De Arnaud v. Ainsworth

Mr. Chief Justice Alvey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Upon the exceptions taken, the questions presented and argued on the part of the plaintiff are —

1. That the making and delivery of the report hy the defendant to the Secretary of war was such a libelous publication as rendered the defendant liable therefor; and, even if privileged at all, it was only qualifiedly so.

2. But even if the making and original delivery of the report to the Secretary of war by the defendant was absolutely privileged, yet,, the subsequent delivery to the witness Hill by the defendant of a copy of the report as contained in and forming *175a part of the report of the Senate committee on military affairs, and published by the authority of the Senate, as a public document, constituted such publication by the defendant of the report made by him as will render him liable to an action for libel.

3. And, if either of the foregoing propositions be held to be sound, it follows that the court below was in error in the rulings made by it, and in directing a verdict to be rendered for the defendant.

These propositions, one and all, are controverted by the defendant ; and, on his part, it is contended: 1st. That the report made by him, as chief of the record and pension office, to the Secretary of war, is absolutely privileged, and that he is not liable in an action for libel for anything contained in that report. But, if the privilege be only of a qualified nature, the action is barred by the statute of limitations, which has been duly pleaded.

2. That the handing of a copy of the report made by the defendant to the witness Hill, as contained in and forming part of the report of the Senate committee on military affairs, after that report had been published by the authority of the Senate as a public document, did not constitute a libelous publication of the report made by the defendant, and he is not liable therefor in an action for libel; and consequently the court below committed no error in directing a verdict for the defendant.

The foregoing propositions have been argued very elaborately by the counsel for the respective parties, both orally and in briefs; but, in the view we have of the case, it will not be necessary to discuss each of the questions at large.

The occasion of the report made by the defendant to the Secretary of war, and which report forms the subject-matter of the alleged libel, was the application made by the plaintiff for a gold medal of honor, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1863. The application was Addressed to the Secretary of war, though, by the terms of the statute, the President was required to act in granting or refusing the medal of honor. The appli*176cation necessarily involved a careful-investigation of the facts upon which the application for the honor was founded. This investigation into the facts alleged in the application, and into the character and merits of the applicant, could only be made through the War department; and the defendant, by the authority of the Secretary of war, was the proper officer to make the investigation and report fully on the application, stating his conclusions and opinion upon the facts found by him. This was required by the regulations of the department, and under which the matter was referred to the defendant. In making the report, therefore, the defendant was in the exercise of his official duty, as chief of the record and pension office, that office being a bureau of the War department, and subject to the orders and control of the Secretary of war. The action is brought against the defendant in his private individual character, and without reference to his official duties or position; but this can make no difference so far as his right of defense is concerned. It is sufficiently shown, in fact conceded, that the defendant was a colonel in the regular army, and was duly appointed to and held the position of chief of the record and pension office, and that it was in that character that he made the report to the Secretary of war of which complaint is made. It is argued, however, that the defendant, in making his report to the Secretary, transcended the limits of his authority in the premises, and made statements of facts and drew conclusions therefrom, in respect to the plaintiff’s character, both military and civil, wholly unwarranted by the nature of the reference to him. But this depends upon the nature and extent of the inquiry to be made, and the questions of fact involved therein. By the application for the medal of honor, the plaintiff not only submitted for determination the question of the truth of the particular facts alleged by him to entitle him to the mark of distinction claimed, but he submitted to scrutiny his ‘character for honor, integrity, and bravery as a soldier, such as would distinguish him among soldiers who had acquired title to distinction. To confer the medal of honor upon a party unworthy and without just claim *177to such distinction, would be to depreciate the mark of distinction conferred upon those really entitled to enjoy it. Hence the importance of a full inquiry into the merits and character of the applicant for the honor. None but those who had most distinguished themselves in action were entitled to be decorated with the medal of honor. Hnless the plaintiff had shown himself thus to be distinguished in action he could have no claim to the honor under the statute; nor was the President required to confer the honor for mere acts of adventure. The statute was intended to authorize the conferring of a special decoration of honor for the exhibition of high soldierly qualities in action. A person rendering services as a spy, or as a “military expert” as the plaintiff denominated himself, however important or valuable such services might be, and therefore entitled to high compensation, could hardly have been intended by the statute to be decorated by a medal for most distinguished services in action. It was only the heroic in action whose services were intended to be signalized by medals of honor.

