Murphy, C. J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court. Barnes and Smith, JJ., dissent and Barnes, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which Smith, J., concurs at page 39 infra.
Appellant Edward M. Hanrahan (Hanrahan) filed suit in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County against W. Boulton Kelly (Kelly) and the architectural firm of Tatar .& Kelly, Inc. (Tatar & Kelly), seeking damages for an alleged libel. The charge of libel arose from a letter from Kelly to Hanrahan dated November 18,1970, which read:
“MR. HANRAHAN, we are answering your preposterous letter of November 16, 1970, not to dignify but to register our disavowal of its content.
“Your letter, as you well know, is totally a fabrication, devised as an obvious attempt to extort a settlement. It follows a period of harrassment and [23]*23threats Rased upon other apparent fabrications. “Any actions on your part to support your scheme of extortion not only will be vigorously resisted but also will be countered by whatever proceedings may be appropriate to remedy an extreme abuse of judicial process.
Very truly yours,
/s/
For Tatar & Kelly, W. Boulton Kelly WBK/vm
cc: Mr. N. Antonelli
Mr. R. Goldman
Mr. P. Moser
Mr. R. Maher”
The case was heard by a jury, Judge Walter M. Jenifer presiding. At the conclusion of the plaintiffs case, the court directed a verdict in favor of Tatar & Kelly. At the conclusion of the entire case, the trial judge ruled the letter libelous per se, as charging the criminal offense of extortion, and submitted the case to the jury on the issues of qualified or conditional privilege (terms used synonymously herein), malice and damages; the jury returned a verdict in favor of the remaining defendant, Kelly. Judgment was entered in favor of both defendants. Hanrahan appealed, alleging error in specified instructions to the jury and evidentiary rulings of the court. No issue, however, was raised as to the directed verdict for Tatar & Kelly, and, consequently, that matter is not before us on appeal.
At trial, evidence was adduced showing that extortion is a criminal offense in Maryland (Maryland Code (1957, 1971 Repl. Vol.) Article 27, § § 561, 563); that the letter had been typed by Vivian Mercer, a secretary in the office of Tatar & Kelly, and possibly read by Dorothy Daniels, supervisor of the secretarial staff of Tatar & Kelly; that copies of the letter had been sent to the four persons indicated on the letter; and that copies were also sent to George McManus, Chase Solomon, and Abraham Adler.
[24]*24The letter alleged to be libelous was mailed against a background of events which centered on a dispute between Hanrahan and Kelly, Seymour Tatar (Tatar), Dominic F. Antonelli (Antonelli) and Kingdon Gould, Jr. (Gould) concerning Hanrahan’s asserted interest in the property known as the Park Plaza located in the Mt. Vernon Place section of Baltimore City. Hanrahan had long been connected with the Park Plaza, having handled public relations for two former owners prior to the purchase of the property, in 1966, by Park Plaza Associates, a limited partnership, in which Antonelli and Gould were general partners. Park Plaza Associates leased the property to the Park Plaza Company, a corporation in which the controlling stock was owned by Antonelli and Gould. Hanrahan had been developing promotional ideas for the Park Plaza, specifically a “mansion market concept,” and rendered professional assistance in public relations and promotional help to the Park Plaza Company, and subsequently became its president. In the spring of 1968, Hanrahan began occupying the fifth floor “penthouse” of the Park Plaza as his residence and office.
The Park Plaza Company was not successful in its operation and terminated its business on January 2, 1970, at which time the Park Plaza was repossessed by Park Plaza Associates for non-payment of rent.
Hanrahan continued to live in the Park Plaza and continued to develop plans for its use, which he presented to Antonelli and Gould directly and through their attorneys,. Ronald L. Maher (Maher) in Baltimore and Mitchell Blankstein (Blankstein), in Washington, D.C. In February 1970, Hanrahan proposed setting up a new development company to manage the Park Plaza; a contract under which Hanrahan would receive a percentage of the rental revenues was drawn up by Maher. This contract was rejected at a meeting with Antonelli on April 16, 1970. As a result of that meeting a new agreement was drawn up, signed by Antonelli and Hanrahan, by which Hanrahan was given what appeared to be an option up to May 15, 1970 for the purchase of the Park Plaza. It was also agreed that [25]*25Hanrahan would be permitted to remain as a rent-free resident of the Park Plaza until June 1, 1970. At a meeting on May 9, 1970, the option was extended, in writing, to June 1, 1970 but expired on that date when not exercised by Hanrahan.1
Toward the end of May, Hanrahan discussed the Park Plaza with Kelly who was then Chairman of the Historical and Architectural Preservation Commission of Baltimore City. Kelly expressed an interest in the building as his architectural firm, Kelly & Tatar, was relocating its offices. Hanrahan attempted to interest Kelly in his ideas for the Park Plaza and arranged a meeting with Antonelli on June 2, 1970. Antonelli was out of town and Kelly and Hanrahan met with Blankstein.
