., 738 F.3d 960, 973 (9th Cir. 2013) (âThe Supreme Court held in Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society that for Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins purposes, state law on attorneyâs fees is substantive, so state law applies in diversity cases.â (footnotes omitted)). The anti-SLAPP provisions âcreate[] [a] right[] or obligation[].â County of Orange, 784 F.3d at 527. They create a defendantâs right to attorneysâ fees and a plaintiffâs obligation to pay such fees. See Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 555â56 (1949) (holding that a state law that âcreate[d] a new liability where none existed beforeâ was substantive). The anti-SLAPP provisions also âserve [Californiaâs] substantive state polic[y],â County of Orange, 784 F.3d at 530 (quoting Feldman v. Allstate Ins., 322 F.3d 660, 667 (9th Cir. 2003)), of protecting âthe 22 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances,â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a), by deterring SLAPPs and compensating prevailing defendants, see Ketchum, 17 P.3d at 741. The Supreme Court has long held that state statutes requiring an award of attorneysâ fees to further a substantial policy apply in federal court: [I]t is clear that it is the policy of the state to allow plaintiffs to recover an attorneyâs fee in certain cases, and it has made that policy effective by making the allowance of the fee mandatory on its courts in those cases. It would be at least anomalous if this policy could be thwarted and the right so plainly given destroyed by removal of the cause to the federal courts. Sioux County v. Natâl Sur. Co., 276 U.S. 238, 243 (1928). This holding survived Erie, as confirmed by the Supreme Court in Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.S. 240, 259 n.31 (1975), superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in Lackey v. Stinnie, 604 U.S. 192, 205 (2025). Indeed, in Alyeska Pipeline, the Court reiterated that in âan ordinary diversity case where the state law does not run counter to a valid federal statute or rule of court, and usually it will not, state law . . . giving a right [to attorneysâ fees], which reflects a substantial policy of the state, should be followed.â Id. (quoting 6 J. Moore, Federal Practice § 54.77(2), at 1712â13 (2d ed. 1974)). Because the anti-SLAPP provisions grant defendants a right to attorneysâ fees to further an important state policy, Supreme Court GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 23 precedent compels us to conclude that the anti-SLAPP provisions are substantive under Erie. 6 Erieâs âtwin aimsâââdiscouragement of forum-shopping and avoidance of inequitable administration of the lawsââconfirm that the anti-SLAPP provisions are substantive. Hanna, 380 U.S. at 468. âPlainly, if the anti-SLAPP provisions are held not to apply in federal court, a litigant interested in bringing meritless SLAPP claims would have a significant incentive to shop for a federal forum.â Newsham, 190 F.3d at 973. â[W]ere [the anti-SLAPP provisions] not to apply in federal court, the incentives for forum shopping would be strong: electing to bring state-law claims in federal as opposed to state court would allow a plaintiff to . . . circumvent any liability for a defendantâs attorneyâs fees or costs.â Godin v. Schencks, 629 F.3d 79, 92 (1st Cir. 2010). âConversely, a litigant otherwise entitled to the protections of the Anti-SLAPP statute would find considerable disadvantage in a federal proceeding.â Newsham, 190 F.3d at 973. As we correctly noted in 6 For this reason, I respectfully disagree with Judge Bressâs suggestion that the anti-SLAPP provisions merely âadopt[] a set of procedures.â Bress Concurrence at 45. Judge Bress also argues that, even assuming the fee-shifting provision is substantive, it would be âwholly improper to apply [the] attorneysâ fees provisionâ because â[t]here is, in effect, no underlying statute to which the attorneysâ fee provision could even apply.â Bress Concurrence at 40. But, as explained above, we have reconciled the special-motion provision with the federal rules, and thus it continues to apply. Further, contrary to Judge Bressâs suggestion, the Eleventh Circuit in Carbone did not reject the notion that fee-shifting provisions under an anti-SLAPP statute that further an important state policy are substantive. Bress Concurrence at 47. Indeed, in rejecting that the statute there was substantive, the Carbone court did not even consider whether the fee-shifting provision could be viewed as substantive. See Carbone, 910 F.3d at 1355. 24 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Newsham, â[t]his outcome . . . run[s] squarely against the âtwin aimsâ of the Erie doctrine.â Id.; see also Makaeff v. Trump Univ., LLC, 736 F.3d 1180, 1187 (9th Cir. 2013) (order) (Wardlaw and Callahan, JJ., joined by Fletcher and Gould, JJ., concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc) (âWithout anti-SLAPP protections in federal courts, SLAPP plaintiffs would have an incentive to file or remove to federal courts strategic, retaliatory lawsuits that are more likely to have the desired effect of suppressing a SLAPP defendantâs speech-related activities.â). 7 III Californiaâs anti-SLAPP special-motion and attorney-fee-shifting provisions, Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1), (c)(1), provide defendants with a pretrial claim for attorneysâ fees for plaintiffsâ abuse of the judicial process. That is a substantive right, and no federal rule controls or directly collides with that right. Thus, the anti-SLAPP provisions apply in federal court. 7 I find unpersuasive the Tenth Circuitâs decision in Los Lobos Renewable Power, LLC v. Americulture, Inc, 885 F.3d 659 (10th Cir. 2018), in which it held that New Mexicoâs anti-SLAPP statute is procedural and not substantive. First, in determining that the fee-shifting provision was procedural, id. at 668â73, the court did not consider the Supreme Courtâs longstanding precedent that state statutes requiring an award of attorneysâ fees to further a substantial policy should be applied in federal court, see Sioux County, 276 U.S. at 243; Alyeska Pipeline, 421 U.S. at 259 n.31. Second, the Los Lobos courtâs cursory discussion of Erieâs twin aims fails to acknowledge the strong incentive to forum shop if the fee-shifting provision were not to apply in federal court. See Los Lobos, 885 F.3d at 673 n.8. