Miss Yerna M. Scribner, a trained nurse, sued J. L. Adams, secretary and treasurer, and one of the managers of the Savannah Hospital, alleging that while she was superintendent of the Savannah Hospital, the defendant, at a meeting of the board of directors of the said institution, spoke of and concerning her the following false, defamatory, derogatory, and slanderous words,
The jury found for the defendant; and in passing upon the motion for a new trial, based upon the usual general grounds, the presiding judge passed the following order: “This was an action for slander. The verdict was for the defendant. The motion for new trial is on the general grounds. There are no exceptions to any of the rulings or to the charge. The defense is twofold: (1) that the words averred were not spoken; (2) that the alleged slander was a conditional privileged communication. As to the first defense, I am clear that the words averred were spoken either literally or substantially, and if there were nothing more in the ease I should not hesitate to grant a new trial. As to the second defense, of conditional privileged communication, it is insisted by movant that there was no plea of privilege. This is true, and good pleading would require such plea. But the defendant, after denying that he had spoken the words charged, testified without objection that the words spoken by him were uttered bona fide, to protect his interest, and without malice. This issue of conditional privilege was made by the evidence, it was argued by counsel, and I charged -on that issue as follows: ‘Statements made with a bona fide intent on the part of the speaker to protect his own interest in a matter where it is concerned, — if you find that to be true, — would require a verdict for the defendant.’ This charge I was constrained to give on a vital issue made by the evidence. There was evidence to support this charge. There is no exception to it. There can be none. The jury had the right to find that the communication was conditionally privileged. I have no right to arbitrarily set aside a verdict. It is a legal discretion which I am permitted to exercise, and the verdict is approved on the sole ground of a conditional' privileged communication.' I trust that the movant may except to this decision, and that the Court of Appeals may reverse it.”
We do not care to comment on the evidence in this case further than to say that it was conflicting, and that it did not demand the verdict. “When the evidence is conflicting, applications for new trial upon the ground that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, or contrary to the weight of the evidence, or decidedly and strongly against the weight of the evidence, are addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial judge. The law imposes upon the trial judge the duty of exercising his discretion in all such cases. See Rogers v. State, 101 Ga. 651 [
We have never known a judge to approve a verdict with such unqualified reluctance as is shown by the judge’s order in this case. Iiis statement that the jury had the right to find as they did, coupled with his further statement that he had no right to arbitrarily set the verdict aside, and his conclusion that he hoped this court would reverse his decision, all lead us to conclude that the verdict did not have the sanction of the mind and conscience of the court, and that he felt that he did not have the power to set it aside. In short, we think that because of his conscientious desire to perform his duty and keep within the law, his honor failed to exercise that discretion which the law requires of him in cases like the one under consideration.
Judgment reversed.
