Defendants’ plea of privilege in a slander action against it was overruled. We affirm.
Plaintiff alleged the defendant agent of defendant insurance company made a false statement to plaintiff’s employer that a peace officer had found plaintiff in an intoxicated state, and that unless plaintiff was discharged the insurance company would cancel the employer’s insurance. The statement resulted in the discharge of plaintiff, a butane truck driver, it was pleaded.
Defendants’ position is that the communication was shown to be conditionally privileged because the insurer and plaintiff’s employer had a mutual interest in the safe operation of insured vehicles; and plaintiff failed to prove malice, requisite under such decisions as Johns v. Associated Aviation Underwriters, 5 Cir.,
That a defamation is qualifiedly privileged is an affirmative defense in the nature of confession and avoidance. International & G. N. R. Co. v. Edmundson, Tex.Com.App.,
The sole issue in the plea of privilege hearing is that of venue; not liability or the merits of the case. Stockyards Nat. Bank v. Maples,