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 25 BRESS, Circuit Judge, with whom COLLINS, LEE, and BUMATAY, Circuit Judges, join, concurring in the judgment: For over twenty-five years, the Ninth Circuit has struggled with its misguided experiment of allowing Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute to apply in federal court. Almost as soon as we allowed these motions to be filed in federal litigation, we were forced to alter the stateâs anti- SLAPP procedures in various ways to avoid conflicts with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Over the years, numerous judges of this court have implored us to reevaluate the broader issue, forcefully explaining why Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute should have no place in federal court. Picking up on those criticisms, virtually every other circuit to consider the issue has come out against us. The time was therefore ripeâbeyond ripeâfor bringing our circuit in line with the overwhelming majority view and holding that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute is a state procedural device that does not apply in federal court. Todayâs decision unfortunately ducks that issue. In concluding that the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion is not immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine, the majority opinion instead continues our multi-decade project of surgically altering the core components of the anti- SLAPP law to make it compatible with federal procedural law. But in the process, the majority allows to prevail in federal court a version of the anti-SLAPP statute that looks even less like the original than the already contorted version we have spent years jerry-rigging. The issue of whether the anti-SLAPP statute applies in federal court is not going away. And we have no license for allowing state procedural law to govern in federal court, 26 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE much less state procedural law that looks nothing like the law the state enacted. Rather than wait for the next case, it would have been far better, after a quarter-century of confusion, to deal with this issue once and for all. We have no jurisdiction to resolve this appeal of the denial of an anti- SLAPP motion for the more fundamental reason that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court. I A Like many other states, California has an anti-SLAPP statute. See Cal. Civ. Proc. Code §§ 425.16â17. SLAPP stands for âstrategic lawsuit against public participation.â The idea behind anti-SLAPP laws is to âprotect against âlawsuits brought primarily to chillâ the exercise of speech and petition rightsâ and to ââencourage continued participation in matters of public significance.ââ FilmOn.com Inc. v. DoubleVerify Inc., 439 P.3d 1156, 1160 (Cal. 2019) (quoting Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(a)). To combat such litigation, California allows defendants to file anti-SLAPP motions. See Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16. Californiaâs anti-SLAPP motion is âa special motion to strikeâ a cause of action âarising from any act of that person in furtherance of the personâs right of petition or free speech under the United States Constitution or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue.â Id. § 425.16(b)(1); see generally Metabolife Intâl, Inc. v. Wornick, 264 F.3d 832, 839â40 (9th Cir. 2001) (outlining the mechanics of an anti-SLAPP motion). There are also exceptions to the anti-SLAPP law. See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.17(b) (anti-SLAPP law generally does not apply GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 27 to âany action brought solely in the public interest or on behalf of the general publicâ). Under the anti-SLAPP statute, if a defendant makes a prima facie showing that the plaintiffâs lawsuit arises from the defendantâs exercise of his right to free speech, the defendant may bring an anti-SLAPP motion. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1); Makaeff v. Trump Univ., LLC, 715 F.3d 254, 261 (9th Cir. 2013). At that point, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to âestablish[ ] that there is a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim.â Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(b)(1); see also Makaeff v. Trump Univ., LLC, 736 F.3d 1180, 1188â89 (9th Cir. 2013) (Watford, J., joined by Kozinski, C.J., and Paez and Bea, JJ., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc). In addition to its heightened âprobabilityâ standard, Californiaâs anti-SLAPP law includes various other procedures ââfor weeding out, at an early stage, meritless claims arising from protected activity.ââ Newport Harbor Ventures, LLC v. Morris Cerullo World Evangelism, 413 P.3d 650, 653 (Cal. 2018) (quoting Baral v. Schnitt, 376 P.3d 604, 608 (Cal. 2016) (emphasis omitted)). For example, âthe filing of an anti-SLAPP motion automatically stays all further discovery until the court rules on the motion.â Metabolife, 264 F.3d at 846 (citing Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(g)). In addition, the statute permits immediate appeals of orders granting or denying anti-SLAPP motions. Newport Harbor, 413 P.3d at 655 (citing Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(i)). The statute also provides that âa defendant that prevails on a special motion to strike is entitled to attorneyâs fees and costs.â Barry v. State Bar of Cal., 386 P.3d 788, 790 (Cal. 2017) (citing Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(c)(1)). These and other features of the law âprovide a mechanism for the early termination of claims 28 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE that are improperly aimed at the exercise of free speech or the right of petition.â Newport Harbor, 413 P.3d at 653 (quoting Lam v. Ngo, 111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 582, 589 (Cal. Ct. App. 2001)). Several years after California enacted its anti-SLAPP statute, we held that the anti-SLAPP law applied in federal court. See United States ex rel. Newsham v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., 190 F.3d 963, 970â73 (9th Cir. 1999). We concluded that there was âno âdirect collisionââ between Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12 and 56 and Californiaâs anti-SLAPP device, even though the latter âadds an additional, unique weapon to the pretrial arsenal.