This is an action for slander, tried to a jury in the District Court. The alleged slander was a statement by the defendant that the plaintiff had sexually attacked a young woman, Lita Kirschbrown. The complaint demanded both compensatory and punitive damages and the district judge submitted both these issues tо the jury. The jury awarded the plaintiff $20,000 in compensatory damages but no punitive damages. The district judge set aside this verdict and entered judgment for thе defendant. The plaintiff appeals. We affirm the judgment.
The evidence was undisputed with respect to the defendant’s defamatory statеment and the circumstances under which it was made. In June 1979 the defendant d’Arazien was a legislative assistant in the office of Congressman Andrew McGuirе of New Jersey. d’Arazien had been employed there- since the fall of 1975, first as a press secretary, later as legislative assistant. On the mоrning of June 18, 1979 the plaintiff Neil Roland joined Congressman McGuire’s staff as a summer intern, to be employed for two and a half months for a stipend of $600.00. d’Arazien and Roland had worked together in 1972 in the presidential campaign of Senator McGovern. A fellow campaign worker was Lita Kirschbrown who later married d’Arazien. When he saw Roland in the McGuire office and identified him as the former McGovern campaign worker, d’Arazien went to Robert Kerr, staff director of the office, and said that his wife'had told him she had been “sexually attacked by Neil Roland” when they were working in the McGovern campaign. Mr. Kerr testified for the plaintiff that d’Arazien was “extremely upset”, that he “said that he could not work in the same office with Mr. Roland, and that he would have to leave if Mr. Roland was going to work there.” (Tr. 115-16) Although d’Arazien did not ask him to fire Roland, Kerr thereafter told Roland that hаving been informed of what happened in 1972 by his legislative assistant, and without “adjudicating the matter” he had to choose between two emplоyees, and that because a legislative assistant was more valuable to the office than a summer intern, he opted for the legislative assistant and Roland had to leave. (Tr. 62) Accordingly Roland’s internship was terminated. 1
I simply said [to Kerr] that because of this incident, whiсh I had to explain to him, because of the gravity of the situation, that I was physically and mentally unable to continue to function in the office, and I felt I had an obligation to him to tell him that I was in such physical and mental condition that I couldn’t stay.
(Tr. 180, 181) In short, on the undisputed evidence, d’Arazien’s communication was in furtherance of the interest shared by him and Mr. Kerr, and therefore it enjoyed a qualified privilege.
Whether a communication is privileged, where the facts surrounding its publication are undisputed, is a question of law for the court.
Manbeck v. Ostrowski,
Although the existence of the privilege in this case was a question of law for the court, whether it was abused by the defendant was a question of fact for the jury. Nat’l Disabled Soldiers League v. Haan, supra; Brice v. Curtis, supra; Alfred A. Altimont, Inc. v. Chatelain, supra. Thus when the uncontradicted evidence established that d’Arazien’s statement to Kerr was protected by a qualified privilege the burden of proof shifted to the plaintiff; and to sustain that burden the plaintiff was required to demonstrate to the jury that d’Arazien abused and thereby forfeited his privilege by acting with malice, or recklessly or dishonestly. Accordingly we must decide whether there was еnough evidence to go to the jury on the issue of abuse of the privilege. We conclude there was not.
The judgment of the District Court was right. It is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The evidence concerning the alleged sexual assault was in conflict. Lita Kirschbrown d’Arazien testified that while she аnd Roland
were in the McGovern office in 1972 Roland pressed her “to go out on a date”, that when she declined “he kept pressing it and prеssing
