The plaintiff, a patrolman in the Norwalk police department, brought this action seeking damages against the named defendant Flora Lippe, hereinafter referred to as Lippe, and The Hour Publishing Company, hereinafter referred to as The Hour. The plaintiff’s amended complaint is in three counts. The first and second counts are directed against Lippe only. The first count alleges slander arising from a street incident in Norwalk on August 27,1966. The second count alleges libel in the publication of a letter sent to the police commissioners, mayor and chief of police of Norwalk on August 29,1966. The third count, directed against The Hour only, alleges libel in the publication in its newspaper of a letter from Lippe dated August 29, 1966. The defendants in their answers pleaded both truth and fair comment on a public official as special defenses. Lippe also filed a counterclaim seeking damages in which she alleged physical injury and emotional upset.
The jury returned a general verdict on the complaint against both defendants for $4000 and found for the plaintiff Moriarty on Lippe’s counterclaim.
Each defendant moved that the court set aside the verdict and render judgment notwithstanding the verdict in accordance with motions for a directed verdict previously made, on which the court had reserved decision. The court denied the motions to set aside the verdict and judgment was rendered in accordance with the jury’s verdict. The defendants have appealed, assigning error in rulings on evidence, in the court’s refusal to charge as requested, in the court’s charge and in the denial of their motions to set aside the verdict and render judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
We turn first to the defendants’ claims that the
*374
court erred in denying their motions to set aside the verdict and render judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the verdict is not supported by the evidence. We test the court’s action in these respects by the evidence printed in the appendices to the briefs.
Southington
v.
Francis,
The jury could have found as follows: On August 27, 1966, at approximately 12:45 p.m., while in the course of walking his beat, the plaintiff saw a vehicle improperly parked in front of an A & P store on Belden Avenue in the town of Norwalk. The plaintiff blew the horn of the ear to alert the operator to come out and remove the vehicle, which was impeding the traffic flow on United States route 1 at a particularly busy intersection. About two or three minutes later a woman identified as Flora Lippe emerged from the A & P store and, in a loud voice that could have been heard across the street, said to the plaintiff, “Grod damn you. Don’t you know *375 how to write a ticket, you stupid son of a bitch.” The plaintiff then asked Lippe for her license and registration. As she produced her license and registration she continued a verbal barrage at the plaintiff, wanting to know his name, who his father was, whether he was after the chief’s job and telling the plaintiff that his father would never do anything like that to her, all of this in a screaming voice that attracted a crowd of thirty-five to forty people. The plaintiff did not respond verbally to her as he wrote out a uniform traffic summons. Lippe, screaming and shouting, referred to the plaintiff as a clown, a big fat ape and a smart aleck, claiming he was out to make a name for himself and that he was out for the chief’s job. The plaintiff informed her that she was being issued a summons and requested that she sign the bottom line of the summons, but she refused to do so or to accept the ticket and started to leave the scene. The officer again told her she would have to sign the summons or would have to come with him to police headquarters. In response to this, she stated that she would not sign the summons and again described him as a big fat oaf, an ape and a clown many times over in a loud voice, all in the presence of a substantial crowd there assembled. It was only after the officer advised her that she was in breach of the peace and would have to accompany him, and Lippe attempted to leave in spite of that admonition, that the officer first placed a hand on her person, taking hold of her right wrist. At this point, Lippe physically attacked the plaintiff with her pocketbook and attempted to kick him and otherwise to inflict harm on him, and in defense of himself against this attack he exercised sufficient force to prevent her from further attacking him, but no additional force. Albert Prato, a captain on the Norwalk police de *376 partment and a superior of the plaintiff, then happened on the scene and in response to his inquiry about what had transpired, Lippe stated in a loud voice that “this ape almost twisted my arm off,” that she was surprised that the “ape” did not take his gun out and shoot and kill her, that he was treating her like common dirt, that she was a business woman and had not done anything wrong, and that she did not see why this “ape” was picking on her in this way. On arrival at police headquarters, she continued to shout at the plaintiff, calling him an “ape” and, addressing Lieutenant Varanay of the Norwalk police department, a superior officer of the plaintiff, accused the plaintiff of attempting to tear her arm out of its socket and again stated that she did not understand why the plaintiff did not take a gun and shoot her.
