123 Ga. 714 | Ga. | 1905
Viewed in any light, the writing was libelous. It. was none the less a libel upon the plaintiffs because it was a libel upon the railway company. Tk<? defendant in effect charged that the railway company had corrhptly influenced the plaintiffs ta
But it is said that the article was merely a report of a trial ■containing the comments of counsel during the progress of the case, and that what was contained in the article was a privileged •communication, both as to the counsel and the publisher. From motives of public policy the law recognizes certain communications and publications as privileged. The privilege which the law thus accords the speaker or publisher is either absolute, entirely freeing the party from any liability to t£e person injured by the words or the publication, or conditional, that is, the words ■shall be spoken in good faith, upon a proper occasion. When the privilege is absolute, the motive of the publication is immaterial. • When the privilege is conditional actual malice will bring about diability. As remarked by Mr. Chief Justice Bleckley, in Wilson v. Sullivan, 81 Ga. 243, “ the characteristic feature of absolute, as distinguished from conditional, privilege is, that in the former the question of malice is not open; all inquiry into good faith is closed.” The remarks of a legislator in debate, the words of a-judge in the course of a judicial proceeding, the averments in a pleading filed in a court of competent jurisdiction, which are pertinent and material to the relief sought, are instances of absolute privilege. While the code does not in any place use the term “absolute privilege,” it is recognized as a part of the law of this .State in section 3842, which deals with the subject of pleadings, •and was expressly held to be the law in the case above cited. 'The privileged communications enumerated in section 3840 are those where the privilege is conditional. Among such are found •comments of counsel fairly made on the circumstances of the case .and the conduct of parties in connection therewith. When in .an action for slander it appears that the words spoken were a part of the comments of counsel and were pertinent and material
Among the communications enumerated as belonging to the class of conditional privilege are also found fair and honest reports of proceedings of legislative or judicial bodies. If a newspaper publishes a fair and an honest report of a trial, stating what was the character of the controversy and embracing the comments of counsel actually made during the progress of the trial, there could be no recovery for such publication, unless it was made to appear that the publisher was animated by express malice; and this would be true notwithstanding there were contained in the publication, as a part of the comments of counsel, words which if uttered elsewhere would have rendered the speaker and the publisher liable in damages. Ordinarily the publisher of a newspaper is not privileged in the publications therein made, but is liable on account thereof in the same manner as other persons; and defamatory matter does not become privileged simply for the reason that it is published in the form of an advertisement, or as news, or is furnished by a correspondent, or is copied from other publications. Cox v. Strickland, 101 Ga. 493 (3). On the subject of privileged communications generally, see Newell on Slander and Libel (2d. ed.), 388 et seq.; Townshend on Slander & Libel (4th ed.), 295 et seq.; Odgers on Libel & Slander (text-book series), t. p. 140 et seq. In an action for libel, thát a writing constituted a privileged communication is generally a matter for plea. Holmes v. Clisby, 118 Ga. 820 (2); Flanders v. Daley, 120 Ga. 885 (4). But if it appears upon the face of the petition that the communication was really privileged, there seems to be no good reason why this might not be taken advantage of by demurrer. The petition in the present case distinctly alleges that the words complained of were not uttered by the attorney during the. trial of the case which was reported, and therefore they were no part of any comments of counsel during the progress of a judicial trial. Hence the publication was not privileged as a fair and an honest report of the proceedings of a court. The publication of the article was a
Judgment affirmed.