Opinion by
This appeal is from a judgment of compulsory non-suit in a trespass action for damages for the defendant’s alleged libel of the plaintiff and the invasion of his privacy. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant moved for a compulsory nonsuit which the trial judge granted and which the court en banc later refused to take off. Judgment was accordingly entered, and the plaintiff appealed. The pertinent facts are not in dispute.
The defendant, Meredith, is the owner and publisher of the Quakertown Free Press, a weekly newspaper of general circulation in Quakertown, Bucks County, Pa. On January 24, 1952, there appeared on the front page of the newspaper the following article:
“F. B. I. LAUNCHES SLOT MACHINES’ INVESTIGATION
No Evidence in Bucks County of Law Infractions— Raids are Conducted in Montgomery
GAMBLERS ARE FEUDING
“Despite heavy activity by local and State Police and FBI agents against slot machine activities in counties surrounding Bucks, District Attorney Willard S. Curtin reported yesterday that his office has no evidence of gambling in the county in the last six months’ period.
“The last round-up of gamblers in Bucks county occurred exactly six months ago Sunday when 69 men were arrested on August 20 of last year after a State Police raid on what was described as the largest floating dice game in the history of the county.
“It has been an even longer time since slot machines have been uncovered in the county. It was August 10 of last year to be exact that State Police seised seven slot machines after a raid on the estate of Carl Schnabel in West Rockhill. ......
*612 “Asked if this clean slate for six months means that Bucks county now has no gambling, Curtin replied yesterday, ‘At least none that we have been informed of” (Emphasis supplied). The article then went on to report the results of like investigations in adjacent areas. It is the publication of the above-quoted paragraph which we have italicized that Schnabel, the plaintiff, claimed libeled him and invaded his privacy.
Libel is the malicious publication of printed or written matter which tends to blacken a person’s reputation and expose him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule: 33 Am. Jur., Libel and Slander, §3. See
Collins v. Dispatch Publishing Co.,
On August 10, 1951, the State Police had seized seven slot machines on Schnabel’s property. He was indicted, tried and acquitted of having set up and maintained gambling devices in violation of Section 605 of The Penal Code of 1939, P. L. 872, 18 PS §4605. At the trial of the present action, Schnabel freely admitted these facts and the trial court, in view of “these *613 admissions, and being convinced that plaintiff had not made out a case of invasion of privacy”, entered the compulsory nonsuit at the close of the plaintiff’s case as already stated. It is the refusal of the court en banc to take off the nonsuit which Schnabel assigns here for error.
The opinion of the learned court below, written by the trial judge, aptly summarized the plaintiff’s contentions with respect to the allegations of libel and adequately and correctly disposed of them as follows:
“Plaintiff apparently concedes [that truth is a defense to an action for defamation], but contends that it has no application, urging the Court to rule that the quoted reference to the plaintiff was not the whole truth in that it did not also refer to the acquittal of plaintiff in the criminal proceedings, and further that it should be a jury question as to whether or not, in the context of the whole article, there could be justifiably found a false imputation that plaintiff was a gambler or operated a gambling establishment.
“There is no merit to these contentions. The item does not charge plaintiff with setting up and maintaining gambling devices at which money was played for, (see Section 605 of The Penal Code of June
24,
1939, P. L. 872, 18 P.S. 4605), which is the offense for which plaintiff was indicted and acquitted, and therefore the failure to mention such acquittal does not detract in any way from the truthfulness of the story. Nor are we convinced that even by innuendo was plaintiff accused of any gambling activity other than that which might have been charged against him merely from the admitted fact of possession of slot machines under Section 603 of the Penal Code (18 P.S. 4603) :
Commonwealth v. Cancillieri,
“Innuendo cannot be used to enlarge the natural meaning of the words used. The quoted portion of the article referring to plaintiff, even considered in the context of the whole story concerning slot machines, could not have the effect of imputing anything to plaintiff except that which was admittedly true. The tidal judge properly determined that question and, therefore, since the article fairly and reasonably could not be construed to have the meaning imputed by plaintiff, the case should not have gone to the jury: Sarkees v. Warner-West Corporation, 349 Pa, 365-368.”
The appellant’s alternative contention is that the reference to the seizure of slot machines on his property some six months prior to the publication of the assailed newspaper item constituted an unwarranted invasion of his right of privacy. Although the plaintiff cites no decision of either of our appellate courts which recognizes the. existence in Pennsylvania of the right of privacy, he asserts that such a right does exist on the basis of a concurring opinion by. the late Chief Justice MAXEY i .
Waring v. WDAS Broadcasting Station, Inc., 327 Pa.
433,
The appellant would hardly assert that, at the time the slot machines were found on his property, it was an unreasonable interference with his privacy to disclose that fact to the various news-dispersing media. It is beyond question that, at the time, his activities were a legitimate matter for public inquiry — and that is so whether the appellant came willingly or unwillingly into public notice. Nor is the mere lapse of time between the date of the seizure of the slot machines on the appellant’s property and the date of the republication of that fact determinative, per se, of the question whether the appellant had so far “reverted to the lawful and unexciting life led by the great bulk of the community” as not to be any longer a proper subject of public interest. The result in each case depends upon a balancing of the conflicting interests,-— the interest of a person not to have his privacy invaded, on the one hand, and, on the other, the legitimate interest of the public to be informed.
In the present instance, the defendant publisher printed a newspaper story which described police efforts to eradicate gambling activities in counties adjacent to Bucks and, in the course of the article, made reference to the fact that it had been six months since slot machines had been exposed in Bucks County when they had been found on the appellant’s property. The newspaper story was comparing conditions in the various counties and, therefore, legitimately referred to the conditions in Bucks County. By his possession of the slot machines, the appellant relinquished his asserted right to be let alone; and, the passage of the six-month interval did not wipe away the notoriety occasioned by his possession of the machines. In
Sidis v. F-R Pub. Corporation,
Judgment affirmed.
