113 S.E. 570 | N.C. | 1922
This is an action of slander.
Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that he resides in Pasquotank County, and has lived there since he was twelve years of age, he now being fifty-two years old, and that he has always borne a good character and reputation among his neighbors and in the community where he made his home, and that he deserved the same.
That the defendant resides in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, and has for a number of years.
That in December of the year 1920 the defendant came to the home of the plaintiff and, in the presence of John Baker and divers other persons, spoke of and concerning the plaintiff in the following language: "You are stealing my corn and carrying it away"; and defendant asked the plaintiff didn't he (plaintiff) promise not to move any of the crops before he had settled up with him (defendant), and plaintiff replied: "I have not removed an ear of corn, Mr. Winslow." Defendant replied: "You are the lyingest and most vicious old devil I ever met up with — you have been stealing my rent corn all the year and attending your crop on it, and lying about it. You are a damn old lying, thievish rascal." The plaintiff ordered the defendant to go into the road, and he left and went into the road, and then returned and said, "I hate to say so, but you are a damned old lying son of a bitch."
That the defendant intended to charge, and did charge, this plaintiff as being a thief, and guilty of the high crime of larceny.
That the defendant intended to charge, and did charge, the plaintiff with the crime of larceny, to humiliate and defame and ruin his good name and character among his fellow-men.
That the charges made by the defendant were false and malicious, and were made for the purpose of humiliating and degrading the plaintiff, and to ruin his good name and fame in the community in which he lives.
That by reason of the defendant's malicious, slanderous, and false charges made against this plaintiff, he has been greatly damaged.
Plaintiff further alleges that he has suffered damages in a large sum for which he prays judgment.
The charge relating to stealing the crops grew out of the relations between the parties, the defendant being the landlord, or principal, and the plaintiff his tenant, or cropper, the charge being that plaintiff had stolen a part of the crop which belonged to the defendant.
Defendant answered and denied the alleged slander. He admitted that the plaintiff now resides in Pasquotank County, North Carolina; that the defendant had not sufficient knowledge or information to form *4 a belief of the other allegations set out in the complaint, as to the plaintiff's former character and reputation, and therefore denies the same.
Defendant then answers further that, again insisting that he had made no such charges against the plaintiff as outlined and set forth in the complaint, this defendant insists that each and every utterance he has made of and concerning the plaintiff at any time has been only of such character as is consistent with the truth, and was true in every particular.
That plaintiff, while a tenant of defendant, without paying his rent and advancements, and without notifying defendant, and against defendant's express orders, and in violation of his agreement, had removed, or caused or permitted to be removed, a part of the crops. All of which this defendant pleads in mitigation, and pleads, as well, the truth of any utterances made by him in justification and bar of plaintiff's right of recovery.
There was evidence tending to support the allegations and denials of the respective parties. The jury returned the following verdict:
"1. Did defendant, in substance, speak of the plaintiff the language alleged in the complaint? Answer: `Yes.'
"2. If so, was same false? Answer: `Yes.'
"3. What damages, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: `$1,925.'"
Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the defendant appealed, after assigning errors.
