ASHBURN, J.
These two eases were consolidated for purpose of trial, tried together and are presented here upon a single reporter’s transcript. Each is an action for slander of plaintiff through a news telecast delivered by defendant Putnam on January 24, 1958, pursuant to an alleged conspiracy with Miles Laboratories, Bond Stores (his sponsors) and Bruce Allen, all of whom were joined as defendants. The Arditto complaint alleges four causes of action and Dietrich’s two causes. Before trial defendants Miles Laboratories, Bond Stores and Bruce Allen paid to Arditto and Dietrich $21,-513.15 for a release of said defendants from all claims based upon the first and second counts of each complaint. The cause proceeded to trial against defendant Putnam only. A jury found for him upon the first, third and fourth causes of action in the
Arditto
case (the second count having been dismissed by plaintiff), and upon the first count of the
Dietrich
case. The trial judge granted plaintiff a new trial upon the first cause of action in each case upon the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict and that it is against law; he denied said motion as to other counts. Prom this order granting new trial as to the first count of each complaint defendant appeals. The other causes of action thus drop out of sight.
Plaintiff Arditto is an attorney practicing in the Los Angeles area and was at the time of the alleged slander vice president, director and secretary of Los Angeles Harbor Development Company. Plaintiff Dietrich is chairman of the board of directors of Houston-Pearless Corporation and also serves as consultant to some other companies; prior to 1956 he was executive vice president of Hughes Enterprises.
On January 23, 1958, the subcommittee on tidelands of the State Assembly Interim Committee on Judiciary, whose chairman was defendant Bruce P. Allen, commenced hearings in Los Angeles upon the “leasing practices followed by the City of Los Angeles relating to tidelands and other lands as regards production of oil,” and “particularly with regard to the leases coming under scrutiny this morning because of
various stories that have been circulated, whether or not there has been influence peddling taking place in the granting of these leases.” On the next evening, January 24, at 6:45 p.m., defendant Putnam, a television news reporter, gave a telecast over station KTTV in Los Angeles, the full text of which is set forth in the footnote.
Bach complaint charges that the following portions are slanderous: “Bruce Allen repeatedly states it looks as though
Arditto, Dietrich and Waters were paid for political influence in gaining oil leases, that they peddled their influence. The committee concludes for the moment satisfied that they have uncovered influence peddling, shady deals and preferential treatment in their investigation of our city’s awards of tideland oil leases, property that belongs to the citizens of Los Angeles.” Defendant admitted making the said statements, denied malice and other allegations of the complaints and advanced these affirmative defenses: privileged communication under section 47 subdivision 3, Civil Code; fair and true
report of a legislative proceeding; fair and true report of the proceedings of a public meeting; and fair and true report of material and matter constituting news items for the benefit of the public. After a long trial the jury, as above stated, found for defendant but the trial judge granted a new trial as to count I of each complaint upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence.
In support of the appeal from that order defendant’s counsel advances the argument that “ [i]f it appears on appeal that a trial court in granting a new trial based its order exclusively upon an erroneous concept of legal principles applicable to the cause, its order will be reversed,” citing
Rosenberg
v.
Wittenborn,
178 Cal.App.2d 846 [p. 851] [3 Cal.Rptr. 459],
Estate of Baird,
198 Cal. 490, 507 [246 P. 324], and
Conner
v.
Southern Pac. Co.,
38 Cal.2d 633, 637 [241 P.2d 535]. The
Baird
opinion says, at page 507:
‘ ‘
[W] e are not unmindful of the well established and salutary rule which clothes the trial court with broad discretionary powers in the consideration and determination of motions of this character. While these powers are broad and extensive, they are not unlimited and their exercise is controlled by other rules of procedure equally well settled and beneficial in their application. One of these last mentioned rules is that where the trial court errs in the application of the legal principles applicable to a cause in granting a motion for a new trial thereof such action will be corrected on appeal just as readily as if the motion had been overruled.”
