109 Tenn. 1 | Tenn. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The declaration contains two counts — one in slander and one in libel — both predicated upon the same words, which are hereinafter set out, in stating the averments of a special plea filed by the defendant. It is averred that the words were falsely and maliciously spoken and published of and concerning the plaintiff, with respect to his occupation and business as a builder and contractor, to his damage, five thousand dollars.
The defendant filed a plea of not guilty, and a special plea in which he says that he uttered the language complained of while being examined as a witness in a suit pending in the chancery court of Knox county, styled “G. B. Eckle et al. v. Florence Crittendon Home,” in answer to questions put to him by counsel in the said cause; that the bill in said cause was filed to enjoin the Florence Crittendon Home from completing a house then in course of construction,
Issue was joined, and the case was tried by the circuit judge and a jury, and upon the trial the plaintiff introduced the solicitor of the complainants in the cause of Eckle and others against the’ Florence Crittendon Home, as a witness in his behalf, and had him identify the original bill, the answer, the decree denying the complainants relief, and ordering the reference to the master to ascertain the damages sustained by the defendant by reason of the wrongful issuance of the injunction, and
Upon cross-examination the witness identified the depositions of other witnesses taken in the cause, the report of the master allowing damages to the defendant in that cause, and the decree confirming the same, which were then read to the jury by 'defendant’s attorney. Other evidence was introduced by the plaintiff tending to prove that the defendant gave the deposition read, and entertained malice toward the plaintiff.
The proof introduced by the plaintiff sustained the averments of the special plea, and upon the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant filed a demurrer, in proper form, thereto, which was overruled by the court, and the damages of the plaintiff assessed by the jury at five hundred dollars, and judgment given therefor; and the defendant has brought the case before this court, and assigns error.
For the plaintiff it is said that the defendant, by calling out and reading in evidence those portions of the record in the chancery cause which the plaintiff had not offered, introduced original evidence in his behalf, and lost his right to demur to the .evidence of the plaintiff, and that for this reason the action of the court in overruling the demurrer was correct, regardless of other questions. It is true that,
The question upon which this case must be determined is whether the language imputed to the defendant is actionable. It is well settled that de
“By an absolutely privileged communication,” says Mr. Townshend in his work on Slander and Libel, “is not to be understood a publication for which the publisher is in no wise responsible; but it means a publication in respect of which, by reason of the occasion upon which it is made, no remedy can be had in a civil action or libel. A conditionally privileged communication is a publication made on an occasion*10 which, furnishes a prima facie legal excuse for the making of it, and which is privileged unless some additional fact is shown which so alters the character of the occasion as to prevent its furnishing a legal excuse.” Townsh. Sland. & L., p. 248, sec. 202, cited and approved in Ruohs v. Backer, 6 Heisk., 405 (19 Am. Rep., 598). In Odgers, Lib. & Sland., p. 191, it is said: “A witness in the box is absolutely privileged in answering all the questions asked him by counsel on either side; and, even if he volunteers an observation (a practice much to be discouraged), still, if it has reference to the matter in issue, or fairly arises out of any question asked him by counsel, though only going to his credit, such observation will also be privileged. But a remark made by a witness in the box, wholly irrelevant to the matter of inquiry, uncalled for by any question of counsel, and introduced by the witness maliciously, for his own purposes, would not be privileged, and would also probably be a contempt of court.” This statement of the law is quoted and approved by this court in the case of Shadden v. McElwee, 86 Tenn., 150 (5 S. W., 602; 61 Am. St. Rep., 821). In the case óf Lea v. While, 4 Sneed, 113, 115, it is said: “There is a class of cases which are absolutely privileged, and depend in no respect for their protection upon their bona fides. The occasion is an absolute privilege, and the only questions are, whether the occasion existed, and whether the matter complained*11 of was pertinent to tbe occasion. In this class are embraced judicial proceedings. The proceedings connected with the judicature of the country are so important to the public good that the law holds that nothing which may be therein said with probable cause, whether with or without malice, can be slander, and, in like manner, that nothing written with probable cause under the sanction of such occasion can be libel. The pertinency of the matter to the occasion is that which is meant by ‘probable cause,’ and probable cause is, in this class of absolutely privileged communications, what ‘bona fides’ is to the class of conditionally privileged communications, which, we have seen, are protected unless there is malice in fact.”