Tatar and Kelly subsequently began negotiations with Antonelli to purchase the Park Plaza; Hanrahan was not included in Tatar’s and Kelly’s plans. To assist with their negotiations, Tatar and Kelly employed attorneys Robert M. Goldman (Goldman) and Peter Moser (Moser). In addition, Chase Soloman (Soloman), an accountant, officer, and director of Tatar & Kelly was directed to assist in the matter. Negotiations for the purchase of the Park Plaza commenced in the early part of July 1970, leading to a contract dated August 14,1970, transferring the Plark Plaza Associates’ partnership interests to Kelly and Tatar, individually. The contract had been reviewed by Blankstein and Maher for Antonelli, and Goldman, Moser and Soloman for Kelly and Tatar. It provided, among other things, that the Park Plaza was to be free of tenancies which Kelly and Tatar did not approve, including Hanrahan’s. Hanrahan refused to move at Kelly’s request; instead, he insisted that he had rights in the Park Plaza. An extended legal battle to evict Hanrahan from the premises then ensued. Hanrahan employed counsel, A. Cookman Boyd and Henry M. Decker, Jr., to represent his interest, but after brief correspondence, they withdrew from the case. Maher initiated eviction proceedings; Hanrahan employed another attorney, George [26]*26F. McManus (McManus), who discussed the matter with Moser on November 5,1970.
On November 16, 1970, Hanrahan, with some advice from McManus, sent a letter to Kelly and Tatar, reiterating his previous claims. It read:
“Dear Bo and Seymour:
“Despite the fact that I approached you, Bo, only for your official capacity to generate municipal support for my enterprise, I did later agree to let you both into my deal — as partners with me in Park Plaza ownership and development.
“Eventually, I also agreed to your representing our mutual interests in finalizing the terms and conditions of the purchase contract with Park Plaza Associates.
“Pursuant to our partnership, I did the following:
(1) — Continued to make available to you the three years of my research, analysis and groundwork that you have publicly acknowledged from the basis of this property’s development potential and your involvement therewith;
(2) — Devised certain tenant operations, divisions and licensing formulae;
(3) — Produced tenants and negotiated leases — at least one of which is already developing significant property revenue — in fact: five times the square-foot yield from any former Park Plaza lease;
(4) — Carried personally the expense of continuing to occupy, repair, maintain and protect the property, and further unearth prospective tenants.
“However, you have breached the partnership trust imposed upon you — by failing so far to furnish me with:
(a) — a copy of the contract of purchase re: 2, 4, 6 West Madison, 810 and 812 N. Charles;
[27]*27(b) — your written acknowledgement of my interest therein;
(c) — notification of settlement date therefor.
“Consequently, I now demand that you set the record straight by enabling my further active participation, — or buy out my interest at a price commensurate with its fair market value.
“In the event that you fail to comply with this demand, I shall, in addition to other remedies, in due time file a Bill under Article 73A, Section 22 for my right to an accounting to the partnership’s affairs.
Very truly yours,
Edward M. Hanrahan”
Copies of this letter were sent the following day by Hanrahan to Antonelli and Maher.
Kelly turned Hanrahan’s letter over to Goldman who drafted a response, which was edited by Moser, and sent to Kelly to be typed and mailed. This is the letter of November 18 upon which Hanrahan sued. Copies were sent to Antonelli, Maher, Moser and Goldman, as indicated on the original. Later in the day, copies were sent to McManus and Soloman.
The efforts to evict Hanrahan continued — unsuccessfully. Another attorney, experienced in eviction proceedings, Abraham Adler (Adler), was employed, and received, for preparation of the case, Kelly’s file which included a copy of Kelly’s November 18 letter. Ultimately, Hanrahan left the Park Plaza in March, 1971.
This brief synopsis of the copious evidence in the record cannot adequately capture the details of involvement of the named recipients of Kelly’s letter. Suffice it to say that we have studied the lengthy record extract submitted to us, and are convinced that, by numerous interactions, each of the recipients of that letter was fully aware of the existing dispute.