All of the foregoing events occurred on Saturday, August 27, 1966. On Monday, August 29, two days after the incident, The Hour published a news article concerning the incident. The article gave no hint that a police officer degraded a citizen. Two days later, on Wednesday, August 31, The Hour published in its “letters to the editor” column, “People’s Forum,” a “letter of protest” submitted by Lippe. On August 30 or 31, the chief of police, a police commissioner and the mayor of Norwalk received complaints against the plaintiff, delivered by Lippe, as a result of which the plaintiff was requested to appear in the chief’s office. The complaints, identical in content to the “letter of protest,” contained the words: “He came up to me, grabbed my arm, twisted it back until it felt as though it came loose out of its socket” and “I would like to bring charges against Officer Moriarty for being abusive and using unnecessary force and treating a respect *377 able citizen like a common criminal.” As a result of the publication of the letter by The Hour, the plaintiff was the victim of continual verbal harassment, embarrassment and humiliation due to his part in the incident, both from the general public and from his fellow officers. The investigation conducted by the Xorwalk police department made other officers aware of the incident, and this greatly diminished the plaintiff’s efficiency as a police officer and his acceptance by fellow officers in the line of duty until, as a result of an investigation by the commissioner into the charge of police brutality, the plaintiff was exonerated of any charge of misconduct. Subsequent to August 31, 1966, Lippe withdrew the charge of misconduct against the plaintiff from the complaint files of the police commissioners.
I
We consider first the appeal of The Hour. It assigns as error the court’s denial of its motions for a directed verdict, to set aside the verdict, and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the verdict is not supported by the evidence.
We assume for the purpose of discussing these motions that the letter published by The Hour was false and that its content was libelous per se.
1
If this be so, in order to sustain a verdict of libel against The Hour the inquiry is whether there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could reasonably conclude that The Hour published the letter with “actual malice,” that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether
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it was false. This constitutionally compelled standard of review, first enunciated in
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
The motivating force for
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
supra, 270, was “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that . . . [such debate] may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.” The plaintiff here has, or appears to the public to have, substantial responsibility for or control over the conduct of government affairs, at least where law enforcement and police functions are concerned, sufficient to be a public official. Although a comparably low-ranking government official, a patrolman’s office, if abused, has great potential for social harm and thus invites independent interest in the qualifications and performance of the person who holds the position. See
Time, Inc.
v.
Pape,
To sustain his burden, the plaintiff offered evidence to prove that no effort was made by The Hour to verify any facts in the letter, although both eyewitnesses and a police reporter were available; that the letter contained material not reported in The Hour’s prior published news article; that the only reputation of its author, the defendant Lippe, known to The Hour when the letter bearing her name was delivered to the newspaper by her sister, was that Lippe was a business woman in the community; and that the letter was published only to increase circulation and make money.
These considerations, singly and cumulatively, fail short of proving The Hour’s reckless disregard for the accuracy of its publication of the letter concerning the plaintiff. Although the United States Supreme Court has observed that “reckless disregard” cannot be fully encompassed in one infallible definition and that its outer limits remain to be charted through case-by-case adjudication; St. Amant v. Thompson, supra; several cases since the *380 New York Times Co. case furnish meaningful guidance for further definition of a reckless publication.
In
Garrison
v.
Louisiana,
By no proper test of recklessness was the printing of the letter by The Hour a reckless publication concerning a public officer. Nothing in the plaintiff’s evidence indicates an awareness by The Hour of the probable falsity of Lippe’s statements about the plaintiff. Failure to investigate does not of itself satisfy this standard.
Curtis Publishing Co.
v.
Butts,
supra;
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
supra, 286-88, 292;
Garrison
v.
Louisiana,
supra, 73-75, 79;
St. Amant
v.
Thompson,
supra, 733;
Time, Inc.
v.
Hill,
Consideration of the reputation of the informant likewise fails to establish that The Hour had obvious reasons to doubt her veracity or the accuracy of the letter. The plaintiff failed to introduce evidence of her reputation for veracity or to demonstrate a low community assessment of her trustworthiness or unsatisfactory experience with her. See St. Amant v. Thompson, supra. The publishers of The Hour knew Lippe to be a local merchant and had no reason to entertain serious doubts as to the truth of her letter since such a publication would, doubtless, cause her some embarrassment.