Conner
v.
Southern Pac. Co.,
38 Cal.2d 633, 637 [241 P.2d 535], phrases the rule thus: “The inquiry as to whether instructions are erroneous presents purely a question of law
(Dodds
v.
Gifford
(1932) 127 Cal.App. 629, 634 [16 P.2d 279];
Markham,
v.
Hancock Oil Co.
(1934) 2 Cal. App.2d 392, 395 [37 P.2d 1087]) and if it appears on appeal that a trial court in granting a new trial based its order
exclusively
upon an erroneous concept of legal principles applicable to the cause, its order will be reversed.” (Italics added.)
Counsel next says, and correctly, that where the record contains
no substantial evidence to support a judgment in favor of the party whose motion for new trial has been granted,
the order will be reversed, citing
Martin
v.
Smith,
103 Cal.App.2d 894, 897 [230 P.2d 679],
Henderson
v.
Braden,
35 Cal.App.2d 88, 91 [94 P.2d 625],
Henningsen
v.
Howard,
117 Cal.App.2d 352, 355 [255 P.2d 837],
Ellis
v.
City of Los Angeles,
167 Cal.App.2d 180 [334 P.2d 37], and
Post
v.
Camino Del Properties, Inc.,
173 Cal.App.2d 446, 453 [343 P.2d 294].
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ASHBURN, J.
These two eases were consolidated for purpose of trial, tried together and are presented here upon a single reporter’s transcript. Each is an action for slander of plaintiff through a news telecast delivered by defendant Putnam on January 24, 1958, pursuant to an alleged conspiracy with Miles Laboratories, Bond Stores (his sponsors) and Bruce Allen, all of whom were joined as defendants. The Arditto complaint alleges four causes of action and Dietrich’s two causes. Before trial defendants Miles Laboratories, Bond Stores and Bruce Allen paid to Arditto and Dietrich $21,-513.15 for a release of said defendants from all claims based upon the first and second counts of each complaint. The cause proceeded to trial against defendant Putnam only. A jury found for him upon the first, third and fourth causes of action in the
Arditto
case (the second count having been dismissed by plaintiff), and upon the first count of the
Dietrich
case. The trial judge granted plaintiff a new trial upon the first cause of action in each case upon the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict and that it is against law; he denied said motion as to other counts. Prom this order granting new trial as to the first count of each complaint defendant appeals. The other causes of action thus drop out of sight.
Plaintiff Arditto is an attorney practicing in the Los Angeles area and was at the time of the alleged slander vice president, director and secretary of Los Angeles Harbor Development Company. Plaintiff Dietrich is chairman of the board of directors of Houston-Pearless Corporation and also serves as consultant to some other companies; prior to 1956 he was executive vice president of Hughes Enterprises.
On January 23, 1958, the subcommittee on tidelands of the State Assembly Interim Committee on Judiciary, whose chairman was defendant Bruce P. Allen, commenced hearings in Los Angeles upon the “leasing practices followed by the City of Los Angeles relating to tidelands and other lands as regards production of oil,” and “particularly with regard to the leases coming under scrutiny this morning because of
various stories that have been circulated, whether or not there has been influence peddling taking place in the granting of these leases.” On the next evening, January 24, at 6:45 p.m., defendant Putnam, a television news reporter, gave a telecast over station KTTV in Los Angeles, the full text of which is set forth in the footnote.
Bach complaint charges that the following portions are slanderous: “Bruce Allen repeatedly states it looks as though
Arditto, Dietrich and Waters were paid for political influence in gaining oil leases, that they peddled their influence. The committee concludes for the moment satisfied that they have uncovered influence peddling, shady deals and preferential treatment in their investigation of our city’s awards of tideland oil leases, property that belongs to the citizens of Los Angeles.” Defendant admitted making the said statements, denied malice and other allegations of the complaints and advanced these affirmative defenses: privileged communication under section 47 subdivision 3, Civil Code; fair and true
report of a legislative proceeding; fair and true report of the proceedings of a public meeting; and fair and true report of material and matter constituting news items for the benefit of the public. After a long trial the jury, as above stated, found for defendant but the trial judge granted a new trial as to count I of each complaint upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence.
