Plaintiff appeals from an order of the trial court filed 26 September 1991, granting defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6).
On 28 August 1991, plaintiff, a Winston-Salem attorney, filed a complaint alleging that defendant, a licensed attorney, “maliciously, willfully and wantonly made and published slanderous and libelous statements about the Plaintiff to persons other than the Plaintiff by mailing a copy of a letter to the newspaper, the Winston-Salem Chronicle” which was seen and read by at lеast three persons who worked at the newspaper. Paragraph seven of plaintiff’s complaint provides that the statements in the letter included, but are not limited to, the following:
a. [Defendant’s] clients intend to file a complaint against [plaintiff] with the North Carolina State Bar.
b. [Defendant] accused [plaintiff] оf misleading the reporter by not informing the reporter’ of vital facts.
c. [Defendant] accused [plaintiff] of lying to the reporter.
d. [Defendant] says the “State Bar thoroughly investigated the issue” (perjury and unethical conduct by Legal Aid lawyers) at [plaintiff’s] request.
e. [Defendant] says [plaintiff] has not produced “a shred of evidence” to support charges of fraud and perjury by Legal Aid lawyers in Court proceedings.
f. [Defendant] accuses [plaintiff] of unethical conduct in talking to а reporter.
g. [Defendant] accuses [plaintiff] of criminal conduct in talking to a reporter.
h. [Defendant] says [plaintiff] has committed libel and slander per sе.
i. [Defendant] threatens [plaintiff] (apparently with criminal action and civil suit) if [plaintiff] again communicates with the reporter.
j. [Defendant] says his clients will file a сomplaint against [plaintiff] (for his talking to the reporter) with the North Carolina State Bar.
k. Pefendant] says [plaintiff] has violated Rule 7.7 and other rules of the Rules of Professional Conduct.
According to plaintiff’s complaint, defendant allegedly talked to additional individuals and repeated the aforementioned accusations. Plaintiff further alleges that defendant’s statements were false and made with actual malice, tended to subject plaintiff to ridicule, contempt, public hatred, and disgrace and to impeach plaintiff in his profession, and charged offenses on the part of plaintiff involving moral turpitude. According to plaintiff’s complaint, plaintiff suffered “nervousness, headaches, anxiety, loss of self esteem and depression and other physical injury for which he receivеd medical treatment” as a direct and proximate cause of defendant’s statements, as well as pecuniary losses, mental suffering, humiliation, and embarrassment and injury to his reputation. Plaintiff did not attach the alleged defamatory letter or a copy of it as an exhibit to his complaint.
On 13 September 1991, defendаnt filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. On 23 September 1991, defendant filed an answer to plaintiff’s complaint, in which he denied the allegations in paragraph seven of plaintiff’s complaint regarding the statements made by defendant “to the extent that such allegations are literally or contextually inconsistent with defendant’s letter.” Defendant also asserted in his answer that the letter was written in the performance of defendant’s professional duties as attorney
The sole issue is whether plaintiff’s complaint states a claim upon which relief can be granted against defendant for defamation.
A motion made pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of the plaintiff’s complaint.
Renwick v. The News and Observer Publishing Co.,
In North Carolina, publications or statements which are susceptible of but one meaning, when considered alone without innuendo, cоlloquium, or explanatory circumstances, and that tend to “disgrace and degrade the party or hold him up to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, or cause him to be shunned and avoided” are defamatory
per se. Flake v. Greensboro News Co.,
In the instant casе, plaintiff in his complaint alleges that defendant mailed a copy of a letter to the
Winston-Salem Chronicle
and that the letter was “seen and read by at least three pеrsons at the Chronicle,” specifically, the publisher, the managing editor, and a reporter. Plaintiff’s complaint sets forth the alleged defamatory portiоns of the letter, including alleged accusations by defendant that plaintiff lied to a reporter, violated the Rules of Professional Conduct, and is guilty of criminal and unethical conduct. Keeping in mind that on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, “ ‘[t]he issue is not whether a plaintiff will ultimately prevail but whether the claimant is entitled to offer evidence to support the claims,’ ”
Johnson,
In doing so, we reject defendant’s contention that plaintiff’s complaint on its face discloses in defendant’s favor the affirmative defense of absolute or qualified privilege. Although defendant correctly states that in North Carolina an attorney is absolutely privileged to publish defamatory matter in communications preliminary to a proposed judicial proceeding,
Reversed and remanded.