If the report complained of as a libel had been made by the Secretary of war to the President for his action, it could hardly be contended for a moment that an action for libel could be maintained against the Secretary; and as the defendant in this case was the duly appointed official to make the investigation and report to the Secretary for the action of the President, the same reason applies for the privilege of the report that would apply if the investigation and report had been made by the Secretary in person. The report is the official action of the War department, and it was made in the course of official duty of the person required to make it. There is nothing in the report that does not relate to or reflect upon the alleged questionable character of the plaintiff and the want of just foundation for the claim to honorable distinction set up by him.

The question of motive, or whether there was a want of good faith on the part of the defendant, in the making of the report, is not a material question in the case. A party is not liable for the motives with which he discharges an official duty; nor is he *178liable for any mistake of fact he may commit in the course of the exercise of that duty. Public policy affords absolute protection and immunity for what may be said or written by an officer in his official report or communication to a superior, when such report or communication is made in the course and discharge of official duty. Otherwise the perfect freedom which ought to exist in discharge of public duty might be seriously restrained, and often to the detriment of the public service. Of course, when a party steps aside from duty and introduces into his report or communication defamatory matter wholly irrelevant and foreign to the subject of inquiry, a different question is presented. But no such question is presented here; and the action is not attempted to be founded upon libelous matter extraneous to the proper subject of inquiry, but upon the report made by the defendant as an entirety.

The real question presented in this case would seem to be quite conclusively determined by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U. S. 483, 40 L. ed. 780, 16 Sup. Ct. Rep. 631. It is true, the facts of that case were quite different from the facts of the present case, but the question in that case was as to the extent of the privilege that belonged to the official acts of the representatives of the several departments of the government while in performance of their duties. In that case it was contended for the plaintiff that the circular issued from the Postoffico department, by the direction of the Postmaster General, was beyond the scope of any authority possessed by that officer; and, therefore, the sending of the circular to the person who had presented claims against the government, was not justified by law, and would not protect the Postmaster General from responsibility for the injury done to the plaintiff from that act. But the couit held otherwise, and, in the opinion of the court, delivered by Mr. Justice Harlan, in speaking of the facts of that case, it was said: “Besides, the statement that ‘no attorney’s services were necessary to the presentation of the claim,’ if not strictly accurate, was, at most, only an expression of the opinion of the Post*179master General in the course of his official duties. As he was charged with the execution of the will of Congress in relation to the readjustment of those salaries, he was entitled to express his opinion as to the object for which the act of 1883 was passed, and to indicate what, in his judgment, was necessary to be done in order to bring claims under that act properly before the department.” And after a full review of the facts and the principles of law applicable to them, and especially in view of several recent English cases referred to and quoted from with approval, the court, in the conclusion of its opinion, says:

