89 Ga. 520 | Ga. | 1892
An action for words was brought by Jones against Forehand, his declaration alleging that in November, 1886, the defendant falsely and maliciously spoke to J. J. Turner thus: “I want you to go down to the Brumright place and arbitrate the matter between Jones (the plaintiff) and myself. I want to settle up with him. He has already stolen two bales of cotton from me, and I want to get him off' before he steals any more
1. It is assigned as error that the court overruled the plaintiff’s demurrer to the plea on which the verdict is based. The demurrer was upon the following grounds: (1) that said plea did not set up any sufficient defence to the plaintiff’s action; (2) that the plea did not show or admit that the defendant had made use of the words in the plaintiff’s declaration alleged, it appearing from the pleadings that the plea of general issue was then and there in and had not been stricken or withdrawn; (8) that the plea did not show that the words alleged to have been spoken were of such a character or were spoken under such circumstances as would make them a privileged communication; and (4) that the law in regard to the action for words did not contemplate the use of slanderous words as being privileged under any circumstances whatever, but that slanderous words per se could in no case be a privileged communication.
It is also complained that the court erred in charging the jury in regard to this plea, as follows : “ These three pleas (the general issue, mitigation, and privileged communications in bar of right of action) he (the defendant) is authorized by law to file, whether they appear to be contradictory or not. It is the right of a party sued to file as many and as contradictory pleas as he sees proper.” This is assigned as error because no plea can be filed or sustained, so long as the general issue remains, that does not admit in hcec verba the words spoken as alleged in the declaration.
"Where a defendant pleads, in addition to the general issue, that he was authorized by law to do the act complained of, he may be required at the trial to elect
Nor is the plea insufficient on the ground that it fails to show that the words were spoken under such circumstances as would make them a privileged communication. After stating the terms of a contract under which the title to cotton cultivated by the plaintiff' was to remain in the defendant as landlord until the former’s
Our code (§2980) includes among privileged communications “ statements made with the bona fide intent on the part of the speaker to protect his own interest in a matter where it is concerned.” According to this plea, the alleged defamatory statement, if made, was made at a private and confidential interview between the defendant and a person selected to represent him in the settle-.
The remaining ground of the demurrer, viz. that language per se slanderous is in no case protected, was not pressed in this court; and on this point the law is too well settled to require discussion. From language per se slanderous malice is inferred, but this inference is always subject to be rebutted by proof of the occasion or other circumstances of justification.
2. One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial is, that the court permitted the defendant to testify that the plaintiff was indebted to him in money and cotton, as a “cropper,” the plaintiff’ objecting that the same was illegal and irrelevant. It is recited in this ground that the court admitted the testimony as illustrating the truth of the plea of privileged communications. Where an occasion is pleaded as privileged, all facts calculated to throw light upon the true character of the occasion
3. Another ground of the motion is, that the court, over objection, permitted the defendant to testify that the communication alleged in the declaration was privileged. The admission of this testimony was clearly improper. A witness cannot be thus permitted to give his opinion as to the law of the case.
4. It is complained that the court instructed the jury as follows : “ One may publish, by speech or writing, whatever he honestly believes is essential to the protection of his own rights, or to the rights of another, provided the publication is not unnecessarily made to others than to those persons whom he honestly believes can assist him in the protection of his own rights, nor to others than those whom he honestly believes will, by reason of a knowledge of the matter published, be better enabled to assert, or to protect from invasion, either their own rights or the rights of others entrusted to their guardianship.” The error assigned is, that the charge was not qualified by stating that the communication, to become privileged, must be made about the subject-matter to which the person to whom made was to attend.* We have examined the entire charge of the court as sent up in the record, and in no part of it is there any reference to this essential feature of a privileged communication—relevancy to the subject-matter on account of which the privilege is claimed. Under the charge, the privilege is made to depend merely upon the defendant’s good faith and his belief in the relevancy of the statement, and not in any degree upon its actual relevancy. It is a well settled rule that “ a communication, to be privileged, must be spoken with reference to the matter in hand. If the speaker goes further and makes a defamatory charge against a person—such
Judgment reversed.