The plaintiff in this action for libel appeals from the allowance of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The only facts properly considered as established on this motion for summary judgment are those admitted in the defendant’s answer and those set forth in the only affidavit filed, that of the defendant’s treasurer. Mass. R. Civ. P. 56 (c), (e),
The defendant conducts a restaurant business in Walpole under the name of “Thackeray’s.” On or about April 5, 1976, the defendant authorized Mr. Reginald L. Marden, acting as its agent and attorney, to send a letter to the plaintiff and a copy of that letter to the police department of the town of Walpole. The letter, written under the attorney’s letterhead, was addressed to the plaintiff at a post office box in East Walpole and shows copies sent to the “Walpole Police Department” and “Thackery’s” (sic). The letter reads as follows:
“Dear Ms. Smith:
Please be advised that this office represents the above named Suburban Restaurants Inc. We have been advised that due to your actions you are no longer welcome on the property of our client and have been so advised in the past.
This is to formally advise you that you are no longer invited, permitted, or licensed to enter upon said premises located at the Walpole Mall or elsewhere. Any further intrusions upon said premises by yourself, your agents, servants, or employees shall be considered a trespass. If such trespass should occur, this office has been instructed to proceed with appropriate legal action.
Very truly yours,
Is/ Reginald L. Marden Reginald L. Marden”
1. Words may be libellous unless they “cannot be reasonably understood in a defamatory sense, or, to express it in another way, unless they are incapable of a defamatory meaning. The test is whether, in the circumstances, the writing discredits the plaintiff in the minds of any considerable and respectable class of the community.”
Muchnick
v.
Post Publishing Co.,
The letter sent by the defendant’s attorney might be viewed by a trier of fact as discrediting the plaintiff in the minds of a considerable and respectable segment of the community. We cannot rule as matter of law that it could not be so viewed. The letter states that the plaintiff engaged in particular conduct which the defendant believed justified instructing the plaintiff that she was no longer permitted in the defendant’s restaurant. Her previous acts were described as intrusions, and any similar future conduct was characterized as a trespass. The inference is warranted that the defendant was a licensed common victualer and operated a place of public accommodation. A place of public accommodation, as members of the community might know, has an obligation to treat each member of the public equally, except for good cause. See G. L. c. 272, §§ 92A, 98;
*531
Commissioner of Corps.
&
Taxation
v.
Chilton Club,
2. On the limited facts properly considered on this motion for summary judgment, the defendant has not established that it was privileged to send a copy of the letter to the police. At the trial, the facts may establish that the defendant was so privileged. The absolute privilege of an attorney to publish false and defamatory matter in communications preliminary to a proposed judicial proceeding applies only where the proceeding is contemplated in good faith and is under serious consideration.
Sriberg
v.
Raymond,
Summary judgment reversed.
Notes
See
Hutchinson
v.
New England Tel. & Tel. Co.,
Under § 120 of G. L. c. 266, as amended through St. 1974, c. 109, a person who, without right, enters a building “after having been forbidden so to do by the person who has the lawful control of said premises, either directly or by notice posted thereon,” is guilty of a crime. On the limited facts available for our consideration, we cannot say that sending a copy of the full text of the letter to the police was privileged as a reasonable assertion of any rights of the defendant under G. L. c. 266, § 120.
