delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented for our determination upon this record is whether, a party to a judicial proceeding is liable in damages to a stranger to the record for defamatory matter alleged in the pleading con-*520earning him, or whether said matter, being pertinent and relative to the issue, is not absolutely privileged.
The allegations of the declaration are that on June 2, 1902, the defendant, J. Craig McLanahan, filed a bill in the United States circuit court for the Middle District of Tennessee, in which it was averred that on the 8th of August, 1901, an election was held in the city of Nashville to determine whether the city should subscribe one million dollars of the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, and that at said election the plaintiff (Crockett) was an illegal voter, for the reason that, after being registered in the twentieth ward, he had changed his residence, and had not again registered twenty days before said election, as required by law, and yet cast his vote at said railroad election. It is alleged that defendant (McLanahan) in said bill meant to charge that plaintiff (Crockett) was an illegal voter in said election, and guilty of a high misdemeanor and a violation of the criminal laws of Tennessee. It is alleged in the second count of plaintiff’s declaration that said allegations were made falsely, recklessly, wantonly, with actual malice, and in bad faith; that they were made without probable cause, and not under such circumstances as reasonably created a belief in the mind of defendant (Mc-Lanahan) that they were true. It is further alleged that plaintiff was not a party to said suit in the federal court and had no interest in it. A demurrer was *521interposed to this declaration, which assigned the following canses, to-wit: “(1) It shows on its face that the alleged libelous publication is an averment in a bill filed by this defendant and others, as complainants, in the circuit court of the United States for the Middle District of Tennessee, against the Tennessee Central Railroad et al., to enjoin the issuance of bonds by the mayor and city council of Nashville in payment of a subscription to the capital stock of said railway, upon the ground, among others, that said subscription did not receive the requisite three-fourths of the votes cast at the election held with respect thereto, and that plaintiff’s vote and the votes of others were counted for said proposition when they were illegal and void, for that said voters were not duly registered and voted in wards in which they did not reside. Defendant says that the alleged illegal, libelous statement is a pleading in a judicial proceeding in said court, which does not assail the plaintiff’s character, and therefore is absolutely privileged, and that this suit can not, for that reason, be maintained against him. (2) The declaration does not show that said suit is still pending, undetermined, and that, therefore, this suit is premature, and can not now be prosecuted against this defendant.” At the September term, 1902, of the circuit court of Davidson county, Hon. John W. Childress, presiding, the demurrer was sustained and the suit dismissed. Plaintiff ap*522pealed, and has assigned as error the action of the circuit court in sustaining the demurrer.
The determinative question of law arising upon the pleadings is whether the alleged defamatory matter was absolutely, or only conditionally, privileged. The rule on this subject at common law was thus statéd by Mr. Townshend in his work on Slander and Libel (4th Ed., sec. 221), viz.: “In a civil action, whatever the complainant may allege in his pleading in connection with his grounds of complaint, can never give a right of action for libel. The immunity thus enjoyed by a party complaining extends also to a party defending. Whatever one may allege in his pleading by way of defense to the charge brought against him, or by way of countercharge, counterclaim, or set-off, can never give a right of action.” This rule was adopted in this State at an early day, but it was coupled with the qualification that the alleged defamatory matter must be pertinent or material to the subject of inquiry in the particular litigation.
In Lea v. White, 4 Sneed, 113, it was said, viz.: “The communications are, on account of the occasion on which they are made, prima facie, or, as the books have it, ‘conditionally privileged; that is, they do not amount to defamation (actionable) until it appears that the communication had its origin in actual malice in fact.’ In such cases it will be incumbent on the plaintiff to show, in addition to the injurious publication, malice in fact, and that the occasion was *523seized upon as a mere pretext.” Illustrations of this class of communications are statements in respect of the character of servants, official communications, reports of judicial proceedings, etc. “But, continues the court, “there is another class of cases which are absolutely privileged and depend in no respect for their protection upon their bona fides. The occasion is an absolute privilege; and the only questions are Avhether the occasion existed, and whether the matter complained of was pertinent to the occasion. In this class are embraced judicial proceedings. The proceedings connected with the judicature of'the country are so important to the public good, the law holds that nothing which may therein be said with probable cause, whether with or without malice, can be slander, and in like manner that nothing written with probable cause under the sanction of such an occasion can be a libel. The pertinency of the matter to the occasion is that which is meant by probable cause, and probable cause is, in this class of absolutely privileged communications, what bona fides is to the class of conditionally privileged communications, which . . . are protected unless there is malice in fact.”