â Id. at 972â73. And we reasoned that the purposes of the Erie doctrine, see Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), supported applying the state anti-SLAPP law in federal court. Otherwise, âa litigant interested in bringing meritless SLAPP claims would have a significant incentive to shop for a federal forum.â Newsham, 190 F.3d at 973. We did not grapple with how the anti-SLAPP statuteâs âprobabilityâ standard deviates from the Rule 12(b)(6) and Rule 56 standards. Several years later, we took the next step and held that the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion is immediately appealable in federal court. See Batzel v. Smith, 333 F.3d 1018, 1024â26 (9th Cir. 2003). While the anti-SLAPP statute permits interlocutory appeals, see Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(i), in federal court, a party is generally âentitled only to a single appeal, to be âdeferred until final judgment has been entered.ââ Batzel, 333 F.3d at 1024 (quoting Digit. Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 511 U.S. 863, 868 (1994)). Still, aligning our law with Californiaâs procedural law, Batzel held that âwe have GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 29 jurisdiction to review the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion pursuant to the collateral order doctrine.â Id. The result of these precedents is the widespread use of the anti-SLAPP mechanism in federal courts in this circuit. See Travelers Cas. Ins. Co. of Am. v. Hirsh, 831 F.3d 1179, 1182â83 (9th Cir. 2016) (Kozinski, J., joined by Gould, J., concurring). Experience shows that it is standard practice for parties litigating in our district courts to include an anti- SLAPP motion as part of the standard suite of dispositive pre-trial motions. B But a major problem lurked. Federal courts do not apply state laws or rules if the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure âattempt[ ] to answer the same questionâ and the relevant Federal Rule does not violate the Rules Enabling Act. Shady Grove Orthopedic Assocs., P.A. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 559 U.S. 393, 398â99 (2010); see also Hanna v. Plumer, 380 U.S. 460, 463â64, 471 (1965). Thus, â[w]hen a situation is covered by one of the Federal Rules,â we apply that rule over a corresponding state rule, unless the Federal Rule is invalid. Hanna, 380 U.S. at 471. In that situation, â[w]e do not wade into Erieâs murky waters unless the federal rule is inapplicable or invalid.â Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 398 (citing Hanna, 380 U.S. at 469â71). Almost as soon as we held that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute could apply in federal court, we were forced to conclude that various aspects of the anti-SLAPP statute could not, in fact, apply in federal court after all. The last twenty-five years of case law in this area from the Ninth Circuitâincluding todayâs decisionâhas therefore revolved around a central project: steadily holding that critical features of Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute do not 30 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE govern in federal court. Everything since Newsham has amounted to a retreat from that precedent. Our decision in Metabolife Intâl, Inc. v. Wornick, 264 F.3d 832 (9th Cir. 2001), was the opening blow. There, we held that the anti-SLAPP statuteâs automatic stay of discovery, see Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(g), conflicts with Rule 56 because while the anti-SLAPP statute âlimits discovery and makes further discovery an exception,â Rule 56 âensures that adequate discovery will occur before summary judgment is considered.â Metabolife, 264 F.3d at 846 (quotations omitted). Thus, the âdiscovery-limiting aspectsâ of Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute do not apply in federal court. Id. (quotations omitted). As Chief Judge Kozinski explained, Metabolifeâs holding was âclearly correct,â but it âcrippled the anti- SLAPP statuteâ by subjecting defendants to the usual rigors of federal court discovery, contrary to the statuteâs objective of haltingâearly on and with minimal expenseâthose claims that have no âreasonable probabilityâ of success. Makaeff, 715 F.3d at 274 (Kozinski, C.J., joined by Paez, J., concurring). From almost the very beginning of our anti- SLAPP case law, we were already constructing a version of the anti-SLAPP motion that was a âfar different (and tamer) animal than its state-court cousin.â Id. at 275. But although âMetabolife diminished some of the tension between the state and federal schemes,â it did so âat the expense of depriving the state scheme of its key feature: giving defendants a quick and painless exit from the litigation.â Id.; see also Makaeff, 736 F.3d at 1189 (Watford, J., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc). As the years wore on, we discovered more areas of incompatibility between the anti-SLAPP statute and federal GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 31 procedure, requiring us to make even more adjustments to the statute. For example, we concluded that âgranting a defendantâs anti-SLAPP motion to strike a plaintiffâs initial complaint without granting the plaintiff leave to amend would directly collide with Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)âs policy favoring liberal amendment.â Verizon Del., Inc. v. Covad Commcâns Co., 377 F.3d 1081, 1091 (9th Cir. 2004). Similarly, the anti-SLAPP statute requires that anti-SLAPP motions generally be filed within 60 days of the service of the complaint or counterclaims. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(f). But we held that this timing rule âdirectly collide[s] with the more permissiveâ timing rule under Rule 56. See Sarver v. Chartier, 813 F.3d 891, 900 (9th Cir. 2016). As a result, for anti-SLAPP motions that sound in Rule 56, we allow the filing of the motion âat any time until 30 days after the close of all discovery.â Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(b)). Litigants in federal court can thus bring anti-SLAPP motions much later in litigation, following discovery that the anti-SLAPP statute would generally not permit in the first place. We had to adjust the rules for interlocutory appeals, too. After initially holding that the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion is immediately appealable on a collateral basis, see Batzel, 333 F.3d at 1024, we were then required to conclude that, as a result of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), a plaintiff cannot appeal the grant of such a motion as to some but not all defendants, even though such an order would be immediately appealable in California state court. See Hyan v. Hummer, 825 F.3d 1043, 1047 (9th Cir. 2016) (per curiam) (citing Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(i)). Once again, we âpulled another toothâ from the anti-SLAPP statute to harmonize it with federal procedural law. 32 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE Travelers Cas. Ins. Co., 831 F.3d at 1186 (Kozinski, J., joined by Gould, J., concurring). C As our hybrid version of Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute became increasingly bespoke, many of our colleagues issued or joined separate writings calling for the reversal of our precedents allowing state-law anti-SLAPP motions in federal court. And numerous other circuits broke with our approach. Writing in 2013, Chief Judge Kozinski, joined by Judge Paez, described Newsham as âa big mistake,â explaining that â[f]ederal courts have no business applying exotic state procedural rules which, of necessity, disrupt the comprehensive scheme embodied in the Federal Rules, our jurisdictional statutes and Supreme Court interpretations thereof.â Makaeff, 715 F.3d at 275 (Kozinski, C.J., joined by Paez, J., concurring). Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute âcreates no substantive rightsâ and âmerely provides a procedural mechanism for vindicating existing rights.â Id. at 273. But as Chief Judge Kozinski wrote, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure already âprovide an integrated program of pre-trial, trial and post-trial procedures designed to ensure âthe just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding.ââ Id. at 274 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 1). The anti-SLAPP statute âcuts an ugly gash through this orderly process,â permitting the premature dismissal of claims without discovery; âchang[ing] the standard for surviving summary judgment by requiring a plaintiff to show a âreasonable probabilityâ that he will prevail, rather than merely a triable issue of factâ; and allowing otherwise forbidden interlocutory appeals. Id. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 33 But our efforts to smooth over the differences created new problems. Once we concluded in Metabolife that the discovery-limiting features of the anti-SLAPP statute could not apply in federal court, Chief Judge Kozinski went on to explain, what remained was âa hybrid procedure where neither the Federal Rules nor the state anti-SLAPP statute operate as designed.â Id. at 275. In a separate concurring opinion in the same case, Judge Paez made similar points. See id. (Paez, J., joined by Kozinski, C.J., concurring). He too recognized that âCaliforniaâs anti-SLAPP statute is âquintessentially procedural,â and its application in federal court has created a hybrid mess that now resembles neither the Federal Rules nor the original state statute.â Id. Later in 2013, an en banc vote to reassess the issue failed, but not without attracting a powerful dissent by Judge Watford who, joined by Chief Judge Kozinski, Judge Paez, and Judge Bea, added to the growing movement against our anti-SLAPP precedents. See Makaeff, 736 F.3d at 1188 (Watford, J., joined by Kozinski, C.J., and Paez and Bea, JJ., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc). Focusing on the legal standards for ending a lawsuit before trial, Judge Watford explained that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute conflicts with Rules 12 and 56, which collectively âestablish the exclusive criteria for testing the legal and factual sufficiency of a claim in federal court.â Id. Under Shady Grove, the anti-SLAPP statute therefore âimpermissibly supplements the Federal Rulesâ criteria for pre-trial dismissal of an action.â Id. For instance, to survive dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), a plaintiff need only âallege facts stating a claim that is âplausible on its face.ââ Id. at 1188â89 (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)). But as Judge Watford observed, Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute 34 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE âimpose[s] a probability requirement at the pleading stageâ that âeffectively stiffens the Rule 12 standard for testing the legal sufficiency of a claim.â Id. at 1189; see also id. (âAny attempt to impose a probability requirement at the pleading stage would obviously conflict with Rule 12. Yet that is exactly what Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute does.â); Travelers Cas. Ins. Co., 831 F.3d at 1183 (Kozinski, J., joined by Gould, J., concurring) (explaining that âCaliforniaâs anti-SLAPP law directly conflicts with Federal Rule 12, which provides a one-size-fits-all test for evaluating claims at the pleading stageâ). Judge Watford further explained how â[s]imilar problems plague the interaction between Californiaâs anti- SLAPP statute and Rule 56.â Makaeff, 736 F.3d at 1189 (Watford, J., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc). Summary judgment is proper only âif the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). But â[t]he anti-SLAPP statute eviscerates Rule 56 by requiring the plaintiff to prove that she will probably prevail if the case proceeds to trialâa showing considerably more stringent than identifying material factual disputes that a jury could reasonably resolve in the plaintiffâs favor.â Makaeff, 736 F.3d at 1189 (Watford, J., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc). For these reasons, Judge Watford called on us to ârevisitâand reverseâour precedent permitting application of state anti-SLAPP statutes in federal court.â Id. at 1190. Although the en banc call in Makaeff failed, Judge Watfordâs views were largely vindicated in Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. v. Center for Medical Progress, 890 F.3d 828 (9th Cir. 2018), in a way that only further cemented the strikingly different version of GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 35 Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute that we permit in federal court. The anti-SLAPP statuteâs heightened âprobabilityâ requirement was a cornerstone of its protections for anti- SLAPP defendants. But in Planned Parenthood, we effectively expunged that âprobabilityâ standard âto prevent the collision of California state procedural rules with federal procedural rules.