“We are of opinion that the same general considerations of public policy and convenience which demand for judges of courts of superior jurisdiction immunity from civil suits for damages arising from acts done by them in the course of the performance of their judicial functions, apply to a large extent to official communications made by heads of executive departments when engaged in the discharge of duties imposed upon them by law. The interests of the people require that due protection be accorded to them in respect of their official acts. As in the case of a judicial officer, we recognize a distinction between action taken by the head of a department in reference to matters which are manifestly or palpably beyond his authority, and action having more or less connection with the general matters committed by law to his control or supervision. Whatever difficulty may arise in applying these principles to particular cases, in which the rights of the citizen may have been materially impaired by the inconsiderate or wrongful action of the head of a department, it is clear — and the present case requires nothing more to be determined — that he cannot be held liable to a civil suit for damages on account of official communications made by him pursuant to an act of Congress, and in respect of matters within his authority, by reason of any personal motive that might be alleged to have prompted his action; for personal motives cannot be imputed to duly authorized official conduct. In exercising the functions of his office, the head of an executive department, keeping within the limits of his authority, should *180not be under an apprehension that the motives that control his official conduct may, at any time, become the subject of inquiry in a civil suit for damages. It would seriously cripple the proper and effective administration of public affairs as intrusted to the executive branch of the government, if he were subjected to any such restraint. He may have legal authority to act, but he may have such large discretion in the premises that it will not always be his absolute duty to exercise the authority with which he is invested. But if he acts, having authority, his conduct cannot be made the foundation of a suit against him personally for damages, even if the circumstances show that he is not disagreeably impressed by the fact that his action injuriously affects the claims of particular individuals. In the present case, as we have found, the defendant, in issuing the circular in question, did not exceed his authority, nor pass the line of his duty, as Postmaster General. The motive that impelled him to do that of which the plaintiff complains is, therefore, wholly immaterial. If we were to hold that the demurrer admitted, for the purposes of the trial, that the defendant acted maliciously, that could not change the law.”

There is no reasonable foundation for the contention that, because the defendant was not at the head of the War department, therefore his report was not entitled to the privilege that would attach to a similar report made by the Secretary of war. The Secretary of war is the regularly constituted organ of the President for the administration of the military establishment of the nation; and rules and orders publicly promulgated through him must be received as those of the executive, and, as such, be binding upon all within the sphere of his legal and constitutional authority. United States v. Eliason, 16 Pet. 291, 302, 10 L. ed. 968, 973. And, as it is impossible for a single individual to perform in person all the various duties assigned to the particular department of which he is head, he must of necessity, under proper orders and regulations, perform the larger portion of such duties through the agencies of the heads of bureaus and divisions of his department. But the work *181when done is, in contemplation of law, the work of the department, and is entitled to all the privilege and protection that would attach to it if done by the Secretary in person. It is, therefore, not the particular position of the party making the report or communication that entitles it to absolute privilege so much as the occasion of making it, and the reasons of public policy for the immunity. This is fully exemplified in the case of Home v. Bentinck, 2 Brod. & B. 130, decided in the English exchequer chamber in 1820. In that case it was held that a report made by the president of a court of inquiry directed to be held by the commander-in-chief to inquire into the conduct of an officer in the army was a privileged communication, and that it was properly rejected as evidence at the trial of an action for libel, and that an office copy of it was also properly rejected. Indeed, the principle is fully illustrated by the English cases referred to with approval by the Supreme Court in the case of Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U. S. 483, 40 L. ed. 780, 16 Sup. Ct. Rep. 631.

The first of the cases so referred to by the Supreme Court is that of Dawkins v. Paulet, L. R. 5 Q. B. 94, 114. That was a case, as stated by the Supreme Court, of an action for libel, brought by an officer of the army against his superior officer, to recover damages on account of a report made by the latter in relation to certain letters of the former, and where the defendant claimed that what he did was done in the course of and as an act of military duty. The replication stated that the libel was written by the defendant of actual malice, without any reasonable, probable, or justifiable cause, and not bona fide or in the bona fide discharge of the defendant’s duty as such superior officer. The case was heard on demurrer to the replication, and it was held by the court (the chief justice dissenting), that the action would not lie. In the opinion of Mellor, J., as quoted by the Supreme Court, it is said: “I apprehend that the motives under which a man acts in doing a duty which it is incumbent upon him to do cannot make the doing of that duty actionable, however malicious they may be. I think that the law regards *182the doing of the duty, and not the motives from or under which it is done. In short, it appears to me that the proposition resulting from the admitted statements on this record amounts r,o this: Does an action lie against a man for maliciously doing his duty ? I am of opinion that it does not; and therefore, upon the pleadings as they stand we might give judgment for the defendant.”