It will be observed that the cardinal inquiry is whether the alleged defamatory matter is pertinent to the issue involved. As said by this court in Shadden v. McElwee, 86 Tenn., 152 (5 S. W., 604; 6 Am. St. Rep., 821), “where the matter alleged is pertinent to the issue, or fairly supposed to be so, although not *524in the strictest sense relevant, the pleader is absolutely privileged, although he may have entertained sentiments of malice to the adverse party.” It is, moreover, the rule that the question of pertinency or relevancy is a question of law for the court. Lea v. White, 4 Sneed, 111; Shadden v. McElwee, 86 Tenn., 152 (5 S. W., 602; 6 Am. St. Rep., 821) ; Jones v. Brownlee, (Mo.), 61 S. W., 795 (58 L. R. A., 448).
It can not be seriously controverted that the allegations of the bill in the United States circuit court with respect to the disqualifications of the plaintiff as an elector in the election of August 8, 1901, were pertinent and relevant to the matter of inquiry in that suit. The legality of the election was challenged in that proceeding uj)on the ground that the municipal aid subscription had not been carried by a three-fourths majority of the voters, as required by law. It was necessary that the bill should specifically recite the names of the disqualified voters, in order that an issue might be made in respect of their qualifications. Moore v. Sharp, 98 Tenn., 498 (41 S. W., 587) ; Blackburn v. Vick, 2 Heisk., 383.
The name of the plaintiff was included in a list of about fifty citizens of the twentieth ward, who were alleged to have been disqualified to vote in said election on account of a failure to re-register after changing their residence in said ward twenty days before the election. The matter alleged being pertinent to the issue, it was absolutely privileged, and it is wholly *525immaterial whether the element of malice entered into the charge. As said in Lea v. White, supra: “It certainly can not be maintained that, because a person is malicious in his statements toward the adverse party, he will not be permitted to set up in his defense any matter that he may reasonably suppose would be available.”
It is alleged in the declaration there was no probable cause, or that defendant could not have reasonably supposed it necessary in his case, to have alleged the libelous matter. It is said ire demurrer admits this allegation. It is well settled that “a demurrer does not admit inferences from facts, nor conclusions of law averred.” 6 Ency. Plead. & Prac., 336; Park v. Kelly Axe Co., 1 C. C. A., 395 (49 Fed., 618); Kent v. Lake Sup. Ship Canal Co., 144 U. S., 75 (12 Sup. Ct., 650; 36 L. Ed., 352); Foster’s Fed. Practice, sec. 106; Hopper v. Town of Covington, 118 U. S., 148, 151 (6 Sup. Ct., 1025; 30 L. Ed., 190); Greef v. Society (N. Y.), 54 N. E., 712 (46 L. R. A., 288; 73 Am. St. Rep., 659).
“Averments in a declaration as to the meaning and interpretation of a writing attached thereto, or exhibited, are not admitted by a demurrer.” National Park Bank v. Halle, 30 Ill. App., 17; 6 Ency. Plead. & Prac., 337, 397; Foster’s Fed. Practice, sec. 106.
“Neither does a demurrer admit matters averred in the declaration contrary to law.” L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Palmes, 109 U. S., 244 (3 Sup. Ct., 193; 27 L. Ed., *526922) ; 6 Ency. Plead. & Prac., 338, 398; Foster’s Fed. Practice, sec. 106; Hooper v. Town of Covington, 118 U. S., 148, 151 (6 Sup. Ct., 1025; 30 L. Ed., 190).
As already seen, the pertinency of the matter to the occasion is that which is meant hy probable cause. The pertinency of the matter to the issue presented is a matter for the court, and the demurrer does not admit the Avant of probable cause, or any other conclusion of laAV Avhich must be draAvn hy the court. We think, as matter of laAV, the alleged defamatory matter Avas absolutely and unqualifiedly privileged.
But it is insisted on behalf of plaintiff in error that the present case falls within an exception to the general rule Avhich was recognized and established hy this court in Ruohs v. Backer, 6 Heisk., 395 (19 Am. Rep., 598). In that case it was held that the rule as to parties does not apply to strangers to the record, and such statements, although pertinent, are only conditionally privileged. The facts of that case were that Ruohs, as next friend of two young girls, filed a petition in the county court of Hamilton county, in which he asked the removal of their guardian upon the ground alleged that ‘the guardian has had in his family a girl who is now probably over sixteen years of age, who came to live with him about the age of thirteen years, and has remained in his family ever since. Her reputation is ruined, and she is now an example of shame and prostitution.” The court said, viz.: “Having the undoubted right to present the pe*527tition, the question recurs, was the reason assigned by the plaintiff in error to the county court for the removal of the guardian such a reason as he might lawfully assign, and his petition a privileged communication within the meaning of the law?
