The words used charged the plaintiff with an indictable offence, and also w'ere calculated to disparage him in his office. They were actionable per se. The defendant introduced no evidence, neither to prove the truth of the allegations nor to show that he had written the letter for an honest bona fide purpose, but contended that the letter was a privileged communication, and that the burden was on the plaintiff to show express malice, which he had failed to do. The Court being of opinion with the defendant, the plaintiff took a nonsuit and appealed. In libel and slander, if the words are actionable per se, the law presumes malice, and the burden is on the defendant to show7 that the charge is true, unless the communication is privileged. Then the rule is otherwise.
Privileged communications are of two kinds—
1. Absolutely Privileged — Which are restricted to cases in which it is so much to the public interest that the defendant should speak out his mind fully and freely, that all'actions in respect to the words used are absolutely forbidden, even though it be alleged that thej’’ were used falsely, knowingly, and with express malice. This complete immunity obtains only where the public service or the due administration of justice requires it, e. g., words used in debate in Congress and the State Legislatures, reports of military or other officers to *274 their superiors in the line of their duty, everything said by a Judge on the bench, by a witness in the box, and the like. In these cases the action is absolutely barred. 13 Am, & Eng. Enc., 406.
2. Qualified Privilege — In less important matters where the public interest does not require such absolute immunity, the plaintiff will recover in spite of the privilege, if he can prove that the words were not used bona fide, but that the defendant used the privileged occasion artfully and knowingly to falsely defame the plaintiff. Odgers on Libel and ■Slander, 184. In this class of cases, an action will lie only where the party is guilty of falsehood and express malice. 13 Am. & Eng. Enc., supra. Express malice is malice in fact, as distinguished from implied malice, which is raised as a matter of law by the use of words libellous per se, when the occasion is not privileged. Whether the occasion is privileged is a question of law for the Court, subject to review, and not for the jury, unless the circumstances of the publication are in dispute, when it is a mixed question of law and fact.
The present case is one of qualified privilege. The plaintiff was not in government employ under Porter. He was not called upon by any moral or legal obligation to make the report, and it was not made in the line of official duty. It was not absolutely privileged. But he was an American citizen interested in the proper and efficient administration of the public service. He had, therefore, the right to criti-cise public officers, and if he honestly and
bona fide
believed, and had probable cause to believe, that the character and -conduct of plaintiff were such that the public interest •demanded his removal, he had a right to make the communication in question, giving his reasons therefor, to the head •of the department. The presumption of law is that he acted
•bona fide,
and the burden was on the plaintiff to- show that ihe wrote the letter with malice or without probable cause.
*275
Briggs
v.
Garrett,
We do not assent to the opposite doctrine which would seem to be laid down by Pearson, J., in
Wakefield
v.
Smithwick,
In the present case the letter charged the defendant with murder and with having cheated the plaintiff out of his election. There was evidence tending to prove that these charges were untrue, and that the character of plaintiff was good. There was no evidence in reply, and the answer admits that the object of the communication was to secure the removal of plaintiff from the office he held. There was evidence on the face of the letter tending to show that the motive of the defendant was ill-will to the plaintiff, by reason of his alleged action in defrauding defendant of 'his election, and spleen on account of his (the defendant) not having had his recommendation more considered, and his friends appointed to the offices to which Ramsey and others named in the letter had been appointed. There being evidence tending to prove malice, as above defined (which need not be personal ill-will to the plaintiff), his Honor erred in not submitting the case to the jury.
If the defendant made the communication not recklessly or maliciously, but bona fide and out of a desire to benefit the public service, the plaintiff cannot recover, though the charges made by the defendant may be untrue. That the plaintiff was of a different political party from himself, gave him, however, no license to make to the appointing power *277 false and defamatory charges against him, maliciously or without probable cause, simply to secure his removal from office. If the defendant thought the plaintiff should be removed from office because belonging to a different political party, and, therefore, in his judgment, unsuitable or unfit to bold the office, he should have put his letter on that ground and there could have been no complaint. He had no right to make defamatory charges, if false, to secure defendant’s removal, the motive not being a bona fide one to purge the public service of a felon end ballot-box stuffer, but merely to remove one who was objectionable to him either as being of an opposite party or by having injured him personally, or from having been appointed instead of his own recommendee for the place. If the defendant’s motive was to injure Hawkins, and to do that he recklessly'made false and defamatory allegations against the plaintiff, that is malice which would entitle the plaintiff to damages.
It is to the public interest that the unfitness or derelictions of public officials should be reported to the authority having the power of removal, and any citizen
bona fide
making such report does no more than his duty, and is protected by public policy against the recovery of damages, even though the charge should prove to be false. But public justice will not permit the government archives to be made, with impunity, the reá^^tacle of false and defamatory charges, put forward to secure the removal of an officer, whereby the malice of the party making such charge may be gratified, or that some benefit or advantage, direct or indirect, may come to him
Proctor
v.
Webster,
If the charge in such cases is false, the law looks to the motive. If the defendant, not moved by the public welfare, but by some wicked and indirect motive, such as to gratify *278 bis malice or bis love of patronage, to assert bis own influence or the like by false charges, has wilfully or recklessly defamed the plaintiff, the latter is entitled to recover damages at the hands of the jury.
Error.
