The appellant sued Cox Enterprises for libel following publication in The Atlanta Journal of an allegedly defamatory article. Suit was brought in Carroll County, and, upon a showing that the editions of The Atlanta Journal containing the alleged defamation were originally distributed to the public in Fulton County, the trial court dismissed the suit for lack of venue. Bound by precedent, we reluctantly affirm. ,
The fact that Carroll County is improper vеnue in a libel action based on an article in a newspaper first distributed in Fulton County is unquestionably concluded by the trilogy of opinions in
Rives v. Atlanta Newspapers, Inc.,
*864
As in
Gerald,
supra, we question the wisdom of the rule to which we are bound. Judicial adoption of the single publication rule was ably critized by Judge Pannell’s special cоncurrence in the original
Rives
opinion.
"The fiction of single' publication has also been emрloyed to determine the venue of an action for libel circulated in many counties of the samе state. In the absence of statute, an action for libel may be maintained wherever the defamatory matter is circulated. Statutes in some states, however, require that a tort action be tried in the сounty where the 'cause of action arose’ or 'where the injury occurred.’ By applying to these provisions the fiction of the composite tort, some courts have held that the tort or injury occurs in the county where the defamatory matter is printed, or where it is first circulated. This application of the concept is rationalized by the argument that to hold that the cause accrues in every сounty where the defamatory matter is circulated would give the plaintiff the advantage — not available to the plaintiff in other tort actions — of being able to choose a forum where religious, pоlitical, and social predilections of the jurors are likely to operate in his favor. But, unlike those injured by other torts, a person libeled suffers injury, to his reputation, in every county where the libel has been distributed, and courts of other states have not found the choice-of-venue privilege an unconsciоnable advantage. In any state with a venue statute requiring the plaintiff, without practical alternativе, to sue in the county where the cause accrued, the application of the single publication rule may give the defendant a similar forum-shopping advantage, which he may exercise by choosing a favorable county for the first release. No real injustice is wrought, of course, if the plaintiff alsо has the option of suing in the county of his residence, where the damage to his reputation will ordinarily be greatest. But, whether the plaintiff has this alternative or not, *865 interpretation of the venue statute in the light оf the integrated publication doctrine seems an unenlightened method for the selection of a proper forum, since the cóunty chosen by this means does not necessarily have a substantial connection with either party. Certainly the single publication rule should not be applied for venue purposes solely on the argument that 'separate suits for each communication are impracticable; ergo, the whole transaction is a single cause of action, which must accrue at a single time and place.’ Furthermore, engrafting such a limitation on the venue statute seems more approрriate for legislative than for judicial action.”
Were we not othеrwise bound, we would recede from the single publication rule first adopted in Georgia by this court and later cemented into the law by the Supreme Court. However, as the law now stands, venue for the instant action did not lie in Carroll County, and the trial court’s judgment was correct.
Judgment affirmed.
