The action is for slander. The plaintiff has recovered a judgment for $1,250 for imputation of unchastity involved in the state- ' ment that her family were disorderly — were keeping á disorderly house in an apartment of a-tenement.. The version of the plaintiff is that the slander was spoken to her landlord by the defendant,' ■ then a captain of police over the precinct wherein these premises
The plaintiff’s version presents the case of a statement made to a landlord by a superior police officer that the landlord’s house occupied by the plaintiff, situate within the-officer’s precinct, is a disorderly house. I think that the occasion of this communication is prima facie privileged. The general rule is stated in Byam v. Collins (111 N. Y. 143) as follows: “A communication made bona fide upon any subject-matter in which the party communicating has an interest, or in reference to which he lias a duty, is privileged if made to a person having a corresponding interest or duty, although it contained criminating. matter which, without this privilege, would be slanderous and actionable; and this though the duty be not a legal one, but only a moral or social duty of imperfect obligation.” (See, too, Coloney v. Farrow, 5 ■ App. Div. 607; Harwood v. Keech, 4 Hun, 389; Bradley v. Heath, 12 Pick. 163.) I think that such an officer has both an interest and a duty to see to it' that no house within his precinct should be kept or maintained as a disorderly house, and that there is a corresponding duty cast Upon, the landlord. It is not necessary to rest this conclusion upon general consideration of the public morals alone, inasmuch as section 322 of the Penal Code prescribes that the keeping of a.disorderly house is a misdemeanor,'and to let knowingly a house for such purposes, or' to suffer it to be thus- used,, is. likewise a misdemeanor. The view of the learned court was. that the duty of the defendant was- confined to procure the arrest'of the offenders and to bring them into a court, of justice, and that, "■■«refOre, he had no duty to perform in the direction of giving
As I have said, the defendant testified that when he discussed the matter with the landlord he then had the house under investigation’ in consequence of complaints, and he was seeking her permission for access to the premises in order to continue his investigations. In People v. Glennon (175 N. Y. 45) the court, per Cullen, J., say : “ If having a well-grounded belief that the house was a house of prostitution, even'though he had not witnessed sufficient to justify' him in making his arrest, it was his duty if he could obtain admission to the house, peaceably and without violation of law, to enter it to see what its nature and character was. So, also, the conduct of the inmates so far as could be observed in the street, though insufficient to justify the arrest, might'well have required the application to- a magistrate for a warrant, and it was his duty to diligently seek for evidence to present to the magistrate on such application.” If the communication as. to the character of the premises of - the plaintiff or even as to her character was. inciden-. tal to the investigation of an alleged crime, then, as was said in Klinck v. Colby (46 N. Y. 434), “For the' sake of public justice, charges and communications, which would otherwise be slanderous,
The judgment must be reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Woodward, Hooker, Gaynor and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.