191 A.D. 620 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
This is an action for libel. The New York Civic League is a corporation. Included in its activities, which are presumably within its corporate powers, is the collection of information concerning the commission of crimes and the conveyance of such information to the proper authorities for the purpose of investigation. The defendant is the superintendent of the law and order department of said league. Two letters were written at about the same time by the same person, one to the defendant and another to a person who has not been shown to have any relation to the league but which letter came to the possession of the defendant. The letter to the- defendant contained among other matters the following reference to
The plaintiff having been nonsuited it must be assumed on the evidence that the charge against him was false. Unless privileged it was clearly actionable. In Matter of Quarles (158 U. S. 532) it was said: " It is the right, as well as the duty, of every citizen * * * to communicate to the executive officers any information which he has of the commission of an offense against those laws; and such information, given by a private citizen, is a privileged and confidential communication, for which no action of libel or slander will lie, and the disclosure of which cannot be compelled without the assent of the government.” In Vogel v. Gruaz (110 U. S. 311), an action for slander, it was held that a communication to a State’s prosecuting attorney was absolutely privileged, the court, further saying: “ It was the province and the privilege of any person who knew of facts tending to show the commission of a crime, to lay those facts before the public officer whose duty it was to commence a prosecution for the crime. Public policy will protect all such communications, absolutely, and without reference to the motive or intent of the informer or the question of probable cause; the ground being, that greater mischief will probably result from requiring or permitting them to be disclosed than from wholly rejecting them.” I am clearly of the-opinion that the communication in question to the district attorney was privileged. The defendant was in receipt of' information charging the commission of a crime. It is the duty of every citizen and it was the duty of the defendant as representing a corporation created for the purpose of discovering and suppressing crime to submit such information to the legally authorized prosecuting officer. No more suitable repository for the submission of such information can be imagined. The free and unembarrassed administration of
The principal contention of the plaintiff is that although the communication was privileged there was a question of malice involved which should have been submitted to the jury. The communication being privileged the burden of proof rested on the plaintiff to prove the existence of express malice. (Lovell Co. v. Houghton, 116 N. Y. 520, 525; Ashcroft v. Hammond, 197 id. 488, 495; Haft v. First National Bank, 19 App. Div. 423, 425.) Those authorities also hold that the question of malice is not necessarily one for the jury. In the case last cited it was said: “ While the question of malice is usually one for the jury, when the burden is on the plaintiff to prove the malice, if the evidence adduced is equally consistent with either the existence or non-existence of malice, the judge should stop the case, for there is nothing to rebut the presumption which has arisen in favor of the defendant from the privileged occasion.” Nor the communication being privileged is the falsity of the same evidence of malice. (Ashcroft v. Hammond, 197 N. Y. 488, 496; Lewis v. Chapman, 16 id. 369.) It does not appear that the defendant knew the author of the original letters nor anything about the circumstances which prompted or justified those letters. The defendant as we have seen had the right to transmit whatever knowledge on information he possessed to the district attorney. It is particularly urged that the defendant did not investigate the information he received before communicating the same to the district attorney. This argument overlooks the fact that the communication was made for the very purpose of instituting an investigation and to an officer particularly charged with that duty. Who was more competent or better equipped for the performance of that duty than the district attorney a'nd who would more impartially and with a greater consideration for the just rights of the plaintiff conduct such an investigation? An investigation could not be made more thoroughly or less harmfully to the plaintiff by the defendant than by a public officer specially charged with the performance of that duty. Complaint is also made that the defendant in his communi
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except Woodward, J., dissenting.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.