195 A.D. 419 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
This is an action to recover damages for libel. The plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a traveling salesman having a certain specified territory. He was paid a salary and an allowance for traveling expenses. The complaint alleges the publication of the following libel, which by stipulation of the parties is conceded to have been mailed in due course to about 150 persons and firms in various lines of business related to the line of business of the defendant, all of whom were customers of the defendant and whose places of business were within the territory of the plaintiff:
“Announcement — Reference: James P. Browne.
“ We wish to advise you that after March 3, 1917, James P. Browne will not be connected, in any way, with us, nor authorized to represent us in any way whatsoever. We have only recently received conclusive evidence that Mr. Browne has, while in our employ and accepting salary from us, been disloyal to our interests, by endeavoring to injure our business and our relations with certain of our customers. In addition to such disloyalty, he has been repeatedly and wilfully dishonest in his transactions with us. Accordingly, we feel that as Mr. Browne may have attempted to injure us in your estimation, we should advise you of the above facts and warn you that he has been discharged from our employment for cause. Regretting the necessity for prompting the sending of this letter and trusting that no dissatisfaction, which may have been occasioned on account of his previous connection with this Company, may affect unfavorably our future business relations with you, we beg to remain.
“ Yours very truly,
“ PRÜDDEN-WINSLOW COMPANY.”
The answer pleads .justification and privileged communication. The only witness examined was the plaintiff, who
The plaintiff’s counsel lays great stress upon the charge of dishonesty, claiming that it was intended thereby to charge that the plaintiff had been guilty of embezzlement and larceny. Taken in the context in which the word was used, it would not bear that construction. Unfaithfulness to his employer and abuse of the relation of-employer and employee by attempting to divert business from the employer to a rival while being paid by the employer would be willful dishonesty in his transactions with the employer, and it was in this sense that the word was used.
The judgment' should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Dowling and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. -