152 S.E. 163 | N.C. | 1930
Civil action for slander.
The evidence discloses that plaintiff was principal of Colerain High School, and defendant a member of the board of trustees of said school. In the early morning of 9 December, 1924, about 7 a.m., five of the lady teachers of said school reported to the defendant at his home that the plaintiff had wrongfully accused them the night before of having a man in their room in the teacherage, and that they had come to tender their resignations; whereupon, the defendant called the plaintiff into a conference with the school board and the lady teachers in question. It is alleged that, during said conference, the defendant lost his temper and angrily addressed the plaintiff, loud enough to be heard by all those present and others on the outside, in words in substance as follows: "Mr. Castelloe, you have committed a crime and you ought to be put on the roads."
It is further in evidence that thereafter, and during the morning of the same day, the defendant, while in conversation with the matron of the school, voluntarily repeated in substance language to the same import of and concerning the plaintiff.
About 9:15 p.m. that night the defendant came to the plaintiff at the dormitory and said: "Mr. Castelloe, we have come for your resignation," and pointing to 18 or 20 men, who were standing under a tree about 50 or 60 feet away, added: "Those men have come here after you and you had better get out of Colerain tonight," which he did.
Plaintiff says the words used by the defendant, viewed in the light of the attendant circumstances, by fair intendment, meant to charge that the plaintiff had uttered a criminal slander against the teachers in question, and that they were so understood by those who heard them. Plaintiff testified that no such insinuation was made or intended by him, and that he had only charged the parties in question with a violation of the rules of the school.
From a judgment of nonsuit entered at the close of all the evidence, the plaintiff appeals, assigning errors. Are the words "You have committed a crime and you ought to be put on the roads," addressed to one in the presence of others, and later repeated to another, actionable per se? We think so, when viewed in the light of their imputation and the circumstances under which they were uttered in the instant case.
The words spoken by the defendant, considering the manner and circumstance of their use, as pointed out in Cotton v. Fisheries ProductsCo.,
The decisions are to the effect that a publication claimed to be defamatory should be considered in the sense in which those to whom it was addressed, or who heard it, would ordinarily understand it. When thus considered, if its meaning be such as to bear but one interpretation, it is for the court to say whether or not that signification is defamatory. On the other hand, if it be capable of two meanings, one actionable and the other not, it is for the jury to determine which of the two meanings was intended and so understood by those to whom it was addressed or by whom it was heard. Washington Post Co. v. Chaloner,
Nothing was said in Deese v. Collins,
True, the defendant's evidence views the matter in a different light and undertakes to impute a less offensive meaning to the words used, but on a motion to nonsuit, we do not weigh the probable values of conflicting *457
testimony. This is a matter for the jury. S. v. Howard,
Nor can the defendant's plea of qualified privilege defeat the plaintiff's right to go to the jury. Newberry v. Willis,
Reversed.