[28]*28I. Conditional Privilege
The finding that the letter was libelous per se is uncontested, and the evidence that copies of Kelly’s letter were sent to the seven individuals heretofore named was uncontradicted. The main issues, both below and on appeal, involve the defense of conditional or qualified privilege based on a mutuality of interest between the sender and the recipients. As we noted in Simon v. Robinson, 221 Md. 200, 206, 154 A. 2d 911, 915 (1959):
“ . . . the cases concerning interest or duty invariably state or hold that a libelous communication is privileged only when the occasion shows that the communicating party and the recipient have a mutual interest in the subject matter, or some duty with respect thereto.”
The defense recognizes that under the conditions delineated in Simon, but subject to an infinite variety of factual circumstances, defamatory words are privileged from liability, not absolutely, but on the condition that “the publisher and the recipient have a common interest, and the communication is of a kind reasonably calculated to protect or further it.” Prosser, Law of Torts § 110 at 809 (3d. ed. 1964). Another formulation of the privilege, which we previously noted in Stevenson v. Baltimore Baseball Club, Inc., 250 Md. 482, 243 A. 2d 533 (1968), is that of the Restatement of Torts § 596 (1938):
“An occasion is conditionally privileged when the circumstances are such as to lead any one of several persons having a common interest in a particular subject matter correctly or reasonably to believe that facts exist which another sharing such common interest is entitled to know.”
Comment c to the above section recognizes that the common interest can arise in relation to interests in property, business and professional dealings.2 For a brief review of our [29]*29prior decisions on the issue, see Simon v. Robinson, supra, 221 Md. at 206, 154 A. 2d at 915.
Mutual interest in the subject matter is but one type of qualified privilege recognized in the law of defamation. See Stevenson v. Baltimore Baseball Club, Inc., supra, 250 Md. at 486, 243 A. 2d at 536. The general rules governing all conditional privileges are, however, well-settled. A finding of conditional privilege conditionally negates the presumption of malice and shifts the burden to the plaintiff to show actual malice. Peurifoy v. Congressional Motors, Inc., 254 Md. 501, 255 A. 2d 332 (1969). Malice may be a jury question. As stated in Fresh v. Cutter, 73 Md. 87, 93-94, 20 A. 774, 775 (1890):
“It is a question for the Court whether the statement if made in good faith and without malice is thus privileged. But the plaintiff has the right notwithstanding the privileged character of the communication to go to the jury, if there be evidence tending to show actual malice, as where the words unreasonably impute crime, or the occasion of their utterance is such as to indicate, by its unnecessary publicity or otherwise, a purpose wrongfully to defame the plaintiff. . . . Or, malice may be established by showing that the publication contained matter not relevant to the occasion. . . . Expressions in excess of what the occasion warrants do not per se take away the privilege, but such excess may be evidence of malice . . ..”
Absent a finding of express malice, a conditional privilege, if [30]*30not abused, defeats the libel action. Wetherby v. Retail Credit Co., 235 Md. 237, 241, 201 A. 2d 344, 347 (1964).
The lower court found as a matter of law that Moser and Goldman “were legally entitled to receive the ... letter” written by Kelly, and that ruling is not challenged on appeal. As to the other five persons who received copies, the court instructed the jury:
“If you find from all of the evidence in the case that the letter in question was privileged under the standards I have hereinbefore set forth, and if you further find that the plaintiff has not persuaded you by a fair preponderance of affirmative evidence that there was actual or express malice on behalf of the defendant in writing said letter, then your verdict should be in favor of the defendant.”
Since the court had previously instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that Kelly’s letter was libelous per se, it is wholly apparent that only by finding a conditional privilege to exist between Kelly and the recipients of his letter, and the absence of a preponderance of evidence to establish actual malice on Kelly’s part, could the jury, under the court’s instructions, find in Kelly’s favor. Since the jury found in Kelly’s favor, and since we presume that in so doing it followed the court’s instructions, it is plain that the jury’s verdict reflected its conclusion that the communication to the seven persons who received copies of the letter was privileged and without actual malice. Cf. Simon v. Robinson, supra.
Appellant does not attack this finding directly. At trial he made no motions for directed verdict or for judgment n.o.v. On appeal, he argues, not that the jury’s verdict was contrary to the facts and law, but that the court fell into prejudicial and reversible error by reason of its evidentiary rulings and jury instructions. Specifically, Hanrahan claims that the court erred in instructing the jury that:
“In determining whether or not the defendant, Mr. Kelly, was motivated by malice in the writing of his letter of November 18, 1970, you should consider [31]*31that it was a response to a letter of the plaintiff dated November 16, 1970.”
