43 Wash. 285 | Wash. | 1906
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages on account of the writing and publishing of a letter by defendant. The appellant and respondent were trustees and stockholders in a certain corporation. Despondent wrote the letter complained of to another stockholder and friend, residing in Ohio-. All three of these persons were practicing physicians. In the letter written by respondent, he severely criticized the conduct of appellant with reference toi the matters with which he had to do as an officer of said corporation.
The trial court submitted to the jury the question of whether or not the letter was libelous. In this we think the learned trial court was in error. The letter is too lengthy to justify its reproduction here, but we will quote therefrom certain extracts which we think are libelous: per se, to wit:
“Chamber’s with the other officers of the company are, I understand, engineering another company and are bound in wrecking ours; all of this it seems for the purpose of getting complete control of everything. He malíes the most pathetic appeals to his Conscience about saving his Ohio friends from any fraud, and all the fraud he can rake up is the original ground he put in, which had no existence-.”
The “ground” referred to is mentioned in other portions of the letter as being worthless land which it is claimed appellant turned over to> thei company for $1,000. In other places the letter says:
“Between you and me my professional opinion about Chambers is, he has been up in Alaska so long, always scheming in something, that he is just a little daft. . . . Since I see he is bound to- wreck the company in the face of the fact that it is more substantial than ever in its history, I feel obliged to protect myself. Therefore am at present instituting proceedings- to appoint a receiver. . . . The right procedure would be to prosecute Chambers and Penwall for criminal proceeding in putting into the company 100 acres of land which had no existence.”
“A libel is the defamation of a person made public by any words, printing, writing, sign, picture, representation, or effigy tending to provoke him to wrath, or expose him to> public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, or to deprive him of the benefits of public confidence and social intercourse; . . . ” Bal. Code, § 7087 (P. C. § 1856).
In the light of this statute, it would clearly seem that the assertions hereinbefore quioted from the letter in question were libelous per se. Urban v. Hemlick, 15 Wash. 155, 45 Pac. 747; 13 Ency. Plead. & Prac., 105.
As to whether or not the letter was a privileged communication depends upon several matters. The relationship existing between the respondent and the Ohio stockholder’, as revealed by the letter, might properly give the occasion for a privileged communication. If the defendant could show that the assertions in the letter were true, this would be a defense to the action.
The jury should have been told that portions of the letter were libelous per se, and that this established prima facie a right of action in- appellant; that the relationship between respondent and the recipient of the letter was such that an “occasion of privilege” existed. This being true, it wlould have met the presumption of malice and actionable damages arising from the libelous matter of the communication — providing said letter did not contain matter tending, upon its face, to show malice or reckless disregard on the part of defendant for the truth of his- statements^ or that he had exceeded his privilege by incorporating in said letter impertinent and unnecessary matters of a libelous character. If the letter did contain anything tending to prove affirmatively any of these matters, then it could not be said, as a matter of law, to be a privileged communication, and could be treated as such only after the jury had found from the evidence that it was privileged, by finding from the evidence that respondent' had properly used and had not exceeded, or abused, the priv
We do' not think tbe contents of tbis letter, taken by themselves, tended to show anything that would render tbe communication not privileged. Consequently the burden of proving malice, knowledge of falsity, recklessness, or tbe use of impertinent or unnecessary, libelous matter, or other legal abuse of the “occasion of privilege,” was upon plaintiff. It was therefore incumbent upon plaintiff, by means of tbe matters in tbe letter or by any other competent evidence, to show that defendant had been actuated by malice or ill will towards plaintiff, or bad included in said communication false and libelous matters, not pertinent or reasonably necessary to tbe subject-matter which it was defendant’s privilege to- communicate, or that defendant bad not made reasonable inquiry and investigation, but bad written recklessly or knowingly falsely and not in good faith; and upon establishing any of these matters, tbe pjaintiff would have been entitled, ion account of tbe presumption of malice, falsity, and injury arising from the matter libelous per se, to recover, unless tbe defendant should have established the truth of the letter’s libelous contents. Urban v. Helmick, supra; 13 Ency. Plead. & Prac., pp. 105, 107; Hall v. Elgin Dairy Co., 15 Wash. 542, 46 Pac. 1049; 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, pp. 909, 925, 929, 942, 1050; Townshend, Slander & Libel, §§ 145, 208-212; Locke v. Bradstreet Co., 22 Fed. 771; Comfort v. Young, 100 Iowa 627, 69 N. W. 1032; Briggs v. Garrett, 111 Pa. St. 404, 2 Atl. 513, 56 Am. Rep. 274; Perkins v. Mitchell, 31 Barb. 461; Harrison v. Garrett, 132 N. C. 172, 43 S. E. 594;
Some other errors are alleged, hut we do not think the assignments well taken.
By reason of the error above mentioned, the judgment of the honorable superior court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Mount, O. J., Dunbar, Hadley, Crow, Fullerton, and Rudkin, JJ., concur.