Plаintiff, Adeline Roach, instituted an action of trespass on the case in the Circuit Court of Hancock County, against defendant, William W. Harper, claiming damages for invasion by defendant of the “right to privacy” of plaintiff, in that defendant, by means of a hearing device installed by him in an apartment rented by him to plaintiff, overheard “confidential and private conversations” of plaintiff. Defendant demurred to the declaration, contending that no right of action exists in this State for recovery of damages occasioned by invasion of privаcy, that the declaration was insufficient in law in that it contained no allegation to the effect that any conversation heard by defendant was repeated or pub *871 lished, and in that it contained no allegation to the effect that plaintiff suffered any special damages. The trial court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the action, with prejudice.
The declaration charges that defendant, about August, 1956, rented an apartment to plaintiff, which she thereafter occupied as a residence; that before the renting of thе apartment, defendant caused to be installed therein “some sort of a receiving set or listening device which was connected to a speaker in the office of said defendant”, by means of which defendant did “repeatedly invade the privacy of this plаintiff’s said apartment”, and, between August 1, 1956 and February 12, 1957, “maliciously, wantonly, unlawfully and secretly did, on divers occasions * * * listen over said speaker and through the same did hear everything said and done by the plaintiff in her said apartment on said occasions”, including numerous personаl, social, private and confidential conversations.
We have been cited no case decided by this Court, and have found none, which considers the precise question posed. No statute of this State governs or relates directly to the question. The question, however, has reached many courts of this country, and has been exhaustively and historically considered by numerous law writers and in numerous court opinions. An article, The' Right to Privacy, written by Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandéis, published about 1890 in 4 Harvard Law Review 193, perhaps the pioneеring article, has been most often referred to and is considered a.leading article supporting the theory of the existence of a right of action for the invasion of privacy. Other leading authorities considering the question are: Interests of Personality, 28 Harvard Lаw Review 343, at 362; The Right of Privacy, 2 Columbia Law Review 437; The Law of Privacy, 12 Columbia Law Review 693; The Right of Privacy, 39 Michigan Law Review 526; Restatement of the Law of Torts, Section 867; 41 Am. Jur., Privacy, Section 2, et seq; 77 C. J. S., Right of Privacy, Section 2 et seq. *872 The existence of the right is refuted in an article published in 3 Northwestern Law Review 1. In the late, very-excellent, work of Harper and James, Law of Torts, Yol. 1, page 690, it is stated: “The ‘right of privacy’ has had an extensive development since Brandéis and Warren wrote their article. On the whole, the courts have been sympathetiс with it in spite of the delicacy of the problems raised and the difficulty of drawing the nice line which separates what the individual may keep to himself and what the public is entitled to know about him. All will admit that some intrusions into one’s personal life are so indecent and outrageous and calculated to cause such excruciating mental pain to all but the most callous that it would be a reproach to the law not to allow redress. On the other hand, it is equally clear that society cannot protect the neurotically thin-skinned agаinst those trivial invasions of privacy which the normal person suffers with equanimity. The mores and the law must distinguish the one from the other.”
Before the publication of the Warren-Brandéis article, however, in
DeMay
v. Roberts,
“Where a wrong has been done another, the law gives a remedy, and although the full extent and character of the injury done may not be ascertained or known until long аfter, yet in an action brought damages therefor may be fully awarded * *
In
Rhodes
v.
Graham,
In
McDaniel
v.
Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
In a well considered case,
Eick
v.