Hanrahan maintains that the jury should have been instructed to consider only Kelly’s letter of November 18 in determining the question of malice. The law, however, is to the contrary where, as here, the issue of qualified privilege has been properly raised. See Orrison v. Vance, 262 Md. 285, 295, 277 A. 2d 573, 578 (1971), holding that all relevant circumstances are admissible in determining the existence of actual malice sufficient to defeat the conditional privilege.
Hanrahan next claims error in the court’s instruction in which it defined the term “subject matter,” as that term is used in the defense of qualified privilege based upon a “mutual interest in the subject matter,” to encompass “Hanrahan’s alleged interests as a partner in the Park Plaza venture, his rights in the promotion of the same, and his status as a tenant in the building situate thereon.” Considering the complex factual background of the case, we think the court’s instruction was entirely proper. In so concluding, we note that the phrase “mutual interest in the subject matter” was given further explanation by the court in its instruction on qualified privilege, viz.,
“Stated in another fashion, a communication is conditionally privileged when the circumstances induce a reasonable belief that the recipient is one to whom the publisher is under a legal duty to publish the defamatory matter or is a person to whom its publication is otherwise within the general standards of decent conduct.”
Much of the court’s instruction on the matter of qualified privilege was taken verbatim from our prior cases. See Simon v. Robinson, supra, 221 Md. at 206, 154 A. 2d at 915; Henthorn v. Western Maryland Railway Co., 226 Md. 499, 507-508, 174 A. 2d 175, 179 (1961). Reviewing the instructions in their entirety, Jones v. Federal Paper Board Co., Inc., 252 Md. 475, 250 A. 2d 653 (1969), Kauffman v. Love, 252 Md. 251, 249 A. 2d 700 (1969), in light of all the evidence, we find that there was a factual question as to the [32]*32existence of a qualified privilege for Blankstein, Adler, Solomon, McManus, and Antonelli sufficient to go to the jury, and that the jury was properly instructed.
II. Publication to Secretaries
Hanrahan next claims that the court erred in instructing the jury that:
“. . . as a matter of law . . . the fact that the letter was typed by Vivian Mercer, a secretary in the office of Tatar and Kelly, and may have been read by Dorothy Daniels, another secretary in said office prior to the mailing thereof does not constitute a publication of said letter and does not sustain liability on the part of the defendant, Mr. Kelly, so far as those two secretaries are concerned.”
Hanrahan argues with much force that such instruction is contrary to our holding in Gambrill v. Schooley, 93 Md. 48, 48 A. 730 (1901) and not within the exception to the Gambrill rule subsequently recognized in Domchick v. Greenbelt Consumer Services, Inc., 200 Md. 36, 87 A. 2d 831 (1952), and Peurifoy v. Congressional Motors, Inc., supra.
In Gambrill we held that the transcription and typing of a libelous letter by the defendant’s private secretary constituted a publication (publication being defined, we there found, as “ ‘the communication of the defamatory words to some third person’ ”), and that such publication was actionable — i.e., sufficient to support a finding of libel even if the writing was, as in that case, then delivered to the plaintiff without being made known to any other person. In so holding we rejected the arguments there advanced: (1) that the secretary was performing a mechanical process without perception of the communication; and (2) that in view of the confidential nature of the secretary’s employment, and the almost universal use of such services, a sufficiently strong policy reason existed for creating an exception to the rule of publication. In rejecting the policy plea, we said, 93 Md. at 61, 48 A. at 731:
[33]*33“Neither the prevalence of any business customs or methods, nor the pressure of business which compels resort to stenographic assistance, can make that legal which is illegal, nor make that innocent which would otherwise be actionable. ”
(Emphasis added.)
GambriU, a case of first impression in the United States, reviewed the English cases on point, two of which are here pertinent. Pullman v. Walter Hill & Co., [1891] 1 Q.B. 529, held actionable the publication of a libelous letter to the clerk who transcribed and typed it, and to the office boy who copied it in a letter-press book. In Boxsius v. Goblet Freres, [1894] 1 Q.B. 843, the English court recognized an exception to the rule of Pullman v. Walter Hill & Co., supra. Gambrill summarized and distinguished Boxsius, 93 Md. at 62-63, 48 A. at 732:
“There, the libellous letter was dictated by a solicitor, acting in behalf of and at the direction of his client, and copies were made as in the case mentioned. The Court distinguished the case very clearly from Pullman v. Hill, holding, through two of the same judges, that the solicitor owed to his client the duty to act on his instructions, and that if the solicitor had communicated directly with the plaintiff, the communication would have been privileged, and that he could discharge that duty, as he did other business of the office, in the ordinary way without losing the privilege. But there was no question of privilege in Pullman v. Hill, and there is none here, as the appellant owed no duty in the matter to any one.” (Emphasis added.)