â Id. at 833. Instead, we held that (1) âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges only the legal sufficiency of a claim, a district court should apply the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) standard and consider whether a claim is properly stated,â and (2) âwhen an anti-SLAPP motion to strike challenges the factual sufficiency of a claim, then the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 standard will apply,â and, in such a case, âdiscovery must be allowed.â Id. at 834. Echoing Chief Judge Kozinskiâs and Judge Watfordâs separate writings, Planned Parenthood explained that a âcontrary reading of these anti-SLAPP provisions would lead to the stark collision of the state rules of procedure with the governing Federal Rules of Civil Procedure while in a federal district court.â Id. As we continued to strip away various defining features of the anti-SLAPP law when utilized in federal court, members of this court continued to criticize our entire project of allowing anti-SLAPP motions in federal litigation. Writing in 2016, Judge Gould took âissue with circuit precedent permitting defendants in federal court to take advantage of Californiaâs anti-SLAPP law,â opining that âan anti-SLAPP motion has no proper place in federal court in light of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.â Travelers Cas. Ins. Co., 831 F.3d at 1186 (Gould, J.). More recently, Judge McKeown similarly expressed concern with our case law, because an anti-SLAPP motion âis wholly grounded in 36 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE th[e] stateâs procedural law, yet we have infused it with substantive significance.â Martinez v. ZoomInfo Techs., Inc., 82 F.4th 785, 794 (9th Cir. 2023) (McKeown, J., concurring), vacated, 90 F.4th 1042 (mem.) (9th Cir. 2024). The other circuits, meanwhile, have by now come out firmly against us. See id. at 795 (noting that â[o]ur jurisprudence on anti-SLAPP statutes places us in the minority among our sister circuitsâ because other circuits âdo not recognize the applicability of SLAPP statutesâ provisions for motions to strike or dismissâ); Planned Parenthood, 890 F.3d at 836 (Gould, J., concurring) (explaining that âthe use of anti-SLAPP procedure in federal courts has been squarely rejectedâ in other circuits). At this time, and after considering similar anti-SLAPP laws in other states, the Second, Fifth, Tenth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuits have all concluded that state anti-SLAPP statutes do not apply in federal court. See Abbas v. Foreign Polây Grp., LLC, 783 F.3d 1328, 1333 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (op. of Kavanaugh, J.); Los Lobos Renewable Power, LLC v. Americulture, Inc., 885 F.3d 659, 673 (10th Cir. 2018); Carbone v. Cable News Network, Inc., 910 F.3d 1345, 1347 (11th Cir. 2018); Klocke v. Watson, 936 F.3d 240, 242 (5th Cir. 2019); La Liberte v. Reid, 966 F.3d 79, 87â88 (2d Cir. 2020). Representative of these decisions is then-Judge Kavanaughâs opinion for the D.C. Circuit in Abbas. Relying on the separate writings from Chief Judge Kozinski and Judge Watford in Makaeff, Abbas held that the District of Columbiaâs anti-SLAPP statute did not apply in federal court because under Shady Grove, âFederal Rules of Civil Procedure 12 and 56 âanswer the same questionâ about the circumstances under which a court must dismiss a case before trial.â Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1333â34. The D.C. anti- GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 37 SLAPP statute could not apply in federal court because it âconflict[ed] with the Federal Rules by setting up an additional hurdle a plaintiff must jump over to get to trial.â Id. at 1334; see also id. (citing the separate writings by Chief Judge Kozinski and Judge Watford in Makaeff); Carbone, 910 F.3d at 1354 (holding that Georgiaâs anti-SLAPP statute cannot apply in federal court under Shady Grove because âthe Federal Rules and the Georgia anti-SLAPP statute address the same question: whether a complaint states a valid claim supported by sufficient evidence to warrant a trial on the meritsâ); Klocke, 936 F.3d at 245 (holding that Texasâs anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court and âfind[ing] most persuasive the reasoning of the D.C. Circuitâ in Abbas); La Liberte, 966 F.3d at 87 (âReid urges us to follow the Ninth Circuit, which holds that Californiaâs anti- SLAPP statute and the Federal Rules âcan exist side by side . . . without conflict.â We disagreeâas do a number of Ninth Circuit judges.â (quoting Newsham, 190 F.3d at 972)). Although they have yet to carry the day in this court, the separate writings of Chief Judge Kozinski and Judge Watford have proven highly influential nationwide, persuading the other circuits that have considered the issue. Only the First Circuit agrees with us that a state anti- SLAPP statute can apply in federal court. See Godin v. Schencks, 629 F.3d 79, 92 (1st Cir. 2010). But it reached that conclusion in 2010, back when we were the only circuit to have weighed in on the issue and before various judges on our court began to express disagreement with our precedent. Our court, like the First Circuit, is thus an outlier. But given our circuitâs vastly greater caseload, allowing anti-SLAPP motions to be filed in our district courts has a profoundly greater effect here. 38 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE II A This case presented a golden opportunity for the en banc court to fix our mistaken precedent and hold that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court. There is really nothing new to think about here. Chief Judge Kozinski, Judge Watford, our sister circuits, and many others have identified the clear path for holding that under Shady Grove and Hanna v. Plumer, Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute cannot apply in federal court, where the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure reign. There is little I can do to improve upon the sound reasoning of the many judges from this circuit and elsewhere who have weighed in to explain this point. In my respectful view, we do a disservice to the law by keeping our patently incorrect anti-SLAPP case law on the books, while leaving in place a lopsided circuit split in which we spearhead the minority view. In taking the minimalist approach of