This is an action instituted in the district court by Marsene Johnson against the Galveston Tribune, a corporation owning and publishing a newspaper of that name in the city of Galveston, for damages growing out of .certain libelous statements published in said newspaper of and concerning plaintiff. In addition to general ■ damages alleged to be $50,000, plaintiff claimed special damages on the ground that said publication had injured him in his business of attorney at law, and also, on the ground that the said libelous publication had been made with actual and express malice, claimed exemplary damages. Defendant by its answer set up as defenses to the action, first, the truth of the statements; second, that they were privileged; and, third, that, if not absolutely privileged, they were qualifiedly privileged, in that the occasion with regard to which the statements were made was privileged, and that, if the statements were not true, they were believed to be true upon reasonable grounds and were made without malice in regard to a matter of public concern. The cause was tried with the assistance of a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,250 general damages, the jury finding against the plaintiff upon the issues of special and exemplary damages. From the judgment, its motion for a new trial having been overruled, the defendant appeals.
Appellee is an attorney at law, and at the time of the publication was a representative in the Legislature for Galveston county. On March 5, 1909, there was published in the Galveston Tribune, a newspaper published in the city of Galvestop, and having a general circulation in said city where appellee resided, the following article including the headlines thereof, which were in large type:
“Galveston Disgraced.
“Yile Language Used Before Committee.
“Johnson and Ely Kill Amendments.
“House Committee was Insulted.
“Galveston’s Interests Now Upheld.
“Special to the Tribune.
“Austin, Texas, March 5. — An exciting and disgraceful scene was • enacted before the house committee on municipal corporations yesterday just after the Tribune dispatches had been filed for the day. It was during the hearing on the Galveston charter amendments proposed by Hon. Marsene Johnson.
“Villification, slander, misrepresentation and profanity were resorted to by those from Galveston in attendance upon the hearing representing the opposition to the City Commission. The principal actors on this side of the question were ex-mayor A. W. Fly and his supporter, 1-Ion. Marsene Johnson. No such public exhibition among the many given by these two men in past campaigns have ever equalled this one. It outdid anything of the kind ever presented before a committee of the Legislature in Austin.
“If the various Johnson amendments ever had a chance of enactment the life was completely beaten out of them yesterday by the actions of Johnson himself and his cohorts before the committee of which he is chairman and with which he might have had some influence had he deported himself decently.”
Evidence was introduced to show special damages and also actual malice in support of appellee’s claim for exemplary damages, but the jury found against appellee as to these, and, as he does not complain of this result, it is not necessary to consider anything except what bears upon the question of general damages. A general demurrer and various special exceptions were urged to the petition. The general demurrer was overruled, and also all of the exceptions except those going to the allegations of the petition, by way of innuendo, that by the statements in the article appellee was charged with the violation of the penal laws of the state, and the court also, upon special exception, struck out allegations in the petition
*For other cases see same topic and section NUMBER in Dec. Dig. & Am. Dig. Key No. Series & Rep’r Indexes *304 referring to an article published cm the following day, after the publication of the article made the basis of the suit. It will not be necessary here more fully to set out the exceptions, which will be referred to as far as is necessary in disposing of the several assignments of error. The court instructed the jury that the publication was libelous per se, and that, unless they believed the ■statements in the article were true, plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. The jury was further Instructed as to general, special, and exemplary damages, and as to the facts under which he would be entitled to recover either, with instructions as to the distinction between the several kinds of damages. By the charge the jury was instructed, if they found for plaintiff, to say what character of damages and the amount of each. The jury found only general damages.
By its first and sixth assignments of error, ■appellant complains of the action of the court in overruling the general demurrer. The ground of demurrer stated in the propositions is that the article in question appeared upon its face to he a reasonable and fair comment or criticism of the official acts ■of public officials published for general information, and was privileged.
By the second, third, and fifth assignments of error appellant complains of the action of the court in overruling its first, second, and fourth special exceptions to the petition. These exceptions present objections that the matter of the publication is not reasonably susceptible of meaning sought to be attached thereto by the explanations or innuendoes in the petition. The court upon exception struck out certain allegations of the petition by way of innuendo, in substance, that by the statements in the article appellee was charged with a violation of the penal laws of the state.
The following matters are declared privileged by the statute, and it is declared that they shall not be made the basis of any action for libel without proof of actual malice:
“(1) A fair, true and impartial account of the proceedings in a court of justice, unless the court prohibits the publication of the same, when in the judgment of the court the ends of justice demand that the same should not be published, and tlie court so orders; or any other official proceedings authorized by law in the administration of the law.
“(2) A fair, true and impartial account of all executive and legislative proceedings that are made a matter of record, including reports of legislative committees, and of any debate in the Legislature and in its committees.
“(3) A fair, true and impartial account of public meetings, organized and conducted for public purposes only.
“(4) A reasonable and fair comment or criticism of the official acts of public officials and of other matters of public concern published for general information.”
The effect of appellant’s contention would be to make a fair and impartial account of such matters as are privileged under the statute, unless actual malice is proved, privileged in fact, if such account is believed in good faith to be true, whether true in point of fact or not, provided only that there be no actual malice. This is what in the authorities is spoken of as conditional or qualified privilege. Such privilege, if the condition is shown, is as complete a defense as the absolute privilege of the statute and would, in substance and effect, add to the conditions under which such accounts are entitled to the privilege — that is, that they be fair, true, and impartial — the important alternative condition that they be believed in good faith to be true. We cannot believe that the Legislature intended by what is said in section 4 of the act, to wit, “that nothing in this act shall be construed to take away any existing defense to a civil action for libel” to so qualify the definition of privileged matter given in the preceding sections of the act. At the
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time of the passage of the act, other matters than those referred to, when published in a newspaper without malice and upon reasonable grounds in good faith believed to be true, were privileged. We think that such matters are now so privileged, but we do not think that since the passage of the act the doctrine of qualified privilege as it existed prior thereto, as a defense to the action of libel can be invoked to protect appellant in the publication of an untrue account of such proceedings as are referred to in the statute, on the ground that the publisher honestly believed the statements to be true. The Legislature did not intend, when in the last section of the statute it preserved existing defenses, to practically destroy the limitations and conditions made essential by the other sections of the statute to the privilege declared to be a defense. This is evidently the view taken of the statute by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth District in the case of Light Pub. Co. v. Lewy,
The only remaining assignment of error is as to the action of the court in refusing to grant appellant a new trial. The special ground set up in the assignment is that the occasion of the publication was conditionally privileged as a matter of law, and the verdict of the jury found there was no malice. What we have already said, we think, sufficiently disposes of this assignment.
We have carefully examined each of the assignments of erro¡f, and the several propositions thereunder, and in our opinion none of them presents sufficient grounds for reversing the judgment, which is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
