12 S.E.2d 127 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. Where one person dictates a defamatory statement concerning a certain person to one who reproduces it on a typewriter in affidavit form and delivers it to the one so dictating, the person so delivering the affidavit is not chargeable with libel.
2. Where the evidence demands a finding that an alleged libel was not read by the person to whom it is alleged to have been communicated, no publication of the libel is shown. The court did not err in granting a nonsuit.
1. If Mr. Hooper, in preparing the affidavits, was not acting as agent for Meeks, Ginn, Harrison, and Harmon, but was acting for S. Krasner Company, the delivery of the affidavits to them under the circumstances was not the publication of a libel to them. The most that can be said is that these men uttered an oral defamation to Mr. Hooper, and that at their request he returned it to them in the form of a written defamation. It can not be said that the reputation of the plaintiff was injured by such an act. His reputation was the same in the minds of the men who dictated the affidavits before the affidavits were reduced to writing as it was afterwards. The delivery of Harmon's unsigned affidavit to any of the men (except possibly Turner) would amount to no more than the delivery of a carbon copy of his own affidavit. There is no evidence that it was delivered to Turner by Mr. Hooper. Even if it had been, there would have been no publication of a libel as to Mr. Turner because he told Mr. Hooper what Harmon would swear.
2. Each of the notaries public testified that he did not read the affidavit he witnessed. Likewise Harmon swore that he did not read the one he signed. In order to effect the publication of a *896
libel there must be a reading of it. Not only that, there must be an understanding of its meaning by the person reading it. 3 restatement of the Law of Torts, 192, § 577; Odgers on Libel and Slander, 158. In this case there is no evidence which would authorize the finding that any person read the alleged libelous publication. This case should be distinguished from one involving a criminal libel, in which no publication to another other than the one defamed is required, the gravamen of criminal libel being the likelihood of causing a breach of the peace. McCurdy v. Hughes,
Judgment affirmed. Sutton, J.,concurs.
STEPHENS, P. J., concurs in the judgment.