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Khan v. Jewish Women International

2026-06-30

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

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Khan v. Jewish Women International

SAIFULLAH KHAN v. JEWISH WOMEN

INTERNATIONAL ET AL.

(AC 48383)

Suarez, Clark and Harper, Js.

Syllabus

The plaintiff appealed from the trial court’s judgment dismissing his action for, inter alia, defamation. While he was a student at Yale University, the plaintiff was accused of rape by J, a fellow student. The plaintiff was charged with, tried, and acquitted of sexual assault in the Superior Court, but, in subsequent disciplinary proceedings at Yale, Yale expelled the plaintiff for violating its sexual misconduct policy. The plaintiff subsequently brought an action in the United States District Court against J for defamation and tortious interference with business relationships. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ultimately certified questions of Connecticut state law concerning absolute immunity to the Connecticut Supreme Court, and the defendants in the present case filed an application with the Supreme Court to appear as amici curiae. In their attached proposed amicus brief, the defendants stated that the plaintiff had raped J and referred to the plaintiff as J’s rapist. The plaintiff then instituted the present action, alleging, inter alia, that the defendants’ statements constituted defamation. On appeal to this court, the plaintiff claimed, inter alia, that the trial court improperly addressed the defendants’ special motions to dismiss pursuant to the antiSLAPP statute (§ 52-196a) after concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action. Held:

The trial court properly concluded that the litigation privilege applied to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae, as the privilege protects all participants in a judicial proceeding and applies to every step of the proceeding until its final disposition, including statements made in pleadings or other documents prepared in connection with the proceeding.

The trial court did not err in concluding that the statements in the proposed amicus brief were pertinent to the certified question before the Supreme Court for purposes of the litigation privilege, as J’s allegation that the plaintiff raped her and Yale’s decision to expel the plaintiff on the basis of her allegation were central to the issues both in the underlying federal litigation and in the proceedings before the Supreme Court, and, because the defendants’ statements referring to the plaintiff as a rapist mirrored J’s allegation, they unquestionably had some reference to the issues before the court.

The trial court did not err in determining that the count of the plaintiff’s complaint purporting to assert a claim for abuse of process was barred by the litigation privilege, as the plaintiff failed to identify specific misconduct intended to cause specific injury outside of the normal contemplation of private litigation and, instead, based his claim entirely on the allegation that the words used by the defendants caused him harm in a way that was ancillary to the litigation.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

This court concluded that the trial court did not err in dismissing the portion of the plaintiff’s claims pertaining to the defendants’ alleged republication of the proposed amicus brief on the alternative ground that, pursuant to Kelley v. Bonney (221 Conn. 549), the litigation privilege barred those claims, as the proposed amicus brief was a publicly filed court record that remained accessible to the general public.

The trial court improperly addressed the special motions to dismiss after concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action, as once the court determined that the litigation privilege barred the plaintiff’s claims, it was required to dismiss the action without proceeding further.

Argued December 3, 2025—officially released June 30, 2026

Procedural History

Action to recover damages for, inter alia, defamation, and for other relief, brought to the Superior Court

in the judicial district of Hartford, where the court,

Hon. Carl J. Schuman, judge trial referee, granted the

motions to dismiss and the special motions to dismiss

filed by the named defendant et al. and rendered judgment thereon, from which the plaintiff appealed to this

court; thereafter, the plaintiff withdrew his appeal as

against the defendant Advocates for Youth. Vacated in

part; judgment directed.

Alexander T. Taubes, for the appellant (plaintiff).

Amanda S. Amert, pro hac vice, with whom were Sara

Kim, pro hac vice, and Karen T. Staib and, on the brief,

Nicole Lapenta and Joseph Mario Buccilli, pro hac vice,

for the appellees (named defendant et al.).

Joel Kurtzberg, pro hac vice, with whom were Lauren Perlgut, pro hac vice, and, on the brief, David G.

Januszewski, for the appellee (defendant Sanctuary for

Families, Inc.).

Sharon Baldwin, for the appellee (defendant Advocates for Youth).

Scott M. Harrington, for the appellee (defendant The

Fierberg National Law Group, PLLC).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

Opinion

CLARK, J. This appeal concerns the applicability

of the litigation privilege, which provides litigation

participants absolute immunity from suit, to persons

participating in litigation as amici curiae. The plaintiff, Saifullah Khan, brought this action against the

defendants, twelve nonprofit organizations (nonprofit

defendants),1 The Fierberg National Law Group, PLLC

(Fierberg), and Attorney Jennifer M. Becker, claiming

that the defendants falsely referred to him as a “rapist”

in a proposed brief they filed with an application to appear as amici curiae in a proceeding before our Supreme Court.

The trial court dismissed the action as to all defendants

except Sanctuary for Families (Sanctuary) for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction on the ground that the plaintiff’s claims were barred by the litigation privilege.2

The court also dismissed the action as to all defendants

pursuant to the anti-SLAPP statute, General Statutes

§ 52-196a, on the ground that the complaint is based on

the defendants’ exercise of their right to petition the

government and that the plaintiff could not prevail on

the merits because the litigation privilege bars his claims.

On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court improperly (1) concluded that the defendants were entitled to

absolute immunity for their statements in the proposed

1

The nonprofit defendants are: Jewish Women International; Legal Momentum; Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation; Connecticut Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Inc.; Futures Without Violence; National Alliance to End Sexual Violence; National Crime Victim Law Institute; National Network to End Domestic Violence, Inc.; National Women’s Law Center; Network for Victim Recovery of the District of Columbia; Sanctuary for Families, Inc.; and Women’s Law Project. The plaintiff also named National Coalition Against Domestic Violence as a defendant in his complaint, but it did not appear before the trial court and is not participating in this appeal. The plaintiff withdrew his appeal as to one additional defendant, Advocates for Youth, after oral argument before this court. Accordingly, all references in this opinion to the defendants include only the nonprofit defendants, The Fierberg National Law Group, PLLC, and Attorney Jennifer M. Becker.

2

As discussed subsequently in this opinion, Sanctuary is the only defendant that did not file or join a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. See part IV of this opinion.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

amicus brief, (2) concluded that the litigation privilege

barred his abuse of process claim, (3) concluded that

the defendants’ alleged republication of the proposed

brief was protected by the fair report privilege, and (4)

addressed the defendants’ special motions to dismiss

after concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action.3 We conclude that the court

erred in addressing the special motions to dismiss after

concluding that the plaintiff’s action was barred by the

litigation privilege. We otherwise affirm the judgment

of the trial court.

The following facts, as alleged in the complaint or as

established by uncontested evidence in the record; see

Derblom v. Archdiocese of Hartford, 203 Conn. App.

197, 200, 247 A.3d 600 (2021), aff’d, 346 Conn. 333, 289

A.3d 1187 (2023); and procedural history are relevant

to this appeal. The plaintiff is a former student at Yale

University (Yale). After being accused of rape by a fellow student, the plaintiff was charged with, tried, and

acquitted of sexual assault.4 Yale subsequently held a

disciplinary proceeding relating to the allegations and,

as a result of that proceeding, expelled the plaintiff for

violating its sexual misconduct policy.

Thereafter, the plaintiff brought an action in the

United States District Court for the District of Connecticut against his accuser, identified as Jane Doe, for

3

The plaintiff also challenges the court’s dismissal of the action pursuant to § 52-196a on the basis that (1) the court improperly concluded that he failed to establish probable cause that he would prevail on his claims, and (2) deprived him of his right to due process by denying his request for discovery pertaining to the defendants’ anti-SLAPP motions. Because we conclude that the court lacked authority to address the special motions to dismiss in the first instance, we need not address these claims.

4

As the trial court noted, although the plaintiff alleged in his complaint that he was acquitted of “rape” and does not identify the jurisdiction in which his trial took place, it is undisputed that the trial took place in the Superior Court and that the plaintiff was charged with and acquitted of sexual assault. See Khan v. Yale University, 347 Conn. 1, 13, 295 A.3d 855 (2023) (“[the plaintiff] faced trial before a jury in early 2018 for first, second, third, and [fourth degree] sexual assault during a nearly [two week] trial and was acquitted on all counts after less than [one] day of deliberations” (internal quotation marks omitted)).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

defamation and tortious interference with business relationships. See Khan v. Yale University, 347 Conn. 1, 16,

295 A.3d 855 (2023).5 The District Court dismissed the

plaintiff’s claims against Doe, concluding that the Yale

disciplinary proceeding was quasi-judicial in nature and

that Doe enjoyed absolute immunity for her statements in

that proceeding. Id. The plaintiff appealed to the United

States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, claiming “that the proceedings of [nongovernmental] entities

cannot be quasi-judicial and, thus, Doe’s accusations of

sexual assault in a private university’s disciplinary hearing are not shielded by absolute immunity.” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.) Id., 17. The Second Circuit,

concluding that the outcome of the appeal hinged on

questions of Connecticut state law concerning absolute

immunity, certified those questions to our Supreme

Court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199b (d). See

id., 17–18.

The nonprofit defendants and Fierberg, represented

by Becker, filed an application for permission to appear

as amici curiae and to file a brief in support of Doe and

attached a copy of their proposed brief to their application. The argument section of the proposed brief opened

by stating: “When Jane Doe was in college, the plaintiff raped her.” The brief also referred to the plaintiff as “[Jane Doe’s] rapist,” stated that “Jane Doe was

raped,” and referred to Doe as a “victim.” The plaintiff objected to the defendants’ application on the basis

that the statements referring to him as a rapist were “a

false and vicious personal attack” that constituted an

“abuse of . . . the litigation privilege,” which the plaintiff asserted “bar[red] [him] from suing [the defendants].”6

5

The plaintiff also brought claims against Yale and various Yale employees, but those claims were not at issue in the proceedings before our Supreme Court. See Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 11 n.8.

