This is аn action for libel. The defendant is a Massachusetts insurance company which formerly employed the plaintiff as an agent or solicitor in Rhode Island, where this cause arose. The alleged libel was a letter written by the defendant to the Insurance Commissioner of Rhode Island, stating that the plaintiff had beеn “discharged for misappropriation of Company funds and shortages in his accounts.” The defendant pleaded truth and privilege. The court declined to direct a verdict for the defendant, the jury found for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.
In September 1956 the plaintiff made some policy adjustments for an insured, a Mrs. Oliver, following which he retained part of the proceeds in his possession, contrary to company rules. His explanations when called to account, and at the trial, as to an intended legitimate disposition of these funds did not answer his failure to have turned them over immediately, much less his failure to have informed either the company or Mrs. Oliver of what he was doing. His claimed good faith, in other words, did not necessarily command belief. 1
On December 7 the plaintiff was discharged. The same day the company so notified the Commissioner, and requested that his license to act as its agent be canceled. This was its legal obligation. In its letter it stated that the discharge was for “violation of company rules and regulations,” and that the “violation involved company checks and misappropriation of same. Restitution was made.” The reason for discharge, although not required by statute, was furnished pursuant tо a standing order of the Commissioner. On January 4, 1957, the Commissioner asked for a further report. By this time the plaintiff’s accounts had been audited and a number of shortages had been discovered. There was a conflict as to whether these shortages were routine. On January 7 the company wrote the Commissioner the letter in question. This letter, and not others written before or since, is the sole asserted basis for the action. Plaintiff’s principal claim as to damages was based on the fact that the Commissioner disclosed its contents to the agency departments of other companies with whom plaintiff thereafter,' unsuccessfully, sought employment. The jury found in plaintiff’s favor and awarded $15,000 compensatory and $5,000 punitive damages.
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Before considering this appeal it would be well to analyze both the precise meaning and the substance of the defamation for which the plaintiff seeks relief. Misappropriation meаns to apply to a wrong use. We might agree with the defendant that it does not necessarily import moral wrong, but, particularly when used as a cause for discharge, a jury could well find that it meant something more than a venial delay in accounting. We think there was a reasonable implication that the plaintiff hаd intended to retain these funds permanently. As to such intention, as already stated, the jury might have found either way. With respect to the shortages, we think again, where used in connection with a dismissal, that they meant not normal shortages, but shortages reflecting unfavorably on the desirability of plaintiff’s employment. But if there were such shortages, we do not think the fact that defendant discovered them only after the date of the discharge was a material matter. The essence of the charge against the plaintiff and what damaged his reputation, and, conversely, what, in connection with issuing a new license, the Commissioner was interеsted in, was not the exact circumstances of his dismissal, but the nature of his misconduct. Cf. Thompson v. Boston Publishing Co., 1934,
The defendant contends that the Commissioner, having licensing authority over agents, Rhode Island Gen.Laws (1956) 27-2-11; 27-3-15; 27-3-18; 27-3-34, had a right to acquire pertinent information as to plaintiff’s conduct for his records; that defendant had a duty to reply; and that its disclosures, even if untrue in fact, were absolutely privileged. The contention is not without merit.
2
The circumstance that the defendant’s statement was not made in a court of law does not preclude the assertion of this privilege. Sheppard v. Bryant, 1906,
When a defendаnt has established that its publication was subject to a
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qualified or conditional privilege, the burden shifts to the plaintiff. It is commonly said that the plaintiff’s burden is to prove malice. Malice, however, when used in this connection, is a word sometimes considerably misunderstood. It may have nothing to do with ill will in the conventional sеnse. Essentially it means or requires an “improper motive,” Hartmann v. Boston Herald Corp., 1948,
Alternatively, a statement may be fair in form and in content (other than with respect to underlying truth, thе error the privilege is designed to protect, Kent v. Bongartz, 1885,
The court’s charge to the jury did not in all ways conform to these principles. Plaintiff’s difficulties, how
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ever, lie deeper. Sending the case to the jury at all involved a misconception of law. The purpose of a conditional privilege is to protect the utterance, on an appropriate occasion, of an inadvertent untruth. It is not to protect a conscious falsehood or, as is sometimes said, behavior which is not in good faith. See Hebb v. Jenckes, 1945,
The plaintiff contends that he was entitled to go to the jury because the fact that defendant pleaded and sought to maintain the truth of its statement permitted the jury to find malice in case it found, as it could, that the plea was not sustained. The court charged the jury that punitive damages could be added for malice, and that an unsuccessful plea of truth might thus enhance damages, Tillinghast v. McLeod, 1891,
The reasoning in Domchick was that the plea was a repetition of the libel, and that repetition is evidence of malice. It is universally the law, however, that relevant pleadings are at the very minimum conditionally privileged, and the law of Rhode Island is that a
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publication upon a privileged occasion, in the absence of bad fаith, is not evidence of malice. Hayden v. Hasbrouck, 1912,
Sincе there was no basis on which the jury could properly find the plaintiif had met his burden of overcoming the privilege, the court should have granted the defendant’s motion.
Judgment will be entered vacating the judgment of the District Court and ordering judgment for the defendant.
HARTIGAN, Circuit Judge, dissents.
Notes
. Although at the trial plaintiff sought to show that his ensuing difficulties began with some confusing, and perhaps erroneous, instructions from one of his superiors, and from the fact that the company had mistakenly given him too large a check to deliver, these circumstances did not answer all the charges, and even they were not advanced by him at the time. Though we find plaintiff’s testimony not always еasy to follow, it was uncontradicted that when in mid-October he was given checks totaling $236 to deliver to Mrs. Oliver, he caused her to endorse them and cashed them himself in violation of company rules, and gave her only $113 or $123. The balance he retained, again contrary to company rules. When, subsequently, the company informed him that it had made a mistake and that the $236 had been an overpayment by $58, he obtained another $22 from her, and gave her a receipt for $58 (incidentally, the only receipt he gave her). He paid the company $58 and retained the rest until, following a complaint by Mrs. Oliver, he was called to account on November 28. At this time he said he was keeping the balance to effect some adjustments on some other policies, but that it was a “foolish, blundering transaction,” and that he had “withheld money * * * with no instructions to do so.” On the record there is no assurance that any accounting would ever have tаken place if Mrs. Oliver had not complained.
. The opinion of the Massachusetts court in Mezullo v. Maletz, 1954,
. It is interesting to note that the Torts Restatement does not use the word malice at all. Section 599 (“General Principle”) reads as follows, “One who publishes false and defamatory matter of another upon a conditionally privileged occasion is liable to the other if he abuses the occasion.”
. This may be tested with a simple example: Suppose two newspapers of opposing, and ardently partisan, political views. Plaintiff, a high public official, is arrested for larceny. The story is patently newsworthy, and privileged. Thompson v. Boston Publishing Co., 1934,
. It is interesting to note that the only non-Maryland ease cited by the court was Wolcott v. Hall, 1810,