After stating the case: We will consider only the exceptions mentioned and discussed in the appellant's brief, the others being abandoned either expressly or by the terms of our rule. Rule 34 (
The defendant's first exception, as stated in the record and his brief, was taken to that part of the charge of the court as to the damages, the particular ground of the objection being that the court, in its instructions, permitted the jury to include in the damages, those of the plaintiff's mental anguish or suffering. The charge is clearly sustained by the authorities. In Fields v. Bynum,
The next exception is equally untenable. This exception, as stated by plaintiff's counsel, was taken to that portion of the charge of the court which permits a recovery of punitive damages if the jury should find defendant, in uttering the words, "was actuated by malice." The ground of objection to the charge being the failure of the court to distinguish between implied malice (for which punitive damages are not recoverable) and actual malice, upon which alone such damages may be predicated. For this he cites Stanford v. Grocery Co.,
The next exception is taken to that supposed failure of the court to place the burden of proof as to the third issue upon the plaintiff. Reading and interpreting the charge as a whole, it is clearly to be inferred that this was done, expressly as to the first two issues, and, by clear implication, as to the third. An intelligent jury could not have concluded, under the charge, that the burden was on the defendant to prove the damages, but that it rested upon the plaintiff himself. If the defendant desired more specific instructions, he should have asked for them. Simmonsv. Davenport,
The next exception was taken to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict because it was what is called a "quotient verdict." The *9
motion was based on the affidavit of the clerk of the court that R. L. Griffin and two other jurors said in his presence and hearing that each of the jurors stated in writing what he was willing to give, the several amounts being then added together and the result divided by twelve, and that the jury returned as their verdict the amount so found. The affidavit of the clerk, the record states, was admitted and considered by the court over the objection of the plaintiff. The judge declined to hear or consider the affidavits of jurors upon this question, and made this entry in the minutes of the court: "The court heard and considered the affidavit of the clerk, and found the facts to be true as therein stated, and that the verdict was arrived at in the manner described. Upon this finding of fact, the court declined, as a matter of law, to set aside the verdict. The court found as a fact that there was no influence brought upon the jury, or misconduct on the part of the jury in arriving at their verdict, other than as set out in the above findings." The affidavit of the clerk as to what the jurors said was incompetent, and should not have been heard, or considered by the judge. If the jurors could not be heard to impeach their own verdict directly by affidavits, we are unable to understand how it could be done indirectly by affidavit as to what three of them had said in the hearing of the clerk. This is rank hearsay, and the court will not listen to what they thus say when, if they had been under oath, and their evidence subjected to the ordinary tests, they would not be heard. It is familiar learning that jurors cannot be heard to impeach their verdict. If that were allowed, law-suits would seldom be determined. Coxe v. Singleton,
The record states that the court declined, as a matter of law, to set aside the verdict. By this the judge meant that while he had found the affidavit of the clerk to be true, it was not competent for him to consider it, on the motion to set aside the verdict, because otherwise it would, in effect, allow jurors to impeach their own verdict, which they cannot do. As thus understood, the ruling was correct. Purcell v. R. R.,
The last exception is to the admission of testimony concerning the wealth of the defendant. This was competent for the jury to consider on the question of punitive damages. 17 R.C.L., sec. 201; Reeves v. *10 Winn,
We have held that the correct issues in actions to recover damages for slander, where the words alleged are actionable per se, and in which justification is not pleaded and privilege is not claimed, are:
1. Did the defendant speak of and concerning the plaintiff the words in substance alleged in the complaint?
2. If so, what damage is the plaintiff entitled to recover?
If the first issue is answered "No," the case is at an end. If answered "Yes," the law, in the absence of justification, says that the charge is false and malicious, and it is then the duty of the jury to award compensatory damages, and they may, in addition, award punitive damages if there is actual malice, which may be inferred by the jury in some cases from the circumstances. Stanford v. Grocery Co.,
If justification is pleaded, the issues are:
1. Did the defendant speak of and concerning the plaintiff the words in substance, as alleged in the complaint?
2. If so, were they true?
3. What damages, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover?
If the first issue is answered "No," or the second "Yes," there can be no recovery; and if the first is answered "Yes," and the second "No," the jury may award damages. This is true because the utterance of words actionable per se implies malice, and in the absence of a plea of justification, or when the plea is entered and the issue is answered against the defendant, the law says the words are false. Hamilton v. Nance,
The case was hotly contested throughout, but those considered by us embrace all of the material exceptions upon which reliance appears to have been placed by the defendant, and we find that none of them is tenable, for the reasons we have stated.
The words of the defendant, used by him in the presence of others, which it was intended they should, and which they did hear, the jury said were not only not justified but false, and besides being unjustifiable and false, they were uttered maliciously about the plaintiff before bystanders, and to humiliate and degrade him among his friends and neighbors there, and they no doubt had the intended effect. It is no wonder that the jury awarded the plaintiff a full verdict. He appears to have deserved it.
There is no error in the case, or record, and it will be so certified.
No error.