6

We take judicial notice of the relevant filings in the Supreme Court in Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 1. See, e.g., Jackson v. Drury, 191 Conn. App. 587, 590 n.4, 216 A.3d 768 (“[a]n appellate court may take judicial notice of files in the same or other cases”), cert. denied, 333 Conn. 938, 218 A.3d 1050 (2019); Norris v. Trumbull, 187

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The defendants filed an application for permission to

file a reply to the plaintiff’s objection to explain why

they believed their statements were supported by the

record and, in the alternative, requested permission to

file a revised brief without the challenged language. The

Supreme Court denied the defendants’ application for

permission to file an amicus brief “without prejudice

to refiling the application . . . accompanied by a proposed brief that is shorn of all facts not supported by the record . . . .” The defendants filed a renewed application

accompanied by a proposed brief without the challenged

language, which the Supreme Court granted. The initial

proposed brief, however, remains publicly available on

the Judicial Branch website, and the plaintiff alleges that the defendants republished the brief on their websites

and “to donors.”

The plaintiff commenced the present action on May 21,

2024, alleging, against all defendants, claims sounding in

defamation, false light, negligent infliction of emotional

distress, and abuse of process. All of the defendants

except Sanctuary filed motions to dismiss for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction, asserting that the litigation

privilege bars the plaintiff’s claims because they arise

from the challenged statements in the proposed amicus

brief. Additionally, all defendants, including Sanctuary,

filed special motions to dismiss pursuant to § 52-196a,

asserting that the plaintiff’s claims are based on the

defendants’ exercise of their rights to free speech and

to petition the government pertaining to a matter of

public concern and that the plaintiff could not establish

probable cause that he would prevail on the merits of his

claims because, inter alia, the litigation privilege bars

those claims.7

Conn. App. 201, 211, 201 A.3d 1137 (2019) (“in conducting our de novo review [of a trial court’s decision granting a motion to dismiss], we limit ourselves to the factual record as it existed before the trial court, supplemented by any additional records of which we may take judicial notice”).

7

As our Supreme Court has explained, “[u]nder [§ 52-196a] a party may file a special motion to dismiss when the opposing party’s complaint is based on the moving party’s exercise of, among other things, the right

Khan v. Jewish Women International

On November 8, 2024, the plaintiff filed an omnibus

memorandum in opposition to the defendants’ motions

to dismiss and special motions to dismiss.8 The plaintiff argued that the defendants did not enjoy absolute

immunity for the statements in the proposed amicus

brief because (1) the litigation privilege does not apply

of free speech or the right to petition the government in connection with a matter of public concern.” Priore v. Haig, 344 Conn. 636, 659, 280 A.3d 402 (2022). A claim is subject to dismissal pursuant to § 52-196a if the party filing the special motion to dismiss demonstrates that the complaint “is based on the moving party’s exercise of its right of free speech, right to petition the government, or right of association under the [c]onstitution of the United States or the [c]onstitution of the state in connection with a matter of public concern,” and the nonmoving party fails to “[demonstrate] to the court that there is probable cause, considering all valid defenses, that the party will prevail on the merits of the complaint . . . .” General Statutes § 52-196a (e) (3).

In their special motions to dismiss, the defendants also raised other arguments in support of their contention that the plaintiff could not meet his burden under the second prong of § 52-196a (e) (3) to establish probable cause that he would prevail on the merits. On appeal, the defendants renew those arguments as alternative grounds to affirm the trial court’s decision granting the special motions to dismiss. We need not address those arguments because, as explained subsequently in this opinion, we conclude that the court should have dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction as to all defendants and should not have addressed the special motions to dismiss.

8

Before filing his memorandum in opposition to the defendants’ motions to dismiss and special motions to dismiss, on September 4, 2024, the plaintiff filed a motion for permission to take limited discovery of Sanctuary for the purpose of responding to its special motion to dismiss. See General Statutes § 52-196a (d). On October 7, 2024, the court granted the plaintiff’s motion in part. The plaintiff, however, filed his omnibus memorandum in opposition to the defendants’ motions to dismiss and special motions to dismiss before taking the deposition of a representative of Sanctuary. The court, therefore, decided the matter as to Sanctuary on the basis of the briefing and affidavits.

In his omnibus opposition to the defendants’ motions to dismiss and special motions to dismiss, the plaintiff, for the first time, requested permission to take discovery of the remaining defendants. In its memorandum of decision, the court denied that request on the basis that the plaintiff did not establish good cause that such discovery was warranted. As stated previously; see footnote 3 of this opinion; although the plaintiff challenges the court’s discovery rulings on appeal, in light of our conclusion that the court lacked authority to address the merits of the special motions to dismiss, we need not address the discovery related claims because they pertain only to the special motions to dismiss.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae, and (2) even

if it does, the privilege did not apply under the facts of

this case because the challenged statements were not

pertinent to the appeal before the Supreme Court. In

support of the latter argument, the plaintiff argued

that the Supreme Court had “necessarily determined

that the statements . . . were impertinent” to the issues

in the appeal “[b]y ordering the defendants to refile their brief ‘shorn of all facts not supported by the record.’ ”

The plaintiff also argued that, even if the privilege did

bar any claims that were based on the defendants’ filing of the proposed brief, it did not bar his claims to

the extent they are based on the defendants’ alleged

republication of the brief. Finally, the plaintiff argued

that the litigation privilege did not bar count four of

the complaint, which was styled as an abuse of process

claim, because the defendants “misus[ed] the amicus

process” by including the statements for an improper

purpose, namely, “to defame the plaintiff, discourage

him from maintaining his case, and generate publicity

and fundraising for their organizations.”

The court, Hon. Carl J. Schuman, judge trial referee, held a combined oral argument on the defendants’

motions and special motions to dismiss on December 9,

2024. On January 9, 2025, the court issued a memorandum of decision dismissing the action against all defendants. Beginning with the motions to dismiss for lack

of subject matter jurisdiction, the court first concluded

that the litigation privilege applies to persons seeking

to appear as amici curiae and that the statements in the

proposed amicus brief were pertinent to the proceeding.

The court also rejected the plaintiff’s contention that,

because count four of the complaint purportedly sounded

in abuse of process, it is not barred by the litigation

privilege. Although noting that the litigation privilege

does not apply to well pleaded abuse of process claims,

the court concluded that count four does not fall within

that exception “because [it] does not properly allege an

abuse of process action, but rather seeks redress solely

for statements the defendants made during the litigation process . . . .”

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The court also disagreed with the plaintiff’s argument

that the litigation privilege did not bar his claims to the extent they are based on the allegation that the defendants republished the proposed brief. Noting that the

complaint alleges that the proposed brief remains available on the Judicial Branch website, the court concluded

that the defendants’ alleged republication of the brief was protected by the fair report privilege because it “would

constitute a report of an ‘official action or proceeding

. . . .’ ”9 The court further concluded that, “given the

additional assistance of the fair report privilege, the

defendants’ republication of their amicus brief would

not negate the applicability of the litigation privilege

in this case.” The court therefore granted the motion to

dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Despite

the court’s conclusion that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action, the court went on to address, and

grant, the special motions to dismiss.

The court thereafter rendered judgment dismissing

the action, and the plaintiff timely filed the present

appeal. Additional facts and procedural history will be

set forth as necessary.

Before addressing the plaintiff’s claims, we first set

forth our standard of review and the general legal principles pertaining to the litigation privilege. The litigation privilege implicates the court’s subject matter

jurisdiction and, therefore, is properly raised by way of

a motion to dismiss. See Practice Book § 10-30 (a) (1);

Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, 349 Conn. 120, 136, 314 A.3d

583 (2024). “Whether the litigation privilege applies in a

given case is a question of law subject to de novo review.” Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 137.

9

Under the fair report privilege, “publication of defamatory matter concerning another in a report of an official action or proceeding or of a meeting open to the public that deals with a matter of public concern is privileged if the report is accurate and complete or a fair abridgement of the occurrence reported.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Elder v. 21st Century Media Newspaper, LLC, 204 Conn. App. 414, 422, 254 A.3d 344 (2021).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

“The litigation privilege is a long-standing [commonlaw] rule that communications uttered or published in the

course of judicial proceedings are absolutely privileged

so long as they are in some way pertinent to the subject

of the controversy.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)

Id. The privilege “originated in response to the need to

bar persons accused of crimes from suing their accusers

for defamation,” but has since “developed to encompass

and bar defamation claims against all participants in

judicial proceedings, including judges, attorneys, parties, and witnesses.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)

MacDermid, Inc. v. Leonetti, 310 Conn. 616, 627, 79

A.3d 60 (2013). The privilege has also evolved from its

common-law origins such that it now “extends to an array

of retaliatory civil actions beyond claims of defamation,

including intentional interference with contractual or

beneficial relations arising from statements made during

a civil action, intentional infliction of emotional distress arising from statements made during judicial proceedings, and fraud against attorneys or party opponents

for their actions during litigation. . . . This expansion

is premised on the rationale that, because the privilege

protects the communication, the nature of the theory [on

which the challenge is based] is irrelevant.” (Citations

omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Dorfman

v. Smith, 342 Conn. 582, 592, 271 A.3d 53 (2022).

I

The plaintiff first claims that the trial court improperly

concluded that the defendants were entitled to absolute

immunity for their statements in the proposed amicus

brief. Specifically, he contends that the court improperly concluded that (1) the litigation privilege applies to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae in a judicial proceeding, and (2) the challenged statements referring to

the plaintiff as a rapist were pertinent to the proceedings before the Supreme Court in Khan v. Yale University,

supra, 347 Conn. 1. We disagree with both contentions.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

A

We first address the plaintiff’s claim that the trial

court improperly concluded that the litigation privilege

applies to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae in a

judicial proceeding. In its memorandum of decision, the

trial court noted that “[t]he applicable rule” as set forth by our Supreme Court “is that the litigation privilege

applies to every step of the proceeding until [its] final

disposition . . . including to statements made in pleadings or other documents prepared in connection with [the]

proceeding,” and that it “bar[s] . . . claims against all

participants in judicial proceedings, including judges,

attorneys, parties, and witnesses . . . . Deutsche Bank

AG v. Vik, supra, 349 Conn. 137.” (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.) The trial court

concluded that, “[u]nder this broad standard, amicus

briefs surely qualify.” The court explained that, because

“[o]ur appellate rules of practice specifically provide for an application for permission to appear as amicus curiae

and the filing of the actual amicus brief . . . amici are

certainly participants in judicial proceedings . . . amicus briefs are very much a step in the proceeding . . . and

statements made in those briefs are communications

uttered or published in the course of judicial proceedings

. . . all within the meaning of the litigation privilege.”

(Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)

The court further concluded that “[t]he fact that the

challenged statements appeared in an attachment to an

application to appear as an amicus, rather than in the

actual and final version of the amicus brief itself, does

not negate this conclusion.” As the court explained, “[t]he litigation privilege applies fully to documents prepared

in connection with [a judicial] proceeding,” and applications for permission to file a pleading accompanied by

proposed pleadings “certainly constitute [steps] in the

proceedings so that the litigation privilege attaches to

statements made in them.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.)

We agree with the trial court that the litigation privilege applies to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae

Khan v. Jewish Women International

in a judicial proceeding. As the court recognized, the

litigation privilege protects “all participants in judicial proceedings”; (emphasis added) MacDermid, Inc. v.

Leonetti, supra, 310 Conn. 627; and applies “to every

step of the proceeding until [its] final disposition . . .

including to statements made in pleadings or other documents prepared in connection with [the] proceeding.”

(Emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.)

Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 349 Conn. 137; see

also Petyan v. Ellis, 200 Conn. 243, 246, 510 A.2d 1337

(1986). Practice Book § 67-7A expressly allows participation by amici and sets forth specific requirements

that would-be amici must follow to obtain permission

to file an amicus curiae brief. In order to obtain such

permission, a person seeking to appear and file a brief as

amicus curiae must file an application for permission that

“state[s] concisely the nature of the applicant’s interest

and the reasons why a brief of an amicus curiae should

be allowed.” Practice Book § 67-7A (b). The proposed

amicus brief that contains the challenged statements was

attached to the defendants’ application for permission

that the defendants filed in accordance with § 67-7A.

Thus, the defendants were participants in Khan v. Yale

University, supra, 347 Conn. 1, in accordance with the

rules governing that proceeding, and their application

to appear was a step in the proceeding expressly required

by the rules of practice.

Moreover, the policy concerns underlying the litigation

privilege support extending the privilege to proposed

amici. “The policy underlying the [litigation] privilege

is that in certain situations the public interest in having people speak freely outweighs the risk that individuals

will occasionally abuse the privilege by making false and

malicious statements. . . . Participants in a judicial process must be able to testify or otherwise take part without being hampered by fear of defamation [or other retaliatory litigation].” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)

Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 349 Conn. 137–38. If

attorneys were “hobbled by the fear of reprisal by actions

for defamation . . . [it] may tend to lessen [counsel’s]

Khan v. Jewish Women International

efforts on behalf of clients.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) Simms v. Seaman, 308 Conn. 523, 535, 69

A.3d 880 (2013). Thus, the litigation privilege “protects the rights of clients who should not be imperiled

by subjecting their legal advisors to the constant fear

of lawsuits arising out of their conduct in the course of

legal representation.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. “Put simply, absolute immunity furthers the

public policy of encouraging participation and candor in

judicial and quasi-judicial proceedings. This objective

would be thwarted if those persons whom the commonlaw doctrine [of absolute immunity] was intended to

protect nevertheless faced the threat of suit.” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.) Chamerda v. Opie, 185 Conn.

App. 627, 641–42, 197 A.3d 982, cert. denied, 330 Conn.

953, 197 A.3d 893 (2018).

These concerns apply equally to amici and their attorneys. Like judges, parties, and witnesses, persons participating as amici and the attorneys representing them

should “do so with [their] mind[s] uninfluenced by the

fear of an action for defamation or a prosecution for

libel.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Simms v.

Seaman, supra, 308 Conn. 538. As the court explained

in Simms, because questions concerning whether a statement is true and whether it was spoken with malice “are,

and always will be . . . questions . . . upon which opinions may differ . . . which can only be resolved by the exercise of human judgment”; (internal quotation marks omitted)

id.; even the threat of a retaliatory defamation action

may cause would-be amici or their attorneys either to

self-censor or to refrain from seeking to participate as

amici curiae at all. See id., 538–39 (noting importance

of providing litigation participants with absolute immunity “because of the simple and obvious reasons that a

witness free from malice could be judged otherwise and

that the expense and distress of . . . harassing litigation might cause a witness not to speak openly and freely”

(internal quotation marks omitted)).10

10

For this reason, we disagree with the plaintiff’s characterization of the chilling effect that retaliatory litigation would have on amici

Khan v. Jewish Women International

As the trial court recognized, “[a]micus briefs are an

important part of the appellate process.” Amicus briefs

aid judicial decision making by providing valuable information about broader implications of the legal issues

before the court that the parties themselves may not

address in their briefs. See 3B C.J.S., Amicus Curiae §

12 (2026) (“[a]micus curiae presentations assist the court

by broadening its perspective on the issues raised by the

parties; among other services, they facilitate informed

judicial consideration of a wide variety of information

and points of view that may bear on important legal

questions”). The importance of amicus briefs is underscored by the fact that our Supreme Court regularly

solicits participation by amici curiae to address specific

legal issues presented in pending appeals. See, e.g.,

Supreme Court Notices, Connecticut Judicial Branch,

available at http://www.jud.ct.gov/supremecourt (last

visited June 18, 2026) (inviting amici to file briefs for

specific appeals on August 15 and December 5, 2025,

and January 30, 2026). Moreover, the court frequently

cites or discusses arguments raised by amici; indeed, as

the trial court noted, our Supreme Court cited information presented by the defendants in their amicus brief,

ultimately concluding that “the public policy of this

state supports providing a qualified privilege for statements made by individuals alleging sexual assault to

proper authorities at institutions of higher education.”

Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 52; see id.,

8 (“[s]upporting Doe’s position, the amici indicate that

as “speculative” and “dubious.” He argues that “denying absolute immunity to proposed amici in no way silences or chills legitimate advocacy” because “[t]he only ‘speech’ that would be deterred by withholding immunity is false and defamatory factual allegations” which is “not protected speech in any event . . . .” As the court recognized in Simms, however, the very purpose of the litigation privilege is to avoid the chilling effect that would result from having to predict in advance whether a statement could be later construed as false or defamatory. “[I]f absolute immunity is not available, attorneys may feel constrained in advocating for their clients because of fears that their legitimate conduct may be misinterpreted as wrongful by dissatisfied parties and thus give rise to future lawsuits.” (Emphasis in original.) Simms v. Seaman, supra, 308 Conn. 563 n.25.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

one in four women, and one in fifteen men, will experience sexual assault while attending college” (footnote

omitted)); id., 52 (“As the amici explain, sexual assault

remains a serious and vastly underreported crime. The

hesitation of victims to report such crimes is, in no small part, due to a fear of retaliation.” (Footnote omitted.)).

The value of amici depends on their ability to be candid

in their arguments. If amici and their attorneys had to

worry about the prospect of retaliatory litigation from

disaffected litigants, it would chill their participation

and diminish the usefulness of their contributions to

the litigation process.

The plaintiff argues that persons seeking to appear

as amici curiae are not participants in the proceeding

because they require permission to appear and that,

“[u]ntil such permission is granted, a proposed amicus

is literally a nonparticipant.” (Emphasis in original.) As

the trial court correctly observed, however, this distinction is both inconsistent with our case law concerning

the litigation privilege and unworkable as a matter of

practice. Our Supreme Court has recognized that the

privilege applies not just to formal pleadings, but to all

“documents prepared in connection with a court proceeding . . . [including] those preparatory communications

that may be directed to the goal of the proceeding.”

(Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)

Scholz v. Epstein, 341 Conn. 1, 28–29, 266 A.3d 127

(2021). For that reason, the litigation privilege applies

to statements made prior to the formal commencement

of litigation, as long as those statements are prepared

in connection with a contemplated proceeding and are

directed toward the goal of the proceeding. See, e.g.,

Hopkins v. O’Connor, 282 Conn. 821, 841, 925 A.2d

1030 (2007) (statement contained in police report that

officer was required to prepare in order to commence

proceedings before Probate Court for commitment of

person with psychiatric disabilities); Craig v. Stafford

Construction, Inc., 271 Conn. 78, 95, 856 A.2d 372 (2004)

(citizen complaint that led to police department internal

affairs investigation); Kelley v. Bonney, 221 Conn. 549,

Khan v. Jewish Women International

574, 606 A.2d 693 (1992) (discussion with potential witness aimed at marshaling evidence to support prospective

administrative complaint to state board of education).

Thus, the fact that the defendants’ statements were

contained in a filing made before they were granted permission to appear and file their brief does not preclude

the application of the litigation privilege.

Moreover, as a practical matter, it would be illogical

to withhold the protections of the litigation privilege

until after proposed amici receive permission to appear,

as doing so would effectively dissuade participation in

the amicus process to the same extent as if the litigation privilege did not apply at all. Because our rules of

practice generally require persons interested in filing

an amicus brief to obtain permission before doing so,

under the plaintiff’s proposed rule, prospective amici

would have to file their applications for permission and

proposed briefs under a cloud of uncertainty, not knowing

whether the statements in their filings were protected

by the litigation privilege until after the court ruled

on their applications. It would defeat the prophylactic

purpose of the privilege to require the person seeking its

protection to speak before knowing whether they could

be held liable for their words.

Relying on case law from our Supreme Court addressing the distinct doctrine of judicial immunity, the plaintiff also argues that the protections of the litigation

privilege should be limited to “essential participants”

in judicial proceedings that are “directly involved in

the core functions of the judicial process.”11 He argues

that, unlike judges, attorneys, parties, and witnesses,

the role of amici is “that of an impartial advisor offering perspective” and is not “intrinsically linked to the

11

The doctrine of judicial immunity provides judges and certain other judicial officers immunity from suit “for judicial acts [a judge] undertakes in his capacity as a judge.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Gross v. Rell, 304 Conn. 234, 246, 40 A.3d 240 (2012). Absolute judicial immunity extends to judicial officers other than judges only “insofar as they perform actions that are integral to the judicial process.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 247.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

adversarial system and the pursuit of justice within a

dispute.” We are not persuaded.

