By her amended petition, plaintiff-appellant, Alice Schoneweis, asserts, so far as is relevant to this appeal, that the defendant-appellee John Dando and his employer, defendant-appellee First National Bank of Beatrice, a national banking association, invaded her privacy and wrongfully revealed her financial condition to others. Each of the defendants demurred under the provisions of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-806 (Reissue 1985) on the grounds Schoneweis’ amended petition both misjoined causes of action and failed to state facts constituting any cause of action. The district court sustained the demurrers and dismissed Schoneweis’ suit. She appeals, assigning error to the dismissal of her amended petition. Defendants cross-appeal, contending Schoneweis’ failure to amend her original petition within the time set by the district court deprives this court of jurisdiction to entertain her appeal. For the reasons discussed hereinafter, this court has jurisdiction, and we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. JURISDICTION
Defendants’ jurisdictional attack stems from the district court’s order of November 5, 1986, which sustained their demurrers to Schoneweis’ original petition and provided that if Schoneweis should fail to file an amended petition within 2 weeks, her suit would stand dismissed at her costs. Schoneweis did not file her amended petition until November 21, 1986, 2 days after the November 19, 1986, deadline purportedly imposed by the November 5 order. Defendants contend that in *182 granting Schoneweis leave to file her amended petition out of time, the district court abused its discretion, as the suit had been dismissed by operation of the earlier order, and the district court thus had nothing before it on which it could act.
However, as defendants recognized at oral argument before the division to which this case was originally assigned, this court has declared that conditional orders purporting to automatically dismiss an action upon a party’s failure to act within a set time are void as not performing in praesenti, and thus have no force or effect.
Snell
v.
Snell,
II. ALLEGATIONS OF PETITION
Hence, we turn our attention to the relevant allegations of Schoneweis’ amended petition. That document, in summary, asserts that Schoneweis had done business with First National for a number of years prior to 1985, both borrowing money from it to operate a farm with her husband and maintaining with it a depository account; that on February 21, 1985, she, pursuant to Dando’s request, as he at all times acted as an agent of and on behalf of First National, signed a promissory note renewing a preexisting loan for which only her husband had been liable; that following the death of her husband shortly thereafter, Dando again asked Schoneweis to sign “new notes in order to keep the farm and the cattle” and that she, on or about April 16, 1985, signed notes which became due June 1, 1985; that although she had no discussion with Dando or other agents of First National concerning satisfaction of these notes, Dando, during the latter part of August and September of *183 1985, revealed the condition of Schoneweis’ loans and depository account to her father, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law, falsely and recklessly _ indicating that the Schoneweis “farm was in trouble” and that Schoneweis “would loose [sic] everything”; that such was done in an effort to coerce Schoneweis into conveying to First National assets that it could not otherwise reach; and that as a result she was damaged in that her reputation was injured and she suffered emotional disturbance and a loss of earning capacity by (1) being placed “in a false light with her friends and family” and (2) First National’s breach of its separate “duty not to disclose personal financial information” about her to third parties.
III. DEMURRERS
We first consider whether, as claimed by the defendants’ separate demurrers, Schoneweis’ amended petition improperly joins causes of action contrary to the prohibition of § 25-806(5). We have characterized a cause of action as the “ ‘judicial protection of one’s recognized right or interest, when another, owing a corresponding duty not to invade or violate such right or interest, has caused a breach of that duty.’ ”
Ravenna Bank v. Custom Unlimited,
This leaves for consideration the question of whether the facts Schoneweis has alleged constitute a cause of action at all; phrased another way, the question is whether Schoneweis has alleged the violation of at least one judicially protected right or interest. In making the analyses required to answer that question with respect to each of her theories of recovery, we are bound by the rule that when considering a demurrer, the petition is to be liberally construed; if as so construed the petition states a cause of action, the demurrer is to be overruled.
Hebardv. AT&T,
IV. PRIVACY THEORY
1. Nature of Statutory Right
In
Brunson
v.
Ranks Army Store,
Any person, firm, or corporation which gives publicity to a matter concerning a natural person that places that person before the public in a false light is subject to liability for invasion of privacy, if:
(1) The false light in which the other was placed would
*185 be highly offensive to a reasonable person; and
(2) The actor had knowledge of or acted in reckless disregard as to the falsity of the publicized matter and the false light in which the other would be placed.
Thus, the gravamen of the conduct made actionable by the foregoing statute is the giving of publicity.
