This is аn action sounding in libel, arising from allegations of improper medical practice against Dr. Morton — the plaintiff, by members of the Grady County Medical Society — Doctors Gardner, Palen, and Bihl. Plaintiff appeals from the grant of summary judgment to Doctors Gardner and Palen. Bihl was dismissed as a defendant in this action.
This is the fifth appeal arising from this incident. See
Morton v. Skrine
and
Stewart v. Morton,
Dr. Morton was a mеmber of the Georgia Composite State Board of Medical Examiners (Board). Prior to his appointment to the Board he practiced medicine in Grady County. After his appointment several members of the Grady County Medical Society (Medical Society) were investigated by the Board. The Grady County doctors were of the opinion that Dr. Morton may have been the instigator of those investigations. The Medical Society was originally formed in 1975 by Doctors Bihl, Gardner, Palen, Lonkani, Singleton and Bailey. On or about June 3, 1976, with only Bihl, Gardner and Palen in attendance, the President, Vice-President and Secretary respectively, the Medical Society composed a letter to the
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Board requesting an investigation of “complaints pertaining to the medical practice of’ Dr. Morton. The letter carried the “stamp” signature of Dr. Bihl in his capacity as “President, Grady County Medical Society.” Although defendants have included exhibits in their appellate brief explaining why the letter had a stamped signature, subsequent events involving the Board and the Medical Society, and submission of a second letter, this Court can not consider evidence contained in the brief. We will rely only upon the evidence of record.
Coweta Bonding Co. v. Carter,
We have deduced from the evidence of record that Doctors Bihl, Gardner and Palen composed the letter from the Medical Society. When Gardner was ready to mail the letter, Bihl — the President of the Medical Society, was unavailable and his “stamp” signature was placed on the letter and it was forwarded to the Board. Bihl thereafter contacted the Board and withdrew his name from the letter. A “meeting” of the Medical Society was held with only Doctors Gardner and Palen in attendance and the letter was resubmitted to the Board — over the signature of Doctors Gardner and Palen — as “Vice-President” and “Secretary” of the Medical Society. The first letter from the Medical Board, dated June 3,1976, is the оnly letter from the defendants referred to in the complaint. Dr. Bihl subsequently moved from the state and he has been stricken as a party defendant in this action.
Even though Bihl withdrew his name from the first letter sent to the Board from the Medical Society, thereafter he read the letter to a newspaper reporter over thе phone and then provided him with a copy of the letter bearing his stamped signature — without the knowledge of either Drs. Gardner or Palen. The reporter spoke to Dr. Palen about the letter but did not go into the contents of the allegations attached to the letter. The evidence shows that only Dr. Bihl read the letter to thе newspaper reporter, discussed the contents, and provided a copy of the original letter to the reporter.
Following extensive discovery, defendants moved for and were granted summary judgment. Plaintiff brings this appeal. Held:
1. The plaintiff’s action was based upon: (1) libel: predicated upon the publication оf the letter from the Medical Society to the Board, dated June 3,1976, and further publication of that letter to a newspaper reporter; (2) conspiracy to commit libel: Count IV — based upon publication of the letter above; Count V — based upon publication of a letter to the Board from Ms. Rhea McCullough, an employee of Dr. Morton; Count VI — publication of a newspaper article and an editorial in the Atlanta Constitution and (3) malicious *602 use of privilege: by using a privileged communication — the letter of June 3, 1976, “as a cloak for venting private malice . . .”
2. We will address first the enumerations dealing with the counts alleging consрiracy to commit libel — Counts IV, V, and VI. Although the question of conspiracy has been held to be a question for the jury (
Hodges v. Youmans,
3. Count VI alleged conspiracy to commit libel by publication of a newspaper article and an editorial in the Atlanta Constitution.
Morton v. Stewart,
4. We turn next to Count V — based upon a letter from Ms. Rhea McCullough — an emрloyee of Dr. Morton, to the Board. Ms. McCullough stated that she alone was responsible for the letter and its contents and she never discussed it with either of the defendant doctors. The record is totally devoid of any evidence of conspiracy or concert of action between Ms. McCullough and either of the defendant doctors. Summary judgment was also proper as to this count.
5. Plaintiff’s Count IV was based on publication of a letter dated June 3, 1976 from Doctors Bihl, Gardner and Palen to the Board. It is contended there were two libels — one when the doctors published the defamatory matter to the Board, and two — when the doctors rеpublished the same defamatory matter to a newspaper reporter.
(a) It is admitted that Doctors Bihl, Gardner and Palen published the letter to the Board — under the claim of a conditional privilege. Defendant’s allege that the plaintiff abandoned this portion of his action in the trial court. We agree.
The triаl court found as a fact, and stated in its order, that plaintiff abandoned such allegation “in oral argument.” The Supreme Court held that no part of the purloined Board file would be admissible in evidence.