In the case of Cooper v. Phipps (decided by the supreme court of Oregon), 33 Pac., 986 (22 L. R. A., 839), the court said: “While there is some conflict in the adjudged cases as to whether witnesses are absolutely exempt from liability to an action for defamatory words uttered or published in the course of judicial proceedings, it is agreed by all the authorities that they are presumptively so; and, before a witness can be held liable in a civil action, this presumption must be overcome by showing, affirmatively that such statements were not only false and malicious, but that they were not pertinent to the issues, and not in response to questions'asked by counsel.”
In the case of Hoar v. Wood, 3 Metc. (Mass.), 193, the court said: “We take the rule to be well settled by the authorities that words spoken in the course of judicial proceedings, though they are such as impute crime to another, and, therefore, if spoken elsewhere, would import malice, and be actionable in themselves, are not actionable if they are applicable and pertinent to the subject of inquiry. The question, therefore, in such case, is not whether the words spoken were true, not whether they are actionable in themselves, but whether they were spoken in the course of judicial proceedings, and whether they were relative and pertinent to the cause or subject of inquiry.”
In the case of Gardemal v. McWilliams (La.), 9 South., 108 (26 Am. St. Rep., 197), it is said: “Certain communications are absolutely privileged, and no person is liable, either civilly or criminally, in respect of anything published by him in the course
The case of Shadden v. McElwee, 86 Tenn., 146 (5 S. W., 602; 61 Am. St. Rep., 821), is relied upon as supporting the position of the plaintiff, hut it does not do so. That case was before this court upon the demurrer interposed by the defendant to the replication of the plaintiff to a plea averring that the words upon which the action was predicated were uttered while the defendant was being examined as a witness in a certain suit, in response to questions propounded to him, and that his answers were responsive and privileged, replying that the words were not uttered in response to questions asked defendant while on the witness stand, and that they were not pertinent to the issues in said suit, but were voluntarily injected into his testimony, and falsely and maliciously spoken for the purpose of injuring the plaintiff, and the demurrer was properly overruled. But it is there expressly held, upon the authority of Lea v. White and Odgers, Sland. & L., above cited,
Applying these principles to this case, the question is not whether the words spoken by the defendant Avere false and malicious, but were they spoken in a judicial proceeding, and were they relevant and pertinent to the subject of inquiry in that proceeding, or responsive to questions propounded to the defendant by' counsel while being examined therein as a AAdtness? If they were, they are absolutely privileged, and the plaintiff’s action must fail.
That the words were spoken in the course of a judicial proceeding is conceded; and the only question that remains to be determined is, were the answers of the witness pertinent to the inquiry, or responsive to the questions
These answers were clearly pertinent to tbe investigation. If Mr. Galyon was a reliable contractor, bis proposition to build tbe bouse tended to prove that tbe defendant bad sustained no loss; and, if be was unreliable, tbe effect of tbe proposition as evidence was weakened. Tbe answers were also fairly, and evidently intended to be directly, responsive to tbe questions propounded to tbe witness. If tbe plaintiff did not pay for tbe material be used in building, or did not use tbe char
We are of tbe opinion that tbe words spoken by tbe defendant of tbe plaintiff were, on account of-tbe occasion, absolutely privileged, and that no action can be maintained upon them. There is therefore no evidence to sustain a verdict against tbe defendant, and tbe demurrer to tbe plaintiff’s evidence should have been allowed.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, tbe demurrer sustained, and the plaintiff’s suit dismissed.