The plaintiff does not cite any case from this or any

other jurisdiction holding that application of the litigation privilege requires an inquiry into whether the person

seeking its protections was an “essential participant.” As

discussed previously, our Supreme Court repeatedly has

stated that the privilege applies to “all participants in

judicial proceedings.” (Emphasis added.) MacDermid,

Inc. v. Leonetti, supra, 310 Conn. 627. Our Supreme

Court observed in Simms v. Seaman, supra, 308 Conn.

523, that this formulation is consistent with the scope

of the privilege recognized by state and federal courts in

other jurisdictions. See id., 555 (“as the United States

Supreme Court explained in Briscoe v. LaHue, 460 U.S.

325, 103 S. Ct. 1108, 75 L. Ed. 2d 96 (1983), the litigation privilege at common law protected all participants

in the court system” (emphasis in original)); see also, e.g., Day v. Johns Hopkins Health System Corp., 907 F.3d

766, 772 (4th Cir. 2018) (“[t]he benefits of the immunity

[afforded by the litigation privilege] flow to all participants in litigation”); Loigman v. Township Committee

of Middletown, 185 N.J. 566, 585, 889 A.2d 426 (2006)

(“[t]he privilege shields any communication . . . made in

judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings . . . by litigants or other participants authorized by law” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Allen v. Ortez, 802 P.2d 1307,

1311 (Utah 1990) (“the integrity of the judicial system

requires that there be free and open expression by all

participants and that this will only occur if they are not

inhibited by the risk of subsequent defamation suits”).

In fact, the only decisions of which we are aware that

have addressed the issue have held that amici curiae

are considered litigation participants for purposes of

the privilege and that they therefore enjoy absolute

immunity for their litigation related statements. See

Weiser Law Firm PC v. Hartleib, United States Court

of Appeals, Docket No. 23-55693 (9th Cir. December 5,

2024) (statements by amicus curiae in briefs and during

court proceedings are protected by litigation privilege

Khan v. Jewish Women International

because amicus is “[participant] authorized by law”

(internal quotation marks omitted)); Randazza v. Cox,

United States District Court, Docket No. 2:12-CV-2040

(JAD) (May 21, 2014) (attorney’s statements in amicus

brief were protected by litigation privilege).

Moreover, we disagree with the plaintiff that extending

the protections of the privilege to amici is unnecessary

because their role is limited to “that of an impartial advisor offering perspective . . . .” Courts and commentators

have recognized that, although the description of amici

as “an impartial individual who suggests the interpretation and status of the law, gives information concerning

it, and whose function is to advise in order that justice

may be done, rather than to advocate a point of view so

that a cause may be won by one party or another . . . was

once accurate and still appears in certain sources . . . [it] became outdated long ago.” (Citations omitted; internal

quotation marks omitted.) Neonatology Associates, P.A.

v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 293 F.3d 128, 131

(3d Cir. 2002); see also 16AA C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3975 (5th Ed. 2026) (“There

is nothing wrong, in current practice, with an amicus

possessing an interest in the relevant issues. The notion

of the amicus as impartial became outdated long ago.”

(Internal quotation marks omitted.)); S. Krislov, “The

Amicus Curiae Brief: From Friendship to Advocacy,”

72 Yale L. J. 694, 703–704 (1963) (describing evolution

of amicus curiae participation by private groups with

interest in litigation and explaining that “the institution of the amicus curiae brief has moved from neutrality to

partisanship, from friendship to advocacy”). Given the

time and resources required to prepare a thorough and

persuasive amicus brief, it is not surprising that amicus

participants will have some interest in the outcome of

the cases in which they seek to appear. See, e.g., Neonatology Associates, P.A. v. Commissioner of Internal

Revenue, supra, 131–32 (“[a] quick look at . . . opinions

[of the Supreme Court of the United States] discloses

that corporations, unions, trade and professional associations, and other parties with ‘pecuniary’ interests

Khan v. Jewish Women International

appear regularly as amici”). Indeed, our rules of practice

expressly require that applications for permission to file

an amicus brief “state concisely the nature of the applicant’s interest” in the matter; Practice Book § 67-7A

(b); and contemplate that amici may support one side or

the other in the litigation. See Practice Book § 67-7A (a)

(requiring application to appear as amicus curiae to be

filed “within twenty days after the filing of the brief of

the party, if any, whom the applicant intends to support”

or, “[i]f there is no such party, then . . . twenty days after the filing of the last appellee’s brief”).

For these reasons, we conclude that the trial court

properly concluded that the litigation privilege applies

to persons seeking to appear as amici curiae.

B

We also disagree with the plaintiff’s claim that the

court erred in concluding that the challenged statements

were pertinent to the proceeding in Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 1. “[C]ommunications uttered or

published in the course of judicial proceedings are absolutely privileged so long as they are in some way pertinent to the subject of the controversy.” (Internal quotation

marks omitted.) Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 349

Conn. 137. The test for determining whether a statement is sufficiently pertinent to fall within the privilege is “very generous”; Bruno v. Travelers Cos., 172 Conn.

App. 717, 727, 161 A.3d 630 (2017); and is satisfied as

long as the statement “has some reference to the subject

matter of the proposed or pending litigation, although

it need not be strictly relevant to any issue involved in

it.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) McManus v.

Sweeney, 78 Conn. App. 327, 335, 827 A.2d 708 (2003);

see also 3 Restatement (Second), Torts § 587, comment

(c), p. 249 (1977) (“It is not necessary that the defamatory matter be relevant or material to any issue before

the court. It is enough that it have some reference to the

subject of the inquiry.”).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The challenged statements in the proposed amicus brief

plainly satisfy this broad standard of pertinence. In the

federal lawsuit that gave rise to the certified appeal in

Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 1, the plaintiff

claimed that Doe defamed him by accusing him of rape

during a university disciplinary proceeding in which the

decision maker ultimately credited her statements and

expelled the plaintiff on the basis of her accusations.

Id., 15–16. As our Supreme Court explained, “[t]he

primary question presented” in the certified appeal was

“whether Doe should . . . be afforded absolute immunity

from suit for her statements made during the [disciplinary] proceeding.” Id., 7–8. Thus, Doe’s allegation that

the plaintiff raped her and Yale’s decision to expel the

plaintiff on the basis of her allegation were central to

the issues both in the underlying litigation and in the

appellate proceedings before the Supreme Court. The

defendants’ statements referring to the plaintiff as a

rapist mirrored Doe’s allegation and, therefore, unquestionably “ ‘ha[d] some reference’ ” to the issues before the court. McManus v. Sweeney, supra, 78 Conn. App. 335.

Contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, the fact that

the Supreme Court initially rejected the proposed amicus

brief has no bearing on whether those statements were

pertinent to the subject of the appeal for purposes of

the litigation privilege. As the trial court observed, the

Supreme Court’s order did not address the relevance of

the defendants’ statements but, rather, indicated that

those statements were “ ‘not supported by the record.’ ”

The broad standard for pertinence under the litigation

privilege does not depend on whether there is evidentiary

support for the challenged statement. “The fact that

the defamatory publication is an unwarranted inference from the alleged or existing facts is not enough to

deprive the party of his privilege, if the inference itself has some bearing upon the litigation.” 3 Restatement

(Second), supra, § 587, comment (c), p. 249. Thus, while

a statement without evidentiary support may constitute

improper or overzealous advocacy under the rules of

practice or the Rules of Professional Conduct, that does

Khan v. Jewish Women International

not render it impertinent for purposes of the litigation

privilege. As our Supreme Court has explained, in determining whether a statement by a litigation participant

is protected by absolute immunity, “we [do] not assess

whether the [statement] was proper advocacy” because

“the purpose of the privilege is to provide immunity from

having to defend such advocacy decisions, even if that

means immunity occasionally applies to misconduct.”

Scholz v. Epstein, supra, 341 Conn. 14–15.

The plaintiff also argues that the challenged statements were impertinent in light of the procedural context

of the certified appeal in Khan v. Yale University, supra,

347 Conn. 1, which required the court “to accept [the

allegations of the complaint] as true and construe [them]

in [the plaintiff’s] favor for purposes of answering the

certified questions of law.”12 Id., 11–12. The plaintiff

argues that the statements referring to him as a rapist

were impertinent because they “directly contradicted”

the allegations of the complaint and, therefore, were not

“germane to the legal questions presented . . . .”

We disagree with the plaintiff’s argument because

it essentially equates the pertinence inquiry with the

standard of relevance governing the admissibility of

evidence, and it is well established that “the bounds of

[pertinence] with respect to the doctrine of absolute

privilege are more generous than the relevance of evidence at trial.” Brady v. Bickford, 179 Conn. App. 776,

797–98, 183 A.3d 27 (2018). Evidence is relevant at

trial if it “tend[s] to make the existence of any fact that is material to the determination of the proceeding more

probable or less probable than it would be without the

evidence.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Glen

S. v. Commissioner of Correction, 223 Conn. App. 152,

162, 307 A.3d 951, cert. denied, 348 Conn. 951, 308

A.3d 1038 (2024). In contrast, a statement is pertinent

for purposes of the litigation privilege as long as it “has 12

As the court explained, the certified appeal arose from the District Court’s granting of Doe’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant to rule 12 (b) (6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See Khan v. Yale University, supra, 347 Conn. 12 n.9.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

some reference to the subject matter of the proposed or

pending litigation,” even if it is “not . . . strictly relevant to any issue involved in it.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) McManus v. Sweeney, supra, 78 Conn. App.

