Whitehall Company, the defendant, is a wholesaler of alcoholic beverages. In the course of discharging a reporting obligation imposed by G. L. c. 138, § 25 (concerning customers whose accounts are not fully paid within sixty days), 2 Whitehall erroneously reported “Dexter’s Hearthside Rest.” (Hearthside) as a delinquent account to the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission (ABCC). Informed of its mistake, Whitehall within six days filed with the ABCC a statement that the Hearthside account was paid in full. Both the original listing and the correction were on ABCC forms.
Hearthside and its principal stockholder and officer, H. Clark Dexter, Jr. (Dexter), brought a libel action based on the mistaken listing. As to Dexter, the action foundered on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted (Mass.R.Civ.P. 12 [b] [6],
1.
Dexter’s claim.
In the complaint, Dexter describes himself as “an officer, major stockholder, director, and principal operations person” of Hearthside, i.e., the restaurant corporation. By reason of the allegedly libelous publications about Hearth-side, Dexter claims to have “personally suffered great anguish of mind and embarrassment” and sustained “great damage to his personal reputation and standing in the community.” An officer of a corporation may not recover damages for a libel published about the corporation.
Kesner
v.
Liberty Bank & Trust Co., 1
Mass. App. Ct. 934, 935 (1979).
Gilbert Shoe Co.
v.
Rumpf Publishing Co.,
*219
Publishing the name “Dexter’s Hearthside Rest.” for inclusion on the ABCC delinquent accounts list cannot reasonably be interpreted as a reference to Dexter as an individual. Cf.
New England Tractor-Trailer Training, Inc.
v.
Globe Newspaper Co.,
2. The corporate claim. Whitehall’s motion for summary judgment against Hearthside rested on the pleadings, a deposition of Dexter, and several exhibits attached to the deposition. Those exhibits included the offending reports of delinquency and restoration of Hearthside to fiscal grace which were, in accordance with regulations, made upon forms furnished by the ABCC. 204 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.13. Dexter, himself, was angry and mortified, but within the liquor trade the incident did not cause a ripple. As to one shipment, which arrived before publication of the notice of Hearthside’s removal from the delinquent list, 3 the restaurant was obliged, in accordance with law, 4 to pay with a certified check. Thereafter, Hearthside *220 dealt with liquor wholesalers on normal credit payment terms. Hearthside stopped buying from Whitehall by its own.choice. The publication range of the delinquency list, as we have noted, is very limited. No customer ever mentioned the matter to Dexter or, to his knowledge, to any employee of Hearthside.
The argument urged by Whitehall in the Superior Court, and presumably the ground for allowance of the motion for summary judgment, was that, in the absence of any showing of pecuniary loss, Hearthside could not maintain the libel action. The problem is not quite so simple. Corporations, stereotypically bloodless and soulless, may not recover for hurt feelings, but it was early recognized that a corporation might recover for damage to its reputation for conducting its affairs honestly or competently without establishing out-of-pocket damages.
Finnish Temperance Soc. Sovittaja
v.
Finnish Socialistic Publishing Co.,
*221
In a case that had much in common with the one before us, the Supreme Court held that a plaintiff can, consistently with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, recover presumed damages when the defamatory statements do not involve matters of public concern.
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
v.
Greenmore Builders, Inc.,
That Whitehall in the instant case was bound by State law to report delinquent accounts could perhaps be said to coat its false statement with a veneer of public concern, but, as in Dun & Bradstreet, the subject of the libel was bereft of the stuff of public issues debate with which the First Amendment is concerned. The status of Hearthside’s account with one of its purveyors is not an idea which implicates the Constitution.
By reason of its status as a private plaintiff (albeit a corporate one) and the circumstance that the alleged false statement
did not
involve an issue of public concern, Hearthside was not obliged to show out-of-pocket loss as a consequence of the libel. Its failure to do so was not a tenable basis for granting
*222
summary judgment to Whitehall. The judgment, however, may be affirmed because Whitehall’s notice was protected by a qualified privilege. We may consider any ground which would support the judgment.
Pupecki
v.
James Madison Corp.,
Publication becomes conditionally privileged “if the circumstances induce a correct or reasonable belief that . . . the recipient is one to whom the publisher is under a legal duty to publish ... the matter” claimed to be defamatory. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 595(l)(b) (1977). Whitehall, of course, was charged by G. L. c. 138, § 25, with a duty to publish the delinquency notice said to be defamatory. “A legal duty imposed for the protection of a particular . . . class of persons carries with it either an absolute or conditional privilege to make such defamatory imputations of another as are reasonably necessary to the performance of the legal duty.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 595 comment f. “In the case of a private citizen, the privilege arising from the legal duty is always conditional, and the proper purpose of the publisher in making the defamatory communication is a prerequisite to his protection.” Ibid.
For example, an employer has a conditional privilege to disclose information which may turn out not to be true concerning an employee when the publication^ reasonably necessary to serve the employer’s legitimate interest in the fitness of an employee to perform his or her job, e.g., letters of reference or evaluation.
See Doane v. Grew,
Truth or falsehood is not material if there is no abuse of privilege or if no actual malice is shown.
Sheehan
v.
Tobin,
Hearthside, in the summary judgment materials, produced no evidence of malice by the defendant. Whitehall’s computerized billing system was run by people who did not know Dexter and sent the report according to normal procedures. The record shows no facts from which an ulterior purpose of the defendants could be inferred.
Humphrey
v.
National Semiconductor Corp.,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
See 204 Code Mass. Regs. § 2 (1978).
The delinquency list is revised on a daily basis. 204 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.13(10) (1980).
The avowed purpose of G. L. c. 138, § 25, expressed with a touch of irony in
James J. Sullivan, Inc.
v.
Cann’s Cabins, Inc.,
The opinion also permits recovery of punitive damages in private person defamation cases, but that additional scope has no bearing on a jurisdiction such as Massachusetts, where punitive damages are altogether proscribed.
Contrasted with a public figure plaintiff of the sort involved in
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