In support of the appeal from that order defendant’s counsel advances the argument that “ [i]f it appears on appeal that a trial court in granting a new trial based its order exclusively upon an erroneous concept of legal principles applicable to the cause, its order will be reversed,” citing
Rosenberg
v.
Wittenborn,
178 Cal.App.2d 846 [p. 851] [3 Cal.Rptr. 459],
Estate of Baird,
198 Cal. 490, 507 [246 P. 324], and
Conner
v.
Southern Pac. Co.,
38 Cal.2d 633, 637 [241 P.2d 535]. The
Baird
opinion says, at page 507:
‘ ‘
[W] e are not unmindful of the well established and salutary rule which clothes the trial court with broad discretionary powers in the consideration and determination of motions of this character. While these powers are broad and extensive, they are not unlimited and their exercise is controlled by other rules of procedure equally well settled and beneficial in their application. One of these last mentioned rules is that where the trial court errs in the application of the legal principles applicable to a cause in granting a motion for a new trial thereof such action will be corrected on appeal just as readily as if the motion had been overruled.”
Conner
v.
Southern Pac. Co.,
38 Cal.2d 633, 637 [241 P.2d 535], phrases the rule thus: “The inquiry as to whether instructions are erroneous presents purely a question of law
(Dodds
v.
Gifford
(1932) 127 Cal.App. 629, 634 [16 P.2d 279];
Markham,
v.
Hancock Oil Co.
(1934) 2 Cal. App.2d 392, 395 [37 P.2d 1087]) and if it appears on appeal that a trial court in granting a new trial based its order
exclusively
upon an erroneous concept of legal principles applicable to the cause, its order will be reversed.” (Italics added.)
Counsel next says, and correctly, that where the record contains
no substantial evidence to support a judgment in favor of the party whose motion for new trial has been granted,
the order will be reversed, citing
Martin
v.
Smith,
103 Cal.App.2d 894, 897 [230 P.2d 679],
Henderson
v.
Braden,
35 Cal.App.2d 88, 91 [94 P.2d 625],
Henningsen
v.
Howard,
117 Cal.App.2d 352, 355 [255 P.2d 837],
Ellis
v.
City of Los Angeles,
167 Cal.App.2d 180 [334 P.2d 37], and
Post
v.
Camino Del Properties, Inc.,
173 Cal.App.2d 446, 453 [343 P.2d 294].
Having established these propositions appellant’s next step in the argument is this: “The rulings made by the trial court in the rejection of certain evidence offered by the defendant to substantiate truth and offset a charge of actual malice establish that the trial court acted upon an erroneous concept of legal principles.” Then follows the assertion of error in sustaining objections to the following questions addressed to the chairman, Mr. Allen: “Q. Were you satisfied that the evidence had disclosed shady dealing, preferential treatment and influence peddling?” “Q. Mr. Silver: Was your committee satisfied at the time you gave this interview that the evidence had disclosed influence peddling, shady deals, and preferential treatment?” These rulings are not presented as grounds for granting a new trial; they are said to be reasons for the denial of such a motion. Without pausing to discuss the correctness of the rulings, it is plain that the argument that the court acted upon an erroneous concept of legal principles in granting the new trial cannot prevail.
If there were error in these rulings, that might afford ground for a new trial at the instance of a defeated defendant, but the rule does not work in reverse. Appellant would have the order granting a new trial upon the ground of insufficient evidence reversed for the exclusion of evidence; no precedent for such a view is cited and sound reasoning does not sanction that result. The reviewing court in considering an appeal from an order granting a new trial must accept (absent augmentation) and act upon the evidence
presented in the record before it; it can neither add to nor subtract from the showing thus made. If the record contains evidence that was erroneously received it must be considered in examining the question of sufficiency of the evidence; if on the contrary there is an absence of evidence which should have been received, the court cannot treat it as part of the proof or reverse the order through the process of forcing into the evidence something that is not there. See
Deary
v.