In construing the almost identical Restatement provision adopted in an earlier case by the Oklahoma Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals in
Polin v. Dun & Bradstreet,
Inc.,
Additionally, it is essential to a false light invasion of privacy
*186
claim that the publicized matter be false.. See,
Machleder
v.
Diaz,
While it is true that at one point in her amended petition Schoneweis asserted that the disclosure was to her father, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law, she also averred that the disclosure placed her in a false light with her “friends and family.” Giving the amended petition a liberal construction, as is required, it can be factually inferred that there was a broader publicity than only to the three named relatives. Whether the evidence would support that inference and thereby support a finding of sufficiently broad publicity is, of course, another matter. Nonetheless, the publicity allegations, coupled with the assertion that the disclosure of Schoneweis’ financial condition was false and made recklessly and the inference that the false light in which she was placed would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, would be sufficient to state a cause of action under the provisions of § 20-204.
2. First Amendment Considerations
However, statutory analysis does not end our inquiry, for, although not addressed by the parties, it is clear that claims of damages resulting from speech present first amendment considerations. See,
Time, Inc.
v.
Hill,
In
Turner
v.
Welliver,
Following the suggestion of Restatement (Second) of Torts § 566, comment
b.
(1977),
Turner
drew a distinction between “pure opinion” and “mixed opinion.”
Turner,
as does the Restatement, further noted that a pure opinion may be of two types. In one, the declarant states the facts on which the opinion is based and expresses comment as to the subject’s conduct, qualifications, or character. In the other, the declarant states the opinion without stating the alleged facts on which it is based, but the parties to the communication know the facts or assume their existence, and the comment is clearly based on those facts. The mixed opinion, on the other hand, is based on facts concerning the subject or the subject’s conduct, which have neither been stated by the declarant nor assumed by the parties to the communication, but the nature of the publication is such as to give rise to the inference that the declarant knows the
*188
undisclosed facts which justify formation of the opinion. While
Turner
held that the offending statement in question in that case was true and therefore not actionable, it nonetheless observed that a pure opinion would in any event be protected by the first amendment. In
Rinsley
v.
Brandt,
Thus, the dispositive question as to Schoneweis’ privacy theory is whether the offending statements Schoneweis attributes to defendants constitute expressions of fact or of opinion, and if the latter, whether the statements fall in the category of pure opinion or in the category of mixed opinion. Whether a statement is of fact or opinion is a question of law for the court to resolve.
Oilman
v.
Evans,
Y. DISCLOSURE THEORY
Left for consideration, then, is whether First National had a separate duty not to disclose Schoneweis’ financial position with it to third persons.
The only legislative pronouncement on the matter is an interesting statutory provision found in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 8-1401 (Reissue 1987), under which, absent a court order to the contrary and subject to certain exceptions not relevant to the inquiry before us, a bank may refuse to disclose information it considers to be confidential. That statute obviously does not address the situation at hand.
Although at least one court refused to find liability on the
*189
part of a bank which disclosed its depositor’s financial condition to another bank,
Irby et ux. v. Citizens Natl.
Bk.,
In
Peterson
v.
Idaho First National Bank,
It is implicit in the contract of the bank with its customer or depositor that no information may be disclosed by the bank or its employees concerning the customer’s or depositor’s account, and that, unless authorized by law or by the customer or depositor, the bank must be held liable for breach of the implied contract.
Id.
at 588,
Suburban Trust Co.
v.
Waller,
*190
At least three other cases have imposed liability on a tort or other theory. In
Djowharzadeh v. City Nat. Bank & Trust Co.,
In
Milohnich
v.
First National Bank of Miami Springs,
Finally,
Graney Development Corp.
v.
Taksen,
92 Misc. 2d. 764,
As to [the] loan, the relation between the bank and the plaintiff was solely that of creditor and debtor. The information the bank imparted about the state of plaintiff’s loan was not information it received in its capacity as agent for a depositor; it was information it obtained as a party to the loan agreement. It was not information that the borrower would normally expect would be kept confidential. One who defaults on his debts owed to a merchant cannot expect that his default will be kept a secret.... I see no basis, therefore, for implying an agreement of confidentiality to the relations of a bank with its borrowers.
Graney, supra, 400N.Y.S.2d at 720.
Schoneweis’ allegation that the offending statements were made in an effort to enhance First National’s position as her creditor compels the conclusion that the statements related solely to that debtor-creditor relationship. We are not persuaded that under such circumstances First National owed Schoneweis any duty of confidentiality.
Affirmed.
