The trial judge granted a new trial because he thought he had given an erroneous instruction to the jury with regard to the defense of conditional privilege. He charged the jury that in order to find for the defendant on the ground of privilege they must be “satisfied" by the preponderance of the evidence that the defendant spoke to Tamutzer in good faith believing him to be a constable with the authority and charged with the duty of instituting a criminal prosecution and apprehending persons committing crimes, with reasonable grounds for believing the man K. guilty of a criminal act of sexual intercourse, and believing him to be so guilty, and believing said statements to Tamutzer to be true, for the sole purpose of having a criminal prosecution instituted^ against K. and having him arrested for such act.” The particular clause which the trial court thought erroneous is the clause which requires the defendant to prove that he had reasonable grounds for believing K. guilty in addition to proving that he actually did believe him guilty.
Upon this question the trial judge’s second thought seems to us to have been correct. The defense of qualified or conditional privilege based on the communication of the .facts regarding a supposed crime to an officer of the law merely from a sense of public duty and without malice is an affirma-. *392tive defense, wbicb, like other affirmative defenses, must be proven by the defendant by a preponderance of the evidence if the facts do not appear in the plaintiffs case; that is, the defendant must show that 'he spoke the slanderous words to an officer of the law charged with the power or duty to arrest or prosecute (or one whom he honestly believed to be such officer) in good faith believing his communication to be true and acting simply from a sense of public duty. As briefly stated by Lord Coleridge in Padmore v. Lawrence, 11 Ad. & El. 380, 382:
“Ear the sake of public justice, charges and communications which would otherwise be slanderous are protected if tona fide made in the prosecution of an inquiry into a suspected crime.”
There must be good-faith belief in the fact that a crime has been committed and good-faith belief that the person to whom communication is made is a proper person or officer with whom the information should be lodged to the end that justice should be vindicated. -When the -defendant has shown these two facts he has undoubtedly lifted the burden of proof. He ’has then shown pidma facie at least that his communication was made in the course of duty, from a sense of duty, and with an honest belief in its truth. He is not required to go further and show that a shrewder man would have discovered the falsity of the supposed facts. The question is: Did he honestly believe what he said to be true ? not whether some other man placed as he was would have believed it. Odgers, Libel & S. (4th ed.) p. 330. His belief must of course be founded upon some information. Mere reckless statements, or statements based on nothing in the way of information, are hot protected, because they cannot be said to have been made in good faith; but statements honestly-believed to be true, based upon some tangible information and made from an honest desire to promote public justice, and made to the proper officer or one honestly supposed *393to be the proper officer, are protected, though some more prudent person would not perhaps have believed in the truth of the information on which the statement is based. Clark v. Molyneux, L. R. 3 Q. B. D. 237, 248. When the prima facie case of privilege has (been thus made by proof that the communication was made in the course of public duty, from •a sense of public duty, and with an honest belief in its truth, it becomes the duty of the plaintiff, as in other cases of communications conditionally privileged, to prove actual malice by some facts tending to prove a malicious or guilty motive. Calkins v. Sumner, 13 Wis. 193; Hemmens v. Nelson, 138 N. Y. 517, 524, 34 N. E. 342; Dale v. Harris, 109 Mass. 193; 8 Ency. of Ev. 220.
It is argued by appellant that because the defendant’s information in the present case was derived only from things which he himself saw or thought he saw, and because the jury have found by their verdict that the supposed crime was not in fact committed, there is ho room for the defendant to claim good-faith belief in the truth of his communication; or, in other words, the claim is that he must have known the communication to be false and hence that it could not be privileged, and no error in the instructions upon the question of privilege can be prejudicial in the least It is sufficient to say with reference to this claim that under the evidence in the case we regard it as entirely possible that the defendant may have believed that the charge he made was true and founded such belief in good faith on certain very compromising facts which, upon the undisputed evidence, came within his vision, and yet the charge may not have been true. It is not deemed edifying or necessary to spread upon the record any specific or detailed statement of the evidence to which we refer.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.