Another case referred to and quoted from by the Supreme Court is that of Dawkins v. Rokeby, L. R. 8 Q. B. 255, 262, the judgment in which was affirméd by the House of Lords, in L. R. 7 H. L. 744, 754. In that case the defendant, a general in the army, was called before a court of inquiry legally assembled to inquire into the conduct of the plaintiff, also an officer in the army. He made statements in evidence, and after the close of the evidence, he handed in a written paper (not called for by the court, but which had reference to the subject of the inquiry) as to the conduct of that officer. An action was brought in respect of those statements, which were alleged to be both untrue and malicious. That case came before the Queen’s bench, and in the exchequer chamber, upon a bill of exception allowed by Mr. Justice Blackburn, who had instructed the jury, as matter of law, that the action would not lie if the verbal and written statements complained of were made by the defendant, being a military officer, in the course of a military inquiry, in relation to the conduct of the plaintiff, he being also a military officer, and with reference to the subject of that inquiry; and this even though the plaintiff should prove that the defendant had acted mala fide, and with actual malice, and without any reasonable or probable cause, and with the knowledge that the statements made and handed in by him were false. The court, all the judges concurring, sustained the correctness of this ruling, and held that the statements were privileged. The language of Lord Chancellor Cairns is quoted by the Supreme Court, by which he declared his opinion as follows: “Adopting the expressions of the learned judges with regard to what I take to be the settled law as to the protection of witnesses in judicial *183proceedings, I certainly am of opinion that upon all principles, and certainly upon all considerations of convenience and of public policy, the same protection which is extended to a witness in a judicial proceeding, who has been examined on oath, ought to be extended, and must be extended, to a military man who is called before a court of inquiry of this kind for the purpose of testifying there upon a matter of military discipline connected with the army. It is not denied that the statements which he made, both those which were made viva voce and those which were made in writing, were relative to that inquiry.” The opinion of the judges was unanimously adopted, and the judgment of the exchequer chamber was affirmed by the House of Lords.

But a still closer case, by analogy to the present, than any we have referred to, is the ease of Chatterton v. Secretary of State, decided in the English court of appeal [1895] 2 Q. B. 189. That case is not referred to in the case of Spalding v. Vilas, because, as we may suppose, the report of the case was not then accessible to the Supreme Court. The principle decided in that case is, that a communication relating to state matters by one officer of state to another in the course of his official duty is absolutely privileged and cannot be made the subject of an action for libel. It appears that, in that case, the statement complained of was made by the secretary of state for India to the parliamentary under-secretary for India, in order to enable him to answer a question asked in the House of Commons with regard to the treatment of the plaintiff, an officer in the India staff corps, by the Indian military authorities and government. The claim was for damages for libel from the defendant in that he conveyed, or caused to be conveyed, in writing to the undersecretary of state untrue statements affecting the professional reputation of the plaintiff, a captain in Her Majesty’s India staff corps; wherein it was said that in a despatch in the defendant’s possession the Commander-in-Ohief, etc., recommended the removal of the plaintiff to the half-pay list as an officer whose retention on the effective list was in every way most undesirable, *184etc.; -with intent to injure the plaintiff. The court of appeal was unanimous in holding that the action would not lie. Lord Esher, M. E., in his opinion, said: “The plaintiff in this case has brought an action of libel against the secretary of state for India in council. It would seem from the form of the action that it is meant to be brought against him in his official capacity, treating him as a corporation, nat against him personally. But it would have made no difference if it had been brought against him as an individual. The substance of the case is that it is an action brought against him in respect of a communication in writing made by him as secretary of state, and, therefore, a high official of the state, to an under-secretary of state in the course of the performance of his official duty. The master, the judge at chambers, and the divisional court have all come to the. conclusion that the action is one which cannot by any possibility be maintained; that it is not competent to a civil court to entertain a suit in respect of the action of an official of state in making such a communication to another official in the course of his official duty; or to inquire whether or not he acted maliciously in making it. I think that conclusion was correct. The authorities which have been cited to us appear to show that, as matter of clear law, a judge at the trial would be bound to refuse to allow such an inquiry to proceed, whether any objection be taken by the parties concerned or not. It follows that such an action as this cannot possibly in point of law be maintained; and, that being so, to allow it to proceed would be merely vexatious and a waste of time and money.” The other judges were of the same opinion.