holding that the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion is no longer immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine, the majority opinion leaves anti-SLAPP practice in this circuit even more incoherent than we found it. The four core pillars supporting the anti-SLAPP statuteâs overarching objective of âresolv[ing] these lawsuits early,â Newport Harbor, 413 P.3d at 651, are (1) stays of discovery, (2) heightened âprobabilityâ of success requirements for plaintiffs, (3) interlocutory appeals, and (4) attorneysâ fees for successful anti-SLAPP motions. Our decision in Metabolife nixed the first. See 264 F.3d at 846. Planned Parenthood eliminated the second. See 890 F.3d 833â34. Todayâs decision cancels the third. So we have now stripped away every major procedural aspect of the statute geared toward GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 39 the early termination of claims. There may be other more minor discrepancies that we have yet to resolve between state anti-SLAPP procedure and the Federal Rules, but one can be assured that if and when those issues arise, the Federal Rules will prevail, just as they have in our past cases. So all that really remains after todayâs decision is the attorneysâ fees provision. What the majority has therefore left us with is a fee- shifting statute for anti-SLAPP motions that merit this label in name only. They are really just motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) or summary judgment motions under Rule 56. They are subject to the same standards as those two types of motions. See Planned Parenthood, 890 F.3d at 833â34. They follow the same discovery processes as those motions, just as the Federal Rules would normally allow. See Metabolife, 264 F.3d at 846. These types of motions would not have fee-shifting associated with them, absent an attorneysâ fees provision in some other relevant substantive state or federal law. But even though we haveâout of necessity to avoid conflict with federal procedural rulesâ completely reformed the state anti-SLAPP legal standards, the state anti-SLAPP discovery processes (or lack thereof), and the state anti-SLAPP rules for interlocutory appeals, after todayâs decision, we will still award attorneysâ fees to a successful anti-SLAPP movant. There is no license for this. It is true that under the Erie doctrine, federal courts sitting in diversity apply attorneysâ fees provisions that are part of substantive state law. See, e.g., Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Socây, 421 U.S. 240, 259 (1975), overruled by statute on other grounds, as recognized in Lackey v. Stinnie, 604 U.S. 192, 205 (2025); Alaska Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Avis Budget Grp., 738 F.3d 960, 973 (9th Cir. 2013); In re Larryâs Apartment, L.L.C., 249 40 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE F.3d 832, 837â39 (9th Cir. 2001). But even assuming it would be proper to regard the anti-SLAPP statuteâs fee- shifting provision as part of state substantive law, as opposed to state procedural law, it is wholly improper to apply a state attorneysâ fees provision to a state law that we have completely rewritten. The attorneysâ fees provision in the anti-SLAPP statute is part of an integrated statutory scheme. There is simply no basis for allowing fee-shifting for a revamped anti-SLAPP law that bears no resemblance to the statute as enacted. There is, in effect, no underlying statute to which the attorneysâ fee provision could even apply. To this point, every other circuit to consider the issue has held that when a state anti-SLAPP statute cannot apply in federal court, its attorneysâ fees provision is inoperative. As then-Judge Kavanaugh explained, when an anti-SLAPP statute âdoes not purport to make attorneyâs fees available to parties who obtain dismissal by other means, such as under Federal Rule 12(b)(6),â âattorneyâs fees under the Anti- SLAPP Act are not available.â Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1337 n.5. Or as the Fifth Circuit put it, the fee-shifting provisions in an anti-SLAPP law âare not applicable apart from the burden- shifting early dismissal framework.â Klocke, 936 F.3d at 247 n.6; see also La Liberte, 966 F.3d at 88â89 (explaining that because the California anti-SLAPP statute âawards attorneysâ fees only to âa prevailing [party] on a special motion to strike,ââ a plaintiff may not recover fees âunder the anti-SLAPP statute if she later prevails by other meansâ (quoting Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 425.16(c)(1)). The logic of these decisions applies as well to the current state of Ninth Circuit case law, placing us in conflict with our sister circuits. Federal defendants who prevail on an anti-SLAPP motion in the Ninth Circuit are not truly prevailing on that motion as the California legislature GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 41 conceived it. Instead, they are winning on some âhybrid messâ of a motion, Makaeff, 715 F.3d at 275 (Paez, J., concurring), that, after todayâs decision, resembles its state court counterpart even less. The Supreme Court âsince 1796 . . . has maintained that âthe Judiciary itself would not create a general rule, independent of any statute, allowing awards of attorneysâ fees in federal courts.ââ Lackey, 604 U.S. at 199 (quoting Alyeska Pipeline, 421 U.S. at 249). Todayâs decision results in that very form of unauthorized fee- shifting. There is also every reason to think that the regime that remains in place after todayâs decision will lead to attorneysâ fees questions that would never arise under the statute as enacted. Again, the core features of Californiaâs anti- SLAPP law were designed to âprovide a mechanism for the early termination of claimsâ that fell within the statuteâs ambit. Newport Harbor, 413 P.3d at 653 (quoting Lam, 111 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 589). But with generally no discovery, defendant-friendly legal standards, and interlocutory appeals, California ensured that anti-SLAPP motions would be resolved expeditiously and, as a result, less expensively. See id. at 655 (explaining that the anti-SLAPP statute provides âa means for the prompt and relatively inexpensive resolution of lawsuits that threaten free speechâ). But now consider the fees issue in federal court. With discovery, see Metabolife, 264 F.3d at 846, more plaintiff- friendly legal standards, see Planned Parenthood, 890 