I.
Petition to Establish the Truth op Exceptions.
This is a petition to establish the truth of exceptions alleged to have been taken by the defendant in the case of
Shore
v.
Retailers Commercial Agency, Inc.
G. L. c. 231, § 117. The petition was referred to a commissioner who reported that the exceptions set forth in the bill were “conformable to the truth.” This conclusion is not challenged. The only issue that need concern us is whether the exceptions have been “reduced to writing in a summary manner” as required by G. L. c. 231, § 113. See
Western Union Tel. Co.
v.
Fitchburg Gas & Elec. Light Co.
II.
The Meeits.
This is an action of tort for libel arising out of a credit report made by the Retailers Commercial Agency, Inc. (defendant), to Modern Funding Corporation (Modern). At a jury waived trial the judge found for the plaintiff in the amount of $10,000.
There was evidence of the following. In March, 1956, the plaintiff, doing business under the name of the Mortgage Service Bureau, got in touch with one Vogel to see if Modern would use the plaintiff’s services as a mortgage broker. The plaintiff would submit mortgages to Modem and, if they were approved, Modern would supply funds for the mortgages and pay him a commission. Vogel, as the local manager of Modern, a New York corporation, 1 had the duty of receiving and processing applications for mortgages, of passing on the value of property and the financial responsibility of applicants, and of servicing the mortgages. He received authorization from Rothman, the president of Modern, to do business with the plaintiff.
During 1956, there was an agreement in effect, between Modern and the defendant, in which the defendant undertook to make credit reports on request. Sometime prior to August, 1956, Vogel asked Nolan, a manager of the defendant, to make a report on the plaintiff. Early in August, Vogel received such a report, dated August 1, 1956, which stated that the plaintiff’s net worth was $15,000; that his *518 annual earned income was $7,500; that he had failed in business or had been through bankruptcy; that a Waltham bank reported that he had had a small loan which was an “undesirable account”; that “ [e]xtreme caution should be used ... in dealing with . . . [him]” as there had been “48 inquiries [concerning the plaintiff] in six mos. time,” and “116 special inquiries . . . due to unethical business practices,” when he was in the real estate business; that he had been arrested and charged with “debt pooling, larceny of over $100,” and with “being a common and notorious thief”; and that he had “pleaded innocent” to a complaint of larceny of over $100. Upon receiving this report, Vogel communicated with the plaintiff and disclosed its contents. Vogel knew that “the whole subject was confidential . . . because . . . there was the legend ‘confidential’ printed right on the report.” He did not, however, specifically know that he was not supposed to divulge the contents of the report to the person inquired about.
Subsequently, the plaintiff satisfied Vogel that the report was untrue and inaccurate in several respects, and Vogel continued to do business with him. Vogel told the plaintiff that the report would not be shown to Rothman because “that would be the end of any possible deal that we’d ever have, as between . . . Rothman, Modern . . . and [Vogel].” Vogel did, however, point out to the defendant’s manager, Nolan, those items which the plaintiff contended were erroneous, and in the middle of September, 1956, the defendant supplied a second report which differed in several material respects from the first. In it the plaintiff’s net worth was reported as $100,000-$150,000, instead of $15,000; his income was raised from $7,500 to $35,000-$40,000; the reference to the “undesirable” loan account was deleted, as were the warning to use extreme caution in dealing with him and the reference to inquiries due to unethical business practices. The plaintiff’s court record was changed to indicate that the plaintiff pleaded nolo con-tendere to a larceny indictment, which was dismissed, the plaintiff agreeing “to make restitution of $448.” At the *519 bottom of the report was written ‘ “See report dated 8-1-56. ’ ’
Subsequently Vogel went to New York and showed Rothman the second report; and upon seeing the reference to the first report, Rothman asked to see it. Vogel was then instructed to cease doing business with the plaintiff, but contrary to these instructions he put through several more applications prior to February 1, 1957, when he stopped working for Modern.
The declaration alleged that the defendant falsely and maliciously published defamatory information about the plaintiff in the first (August 1) report, the substance of which has already been set forth. The defendant does not contend that this report could not have been found to be defamatory. Rather it argues that the report was conditionally privileged, and that no abuse has been shown. Hitherto this court has never decided whether a report made by a mercantile agency in the circumstances existing here was qualifiedly privileged. There is, to be sure, a statement in the case of
Colby Haberdashers, Inc.
v.
Bradstreet Co.
*520
We are of opinion that reports made by a mercantile agency to an interested subscriber should be conditionally privileged. Those about to engage in a commercial transaction like to know something about the persons with whom they are dealing. Often they are unable to get that information themselves and must obtain it through mercantile agencies. In furnishing such information the agencies are supplying a legitimate business need and ought to have the protection of the privilege. Without such protection few would undertake to furnish the information, and the cost would be high, if not prohibitive. For a good discussion of the reasons supporting the privilege see Smith, Conditional Privilege for Mercantile Agencies, 14 Col. L. Rev. 187, 296, 306 - 310. We are not to be understood as holding that there is a privilege where information is published by the agency generally to subscribers having no particular interest in the report. See
King
v.
Patterson,
49 N. J. L. 417;
Sunderlin
v.
Bradstreet,
A conditional privilege is destroyed if abused. On this issue the burden is on the plaintiff.
Bander
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
It has long been recognized that an absence of good faith may tend to prove ill will and thus actual malice. See
Billings
v.
Fairbanks,
*522
The plaintiff argues that the real test should be whether the defendant has used reasonable care. That negligence may destroy the privilege finds some support in the authorities.
Douglass
v.
Daisley,
In the light of these principles, a finding for the defendant was not required. It has been already noted that there were substantial differences between the first and second reports. And, contrary to both reports, there was evidence that the plaintiff had never failed in business or gone through bankruptcy. 'The estimates of his earnings and net worth were much less than those later reported. There was evidence that the statement of the plaintiff’s court and business records was inaccurate and misleading. The facts as to the plaintiff’s bankruptcy and criminal record were susceptible of precise check. We need not decide the effect of the misreporting in other respects, for as to these verifiable matters we are of the opinion that the finder of fact could in any event conclude that the defendant made the first report recklessly, without reasonable grounds for believing it was true. If this was the case (and the trier of *523 fact could so find) the privilege was lost. The defendant’s thirteenth request, therefore, was rightly denied.
The judge, subject to the defendant’s exceptions, granted the plaintiff’s fourth and thirteenth requests which were as follows: “4. Any privilege that the defendant may have had was lost and constitutes no defence, as the report . . . [the August 1 report] contained false statements of and concerning the plaintiff.” “13. The evidence warrants a finding that the defendant, having rested without offering any proof as to the truth of the statements alleged by the plaintiff to be false, derogatory and libelous, has lost the benefit of any defences it may have had and failed to make out a defence under the provisions of G. L. c. 231, § 92.” The granting of these requests was erroneous and the defendant’s exceptions must be sustained. “If the occasion . .’. is a privileged one and the defendant . . . was acting under the privilege created by the occasion, a defence is made out,
even if what he said was not in fact true”
(emphasis supplied).
Doane
v.
Grew,
The defendant’s exceptions to evidence, in view of our disposition of the case, are waived. As the proof may be different when the case is retried, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the defendant’s contention that the plaintiff, if entitled to prevail, may recover only nominal damages.
Exceptions sustained.
Notes
Vogel was actually manager of Modern Funding Corporation of Boston, which was a branch of Modern.
Erber
Stickler
v.
R. G. Dun
&
Co.
Johnson v. Bradstreet Co.