Finally, the plaintiff contends that the letter was published merely to increase circulation and make money. A “letters to the editor” column provides an important outlet for the promulgation of information and ideas by persons who do not themselves have access to publishing facilities but who wish to exercise their freedom of speech even though they are not members of the press. The Hour did not fabricate the letter; it was not the product of its publisher’s imagination; it was not based on an unverified anonymous communication. The contents of the letter were not so inherently improbable that only a reckless man would have put them into circulation. See St. Amant v. Thompson, supra.
Since the verdict is against the evidence and there appears to be no justification for a new trial, there
*382
was error in the denial of The Hour’s motion to set aside the verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Masterson
v.
Atherton,
H
We turn now to the assignments of error raised by the defendant Lippe. She assigns as error the denial of her motions for a directed verdict, to set aside the verdict, and to render judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
We consider first the slander count. Lippe contended at the trial in support of these motions that none of her statements, as a matter of law, constitutes a slander actionable per se. These motions were denied and, despite Lippe’s request that the jury be charged that the utterances were not slanderous per se, the court proceeded to charge as follows, to which the defendant excepted: “One common category of slander actionable per se consists of defamatory oral utterance charging a person with a crime. In this State the expression is limited to charging one with a crime punishable by law and involving moral turpitude. In his complaint the plaintiff alleges, in the first count, that the defendant Flora Lippe called the plaintiff an ape and exercised police brutality. Now, the exercise of police brutality is actionable per se, because it charges the plaintiff with a crime, and the crime is that of assault. Insofar as that utterance is concerned, the action is founded upon slander action [sic] per se; the results carry damages without proof of special damages.”
Having admittedly alleged or proven no special damages, the plaintiff here is limited to a recovery
*383
of general damages on a showing that the utterance was slanderous per se.
Urban
v.
Hartford Gas Co.,
While the precise statute involved is not given, the crime of assault charged here, occurring in 1966, appears to be a violation of § 53-174 of the General Statutes (repealed October 1,1971) which is punishable by imprisonment for not more than one year or merely by a fine of not more than $500. Such a crime, involving no moral turpitude, is not an infamous crime under any of the definitions of that
*384
term.
Drazen
v.
New Haven Taxicab Co.,
supra; see
Heating Acceptance Corporation
v.
Patterson,
We conclude then that, as a matter of law, the utterance involved here, even if false, does not charge a icrime which constitutes a slander aetionalble per se.
We have recognized other categories of slander actionable per se. See Wright & Fitzgerald, Conn. Law of Torts (2d Ed.) § 147. Only one other, however, might apply here. It is that a defamation is actionable per se if it charges improper conduct or lack of skill or integrity in one’s profession or business and is of such a nature that it is calculated to cause injury to one in his profession or business.
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
We recognize a distinction under this rule between libel and slander, however. “Spoken words are actionable per se only if they charge a general incompetence or lack of integrity. They are not slanderous per se if they charge no more than specific acts, unless those acts are so charged as to amount to an allegation of general incompetence or lack of integrity.”
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
supra, 567;
Camp
v.
Martin,
Specifically, the plaintiff offered evidence to prove that in response to an inquiry at the scene made by Captain Prato, a superior of the plaintiff, as to what had transpired, Lippe stated to him that “this ape almost twisted my arm off.” On arriving at police headquarters, she addressed Lieutenant Varanay, a superior of the plaintiff on the Norwalk police department, and accused the plaintiff of “attempting to tear her arm out of its socket.” Such utterances do *385 not charge more than specific acts and, therefore, cannot, as a matter of law, be slander actionable per se.
Other words uttered in the presence of those assembled, “clown,” “big fat ape,” “smart aleck,” “big fat oaf,” and “stupid son of a bitch,” were here merely gross and vulgar expressions of abuse. The general rule has long been that such words of general abuse, regardless of how rude, uncouth or vexatious are not slanderous per se and cannot support recovery in a slander action in the absence of a showing of special damages. Notes,
We conclude, then, that none of the allegedly slanderous words could be considered actionable per se in any sense. The matter then becomes one of law for the court.
Charles Parker Co.
v.
