Plaintiff Jeanette Heard brought this libel action against defendant Neighbor Newspapers, Inc., and C. Randall Doster in regard to an article which appeared on the front page of the newspaper’s October 21, 1982 edition. The article reported that according to Doster, an investigator with the Georgia Department of Human Resources Office of Fraud and Abuse, plaintiff Heard had pled guilty to an indictment for welfare fraud and had paid $10,939 to the clerk of the Paulding County Superior Court as restitution. In fact, plaintiff pled not guilty but agreed to make restitution of the stated amount and, upon motion of the district attorney, the court entered an order of nolle prosequi. Defendant newspaper brought a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the statement in question was a privileged communication pursuant to OCGA § 51-5-7 (7) because it was a truthful report of information received from the investigator and was made without malice. Summary judgment was granted to defendant newspaper and plaintiff appeals. Although plaintiff asserted nine enumerations of error, plaintiff’s argument is essentially two-fold: (1) that an issue of fact remains as to whether the statement was privileged and (2) even if it was a privileged statement, an issue of fact remains as to whether the statement was made with “private malice,” so as to negate the privilege pursuant to OCGA § 51-5-9.
1. a. The first element of the privilege granted by OCGA § 51-5-7 (7) is that the report is a “truthful report” of the statement given by the officer. The reporter to whom the statements were made at
b. The second element of the privilege granted by OCGA § 51-5-7 (7) is that the information in question was “received from any arresting officer or police authorities.” Plaintiff argues that defendant’s motion must fail because defendant has not shown that Doster was an officer or a “police authority] ” pursuant to the terms of the statute.
Clearly, Doster was not an arresting officer or a policeman. The issue is whether Doster was an agent of a “police authority]” as that term is used in the statute. Apparently, the appellate courts of this state have never before construed the meaning of “police authority]” in applying the statute. However, the courts have construed the meaning of “proceeding of legislative or judicial bodies” in applying the statutory privilege granted in subsection (4) of OCGA § 51-5-7. We have applied a functional analysis in determining whether the proceeding in question was judicial or legislative in nature. “[I]t is the nature of the act to be performed rather than the office, board, or body which performs it, that determines whether or not it is the discharge of a judicial or quasi-judicial function. [Cit.]” (Punctuation omitted.)
Morton v. Stewart,
supra at 639. Thus, a conditionally privileged status has been granted to the proceedings of the Composite State Board of Medical Examiners
(Morton,
id.) and to the proceedings of a County Commission on Roads and Revenues
(Pearce v. Brower,
The record shows that defendant Doster was employed as an investigator by the Georgia Department of Human Resources Office of Fraud and Abuse and that he assisted the district attorney in investi
Plaintiff argues that the privilege should not attach unless the information given by the “police authority]” was made within the context of an official proceeding. Here, the information received by defendant newspaper from defendant Doster did, in fact, relate to the official proceeding against plaintiff. Therefore, no issue of fact remains as to whether the communication in question is privileged.
2. “[W]hen a defendant moves for summary judgment [in a case involving a statutorily privileged statement], it must negate a plaintiff’s claim of actual malice by establishing that it lacked knowledge that the defamatory matter was false or did not publish it with reckless disregard as to whether it was false or not.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Clayton v. Macon Telegraph Pub. Co.,
Because no issue of fact remains as to the defendant’s lack of malice, plaintiff may not recover general or punitive damages and the court did not err in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
