The action is tort for libel, and the demurrer admits all the essential allegations of the declaration, from which it appears that at the time of publication the plaintiff was and has since continued to be an attorney at law engaged in the active practice of his profession in this Commonwealth. It cannot be doubted that the accusations, that he invited and allowed a vile and disreputable woman to frequent his office or place of business, and so conducted himself as to bring disgrace upon his office, and that he gambled “for money with cards in his said office during business hours,” were, if false and without justification, defamatory and actionable. The publication obviously tended to subject the plaintiff to public contempt and to injure seriously his reputation for integrity and moral worth not only as an individual, but as a member of the bar entitled to the confidence of the community. Atwill v. Mackintosh,
But as the publication consisted of a general answer and claim in recoupment filed in an action brought in the name of the plaintiff’s assignee to recover for use and occupation of a room let -to the defendant as the plaintiff’s tenant, the demurrant contends that the publication is privileged.
It is settled by McLaughlin v. Cowley,
And the defendant having admitted by the demurrer that with express malice he prepared and published the defamatory words, which were wholly irrelevant to the issue, the justification on which he now relies is not a defence. McLaughlin v. Cowley,
The judgment for the defendant must be reversed and the demurrer overruled.
So ordered.