335. As we have explained, the statements referring to

the plaintiff as a rapist had “some reference” to the subject matter of the litigation in Khan v. Yale University,

supra, 347 Conn. 1, because the plaintiff sued Doe for

her statements accusing him of rape in the disciplinary

proceeding, and the issues before the Supreme Court in

the certified appeal concerned whether Doe had immunity

for those statements. Accordingly, we conclude that the

trial court did not err in concluding that the statements

in the proposed amicus brief were pertinent for purposes

of the litigation privilege.

II

We next address the plaintiff’s claim that the court

erred in concluding that the litigation privilege barred

count four of the complaint, which purports to assert

a claim for abuse of process. As explained previously,

although at common law the litigation privilege “bar[red]

persons accused of crimes from suing their accusers

for defamation,” the scope of the privilege has since

“expanded to bar a variety of retaliatory civil claims

arising from communications or communicative acts

occurring in the course of a judicial or quasi-judicial

proceeding, including, but not limited to, claims for

tortious interference, intentional infliction of emotional

distress, fraud, and violations of [the Connecticut Unfair

Trade Practices Act].” Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra,

349 Conn. 137. Despite this expansion, “there are limits

to the application of the litigation privilege to attorney

conduct and communications.” Scholz v. Epstein, supra,

341 Conn. 10. Specifically, “[our Supreme Court] has

recognized a distinction between attempting to impose

liability [on] a participant in a judicial proceeding for the words used therein and attempting to impose liability

[on] a litigant for his improper use of the judicial system itself. . . . In this regard, [the court has] refused to

Khan v. Jewish Women International

apply absolute immunity to causes of action alleging the

improper use of the judicial system.” (Internal quotation

marks omitted.) Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 138.

As a general matter, well pleaded claims of vexatious

litigation and abuse of process are not barred by the litigation privilege “because they challenge the underlying

purpose of the litigation rather than an attorney’s role

as an advocate for his or her client.” Simms v. Seaman,

supra, 308 Conn. 546. Specifically, these causes of action

“seek to hold an individual liable for . . . the improper

use of the judicial process for an illegitimate purpose,

namely, to inflict injury [on] another individual in the

form of unfounded actions.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) Deutsche Bank AG v. Vik, supra, 349 Conn.

138. “We have treated these claims differently in part

because of restraints built into [them] by virtue of [their] stringent requirements”; id., 138–39; which safeguard

against the possibility that they will be used by disappointed litigants to pursue retaliatory litigation, rather

than to challenge the improper use of the judicial system

itself. With respect to abuse of process claims in particular, these safeguards are met by requiring the plaintiff to demonstrate that the defendant used the “legal process

. . . primarily to accomplish a purpose for which it is not designed”; (emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks

omitted) Mozzochi v. Beck, 204 Conn. 490, 494, 529

A.2d 171 (1987); and to “point to specific misconduct

intended to cause specific injury outside of the normal

contemplation of private litigation.”13 Id., 497.

This does not, however, mean that a plaintiff can avoid

the litigation privilege merely by repackaging a defamation claim as one for abuse of process. Rather, it is well

recognized that the label a party attaches to a cause of

13

Although not at issue in the present case, the tort of vexatious litigation likewise includes such “built-in restraints” in that it requires proof that “the defendant acted with malice, primarily for a purpose other than that of bringing an offender to justice . . . [that] the defendant acted without probable cause . . . [and that] the [prior] proceeding terminated in the plaintiff’s favor.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Simms v. Seaman, supra, 308 Conn. 542 n.12.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

action does not control whether it is barred by the litigation privilege. As our Supreme Court has explained,

“in expanding the doctrine of absolute immunity to

bar claims beyond defamation, [the] court has sought

to ensure that the conduct that absolute immunity is

intended to protect, namely, participation and candor

in judicial proceedings, remains protected regardless of

the particular tort alleged in response to the words used

during participation in the judicial process. Indeed . . .

because the privilege protects the communication, the

nature of the theory [on which the challenge is based]

is irrelevant.” (Emphasis omitted; internal quotation

marks omitted.) MacDermid, Inc. v. Leonetti, supra,

310 Conn. 628; see also DeLaurentis v. New Haven,

220 Conn. 225, 264, 597 A.2d 807 (1991) (“whether

or not a party is liable for ‘vexatious suit’ in bringing

an unfounded and malicious action, he is not liable for

the words used in the pleadings and documents used to

prosecute the suit”). To ensure that the protections of

the privilege cannot be evaded through creative pleading,

our Supreme Court has instructed that courts should

“consider not only the elements of the cause of action

but also whether the complaint contains allegations that

a party suffered harm because of a falsehood communicated by the opponent’s attorney.” (Internal quotation

marks omitted.) Dorfman v. Smith, supra, 342 Conn.

600–601; see also id., 601 n.9 (“[T]he fact that the plaintiff alleged that the conduct at issue constituted an abuse of the judicial system does not make the claim at issue

akin to a claim for abuse of process. Rather, we look to

the plaintiff’s factual allegations to determine whether

the plaintiff’s claim is premised on the communication

of false statements.”).

Applying the foregoing principles to the present case,

we conclude that the trial court did not err in determining that count four is barred by the litigation privilege.

As explained previously, to adequately state an abuse

of process claim, a plaintiff is required to identify “specific misconduct intended to cause specific injury outside of the normal contemplation of private litigation.”

Khan v. Jewish Women International

(Emphasis added.) Mozzochi v. Beck, supra, 204 Conn.

497. This requirement is not satisfied merely by alleging

that a defendant has as one of his or her goals the desire

to obtain a result that is ancillary to the usual purpose

of litigation. Rather, the plaintiff must allege that the

defendant used the machinery of legal process, and not

just the words therein, to accomplish a result that could

not be obtained through proper means. See, e.g., Suffield

Development Associates Ltd. Partnership v. National

Loan Investors, L.P., 260 Conn. 766, 775, 802 A.2d 44

(2002) (plaintiff stated abuse of process claim by alleging that defendant wrongfully obtained execution in excess

of amount owed and used execution to pressure plaintiff

to settle disputed claim).

Here, the only alleged conduct identified by the plaintiff to support count four of the complaint is the defendants’ choice of words in the proposed amicus brief, and

the only harm that the plaintiff alleges he suffered is that caused by the fact that the defendants labeled him a rapist in the brief. There is no allegation that the defendants

took any action outside the normal course of the amicus

process or that they sought any relief other than to urge

the Supreme Court to hold that university disciplinary

proceedings are quasi-judicial in nature. Instead, count

four rests entirely on the allegation that the words used

by the defendants caused him harm in a way that was

ancillary to the litigation. In fact, the plaintiff acknowledges in his appellate brief that count four is based on

the allegation that the defendants misused the amicus

process “by falsely branding [the plaintiff] a rapist . . . .” The plaintiff’s attempt to hold the defendants liable for

their communication of allegedly defamatory statements

in a court filing is quintessentially a defamation claim

that falls within the core of the litigation privilege. See, e.g., Dorfman v. Smith, supra, 342 Conn. 600 (claim is

barred by litigation privilege where, “like a defamation

claim, [it] is premised on the communication of false

statements during litigation”).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

We disagree with the plaintiff that the trial court

“improperly resolved factual questions about the defendants’ purpose” when it stated that the allegations in the

complaint concerning the defendants’ primary purpose

in filing the amicus brief “are essentially conclusions

concerning the defendants’ motivation that the court

need not rely upon in evaluating whether the defendants’

actions amounted to abuse of process.” The plaintiff

relies on the allegations in count four averring that “the

defendants’ primary purpose in attempting to file the

[proposed] amicus brief was . . . [t]o smear the plaintiff . . . [t]o harm the plaintiff’s reputation . . . [t]o serve as an adversary in the litigation against the plaintiff . . . [t]o discourage the plaintiff from maintaining his lawsuit;

and . . . [t]o raise funds for the defendants’ organizations.” The plaintiff argues that these allegations are

sufficient to state an abuse of process claim because they

“assert that the defendants misused the amicus process

for purposes entirely foreign to the proper role of an

amicus curiae.”

As we have explained, however, to state an abuse of

process claim, the plaintiff was required to allege that

the defendants engaged in “specific misconduct intended

to cause specific injury outside of the normal contemplation of private litigation.” Mozzochi v. Beck, supra,

204 Conn. 497. The trial court properly concluded that,

because count four is based entirely on the assertion that

the defendants’ choice of words in the proposed amicus

brief caused the plaintiff harm incidental to the litigation, it did not identify any misconduct that is actionable in an abuse of process claim. Thus, the court did not

“[resolve] factual questions about the defendants’ purpose” but, rather, properly concluded that the allegations

in question were insufficient to state an abuse of process

claim.14 Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court

14

In the trial court, the defendants also claimed that, as a matter of law, the plaintiff could not maintain an abuse of process claim against them because an amicus brief is not the kind of “process” that can give rise to such a claim. See, e.g., Dorfman v. Smith, supra, 342 Conn. 637 n.11 (Ecker, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (noting

Khan v. Jewish Women International

did not err in dismissing count four of the complaint on

the basis that it was barred by the litigation privilege.

III

We next address whether the litigation privilege barred

the portion of the plaintiff’s claims alleging that the

defendants republished the proposed amicus brief. As

explained previously, the trial court concluded that

the defendants’ alleged republication of the brief was

protected by the fair report privilege, rather than the

litigation privilege. Following oral argument before

this court, we, sua sponte, ordered the parties to file

supplemental briefs addressing “whether the dismissal

of the portion of the plaintiff’s claims pertaining to

the defendants’ republishing of the proposed amicus

brief may be affirmed on the alternative ground that

the republishing of the brief was protected by the litigation privilege.”15 In that order, we directed the parties’

attention to Kelley v. Bonney, supra, 221 Conn. 549,

in which our Supreme Court held that “[p]ublication to

the media of material that the media was independently

“that there is little clarity regarding the scope and meaning of the term ‘process’ ” that can give rise to abuse of process claim and that “[some] authorities have limited the tort to process of a type that compels the performance or forbearance of some prescribed act” (internal quotation marks omitted)). The trial court did not address this issue because it concluded that, even if an amicus brief could give rise to an abuse of process claim, the plaintiff failed to allege such a claim. Because the defendants do not raise this claim as an alternative ground to affirm, we likewise do not address that issue.