Shields,
54 Cal.App.2d 795, 799 [129 P.2d 935];
Gunning
v.
Forbes,
60 Cal.App.2d, 521, 523 [141 P.2d 30];
Waller
v.
Southern Cal. Gas Co.,
170 Cal.App.2d 747, 757 [339 P.2d 577];
Jones
v.
Brown,
176 Cal.App.2d 184, 186 [1 Cal.Rptr. 267];
Williams
v.
Hawley,
144 Cal. 97, 100 [77 P. 762];
Studer
v.
Plough,
179 Cal.App.2d 436, 440 [3 Cal. Rptr. 785];
Tyra
v.
Board of Police & Fire etc. Comrs.,
101 Cal.App.2d 248, 250 [225 P.2d 617];
Shepherd
v.
Turner,
129 Cal. 530, 532 [62 P. 106]; 36 Cal.Jur.2d section 157, page 364; 66 C.J.S. section 196c, pages 473-474.
In
Williams
v.
Hawley, supra,
the court said, at page 100: “The notice of motion referred to in this entry, which perhaps means the notice of intention to move for a new trial, is not made a part of the bill of exceptions, and, consequently, though printed in the transcript, it is no part of the record, and we cannot examine it for a statement of the grounds of the motion.”
Waller
v.
Southern Cal. Gas Co., supra,
170 Cal.App.2d 747, 757: “But we must take the record as we find it. We cannot strike or disregard any evidence favorable to the prevailing party merely because it was erroneously received. ’'
The rest of appellant’s brief is devoted to review of the evidence in a manifest attempt to induce the court to follow the same process and it overlooks some of the cardinal rules of proper presentation of an appellant’s contention of insufficiency of the evidence. Our present question is whether there was any substantial evidence to sustain a verdict in favor of plaintiff if rendered
(Yarrow
v.
State of California,
53 Cal.2d 427, 434 [2 Cal.Rptr. 137, 348 P.2d 687]), and so the rules laid down in
Davis
v.
Lucas,
180 Cal.App.2d 407, 409 [4 Cal.Rptr. 479], are here pertinent: “The appellate court starts with the presumption that the evidence sustains each finding of fact [citations], and the burden rests upon appellant ‘to demonstrate that there is no substantial evidence to support the challenged findings. ’ [Citations.] To this end appellant must set forth in his
brief all material evidence upon the point, not merely his own proofs [citations]; if this is not done the point is deemed waived (so held in the cases just cited). ... ‘[A] claim of insufficiency of the evidence to justify findings, consisting of mere assertion without a fair statement of the evidence, is entitled to no consideration, when it is apparent, as it is here, that a substantial amount of evidence was received on behalf of the respondents.’ [Citation.] In the circumstances we are entitled to accept the statements of respondent’s brief as to the evidence upon the subject. Respondent’s counsel has assembled enough of the testimony in his brief to show at least a substantial conflict in the evidence. Our duty begins and ends with the determination of the existence of such a conflict.”
It is likewise true at bar that respondent has arrayed adequate evidence to show that there is at least a substantial conflict and our duty in this regard is ended. “It is not the province of a reviewing court to comment on each evidentiary conflict or disagreement or to present a detailed argument on the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings
(Pores
v.
Purity Milk Co.,
135 Cal.App.2d 305, 309 [287 P.2d 169].) “[A]n appellate court is not charged with the duty of reviewing the evidence in an effort to convince appellant of its sufficiency or to otherwise demonstrate the fact.”
(Edwards
v.
Container Kraft Carton etc. Co.,
161 Cal.App.2d 752, 756 [327 P.2d 622].)
Order affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
The petition in Civ. No. 26063 for a rehearing was denied April 23, 1963.