386 Pa. 542, 126
A.2d 915 Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania. John DEMPSKY,
Appellant, v. Alma DOUBLE and Esther Smith. Nov. 27, 1956. [*544] [**916] Coleman Harrison,
Herbert G. Labbie, Robert Engel, Pittsburgh, for appellant. Walter T. McGough, Reed, Smith, Shaw & McClay, Pittsburgh, for
appellees. [*543] Before STERN, C. J., and JONES, BELL, CHIDSEY,
MUSMANNO and ARNOLD, JJ. [*544] HORACE STERN, Chief Justice. In this libel action the trial court entered a compulsory nonsuit
which was affirmed by the court en banc, and plaintiff appeals. In May, 1950, a so-called 'free-work probe' was being conducted in
the City of Pittsburgh. It consisted of an investigation into the possible
misuse of public property by local officials, especially the use of county
vehicles by county employees for private purposes, and it was much publicized
at the time in the newspapers. On May 9, 1950, one of the defendants, Esther Smith, wrote a
letter to the Controller of Allegheny County as follows: Dear Sir: This seems
to be an oppotune time to bring certain facts to your attention, and, as a
taxpayer, to ask for an immediate investigation and an explanation regarding
the use of County cars and trucks by a County employee for hauling materials
used in the remodeling of a house which he purchased in 1948 when said property
was up for sale for taxes. In the
summer of 1948, Mr. John Dempsky, a county employee purchased the Overholt
property, located *545 at 7211 Thomas Boulevard, (and adjoining our property).
* * * Ever since
this property was purchased in the summer of 1948, Mr. Dempsky has used various
County cars and trucks * * * to transport materials such as cement, lumber,
plaster, lime, gravel, sand, pipe, coal, acetylene tanks for welding, etc. to
this property at 7211 Thomas Blvd., and has used County cars to haul away the
debris, ashes leaves and rubbish in the yard, etc. etc. * * * There followed a statement of particular occasions on which County
cars were parked, sometimes in the daytime, sometimes all night, in front of the
plaintiff's property. The letter then proceeded: * * * I
think I have given you sufficient information to warrant an immediate
investigation. * * * People are
becoming more tax conscious every day, and are not going to stand idly by and
see county employees appropriate county cars and equipment for their own
personal and private use, to say nothing of time which is spent during working
hours to transport materials in county cars. Very truly
yours, (Signed)
Esther Smith (Mrs.)
Esther Smith Copy--Mrs. R. Templeton Smith, President Allegheny County League
of Women Voters * * *. [**917] John Dempsky, referred to in the letter, was
an automobile mechanic employed by the County of Allegheny in a garage where
county vehicles were kept and serviced. Responding to the request for an investigation contained in the
letter, the Controller conducted elaborate hearings extending over a period of
several weeks, as a result of which he concluded that Dempsky had in & nbsp;[*546] fact used
county vehicles for his own private purposes in violation of county
regulations, and that these violations were flagrant and occurred in connection
with repairs and alterations being made on his property. On the basis of the
Controller's report to that effect the County Commissioners discharged Dempsky
from his employment. He then brought the present libel action against Esther
Smith and her sister Alma Double. At the trial plaintiff argued that Mrs. Smith's letter accused him
of the larceny of county materials, but the court rejected this contention and
correctly held that the letter charged only the improper use of county vehicles
and contained no allegation of theft; accordingly the court excluded evidence
offered to show that plaintiff had not stolen anything. It was, of course, the
duty of the court to determine as a matter of law whether the language used in
the alleged libelous publication could fairly and reasonably be construed to
have the meaning imputed to it in the innuendo, and an innuendo cannot be used
to introduce new matter, or to enlarge the natural meaning of the words and
thereby give to the language a construction which it will not bear. Naulty
v. Bulletin Co., 206 Pa. 128, 55 A. 862; Sarkees v. Warner-West
Corporation, 349 Pa. 365, 37 A.2d 544. The reason for the entry of the nonsuit was that, in the opinion
of the court, the circumstances giving rise to the writing of the letter
constituted a conditionally privileged occasion as a matter of law and that
plaintiff had not presented any evidence to show an abuse of that privilege,
as, for example, that the writer was actuated by malice. A privileged communication
is one made upon a proper occasion, from a proper motive, in a proper manner
and based upon reasonable *547 and probable cause, Conroy v. Pittsburgh
Times, 139 Pa. 334, 21 A. 154, 11 L.R.A. 725; Matson v. Margiotti, 371 Pa.
188, 196, 88 A.2d 892, 896, and it is always for the court to determine whether
the alleged defamatory publication is thus privileged; if found so to be, and
if there is no intrinsic or extrinsic evidence of malice, it is the duty of the
court to direct a nonsuit or give binding instructions for the defendant. Neeb
v. Hope, 111 Pa. 145, 154, 2 A. 568, 572; Rest.Torts, & sect; 619.
Here the court pointed out that in view of the extensive probe then being
conducted and its public importance a communication by a private citizen to a
public official, expressing an honest belief that an employee under his control
or supervision was misusing public property entrusted to his charge, and
suggesting that such an apparent violation of the law be investigated,
completely justified it as a privileged communication. Rest. Torts, & sect;
598. The Controller testified as to his authority and investigative powers into
all matters dealing with county business, and that he was engaged in making
several similar investigations at the time. Nor was there any evidence of
actual malice on the part of Mrs. Smith which would have deprived the
publication of its privileged character, and therefore no question in that
regard to be submitted to the jury. Plaintiff makes something of the fact that a copy of the letter to
the Controller was sent to the Allegheny County League of Women Voters, an
organization which is presumably a civic-minded group of women active in the
interests of good government in the Pittsburgh area. But the object of sending
it the copy was obviously in order to have it cooperate in the request for an
investigation and was & nbsp;[**918] thus intended to
serve, not a private motive, but the public welfare. For that & nbsp;[*548] purpose it
enjoyed the same conditional privilege as the original letter to the
Controller. It remains only to add that, as far as Alma Double is concerned,
she not only was not a signatory to the letter, but there was no evidence
whatever that her sister wrote it with her knowledge or consent or no her
behalf. No inference of agency arises from their mere family relationship. Judgment and order affirmed. |