15

We note that, although the trial court did not address this issue and neither party raised it as an alternative ground for affirmance, we properly may address it because we afforded the parties the opportunity to brief the issue and, unlike the fair report privilege, the litigation privilege implicates the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction. See Blumberg Associates Worldwide, Inc. v. Brown & Brown of Connecticut, Inc., 311 Conn. 123, 161, 84 A.3d 840 (2014) (“the reviewing court not only can but must address an issue implicating subject matter jurisdiction whenever it arises, regardless of how the issue comes to the court’s attention”); Kloiber v. Jellen, 207 Conn. App. 616, 621, 263 A.3d 952 (2021) (addressing issue of whether plaintiff had standing to maintain action after ordering parties to file supplemental briefs because “a question of subject matter jurisdiction may be raised at any time, including sua sponte invocation by a reviewing court”).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

entitled to view . . . cannot provide a basis for a claim of defamation.” Id., 576. We conclude that the trial court

did not err in dismissing the portion of the plaintiff’s

claims pertaining to the defendants’ alleged republication of the brief on the alternative ground that, under

Kelley, the litigation privilege bars those claims.

In Kelley, our Supreme Court held that the litigation

privilege barred a defamation claim against a member

of a local board of education (board) who provided to a

local newspaper a copy of an administrative complaint

that she had submitted to the state department of education (department). The plaintiff in Kelley was a former teacher who retired while facing investigation for

inappropriate classroom conduct. Id., 553. After the

board voted not to proceed with the investigation, four

members of the board who had dissented from that vote,

including the defendant, submitted a verified petition

and complaint to the department detailing the allegations

against the plaintiff and requesting that the department

investigate the matter. Id., 555–56. Thereafter, an editorial writer for the local newspaper asked the defendant

for a copy of the complaint, and the defendant provided

him with a copy. Id., 574–75. The plaintiff brought a

defamation claim against the defendant alleging, inter

alia, that she defamed him when she sent the complaint

to the editorial writer. Id., 575.

Our Supreme Court concluded that the litigation privilege barred the plaintiff’s claim. In reaching that conclusion, the court first explained that, although “the . . . proceedings before the [department] were quasijudicial

in nature,16 not all communications relating to that topic

are necessarily absolutely privileged.” (Footnote added.)

Id. The court further observed that, “[i]n determining

16

Earlier in its opinion, the court in Kelley concluded that the plaintiff’s claims against the other board members, which were based on the allegation that they submitted the verified complaint to the department, were barred by the litigation privilege because the administrative proceeding that resulted from the complaint was quasi-judicial in nature and the “submission of the verified petition and complaint was a step in that proceeding.” Kelley v. Bonney, supra, 221 Conn. 571.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

whether an occasion is absolutely privileged, the pivotal

factor is frequently to whom the matter is published”

and that “[t]he privilege may be lost by unnecessary or

unreasonable publication to one for whom the occasion

is not privileged.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. The court went on to explain,

however, that, although “[p]ublication to the media is

ordinarily not privileged . . . [p]ublication to the media

of material that the media was independently entitled to

view . . . cannot provide a basis for a claim of defamation.” (Citation omitted.) Id., 576. Because there would be “no

persuasive justification for punishing [the defendant] for

publication to [the newspaper] of the formal written complaint and petition if [the newspaper] was independently

permitted to view the material,” the court reasoned that

“[t]he pivotal question [was] whether, regardless of the

actions of the defendant, the [newspaper] would have

been entitled to access to the complaint.” Id., 576–77.

After explaining that the Freedom of Information Act,

General Statutes § 1-200 et seq.,17 provided the newspaper a right to access and receive a copy of the complaint

from the department, the court concluded that, “because

[the newspaper] had a statutory right to the information

provided by [the defendant],” the plaintiff’s claim was

barred by the litigation privilege. Id., 579.

Since Kelley, numerous state and federal courts have

concluded that, under the holding of that case, the litigation privilege bars claims against a person who repeats

or republishes the contents of an otherwise privileged

statement contained in a publicly accessible document.18

17

At the time Kelley was decided, the relevant provisions of the Freedom of Information Act were codified at General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) §§ 1-18a and 1-19. See Kelley v. Bonney, supra, 221 Conn. 577.

18

See, e.g., Modzelewski’s Towing & Storage, Inc. v. Government Employees Ins. Co., Superior Court, judicial district of StamfordNorwalk, Docket No. CV-XX-XXXXXXX-S (August 2, 2024) (relying on Kelley in applying litigation privilege where statements in question were contained in “public record under the [Freedom of Information Act] . . . and the public would be therefore independently entitled to view this information”), aff’d, 238 Conn. App. 158, 355 A.3d 628 (2026); Barr v. MFI Management, Inc., Superior Court, judicial district of StamfordNorwalk, Docket No. CV-XX-XXXXXXX (March 25, 2019) (litigation

Khan v. Jewish Women International

Courts in several other jurisdictions have reached the

same conclusion.19 These courts recognize that the act

of republishing a publicly accessible court filing “is a

truthful sharing of a privileged and public document”;

privilege barred claims based on party’s act of forwarding copy of complaint “ ‘to reporters and various websites’ ”); Moore v. Sequeira, United States District Court, Docket No. 3:21-CV-787 (VAB) (D. Conn. August 18, 2023) (dissemination to media of police officer’s termination letter was protected by privilege because it was public record under Freedom of Information Act); AF Holdings, LLC v. Olivas, United States District Court, Docket No. 3:12-CV-01401 (JBA) (D. Conn. September 24, 2014) (relying on Kelley in concluding that, “[s]ince legal complaints, once filed, are available to the public, the publication of [the] [p]laintiff’s complaint on its counsel’s website, like the publication of a complaint to the media, is protected by the judicial proceedings privilege”); Held v. Silver, United States District Court, Docket No. 3:10-CV-00992 (CSH) (D. Conn. October 16, 2013) (“[the] forwarding of [a] complaint to [a third party], even if done with the explicit intention of impacting [the third party’s] view on [the] [d]efendant’s character or reputation, is not actionable as defamation, because such an act is a truthful sharing of a privileged and public document,” but commentary on complaint was not privileged because it “[went] significantly beyond anything that could be considered privileged or a mere summary of the contents of [the] complaint”); Field v. Kirton, 856 F. Supp. 88, 97–98 (D. Conn. 1994) (litigation privilege barred claims based on statement to press about prior action because statement “contains no information which cannot be gleaned from the [v]erified [p]etition which had already been filed, and which was therefore already publicly available, in the New York Supreme Court . . . [and] there is nothing to suggest that the media somehow lacked the ability to gain access, and to review independently, the [v]erified [p]etition” (footnote omitted)).

19

See, e.g., Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society v. HonorSociety.Org, Inc., United States District Court, Docket No. 3:22-CV-208 (CWR) (RPM) (S.D. Miss. March 29, 2024) (press release announcing litigation was protected by privilege where statements were “so similar to [the plaintiff’s] claims in the [a]mended [c]omplaint that they warrant privilege”); Norman v. Borison, 418 Md. 630, 664, 17 A.3d 697 (2011) (attorney’s republication of complaint on website was protected by litigation privilege because, “[o]nce a document is made public, Maryland law does not limit who, where, or the extent to which one may view that document” (emphasis omitted)); Prokop v. Cannon, 7 Neb. App. 334, 343, 583 N.W.2d 51 (1998) (attorney’s statements to media describing nature and purpose of action were protected by litigation privilege); Chavez-Neal v. Kennedy, 485 P.3d 811, 815 (N.M. App. 2021) (attorney’s statements in television interview discussing litigation were protected by litigation privilege “because they were . . . limited to reiteration and explanation of the allegations of the complaint”). But see Asay v. Hallmark Cards, Inc., 594 F.2d 692, 698 (8th Cir. 1979) (holding litigation privilege did not protect party who provided copy of complaint to newspaper).

Khan v. Jewish Women International

Held v. Silver, United States District Court, Docket No.

3:10-CV-00992 (CSH) (D. Conn. October 16, 2013); and

it would serve no practical purpose to hold that a party

enjoys an absolute privilege to publish defamatory statements in a court filing but loses that privilege merely by

facilitating public access to that filing, even though the

filing itself is a matter of public record. As the United

States District Court for the Southern District of New

York recognized, especially “[i]n the age of digital communication, it is illogical to protect allegations in a publicly filed complaint but not repetition or explanation of

those same allegations outside the courthouse” because

“[a]llegations of interest to the public or even to a single competitive industry will inevitably reach interested

parties . . . .” (Footnote omitted.) PowerDsine, Inc. v.

AMI Semiconductor, Inc., 591 F. Supp. 2d 673, 684

(S.D.N.Y. 2008).

We agree with these courts and conclude that, under

Kelley, the litigation privilege bars the plaintiff’s claims to the extent they are based on the defendants’ republication of the proposed amicus brief. As our Supreme Court

stated in Kelley, there is “no persuasive justification for punishing [a defendant]” merely for republishing a document that the public is “independently permitted to view

. . . .” Kelley v. Bonney, supra, 221 Conn. 577. Here, the

complaint alleges that the defendants published the proposed brief “online” and “to donors . . . .” The complaint

also alleges that the brief remains publicly available on

the Judicial Branch website and, in fact, the complaint

contains a hyperlink to the proposed brief on the Judicial

Branch website, confirming that it is publicly accessible.

There is no allegation in the complaint that the defendants edited or altered the brief before they republished

it or that they made any statements about the contents

of the brief other than simply republishing a verbatim

copy of what is already publicly available. Because the

proposed amicus brief is a publicly filed court record that remains accessible to the general public, the litigation

privilege bars any claims that are based on the allegation

that the defendants republished the brief.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The plaintiff argues that Kelley is distinguishable from

the present case because the defendant in Kelley shared

a copy of the complaint in response to a specific request

from the editorial writer. The plaintiff contends that

we should construe Kelley to protect republication only

when the recipient of the document “would have obtained

the material anyway” because, in that instance, the act

of republication does not cause “incremental defamatory

exposure . . . .” (Emphasis omitted.)