F.3d at 833â34, and now no interlocutory appeals, the cost of litigating an anti-SLAPP motion in federal court will surely be much greater than it would have been in California state court. The denial of interlocutory appeals, in particular, is likely to play a major role in increasing litigation costs, because the effect of those appeals was not only a quick 42 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE answer on appeal, but typically a stay of proceedings in district court. Now imagine that an anti-SLAPP motion is denied, there is no interlocutory appeal, and the parties litigate the case to final judgment, only for the court of appeals to conclude years later that the anti-SLAPP motion should have been granted at the outset. How should fees be assessed in that situation? After todayâs decision, we can expect a wave of new issues relating to outsized fee awards, made possible by the majorityâs decision to retain the statuteâs sole remaining core featureâfee-shiftingâbut to inter the rest. It would have been far better to avoid these issues entirely by aligning our law with the dominant and clearly correct position that the anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court. The majority opinion is already dismissing stare decisis concerns and overruling decades of past precedent that permitted interlocutory appeals of the denial of anti-SLAPP motions. The effects of todayâs decision will already be significant. Why not just finish the job? The issue matters not just to prevent judicially unauthorized fee shifting, but because district courts are constantly confronted with the additional burden of parasitical anti-SLAPP motions, which often raise nettlesome questions about the interaction between state and federal procedure. We could have restored the rule of law and made everyoneâs lives much easier by returning to the basic proposition that unless Congress specifies otherwise, it is the Federal Rules that âgovern the procedure in all civil actions and proceedings in the United States district courts.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 1. B There are a few common objections to the majority position that nearly every circuit but this one has adopted. GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 43 These objections do not stand up, as the other circuits have rightly concluded. First, some may argue that federal courts should apply state anti-SLAPP statutes because those laws serve the important and beneficial purpose of protecting defendants from lawsuits that threaten their free speech rights. This argument fails because it is not up to us to devise greater procedural protections than the law confers. As the Second Circuit has explained, â[t]he idea that the more stringent requirement of the anti-SLAPP standard is a beneficial âsupplementâ to the Federal Rules is a policy argumentâand fatal, because the more permissive standards of the Federal Rules likewise reflect policy judgments as to what is sufficient.â La Liberte, 966 F.3d at 88. Congress can adjust the rules governing litigation, including the pleading standards. It has done so, for example, for fraud claims, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b), and for violations of the securities laws, see Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (PSLRA) of 1995, Pub. L. No. 104â 67, 109 Stat. 737 (1995); Tellabs, Inc v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 321 (2007). As the Supreme Court has explained, Congress âhas ultimate authority over the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; it can create exceptions to an individual rule as it sees fitâeither by directly amending the rule or by enacting a separate statute overriding it in certain instances.â Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 400. In the case of anti-SLAPP statutes, moreover, it is not necessarily all upside. California courts have themselves expressed concern that anti-SLAPP motions âpresent[ ] the possibility for abuse.â Newport Harbor, 413 P.3d at 655 (quoting Platypus Wear, Inc. v. Goldberg, 83 Cal. Rptr. 3d 95, 103 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008)). It is up to Congress, not the 44 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE courts, to decide whether the perceived benefits of an anti- SLAPP statute outweigh the costs. Second, and related, some argue that if we do not apply the anti-SLAPP statute, plaintiffs who want to silence their critics through lawsuits will engage in forum-shopping in federal court. But when âFederal Rules 12 and 56 answer the same question as the Anti-SLAPP Actâs special motion to dismiss provision,â Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1336, that is the end of the matter. Nor can there be any doubt that Rules 12 and 56 are valid under the Rules Enabling Act. See, e.g., Klocke, 936 F.3d at 247â48; Carbone, 910 F.3d at 1356â57; Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1336â37. If forum-shopping is the result of not applying the anti-SLAPP statute in federal court, that is âthe inevitable (indeed, one might say the intended) result of a uniform system of federal procedure.â Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 416 (plurality op.). In any event, the concerns of forum-shopping are surely more imagined than real. The anti-SLAPP statute does not create new substantive rights; it protects existing ones. See Makaeff, 715 F.3d at 273 (Kozinski, C.J., joined by Paez, J., concurring). There is no reason to believe that federal courts are incapable of dealing with plaintiffs who seek to use litigation to chill speech. See Los Lobos Renewable Power, 885 F.3d at 673 n.8 (holding that New Mexicoâs anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court but cautioning that â[a]nyone who believes that a federal district court is ill- equipped to deal swiftly and harshly with the sort of lawsuits described in [the anti-SLAPP law] is seriously mistakenâ and âin for a rude awakeningâ). Of course, if the forum-shopping concerns were so overriding as to carry the day, then todayâs decisionâand our multi-decade endeavor of paring back the anti-SLAPP GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 45 statute when invoked in federal courtâare themselves unjustified. To avoid conflicts with federal procedural rules, our case law already weakens the protections of the anti- SLAPP statute for lawsuits filed in federal court. If forum shopping is the