Thus, in GambriU, we declined to view Boxsius as a weakening of the general rule declared in Pullman, but classed it instead as a clearly distinguishable exception rooted in the well-established rules of privilege. The general rule in England, established in Pullman, became the general rule in Maryland, declared in GambriU.
Fifty years later, the Boxsius-type exception was [34]*34presented to us in concrete form in Domchick v. Greenbelt Consumer Services, Inc., supra. In Domchick, the appellant (an employee discharged for theft) alleged libel based on writings by the general manager — a memorandum to the Board of Directors pertaining to appellant’s discharge and a letter to him stating the reasons therefor — both of which were typed by the general manager’s secretary. We recognized that each of these writings arose out of a duty which the general manager owed to the corporation and its board of directors, 200 Md. at 42, 87 A. 2d at 834; and further, that the letter was the result of a duty which the general manager owed to appellant, the latter having requested “notice in writing of the grounds for his discharge, . .. [this] request being in accordance with the Personnel Policies of the Corporation.” 200 Md. at 39, 87 A. 2d at 833. Because of the duty the general manager owed in connection with the writings, we held the communications conditionally privileged. Just as the English courts had recognized that the existence of a privilege in Boxsms created an exception to the Pullman rule, we recognized that the conditional privilege in Domchick created an exception to the Gambrill rule. We said:
“ . .. [Appellant] further contends that the dictation of the memorandum and letters to the stenographer took the case out of the privileged class. In support of this contention, he cites the case of Gambrill v. Schooley, 93 Md. 48, 48 A. 730, 52 L.R.A. 87, which held that the dictation of a letter to a stenographer was publication, that there was no privilege between the stenographer and her employer, and that such a dictation in that case took the communication out of the privileged class. In that case, however, the defendant dictated a libellous letter to his stenographer and had it mailed to the plaintiff, and the sole question was whether, under such circumstances, the dictation to the stenographer was a publication of the letter, as, of course, the defendant could not have been liable for a letter written to the plaintiff had not someone [35]*35else seen it. This court held in that case, that, as the stenographer had no interest in the matter, it was a publication. There was no question of privilege in that case at all, and we would be loath to hold that privileged communications respecting the affairs of a corporation or a business must be written by hand and not dictated, as is the universal custom. . . . [The general manager] was using the ordinary facilities of his office, in doing something which came within the duties of his office, and to hold that dictating letters and memoranda about such matters to his stenographer was a publication of them to a person who had no interest in them, and, therefore, they were without the ordinary privilege they would otherwise have had, leads to a conclusion which can only be termed ridiculous.” 200 Md. at 43-44, 87 A. 2d at 835. (Emphasis added.)
Peurifoy v. Congressional Motors, Inc., supra, involved a communication factually similar to the letter in Domchick. The secretary to the vice-president of Congressional Motors, at the latter’s direction, typed the allegedly libelous letter detailing the reasons for Peurifoy’s discharge, and the letter was then hand-delivered to Peurifoy, without being communicated to any other person. When Peurifoy was decided seventeen years after Domchick, it had become well established in Maryland that communications arising out of the employer-employee relationship enjoy a qualified privilege, whether it be classified as a privilege arising from duty (legal or moral), common interest in the subject matter of the communication, or as a sui generis privilege. See Stevenson v. Baltimore Baseball Club, Inc., supra, 250 Md. at 486, 243 A. 2d at 536. Therefore, Peurifoy’s discharge letter from his employer, typed by the employer’s secretary, was immune from liability absent a showing of express malice. The occasion of the communication was privileged, and the essence of our holding in Peurifoy reiterated the Boxsius rule we recognized, as dicta, in Gambrill, namely that “the . . . [defendant] owed . . . the duty, and ... if the . . . [defendant] had communicated directly with the plaintiff, the [36]*36communication would have been privileged, and ... he could discharge that duty, as he did other business of the office, in the ordinary way without losing the privilege.” Gambrill v. Schooley, supra, 93 Md. at 62-63, 48 A. at 732.