Nothing in Kelley, however, suggests that the court’s

decision turned on the fact that the editorial writer had

requested a copy of the complaint. Although the court

mentioned that fact in passing while summarizing the

factual background, the court’s analysis focused on the

legal question of whether the reporter had a right to

access the complaint under the Freedom of Information

Act. Indeed, the court referred to the issue of whether

the reporter “would have been entitled to access to the

complaint” as “[t]he pivotal question” in its analysis;

(emphasis added) Kelley v. Bonney, supra, 221 Conn.

576–77; and concluded that the litigation privilege

applied “because [the reporter] had a statutory right to

the information . . . .” Id., 579. The court’s analysis did not even refer to the fact that the reporter had sought a

copy of the complaint, much less suggest, as the plaintiff argues, that its decision “turn[ed] on whether” the

reporter “would have obtained the material anyway.”

In fact, the plaintiff does not cite a single case that has construed Kelley in such a limited fashion, and we have

not discovered any such case in our own research. Accordingly, we reject the plaintiff’s attempt to distinguish

Kelley on that basis.

The plaintiff also argues that, even if we disagree with

his interpretation of Kelley, dismissal is not warranted

because there are factual questions relevant to this issue

that must be resolved by the trial court. Specifically,

he contends that (1) whether the proposed brief “was

publicly accessible on the Judicial Branch website at

the time of republication,” (2) whether visitors to the

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defendants’ websites “had any independent means or

motivation to access the brief,” and (3) “whether the

defendants’ republication reached a new audience” are

all questions that “remain unresolved.” We disagree.

As to the first issue, the complaint expressly alleges

that the defendants filed the proposed brief with the

Supreme Court and that the brief “remains available

permanently on the Connecticut Supreme Court website

. . . .” It is well established that, in the absence of certain exceptions, pleadings and other judicial documents

filed in court are presumptively open to the public. See

Practice Book § 11-20A; Rosado v. Bridgeport Roman

Catholic Diocesan Corp., 292 Conn. 1, 46, 970 A.2d 656,

cert. denied, 558 U.S. 991, 130 S. Ct. 500, 175 L. Ed. 2d

348 (2009). The complaint does not allege, and there is

nothing in the record to indicate, that the proposed brief

was subject to any such exception. Moreover, the defendants expressly argued before the trial court that their

republishing of the brief was privileged, either by way

of the litigation privilege20 or the fair reporting privilege, because it was a publicly accessible document, and

the plaintiff never attempted to refute the defendants’

contention that the proposed brief was publicly available.

Thus, the record does not support the plaintiff’s claim

that there was an unresolved factual question concerning

the public availability of the proposed brief.

The other two factual issues identified by the plaintiff

have no bearing on the applicability of the litigation

privilege under Kelley. As we have explained, the court’s

analysis in that case turned on whether the document in

question was one that the public has a right to access, not 20

Contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, one set of defendants did claim before the trial court that the litigation privilege barred those portions of the plaintiff’s claims that are based on the defendants’ alleged republication of the brief. Specifically, these defendants argued that, because “the proposed amicus brief was a public judicial filing, and the plaintiff alleges only that it was republished as-is by the defendants . . . [t]he plaintiff’s allegation is thus insufficient to take the proposed amicus brief outside the scope of the litigation privilege and fails to establish subject matter jurisdiction.” (Citation omitted.)

Khan v. Jewish Women International

whether the audience that actually received the document

would have done so in the absence of the defendants’

actions. Accordingly, the factual issues identified by the

plaintiff are not relevant to whether the litigation privilege bars the plaintiff’s claims. We, therefore, conclude

that the trial court did not err in granting the defendants’ motions to dismiss those portions of the plaintiff’s claims asserting that the defendants republished the proposed

amicus brief, albeit on the alternative ground that the

litigation privilege bars those claims.21

IV

Finally, the plaintiff claims that the court improperly addressed the defendants’ anti-SLAPP motions

after concluding that the litigation privilege barred his

claims. The plaintiff argues that, because the litigation

privilege implicates subject matter jurisdiction, “[t]he

trial court’s determination that the litigation privilege

applied deprived it of jurisdiction to do anything except

dismiss the case immediately.” In support of his claim,

the plaintiff relies on this court’s decision in Robinson

v. V. D., 229 Conn. App. 316, 328 A.3d 198 (2024), in

which we held that, “[b]ecause [a] defendant’s absolute

immunity claim implicates the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction, it presents a threshold issue that we must address before turning to the merits of the special motion

to dismiss.” Id., 25–26. The plaintiff further argues that

the fact that Sanctuary did not file a motion to dismiss

for lack of subject matter jurisdiction “is immaterial”

because “[s]ubject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived,

and once the court found [that] the privilege applied to

any defendant’s conduct, it was required to dismiss as to

all defendants whose conduct fell within that privilege.”

We agree.

21

Fierberg, which filed an affidavit in connection with its motion to dismiss attesting that it did not republish the brief, also argued before the trial court and on appeal that it was entitled to dismissal of the action on that basis. Although the trial court agreed with that argument, our conclusion that the litigation privilege applies irrespective of whether Fierberg republished the proposed brief obviates any need to address that alternative basis for dismissal as to Fierberg.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The following procedural history is relevant to this

claim. As stated previously in this opinion, although all

of the other defendants filed both motions to dismiss for

lack of subject matter jurisdiction and special motions to

dismiss pursuant to § 52-196a, Sanctuary only filed a special motion to dismiss. All of the defendants, including

Sanctuary, asserted in their special motions to dismiss

that the complaint should be dismissed because it is based

on the defendants’ exercise of their right to petition the

government in connection with a matter of public concern

and that the plaintiff could not establish probable cause

to prevail on the merits of the complaint because, inter

alia, the litigation privilege barred his claims.

In its memorandum of decision, after addressing the

motions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction filed by the other defendants, the trial court stated

that, because “Sanctuary . . . filed a separate . . . special motion to dismiss under the anti-SLAPP statute and

did not file a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction . . . [i]t is therefore necessary to resolve its motion.” The court went on to note that “the other .

. . defendants . . . have filed or joined their own special motions to dismiss” and stated that “[r]esolving these

other . . . special motions to dismiss may provide an

alternative ground for their dismissal from the case in

the event that an appellate court reverses the court’s

decision on their motion to dismiss for lack of subject

matter jurisdiction.” Addressing the merits of the special

motions to dismiss, the court concluded that the defendants met their burden under the first prong of § 52-196a

(e) (3)22 by establishing that the complaint is based on

their exercise of their right to petition the government

in connection with a matter of public concern. The court

further concluded that, because the plaintiff’s claims are

barred by the litigation privilege, the plaintiff necessarily failed to meet his burden under the second prong of §

52-196a (e) (3) to establish probable cause that he would

prevail on the merits.

22

See footnote 7 of this opinion.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

The court thereafter issued separate orders granting

both the motions to dismiss for lack of subject matter

jurisdiction filed by all defendants except Sanctuary

and the special motions to dismiss filed by all defendants. Subsequently, all defendants jointly filed a motion

requesting that the court extend the time to file motions

for attorney’s fees pursuant to § 52-196a (f)23 until thirty days after the resolution of this appeal. The court granted that motion without objection. Thus, the issue of attorney’s fees remains pending, and the availability of those

fees under § 52-196a (f) is contingent on our resolution

of this issue.

“Subject matter jurisdiction is the power of the court

to hear and determine cases of the general class to which

the proceedings in question belong.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Gurliacci v. Mayer, 218 Conn.

531, 542, 590 A.2d 914 (1991). “Our Supreme Court

has long held that because [a] determination regarding

a trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction is a question

of law, our review is plenary. . . . Moreover, [i]t is a

fundamental rule that a court may raise and review

the issue of subject matter jurisdiction at any time. . . . The subject matter jurisdiction requirement may not be

waived by any party, and also may be raised by a party,

or by the court sua sponte, at any stage of the proceedings, including on appeal.”24 (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) Haydusky’s Appeal from Probate, 220 Conn.

App. 267, 276, 297 A.3d 1072 (2023).

Because subject matter jurisdiction goes to the court’s

authority to decide the case before it, a trial court faced with a claim that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction

23

General Statutes § 52-196a (f) provides in relevant part: “(1) If the court grants a special motion to dismiss under this section, the court shall award the moving party costs and reasonable attorney’s fees, including such costs and fees incurred in connection with the filing of the special motion to dismiss. . . .”

24

Because subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived and may be raised at any time, we reject the defendants’ contention that the plaintiff waived his jurisdictional challenge to the trial court’s consideration of the anti-SLAPP motions by failing to raise it before the trial court.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

generally “must fully resolve [that issue] before proceeding further with the case.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) Johnson v. Commissioner of Correction, 258

Conn. 804, 813, 786 A.2d 1091 (2002). From this “ ‘jurisdiction first’ rule”; Schaghticoke Tribal Nation v. Harrison, 264 Conn. 829, 839 n.6, 826 A.2d 1102 (2003);

flows two principles applicable to the plaintiff’s claim

that the court erred by addressing the special motion to

dismiss. First, when a potential jurisdictional defect is

brought to the court’s attention, the court must dispose

of that issue first, “no matter in what form it is presented.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Johnson

v. Commissioner of Correction, supra, 813; see, e.g.,

Palosz v. Greenwich, 184 Conn. App. 201, 207, 194 A.3d

885 (addressing claim of sovereign immunity, which

implicates subject matter jurisdiction, that was raised

in motion to strike), cert. denied, 330 Conn. 930, 194

A.3d 778 (2018); Sethi v. Yagildere, 136 Conn. App. 767,

770 and n.6, 47 A.3d 892 (treating motion for summary

judgment for lack of standing as motion to dismiss), cert.

denied, 307 Conn. 905, 53 A.3d 220 (2012). Second,

because “any movement is necessarily the exercise of

jurisdiction”; (internal quotation marks omitted) Federal

Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Peabody, N.E., Inc., 239 Conn. 93,

99, 680 A.2d 1321 (1996); once the trial court determines

that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, “it need not,

and cannot, consider additional claims raised by a defendant.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Mulvihill v.

