A gеneral demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint having been sustained without leave to amend, plaintiff appeals from the judgment of dismissal subsequently entered.
The action is one for libel, and is based upon a letter alleged to have been written and published by the defendants. The complaint alleges that plaintiff is an attorney who for more than twenty years before the publication of the letter complained of specialized in municipal corporation law and served either as assistant secretary оr secretary of the League of California Municipalities, an association composed of more than 100 incorporated cities and towns in this state, *601 and that during thе larger part of said time plaintiff acted as special legal advisor to many of the cities. The complaint further alleges that without any valid reason therefor рlaintiff was discharged from his office as secretary by the directors of the league, and that thereafter defendants “maliciously composed of and concerning рlaintiff, false and defamatory matter in the form of a letter” and published the letter by causing it to be mailed to mayors and city officials of many cities belonging to the league.
This letter, quoted in full in the complaint, appears to have been written on stationery of the League of California Municipalities, where also appears undеr the title of president, the name of defendant Mitchell. It is addressed to “Honorable Mayors and City Officials of the Member Cities of the League of California Municipalities”, under date of March 24, 1932, and is signed: “James H. Mitchell, President League of California Municipalities”. In it Mitchell states that the board of directors of the league on March 12th was compelled “in view of the facts presented”, to ask for plaintiff’s resignation.
As reasons for demanding the resignation, the letter states that during plaintiff’s absence from the city a Mr. Levy came into possession of a check for $190 payable to the league; that plaintiff by wire authorized Levy to endorse the check in the name of the leaguе; that Levy did endorse it and used the proceeds and that the league has never received that part of the money to which it was entitled. The letter discusses other checks which, it states, although payable to the league, were endorsed and cashed, the major portion of the proceeds being used for other than league purposes. It also states that “The testimony given to the Board showed without contradiction that of the various sums appropriated as aforesaid, there is at least nоw a net sum of $202.40 unpaid” and that knowledge of the transactions came “from sources other than the office of the Secretary-Manager”. The letter also mentions a publishing company with which the plaintiff was connected during all of the time mentioned, and implies that the transactions of this company with the league were questionable, if nоt dishonest.
Reading the letter as a whole there is no doubt that it charges plaintiff with dishonest conduct and that its publication had a “tendency to injure him in his occupation”;
*602
hence under section 45 of the Civil Code, which defines libel as a “false and unprivileged publication by writing . . . which exposes any person to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy ... or which has a tendency to injure him in his occupation”, the- letter would be libelous
per se
if both false and unprivileged.
(Bates
v.
Campbell,
Privilege must be pleaded as an affirmative defense to an action for libel
(Gilman
v.
McClatchy,
Furthermore, while in the case of a false and unprivileged publication, libelous
per se,
malice is implied, and lack of it is a matter of dеfense, which need not be pleaded
(Gilman
v.
McClatchy, supra; Snively
v.
Record Pub. Co.,
*603 The complaint in this case sets forth no facts showing that malice existed at the time the communication was published. The allegations that defendants “maliciously composed of and concerning plaintiff, false and defamatory matter in the form of a letter” and “that said charges, made and published in said letter . . . were and are false, malicious and scandalous ... ”, state the mere conclusion of the pleader (Taylor v. Lewis, supra). In the case last' cited it is said: “Does the complaint. herein allege such malice? In our opinion it does not. The allegation that the article was ‘maliciously published’ would seem to be but a mere conclusion of the pleader, unless the article itself lends support to such a conсlusion”.
In the present case the letter itself does not support the conclusion that it was maliciously published. On the contrary, its tenor indicates that it was published with regret after a partial investigation which led the writer to believe that the charges made were true. The pleading does not allege that the defendants knew the charges were false or had any reason to believe they were false. The pleading, of course, does use the words “malicious” and “maliciously”, but these words, standing alone, are nоt sufficient to charge malice in fact. The rule as stated in
Henry
v.
Moberly,
Our attention is called to certain language in
Stevens
v.
Snow,
As the complaint in the present case fails to state a cause of action, the demurrer was properly sustained.
The judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Thompson, J., Waste, C. J., and Shenk, J., concurred.
