The complaint alleges that the defendants ■Reinke and Court composed and delivered to the Western Union Telegraph Company, at Appleton, Wisconsin, the following message:
“Appleton, Wisconsin, Decеmber 14, 1927. Lawrence A. Flynn, 2159 Faye street, Dubuque, Iowa. Advise Pace by wire how you wish to settle with us on money collected from Anton Lange, Neenah, or else face embezzlement charge along with Martin, who is now under arrest. Mаrtin states you were in with him on this collection. Lange also says you were present helping take money. Prompt settlement or warrant will be issued at once. (Signed) Reinke & Court.”
The defendant Western Union Telegraph Compаny received said message, transmitted it over its wires, and delivered the same to the plaintiff at Dubuque, Iowa. The complaint demands damages from both said defendants in the sum of $10,000. The question is whether the demurre# of the Western Uniоn Telegraph Company to the complaint was properly sustained.
In support of the order the respondent contends that the message is not libelous per se. The message plainly charges the plaintiff with the crime of embezzlement, and the contention that it is not libelous upon its face is purely fatuous. Further discussion of this question will not be indulged.
The real question presented is whether the telegraph company is liable in damages by reason of the transmission of a libelous message over its wires. Upon this question we find
In Whitfield v. South Eastern R. Co., supra, the only point urged against th,e liability of the telegraph company was the contention that a corporation could not be guilty of mаlice. The court having resolved that question in the affirmative held the company liable. In Dominion Tel. Co. v. Silver, 10 Can. Sup. Ct. Rep. 238, it appeared that the telegraph company acted as newsgatherer and collected, composed, and transmitted over its wires an item of news. In that case the telegraph company composed as well as transmitted the libelous message, and the grounds of its liability could not be confined to the merе act of transmission of a message delivered to it. In Western Union Tel. Co. v. Cashman,
The fact that this question has not arisen in more than a half dozen jurisdictions throughout the English-speaking world indicates, first, that the security of moral character Is not greatly threatened by the usual and ordinary conduct of the telegraph business, and second, that judicial thought upon the question is but in the formative period, and that
Malice is an essential ingredient of actionable libel. Malice may bе either actual or implied. To say that a telegraph company is prompted by actual malice towards the recipient of a message transmitted over its wires in the ordinary course of business is mere fatuity. If thе malice essential to support an action for libel can be found under such circumstances, it must be imputed by law. “Malice in law is such as the law infers to exist without just or lawful excuse.” Newell, Slander & Libel (4th ed.) § 275. “If false and defamatory statements are made concerning another without sufficient cause or excuse they are legally malicious.” Ibid. § 277. The law will impute malice where a defamatory publication is made without sufficient cаuse or excuse. That the law recognizes circumstances under which malice should not be so imputed is apparent when we consider that branch of the law of libel comprehended under privileged and gwari-privileged communications. The law will impute malice where necessary to protect the interest of society and the security of character and reputation. But it tolerates a balancing of considеrations, the weighing of benefits to result, and where the welfare of society is better promoted by a freedom of expression malice will not be imputed. In such cases the communication is classified as privilegеd or gwri-privileged in the law. Under such circumstances the individual is required to surrender his personal rights for the benefit of the common welfare. With these principles in mind, let us consider the nature of a telegraph company and its business.
It is well settled that a telegraph company is a public-service corporation. It is chartered and licensed by the government to furnish a necessary service to the public, namely, the prompt and rapid transmission of messages. It is an
The law which licenses telegraph companies imposes no restrictions upon the character of the messages which they shall transmit, although generally heavy penalties are imposed upon all officers and employees of such companies for divulging the contents of messages transmitted over the companiеs’ lines. The statute, perhaps out of consideration for the best of service, has refrained from laying upon the telegraph company the duty and the burden of searching and winnowing the messages tendered to it for trаnsmission, while it seeks to promote the rapid and just transmission of messages by requiring their dispatch in the order tendered. Sec. 348.36, Stats. So far as the written law is concerned, it seems to command telegraph companies to send all messages tendered in the order in which they are received, but to divulge the contents to no one. . v ,
In Owen v. Ogilview,
In a note upon this subject to be found' in 18 A. L. R. 776, at 778, it is said: “The more liberal rule, and the one which seemingly has the support of the weight of modern authority, is that, where the communicаtion is made to a
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