We recognize that some confusion, reflected in the instruction in the instant case, may have been engendered by the flat statement in Peurifoy that “there was no publication ... by the dictation of the letter .. . to . . . [the] stenographer and by her transcription of the letter.” 254 Md. at 514, 255 A. 2d at 339. (Emphasis added.) We think that a fair reading of Peurifoy, particularly its heavy reliance on Domchick, which distinguished Gambrill, makes it readily evident that we concluded that there had been no actionable publication in the circumstances of that case. Our holding in Peurifoy does not represent a departure from the general rule of Gambrill; rather, it follows the Domchick exception to Gambrill, i.e., that while such communication is a publication, it is not an actionable publication where an unabused qualified privilege exists.3
Relating the governing law to the instructions before us, (that communication to the two secretaries “does not constitute a publication of said letter and does not sustain liability on the part of the defendant, Mr. Kelly, so far as those two secretaries are concerned”) we do not find reversible error. While the statement that the communication was not as a matter of law a publication is technically in conflict with the law of Maryland as we reaffirm it today, we think such error, in light of the overall correctness of the instruction that such communication does not sustain liability on the part of the defendant (or, as we [37]*37have expressed it elsewhere in this opinion, “is not actionable”), is harmless. Baltimore Transit Co. v. State ex rel. Castranda, 194 Md. 421, 71 A. 2d 442 (1950), Sieland v. Gallo, 194 Md. 282, 71 A. 2d 45 (1950); cf. State Roads Commission v. Kuenne, 240 Md. 232, 213 A. 2d 567 (1965); Rippon v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust Co., 213 Md. 215, 131 A. 2d 695 (1957).
To support the substantial correctness of the instruction, we need only look to the court’s finding, as a matter of law, of the existence of a qualified privilege as to Moser and Goldman. Where a conditional privilege is so found to exist,
“Any reasonable and appropriate method of publication may be adopted which fits the purpose of protecting the particular interest. The dictation of a business letter to a stenographer . . . [citing Domchick among others] may be privileged on a proper occasion.. . .
“In all such cases, the fact that the communication is incidentally read or overheard by a person to whom there is no privilege to publish it will not result in liability, if the method adopted is a reasonable and appropriate one under the circumstances.” Prosser, supra, at 820.
There was no evidence that the procedure used for sending the letter was not reasonable; on the contrary, all the evidence was that the typing by Mercer, under the supervision of Daniels, was in accordance with the normal procedure of that office for mailing copies of correspondence. The fact of the publication to the other five persons, and of possible malice, would not deprive Kelly of the immunity, as to the single act of publication to the secretaries, furnished by the qualified privilege as to Goldman and Moser.
III. Admission of Evidence
Hanrahan claims that the lower court committed prejudicial error in refusing to admit into evidence dictionary definitions (The Oxford Dictionary of the English [38]*38Language, 1893 and Webster’s unabridged dictionary) and “current newspaper articles and other publications” (among them, the comic strip “Little Orphan Annie”) illustrating the meaning of the word “extortion*.” As this evidence was proffered for the purpose of proving that Kelly used the word in a libelous context — a conclusion confirmed by the lower court when it instructed the jury that the letter was libelous per se — appellant was not injured by the court’s ruling.
Secondly, Hanrahan objects to the court’s refusal to admit Kelly’s complete financial statement in evidence. All portions of this document were read into evidence except (a) the value of a residence held by Kelly and his wife by the entireties, and (b) the net worth figure (which included the value of Kelly’s residence). We think the court was correct in its ruling excluding consideration of entireties property. See Lake v. Callis, 202 Md. 581, 588, 97 A. 2d 316, 319 (1953). If the proffer of the two excepted items were directed to the issue of punitive damages, the objection is rendered moot by reason of the jury’s verdict for Kelly. Of if, as appellant contended on oral argument, the proffer of the two excepted items were directed to the issue of Kelly’s credibility, and intended for comparison with the financial statement Kelly prepared for this case, we think the portions read into evidence amply fulfilled that purpose.
Lastly, Hanrahan claims that “[t]he court erred in allowing the Defendant and his lawyers to testify as to what they, or any of them, meant by the use of the words in the letter of November 18th, even though the Court ruled that the words were ‘libelous per se.’ ” The short answer to this contention is that Kelly did not so testify, and his lawyers, Goldman and Moser, testified without objection. Lacking objection, the question is not before us on appeal. Maryland Rules 522 (d) (2), 885.
In view of our conclusion, it is unnecessary for us to consider Hanrahan’s contentions on the question of damages.
Judgment affirmed; appellant to pay costs.