Silver City Crystal Co.,
Ill
The complaint charging Lippe with libel is limited to facts alleging false and malicious statements made by her in a letter sent to the police commissioners, to the chief of police and to the mayor of the town of N or walk, containing the words: “He came up to me, grabbed my arm, twisted it back until it felt as though it came loose out of its socket,” and “I would like to bring charges against Officer Moriarty for being abusive and using unnecessary force and treating a respectable citizen like a common criminal.” Lippe, in her motion for a directed verdict, argued that these statements are at most libel per quod rather
*386
than libel per se, and are thus not actionable, since special damages were not proven. See
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
Libel may be actionable per se if it charges improper conduct or lack of skill or integrity in one’s profession and is of such a nature that it is calculated to cause injury to one in his profession.
Charles Parker Co.
v.
Silver City Crystal Co.,
supra;
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
supra, 566, and cases cited. The first statement complained of does on its face impute improper conduct.
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
supra, 565. Written words are libelous per se where they charge only a single act, provided that act is something derogatory to the plaintiif in the practice of his profession;
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
supra, 567,
Corsello
v.
Emerson Bros., Inc.,
A jury could reasonably infer from the evidence presented that the charges contained in the letter to the plaintiff’s superiors were calculated to cause the plaintiff injury in his profession and that they were false. Thus, the court was correct in refusing to grant the directed verdict, unless, as a matter of law, the communication was privileged.
Defendant Lippe, as well as The Hour, was entitled to the benefit of the rule of
New York Times Co.
v.
Sullivan,
The actual malice sufficient to destroy this immunity is shown where the defendant utters the statement with knowledge that it is false or with a reckless disregard of the truth or falsity of the facts stated. 2
As the plaintiff concedes in his brief, sufficient evidence was presented here to allow a jury to conclude that Lippe was confused and seriously mistaken as to the facts but had a bona fide and honest intent and was not reckless in her publication by reason of her confusion. Conflicting evidence, however, was also presented which would allow a jury to conclude from the evidence and reasonable infer *388 enees .therefrom that lippe acted knowing the statements to be false or with .at least reckless disregard as to whether her statements were true.
The jury could choose to believe the plaintiff’s evidence that he exercised no excessive force and, thus, reasonably conclude that the allegations in Lippe’s letter were deliberate falsifications.
Curtis Publishing Co.
v.
Butts,
We conclude then that the trial court was correct in denying Lippe’s motion for a directed verdict. Lippe, however, also assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to charge the jury that she was entitled to and relied on the defense of fair comment on a public official, which requires that the plaintiff must show actual malice on her part. She had specially pleaded this defense, had requested such a charge, and had properly excepted to its exclusion. In our earlier discussion we concluded that such a charge was required under the New York Times Co. rule.
The trial court erred in refusing to charge as requested.
IV
Finally, the defendant Lippe filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff for damages for physical in
*389
juries which she alleged were inflicted on her by the plaintiff. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. Lippe assigns error in the court’s charge that to constitute an actionable assault and battery there must have been an “unlawful” force applied to one person by another. Lippe claims the use of the term “unlawful” could confuse the jury, since the claimed perpetration of the assault was on a policeman. The court, however, in its charge went on to define for the jury “unlawful” as being either intentional, wanton or negligent conduct in the application of force. The court further told the jury that absent these elements, the application of the force is not “unlawful.” That is a fair statement of our law.
Russo
v.
Porga,
There is error, the judgment against The Hour is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment on the third count for the defendant The Hour Publishing Company in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict. The judgment against the defendant Flora Lippe is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendant Flora Lippe on the first count in accordance with her motion for a directed verdict. A new trial is ordered on the second count. There is no error on the counterclaim.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendant The Hour raised no exception to the court’s charge that the article was libelous per se, requested no contrary charge, and assigned no error to this charge.
We note, of course, that even if the plaintiff was not a public official, all citizens have a conditional privilege to communicate to police officials respecting the perpetration of an alleged criminal act.
State
v.
Pape,
This is a sufficient showing to prevent a directed verdict pursuant to General Statutes § 52-237 where, as here, no retraction was requested, and no special damages were alleged.
Proto
v.
Bridgeport Herald Corporation,