Morton v. Gardner,
Thus, as the conspiracy to commit libel count was based upon publication of the letter from Dоctors Bihl, Gardner and Palen to the Board and to the newspaper reporter and the publication to the Board has been found to be abandoned, we need only address the issue of conspiracy as it relates to publication of the letter to the reporter.
(b) Doctors Gardner and Palen claimed the conditional privilege relating to the letters forwarded to the Board (Code Ann. § 84-916 (h) (Ga. L. 1913, pp. 101,107; as amended through 1974, pp. 1156, 1162)) and established a prima facie right to such privilege.
Melton v. Bow,
As we held in
Morton v. Stewart,
We have reviewed the voluminous evidence of record and found it devoid of any fact or circumstance tending to establish a conspiracy between Dr. Bihl and Doctors Gardner or Palen to publish the letter of the Medical Society to the newspaper reporter. Accordingly, the court did not err in granting summary judgment as to Count IV for the defendants.
Summer-Minter & Assoc. v. Giordano;
6. Plaintiff alleged that Doctors Bihl, Gardner and Palen, maliciously used a privileged communication — the letter to the Board, “as a cloak for venting private malice.” Pretermitting the issue of whether plaintiff also abandoned this count, this letter was entitled to a conditional privilege under Code Ann. § 84-916 (h), supra, if “such report [was] made in good faith without fraud or malice.” However, “if the privilege is used merely as a cloak for venting private malice, and not bona fide in promotion of the object for which , the privilege is grantеd, the party defamed shall have a right of action.” Code Ann. § 105-710 (Code § 105-710). “[P]roof that the communication as made was privileged will defeat recovery unless actual malice on the part of the defendant exists.”
Van Gundy v. Wilson,
The principal rule of New York Times v. Sullivan,
(a) The defense of “privilege” in a libel action is one of “confession and avoidance.” It admits the publication of the allegedly defamatory matter but asserts it was done on a privileged occasion and bona fide in promotion of the object for which the privilege was granted.
DeLoach v. Maurer,
Defendants moved for and supported their motion for summary judgment — showing occasion for the privilege, a claim of good faith,
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verification of their entries in the letter and a lack of “actual mаlice” in the constitutional sense. See
Ivester v. Coe,
Both doctors disclaimed any false or malicious motive for forwarding the letter to the Board. Each doctor stated thаt the letter was submitted in a capacity as an officer of the Medical Society — and not as an individual. One of the functions of the Society was to communicate with the Board which had “the duty, responsibility and power to conduct investigations which the [Grady County Medical] Society does not.” The doctors testified that thеir motive for initiating the letter was solely “the quality of medical care” for the community and “in the interests of patient’s health, interest and safety.” The Medical Society felt “it would be remiss in its purpose of insuring quality medical treatment if these complaints were not investigated by the proper authority.” The proper investigаtive authority was the Board. Code Ann. § 84-916 (d), supra.
Neither defendant doctor discussed the contents of the allegations in the letter with anyone except the Board and Dr. Bihl. Each defendant doctor discussed the fact that a letter had been sent to the Board but prior to that time this fact had been communicated to the reporters by Dr. James Dudley, President of the Board. Onе reporter testified that he also spoke to the Director of Investigations *606 for the Board “who confirmed that his office was investigating, currently investigating Dr. Morton, and he [the investigator] discussed in general terms the allegations that had been made. [The reporters] then went to see Mr. Cecil Clifton, [Executive Director of thе] Medical Board, discussed the investigation with him [and] returned to the office. I called Dr. John H. Bihl who read to me a portion of the letter that had been sent to the Board ...” The reporters were aware that two letters — from McCullough and the Medical Society had been sent to the Board concerning Dr. Morton. The reporter stated that “Dr. Dudley and Cecil Clifton both made reference to [both letters] ... [W]e talked with Mr. Clifton prior to talking with Dr. Bihl...” (Emphasis supplied.) Thus, the sequence of events appears to be that Ms. McCullough sent a letter to the Board, then the Medical Society forwarded their two letters to the Board. Thereafter, the newspaрer reporters called the Board and spoke to its President, then the Executive Secretary, before they spoke to either of the defendant doctors about the letters from the Medical Society. Furthermore, general discussion of the contents of the letters came from the President, Executive Seсretary and chief investigating officer of the Board and not from the defendants. The defendants admitted they discussed the fact that a letter had been sent — but not its contents. Only Dr. Bihl read his letter to the reporter and sent a copy to. him.
(b) Defendants carried their burden showing their prima facie claim of privilege and lack of “actual malice” in the constitutional sense — thus piercing the pleadings of the plaintiff as to this matter. Thereafter, the burden of proving “actual malice” was on the plaintiff.
Ivester v. Coe,
7. The sole remaining issue is whether there is any evidence tending to establish that Doctors Gardner or Palen defamed Dr. Morton by publication of the letter from the Medical Society to the Board — dated June 3,1976, or by the republication of that letter by Dr. Bihl alone — to the newspaper reporter. We find that Divisions 5 *607 and 6 above are controlling as to this issue.
Judgment affirmed.