predominant concern, the majority should be overruling Metabolife and Planned Parenthood, not further weakening the anti-SLAPP statute by removing the protections associated with interlocutory appeals. Although it is questionable whether anyone would choose a federal forum based on the anti-SLAPP decisional law alone, the incentives for forum shopping in federal court on this basis already exist, and they will be even stronger after todayâs decision. But we have never thought those concerns sufficient. And there is no indication in our multi-decade experiment with the anti-SLAPP laws that plaintiffs have specifically selected the federal courts on the theory that they are less protective of free speech interests. Third, and another variation on the above two points, some will argue that what California has done through its anti-SLAPP statute is effectively create a cause of action, akin to abuse of process, which federal courts are bound to respect under Erie. But the difficulty here is that California did not create a cause of action; it instead adopted a set of procedures that answer the same question as the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Other circuits have had little difficulty rejecting this same argument. As the Eleventh Circuit has explained, âthe problem with the argumentâ is that âthe means by which the [anti-SLAPP statute] pursues its special purpose is by winnowing claims and defenses in the course of litigation, just like Rules 12 and 56.â Carbone, 910 F.3d at 1354. It is âirrelevantâ that the anti-SLAPP statute seeks to protect speech interests because it âadvances that end by imposing a requirement on a plaintiffâs 46 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE entitlement to maintain a suit over and above the requirements contemplated by the Federal Rules that control the same question.â Id.; see also Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1335 (âHad the D.C. Council simply wanted to permit courts to award attorneyâs fees to prevailing defendants in these kinds of defamation cases, it easily could have done so. But the D.C. Council instead enacted a new provision that answers the same question about the circumstances under which a court must grant pre-trial judgment to defendants.â). It thus proves nothing to observe that Californiaâs anti- SLAPP statute promotes substantive interests. All procedural rules can be said to do that in some way or another. See Shady Grove, 559 U.S. at 404 (explaining that âmany state rules ostensibly addressed to procedureâ could be recharacterized as âsubstantive,â and that â[p]leading standards, for example, often embody policy preferences about the types of claims that should succeedâ). Acknowledging the substantive motivations behind the anti- SLAPP statute does not change the fact that it is, as the California Supreme Court described it, âa procedural device.â Kibler v. N. Inyo Cnty. Local Hosp. Dist., 138 P.3d 193, 198 (Cal. 2006). But a state procedural device has no place in federal litigation. C Drawing on the same three points above, Judge Bennettâs concurring opinion would conclude that, stripped down to its fee-shifting provision, Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute applies in federal court. But Judge Bennettâs concurrence is mistaken for the reasons I have just explained. And it would only perpetuate the lopsided circuit split that has emerged after nearly every other circuit to address the issue has disagreed with us. Contrary to Judge GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE 47 Bennettâs belief that the other circuits âframed the question differentlyâ than he does, Bennett Concurrence at 19 n.4, the Second, Fifth, Tenth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuits simply disagree with his reasoning. And three of these circuits have specifically rejected the notion that an anti-SLAPP attorneysâ fee provision could carry forward without the rest of the statute. See La Liberte, 966 F.3d at 88â89; Klocke, 936 F.3d at 247 n.6; Abbas, 783 F.3d at 1337 n.5. The core premise of Judge Bennettâs concurrence is that the anti-SLAPP statute âcreate[s] a substantive right.â Bennett Concurrence at 15. But as the Eleventh Circuit explained, âthis argument is a nonstarterâ because the anti- SLAPP statute ââcreates no substantive rights; it merely provides a procedural mechanism for vindicating existing rights.ââ Carbone, 910 F.3d at 1355 (quoting Makaeff, 715 F.3d at 273 (Kozinski, C.J., concurring)); see also Klocke, 936 F.3d at 247. Judge Bennettâs position is also at odds with the California Supreme Courtâs own repeated description of the anti-SLAPP statute as âa procedural device,â Kibler, 138 P.3d at 198, and âprocedural statute,â Soukup v. Law Offices of Herbert Hafif, 139 P.3d 30, 43 (Cal. 2006). The only reason that Judge Bennett can even suggest otherwise is because our cases have now rejected various aspects of the anti-SLAPP law as inconsistent with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. But contrary to his assertion that we have âreconciledâ the anti-SLAPP statute with Rules 12 and 56, Bennett Concurrence at 17 n.3, 20â 21, 23 n.6, no reconciliation was accomplished, nor was it even possible: we simply rewrote the anti-SLAPP statute wholesale. The fact that we had to do that should have led us to conclude that the anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court at all. It does not justify Judge Bennettâs effort 48 GOPHER MEDIA LLC V. MELONE to re-label as substantive a reconstructed, federal-court-only anti-SLAPP statute that looks nothing like the anti-SLAPP statute that applies in California state court. Judge Bennettâs position thus has no foothold in the statute he would purport to apply. And we have no authority to order fee-shifting âindependent of any statute.â Lackey, 604 U.S. at 199 (quoting Alyeska Pipeline, 421 U.S. at 249). * * * We should have held that Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute does not apply in federal court. When the issue presents itself again, which it surely will, I hope we will end our confusing efforts to meld federal and state procedural law. No authority permits us to blend these two bodies of law as we have, an endeavor that has bedeviled federal practice and left in its wake a version of the anti-SLAPP statute that bears no resemblance to the real thing.
Case Information
- Court
- 9th Cir.
- Decision Date
- October 9, 2025
- Status
- Precedential