The plaintiff in a libel action appeals from an adverse judgment granted after the demurrers of the defendant Market Street Railway Company and of the defendants Walter H. Linforth and William M. Cannon had been sustained without leave to amend. In brief, the complaint alleged that, in an action for personal injuries brought against the defendant Market Street Railway Company, plaintiff had previously testified against such defendant; that such defendant and the other defendants, as its attorneys, in support of a motion for a new trial, had filed in such action two affidavits, which stated that plaintiff had stolen hogs from one of the affiants; and that such statements were false, defamatory and not pertinent or relevant to any matter in issue in such action. It is not disputed that the statements, if false and unprivileged, were libelous
per se. (DeWitt
v.
Wright,
Section 45 of the Civil Code provides, in part, that “libel is a false and unprivileged publication”. The pertinent part of section 47 of the same code reads as follows: “A privileged publication is one made ... 2. In any ... (2) judicial proceeding ...” (Italics ours.) If, as defendants argue, this privilege is absolute, the demurrers were properly sustained, for the complaint alleges that the defamatory matter was contained in affidavits filed in a judicial proceeding. On the other hand, if this privilege extends only to defamatory words which are relevant or pertinent to the judicial proceeding, as plaintiff contends, the demurrers should have been overruled. The question to be decided, then, is the extent of the privilege granted by section 47. The problem being the proper construction of this section, it is useless to discuss the decisions of other states upon this matter.
In
Moore
v.
United States F. & G. Co.,
The Supreme Court in
Gosewisch
v.
Doran,
In the course of its reasoning the Supreme Court has recognized in at least four cases that the privilege provided in section 47, subdivision 2, is absolute.
(Snively
v.
Becord Publishing Co.,
The complaint sets forth but a part of the affidavits. It is true that the complaint alleges that the statements set forth were not pertinent or relevant to any issue involved in the action, in which the affidavits were filed. This allegation is a mere conclusion of law, which is not admitted by the demurrers. (Gosewisch v. Doran, supra.) “If a complaint pleads facts which show the publication was made in a judicial proceeding it does not state a cause of action unless it goes further and pleads other facts which show that in contemplation of law the publication was not in fact made in a judicial proceeding although made in court.” (Irwin v. Newby, supra, at p. 116.)
The demurrers having been properly sustained, the judgment is affirmed.
Knight, Acting P. J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on February 20, 1936.