Spinnato, 228 Conn. App. 781, 788 n.12, 326 A.3d 251,

cert. denied, 350 Conn. 926, 326 A.3d 248 (2024); see,

e.g., Schaghticoke Tribal Nation v. Harrison, supra,

264 Conn. 839 n.6 (court lacked jurisdiction to entertain

motion to intervene after it determined that it lacked

subject matter jurisdiction); Federal Deposit Ins. Corp.

v. Peabody, N.E., Inc., supra, 99 (once defendant moves

to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, court

lacks authority to entertain motion to amend aimed at

curing jurisdictional defect); Baldwin Piano & Organ

Co. v. Blake, 186 Conn. 295, 298, 441 A.2d 183 (1982)

(court erred in ruling on plaintiff’s motion for contempt

Khan v. Jewish Women International

without first addressing defendant’s claim that it lacked

subject matter jurisdiction).

In Robinson v. V. D., supra, 229 Conn. App. 316, this

court applied these principles in holding that, when a

defendant raises a litigation privilege claim as a defense

in the context of a special motion to dismiss pursuant to § 52-196a, the court must address that claim as a threshold

issue before reaching the merits of the special motion to

dismiss. See id., 325–26. In Robinson, the defendant

raised the litigation privilege in a motion labeled as a

combined motion to dismiss and special motion to dismiss

brought pursuant to both Practice Book § 10-30 and §

52-196a. Id., 325 n.7. The trial court declined to address

the motion to dismiss on the basis that the defendant had

not expressly requested that the court treat his motion

as a “hybrid” motion and, in any event, that our rules of

practice do not expressly authorize such hybrid motions.

Id. In support of its decision not to address the motion

to dismiss portion of the defendant’s motion, the court

also cited “the expedited time requirements pertaining

to a statutory special motion to dismiss [pursuant to §

52-196a]” and “the limited inquiry of [such] a special

motion to dismiss . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. Instead, the court addressed only the special

motion to dismiss, which it denied after concluding that

“the defendant had failed to meet his burden of showing, by a preponderance of evidence, that the complaint

was based on the exercise of his right of free speech, to

petition the government, or of association.” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.) Id., 322.

On appeal, the defendant in Robinson renewed his

claim that the action was barred by the litigation privilege and, therefore, that the trial court should have dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Id., 324. This court noted that, although the trial court

had not addressed that claim, “[b]ecause . . . absolute

immunity . . . implicates the trial court’s subject matter

jurisdiction, it presents a threshold issue that we must

address before turning to the merits of the special motion

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to dismiss.” Id., 325–26. This court also made clear that

the trial court lacked the discretion to decline to address the jurisdictional issue merely because the defendant had

not distinctly raised it in a motion to dismiss pursuant

to Practice Book § 10-30. In so doing, this court also

rejected the trial court’s rationale that the expedited

nature of the remedy provided by § 52-196a justifies an

exception to the general rule requiring courts to address

jurisdictional claims before reaching other issues. This

court stated that, “[a]lthough a court certainly has broad

discretion to manage its docket and resolve cases as it

sees fit . . . which arguably would include the discretion

to reject a so-called hybrid motion, it is axiomatic that

questions pertaining to the subject matter jurisdiction

of the court may be raised at any time and by any party

. . . and that [o]nce . . . raised, [the challenge] must be disposed of no matter in what form it is presented.” (Citation omitted; emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks

omitted.) Id., 325 n.7. This court went on to conclude

that all but two of the plaintiff’s claims were barred by

the litigation privilege and, therefore, reversed in part

the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case

with direction to the trial court to dismiss the counts

that were barred by the litigation privilege. Id., 349–50.

We conclude that, under the rationale of Robinson,

the trial court erred by addressing the special motions

to dismiss after it concluded that the litigation privilege barred the plaintiff’s claims. As this court explained in

Robinson, the applicability of the litigation privilege was a threshold issue that implicated the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction and, once that issue was raised, the

court was required to address that issue. Id., 325–26.

The court did not have discretion to entertain the merits

of the special motions to dismiss merely because Sanctuary raised the litigation privilege in that motion as

opposed to a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter

jurisdiction.25 As in Robinson, once the jurisdictional

challenge was raised, the court was required to “[dis25

We note that, although Sanctuary did not file a motion to dismiss, it expressly argued in its special motion to dismiss that “[t]he applicability

Khan v. Jewish Women International

pose] of [it] no matter in what form it [was] presented.”

(Emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)

Robinson v. V. D., supra, 229 Conn. App. 325 n.7; see

also Bruno v. Travelers Cos., supra, 172 Conn. App. 729

(concluding that, even though defendants raised litigation privilege in motion to strike rather than motion to

dismiss, trial court erred by allowing plaintiff to replead rather than dismissing action for lack of subject matter

jurisdiction after determining that litigation privilege

applied). Moreover, once the court determined that the

litigation privilege barred the plaintiff’s claims, it was

required to dismiss the action without proceeding further, as “any action taken after the court determined that

absolute immunity applied to all of the plaintiff’s causes

of action against the defendants is void . . . [because] the court had no jurisdiction.” Bruno v. Travelers Cos.,

supra, 729.

In addressing the merits of the special motions to

dismiss, the court reached additional issues that went

beyond the question of whether the litigation privilege

applied. Specifically, pursuant to § 52-196a (e) (3), the

court was required to determine whether the defendants

had met their burden of establishing that the plaintiff’s

claims were based on the exercise of their right to petition the government. The court also addressed claims raised

by the plaintiff concerning the constitutionality of §

52-196a and considered the plaintiff’s request pursuant

to § 52-196a (d) for limited discovery as to all defendants except Sanctuary.26 All of these issues went well beyond

the threshold question of whether the court had subject

matter jurisdiction over the action. Because the court

had already determined that the litigation privilege

barred the plaintiff’s action, it was required to dismiss

the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and

of absolute immunity implicates the court’s subject matter jurisdiction.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)

26

The court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that § 52-196a violated his right to a jury trial, to due process, and to petition the government. As stated in footnote 8 of this opinion, the court also denied the plaintiff’s belated discovery request.

Khan v. Jewish Women International

lacked the authority to address any additional claims

raised by the parties.

The defendants argue that this court’s decision in

Sicignano v. Pearce, 228 Conn. App. 664, 325 A.3d

1127 (2024), cert. denied, 351 Conn. 908, 330 A.3d

881 (2025), which predates our decision in Robinson by

approximately one month, stands for the proposition that

a trial court may address the merits of a special motion

to dismiss even when a defendant raises the litigation

privilege as a defense in such a motion. As the defendants

note, this court in Sicignano affirmed on the merits a

trial court’s decision granting a special motion to dismiss even though the defendants in that case had raised

the litigation privilege in connection with that motion.

On appeal in Sicignano, however, the plaintiff did not

raise any claim with respect to the litigation privilege.

Rather, as this court explained, the plaintiff in Sicignano claimed that the trial court had erred in concluding that

the complaint was based on the defendants’ exercise of

their right to petition the government, but “fail[ed]

to address the court’s conclusion that [the action was]

barred by the defense of absolute immunity based on the

litigation privilege.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)

Id., 691. Because the issue was not raised or decided in

Sicignano, that decision has no bearing on our resolution of the plaintiff’s claim that the trial court lacked

jurisdiction to address the special motions to dismiss. See 21 C.J.S., Courts § 186 (2026) (“[a] court that resolves

a case on the merits without discussing its jurisdiction

to act does not establish a precedent requiring similar

treatment of other cases once the jurisdictional problem has come to light”); see also, e.g., Pennhurst State

School & Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U.S. 89, 119, 104

S. Ct. 900, 79 L. Ed. 2d 67 (1984) (“[w]hen questions of

jurisdiction have been passed on in prior decisions sub

silentio, this [c]ourt has never considered itself bound

when a subsequent case finally brings the jurisdictional

issue before us” (internal quotation marks omitted));

Glidden v. Chromalloy American Corp., 808 F.2d 621,

625 (7th Cir. 1986) (“[w]hen a court resolves a case on the

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merits without discussing its jurisdiction to act, it does

not establish a precedent requiring similar treatment of

other cases once the jurisdictional problem has come to

light”). Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court

improperly addressed the special motions to dismiss after

concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over

the action and, therefore, that the court’s judgment must

be vacated to the extent it dismissed the action pursuant

to § 52-196a.27

The judgment is vacated only as to the granting of the

special motions to dismiss and the case is remanded with

direction to render a judgment of dismissal for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction as to all claims against Sanctuary; the judgment is affirmed in all other respects.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

27

Our conclusion that the court erred by addressing the special motions to dismiss is limited to circumstances like the present case in which the question of the court’s subject matter jurisdiction can be decided on the papers, whether on the pleadings alone or the pleadings as supplemented by uncontested facts contained in affidavits. We are cognizant of the fact that, in certain limited circumstances, “[w]hen the jurisdictional facts are intertwined with the merits of the case, the court may in its discretion choose to postpone resolution of the jurisdictional question until the parties complete further discovery or, if necessary, a full trial on the merits has occurred.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Cuozzo v. Orange, 315 Conn. 606, 616, 109 A.3d 903 (2015). In light of the fact that the anti-SLAPP statute is intended to provide “an expedited off-ramp for a party to avoid further litigation”; (internal quotation marks omitted) Smith v. Supple, 346 Conn. 928, 947 n.16, 293 A.3d 851 (2023); different considerations may apply when a court is faced with a jurisdictional issue that cannot be resolved promptly. Because those circumstances are not present here, however, we express no view with respect to whether under those circumstances a trial court may rule on a special motion to dismiss that raises a nonjurisdictional defense before deciding the question of subject matter jurisdiction.