This case is before this court on the grant of a petition for certiorari to the Court of Appeals (96
Ga. App.
48,
1.
That an action will lie for a violation of the right of privacy was established in this State in
Pavesich
v.
New England Life Insurance Co.,
122
Ga.
190 (
2. In the
Pavesich
case it was said: “The right of privacy is embraced within the absolute rights of personal security and personal liberty. Personal security includes the right to exist and the right to the enjoyment of life while existing, and is invaded not only by a deprivation of life, but also' by a deprivation of those things which are necessary to the enjoyment of life according to the nature, temperament, and lawful desires of the individual. Personal liberty includes not only freedom from physical restraint, but also the right ‘to be let alone,’ to determine one’s mode of life, whether it shall be a life of publicity or of privacy, and to order one’s life and manage one’s affairs in a manner that may be most agreeable to him so long as he does not violate the rights of others or of the public.” 122
Ga.
190 (3, 4, 5). Other courts have defined the right of privacy as “the right of a person . . . to be free from unwarranted publicity, ... or the unwarranted appropriation or exploitation of one’s personality, the publicizing of one’s private affairs with which the public had no legitimate concern.” Housh
v.
Peth,
3. Whether a letter written by a creditor to an employer notifying him that his employee is indebted to the creditor and seeking the employer’s aid in the collection of the debt constitutes a violation of the right of privacy of the employee, is a question of first impression in this State. Courts of other jurisdictions in dealing with the question have generally held that such does not give a cause of action for a violation of the right of privacy, their reasoning being that, in giving this in
*684
formation to an employer, it was not giving to the general public information concerning a private matter in which it had, or could have, no legitimate interest, since an employer has a natural and proper interest in the debts of his employees. Voneye
v.
Turner, supra; Patton
v.
Jacobs,
The Court of Appeals erred in sustaining the judgment of the *685 trial court and in holding that the petition stated a cause of action for a violation of the plaintiff’s right of privacy.
Judgment reversed.