“Although there are authorities which would, perhaps, sustain the petition to the county court as falling within the definition of absolutely privileged communications, this court is of opinion that a distinction should be taken between statements made in the course of judicial proceedings relative to the parties thereto and those which relate to strangers to the record, and that the protection of private character, as well as the peace of society, require that imputations against persons having no connection with the judicial proceeding should, even when properly relating to such proceeding, be considered as falling within the class of conditionally privileged communications.’'
The case of Ruohs v. Backer was decided in 1871 in an opinion delivered by Judge Nelson. It has not beeii reaffirmed, as erroneously stated by counsel, nor has it been distinctly overruled. In the recent opinion of this court in the case of Cooley v. Calyon, ante, p. 1, decided at Knoxville, September term, 1902, (70 S. W., 607), a rule antagonistic to that laid doAvn in Ruohs v. Backer was announced. It was held in that case that slanderous words spoken by a witness in a judicial proceeding, which are relevant and pertinent to the subject of inquiry or responsive to questions, are ab*528solutely privileged. The court said, viz.: “It is immaterial that neither the plaintiff nor defendant were parties to the cause in Avhich the defendant was called to testify. The majority of witnesses are not parties to the canse in which they are examined, and facts in relation to other strangers to the litigation often become the subject of necessary inquiry.
“If the privilege was confined to the parties, it would be reduced to narrow limits, and the proper administration of justice would be greatly embarrassed and made difficult.”
It was held in Henderson v. Broomhead, 4 Hurl. & N. (English Exchequer), 569, that no action lies against a party who in the course of a cause makes an affidavit which is scandalous, false and malicious, though the person scandalized and who complains is not a party to the cause.
This question was under consideration in the recent case of Jones v. Brownlee, 61 S. W., 795 (58 L. R. A., 448), a case from Missouri, in AAdiich the court said, viz.: “With the exception of Ruohs v. Backer, 6 Heisk., 395 (19 Am. Rep., 598), Ave have not been able to find any case, either in England or the United States, which holds that an absolutely privileged communication made in a pleading in a cause ceases to be such when written or spoken as to one not a party to the suit. We think such a distinction can not be made without disregarding the public policy upon which the whole rule depends. *529There are so many cases in which the rights and character of persons who are not parties to the suit become collaterally the subject Of inquiry, and the right to make such inquiry so unquestionable, that no good reason for making the exception can be given so long as the rule itself is maintained.” Again, in the case of Johnson v. Brown et al., 18 W. Va., 136, the court wrote as follows: “The English and American courts, as will be seen by reference to many of the authorities before cited, in laying down the rule which is to determine whether libelous matter appearing in the conduct or proceedings of a cause is or is not to be considered as absolutely privileged, appears to assume that it in no manner depends upon whether it relates to or was uttered about a stranger to the suit or otherwise.
“While in many cases, as we have seen, qualifications are added in stating the rule which exempts from libel or slander suits utterances in the prosecution regularly of a suit, yet the qualification that they must not be uttered in reference to a stranger to the suit is never added. There is, nevertheless, one American case that decides that if a libelous statement, made in the course of judicial proceedings, is made in regard to a third person, such statement is not an absolutely privileged publication, but is only conditionally privileged, and is actionable if made with malice, without probable cause, and under such circumstances as would not reasonably create the belief that *530they were true” — citing Ruohs v. Backer, 6 Heisk., 395 (19 Am. Rep., 598).
Judge Nelson, in Ms opinion, states, viz.: “If a guardian may be removed because Ms domestic associations are suck as tend to tbe corruption and contamination of Ms ward, upon wbat principle is it that tbe person seeking bis removal may not even name bis associates and cause tbeir character to be inquired into? There are many cases in which tbe rights and character of persons who are not parties to the suit become collaterally the subject of inquiry; and the right in this case,” continues Judge Nelson, “is unquestionable.”
If, then, the right to make the inquiry is material and pertinent, why should not the rule of exemption from liability, grounded on reasons of public policy, which favors a free and untrammeled investigation in courts of judicature, not apply when the allegation is made concerning a stranger, as if made against a party to the record? The exception undertaken to be made destroys the rule and defeats the objects of public policy upon which it was founded. It is not supported by any authority, but is contrary to the rule announced in all the cases, and should not be adhered to as a precedent.
The fact that cases of hardship may arise, and persons who have been defamed in the course of judicial proceedings may be left remediless, is no reason why a wholesome legal principle, founded upon reasons *531of public policy, should be overthrown. A multitude of instances might be cited where the rights of the individual are required to be sacrificed for the public good.
Without further elaboration, we are of opinion the judgment of the circuit court on the demurrer was correct, and the same is affirmed.