It would seem to be clear, therefore, that the principle of absolute privilege is unquestionably established by the English authorities, as applicable to a case like the present;. and that principle is not less clearly and fully established in this jurisdiction by the case of Spalding v. Vilas, to which we have referred.

Much reliance has been placed by the plaintiff upon certain passages that occur in the opinion of the court in the case of White v. Nicholls, 3 How. 281, 11 L. ed. 601, for the support of *185his contention. But that was quite a different case from the one now before us; and while the general language found in that case was quite applicable to the facts to which it was applied, the principle of that case has no application to a case like the present. That was a case, at most, of qualified privilege, and where the privilege could be overcome by showing in proof the falsehood and actual malice of the defendant. But, even if it were supposed that the present case was within the principle of White v. Nicholls, and that the report of the defendant was only entitled to a qualified privilege that could be overcome by proof, still, there could be no recovery for the making and publishing the report to the Secretary of war, as of April 24, 1895, and as charged in the first count of the declaration, for as to that the statute of limitations has been pleaded as a complete bar, and such defense is clearly applicable.

But it is contended in this case that, if the original report made to the Secretary of war was entitled to an absolute privilege, as we have shown it was, still, by the subsequent handing by the defendant to the witness Hill of a copy of the report of the Senate committee on military affairs having incorporated therein a copy of the report made by the defendant to the Secretary of war, such absolute privilege was lost, and the delivery of such copy to Hill was a libelous publication of the report for which the defendant is liable; and that the statute of limitations did not apply to such publication.

W« are of opinion, however, that this contention is not maintainable. There is nothing to show how the report made by the defendant got into the hands of the committee. It was, however, a report of an official character, existing on file in the War department, and related to the subject-matter of inquiry before a committee. It was therefore subject to the call of the committee if they deemed it necessary to enlighten them upon the subject under their consideration. The committee did deem the report of importance, and therefore incorporated it into their own report to the Senate, which was adverse to the allowance of any portion of the claim of the plaintiff made before the Congress of the United States for extra compensation for the services *186made tbe basis of tbe application for tbe medal of honor, and upon which application the defendant made his report to the Secretary of war. The report of the committee, referring to and adopting the report of the defendant, was duly published as a Senate document, and was thus made accessible to the public. The terms “public documents” are defined by statute to be all publications printed by order of Congress or either House thereof. Act Cong. June 23, 1874. And by the act of Congress of January 12, 1895, entitled “An Act Providing for the Public Printing and Binding and the Distribution of Public Documents,” it is provided that “documents and reports of committees, with the evidence and papers submitted therewith, or any part thereof, ordered printed by Congress, may be reprinted by the public printer on order of any member of Congress or' delegate, on prepayment of cost thereof,” etc. [28 Stat. at L. 606, chap. 23, § 37, U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 2536.]. It was under these statutory provisions and the rules of the Senate that the report of the committee was printed and published. If, therefore, such publication by the authority of Congress was lawful, it is not perceived how the mere handing of a copy of that report to a third party by the defendant, after such publication by authority of Congress, could constitute a libelous publication for which an action could be sustained. The report became a public document, and every person desiring it was entitled to receive and inspect it; and all persons giving circulation to the report thus published are protected by the law. The defendant had the same right as other persons to own and to lend or give the report to persons desiring to see or use it, without incurring liability as for the publication of a libel.

It follows from what we have said that the court below committed no error in its several rulings in excluding the several offers of evidence by the plaintiff, including the report, and in directing the verdict for the defendant. The judgment must therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Judgment affirmed.

A writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States was prayed by the appellant and allowed October 19, 1904.