1. There being neither evidence nor pleading to justify an instruction to the jury upon the subject of privileged communications, based upon the fact that the plaintiff and the defendant belonged to the same lodge of Odd Eellows, the instruction of the court upon this subject was erroneous and prejudicial.
2. The evidence relative to statements alleged to have been made by the defendant as to the plaintiff was insufficient to establish that such statements were made either bona fide in the performance of a public duty, or in the performance of a private duty, either legal or moral, or with a bona fide intent to protect the interest of the defendant in a matter where his interest was concerned; and the instructions of the trial judge upon the subject of privileged communications, as embodied in the 5th, 7th, and 8th grounds of the motion for a new trial, were erroneous.
3. The words alleged to have been used by the defendant of the plaintiff, imputing to him the crime of larceny, were slanderous per se, and it was therefore error for. the court to instruct the jury that if the defendant “used the verbal charges against the plaintiff in an endeavor to find his property, or to locate the party who had it, with a view of suing for the same, civilly or criminally,” the law would presume that he acted in good faith. Where a verbal statement is slanderous per se, there is no presumption that the person making the statement acted in good faith; on the contrary, upon proof of the slanderous words, it devolves upon him either to justify by proving the truth of his accusation or to show that for some reason the communication was privileged.
5. Eor the foregoing reasons the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. Except as indicated above, the trial was free from error.
Judgment reversed.