Perk Dog Food Co.,
“The right is now recognized by the great preponderance of authоrity throughout the country. Courts of at at least twenty American jurisdictions have explicitly recognized the right either in direct holdings or well considered dicta * * * [citing numerous authorities]
“Following the lead of Samuel Warren and Louis D. Brandéis, whose famous article The Right of Privacy, 4 Harv. L. R. 193 (1890) first used the phrase ‘right of privacy,’ distinguished writers have supported the recognition of the right. Larremore, The Law of Privacy, 12 Col. L. R. 693 (1912); Pound, Interests in Personality, 28 Harv. L. R. 343, 362-4 (1915); Winfield, Privacy, 47 Law Q. R. 23 (1931); Green, Right of Privacy, 27 Ill. L. R. 237 (1932); Nizer, Right of Privacy, 39 Mich L. R. 526 (1941); Thayer, Legal Control of The Press, Ch. 12 (1944); Feinberg, Recent Developments in the Law of Privacy, 48 Col. L. R. 713 (1948). In American Juris *875 prudence, Vol. 41, pg. 927, it is stated that the preponderance of authority supports the view that .there is a legal ‘right of privacy,’ the invasion of which gives a right to a cause of action. This is likewise supported by articles in the American Law Reports, 138 A. L. R. 22; 168 A. L. R. 446; 14 A. L. R. 2d 750, and by 54 Corpus Juris, 816, Right of Privacy, 1931, 77 C. J. S., Right of Privacy, §1. The right is defined and approved in the Restatement of Torts, Sec. 867.
“Against this massive weight of authority there is pitted a small, largely inconclusive group of opinions written for the most part before the bulk of the cases upholding the right of privacy were decided. Only one of the cases cited as denying the existence of the right of privacy stands today as an unqualified precedent refusing to recognize the right * *
In
Housh
v.
Peth,
The cases cited, we think, are sufficiently illustrative. An attempt to collate here the many pertinent holdings would be useless. That end has been attained in annotations in 14 A. L. R. 2d 750, 168 A. L. R. 446 and 138 A. L. R. 23. The author of the last cited annotation, in summary, says, page 28: “The brief rеview above shows *876 a decided preponderance of authority favoring the view that there is a legal right of privacy that will be given protection as such. It discloses, in fact, that since the enactment of the New York privacy statute there is only one American jurisdiction, namely, Rhode Island, in which it can be definitely said, on the basis of actual decisions, that there is no such legal concept as the right of privacy.”
“The ‘right of privacy’ has been defined as the right of an individual to be let alone, to live a life of seclusion, оr to be free from unwarranted publicity.” 77 C. J. S., Right of Privacy, Section 1. The right of privacy is closely related to many other subjects of law, e. g., libel and slander, literary property, wrongful search 'and seizure, compulsory physical examination and eavesdropping. 41 Am. Jur., Privacy, Section 1. Though different in some respects from such subjects, the right to privacy is an individual right that should be held inviolate. To hold otherwise, under modern means of communication, hearing devices, photography, and other technological advancements, would effectively deny valuable rights and freedoms to the individual. The usual argument against the existence of the right of action is that it is for a wrong or tort for which no recovery was permitted at common law. We need not here, however, theorize as to the basis for the existence of the right. See 41 Am. Jur., Privacy, Section 6, et seq. As above pointed out, that existence has been affirmed by the very great weight of authority. It may not be amiss, however, to quote language of Judge Parker in the opinion in
Barnes Coal Corporation
v.
Retail Coal Merchants Ass’n.,
Having reached the conclusion that the plaintiff has the right to maintain her action for invasion of privacy, we reach the questions of whether a declaration in such an action, to be sufficient against demurrer, must allege special damages and publicatiоn. Courts which have followed the doctrine of the existence of the right of action have had no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that an allegation of special damages is not necessary to the validity of the pleading. We think the conclusion logical. Thе invasion of the right, the tort committed, gives right to the action, the right to recover damages. “Publication or commercialization may aggravate, but the individual’s right to privacy is invaded and violated nevertheless in the original act of intrusion.” McDaniel v. Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Co., supra. Questions of special damagеs, of course, may arise SO' as to enhance recovery. Also, circumstances may arise which would mitigate damages. 41 Am. Jur., Privacy, Sections 13, 34; Annotation 138 A. L. R. at page 48. The same reasoning leads to the conclusion that a declaration in such an action, to be sufficient against demurrer, need not allege publication of information or results obtained through the invasion. 41 Am. Jur., Privacy, Section 20; Annotation 138 A. L. R. 63.
The judgment of the trial court complained of is reversed, the action is reinstated, and remanded to the Circuit Court of Hancock County.
Reversed and remanded.
