This сase concerns provisions in the North Carolina General Statutes, N.C.G.S. § 7A-543 (1995) (repealed and recodified as N.C.G.S. § 7B-301 (1999)), 1 that require anyone suspecting child abuse or neglect 2 to report that behavior to the Department of Social Services. Further, this case examines the rigor of statutory immunity from civil or criminal liability for a person reporting such abuse or neglect, as well as that of a statutory presumption of good faith, codified in N.C.G.S. § 7A-550 (now N.C.G.S. § 7B-309 (1999)). It is clear that the legislative intent of these statutes is that citizens are to be vigilant in assuring the safety and welfare of the children of North Carolina. We therefore conclude that such policy compels a significant evidentiary burden for those who challenge the presumption that people who report such abuse or neglect do so in good faith.
The circumstances giving rise to this lawsuit arose in May 1997 in a J.C. Penney department stоre. Defendant Harris worked at the catalogue-layaway counter. Plaintiff, accompanied by her fifteen-month-old child, came to the store to pay for and pick up an item she had put on layaway. Defendant Harris retrieved the wrong item and mistakenly reported to plaintiff the balance due. Neither she nor defendant Harris realized the error until after plaintiff had written her check. When plaintiff did so, however, she berated Harris, who apologized and retrieved the proper item. As it was more expensive, plaintiff had to rewrite a check for the correct amount. Plaintiff alleged that defendant Harris’ unprofessional attitude spurred her to ask for the name of Harris’ supervisor; Harris obliged. Meanwhile, plaintiff’s child had become restive, and plaintiff reportedly yelled at the child, picked her uр off the counter where she had been sitting, and slammed her back down. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff and her child left the store.
The parties’ accounts differ as to the actual danger threatened the child by her mother’s treatment of her at the store, but it sufficiently alarmed defendant Harris that she subsequently notified a representative of the Guilford County Department of Social Services (DSS). The representative requested the name and address of plaintiff, which defendant Harris obtained from plaintiffs check.
Plaintiff was informed by DSS that a complaint had been made against her for abuse and neglect of her child, and an investigation was initiated that ultimately lasted some two months.
In her complaint and affidavit, plaintiff accused defendant Harris of reporting her to DSS in retaliation for her requesting the name of Harris’ supervisor, and shе sued
In her answer and verified responses to interrogatories, defendant Harris asserted that she had honestly reported her perception of plaintiff’s actions to the proper parties and that her report was “made in good faith, without malice, pursuant to a moral and social duty to make such statements.” The qualified privilege afforded such statements, she averred, barred plaintiff’s claim for slander per se.
The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The Court of Appeals affirmed the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant J.C. Penney and in favor of defendant Harris as to intentional infliction of emotional distress. It reversed summary judgment on plaintiff’s claim against defendant Harris for slander per se and remanded for trial on that issue.
This Court granted defendant Harris’ petition for discretionary review, which raised the single question whether the facts allegеd in plaintiff’s complaint and affidavit supporting her claim for slander per se were sufficient to overcome the statutory presumption of defendant’s good faith in reporting child abuse or neglect.
False accusations of crime or offenses involving moral turpitude are actionable as slander
per se. Penner v. Elliott,
Government has no nobler duty than that of protecting its country’s lifeblood — the children. For this reason, all fifty states have codified mandatory reporting statutes that impose a duty to report suspected or observed child abuse upon specified persons or institutions, particularly those that work regularly with children.
See
Danny R. Veilleux,
Annotation: Validity, Construction, and Application of State Statute Requiring Doctor or Other Person to Report Child Abuse,
Affirming that distinguishing adults from children for purposes of definitions under the Juvenile Court Act, N.C.G.S. § 7A-278 (1969), passes muster under the Equal Protection Clause, Justice Huskins wrote in
In re Walker,
N.C.G.S. § 7A-543 (now N.C.G.S. § 7B-301) imposes an affirmative duty for anyone with “cause to suspect” child abuse or neglect to report that conduct to the department of social services. It provides, in pertinent part:
Any person or institution who has cause to suspect that any juvenile is abused, neglected, or dependent, as defined by G.S. 7A-517 [now 7B-101] . . . shall report the case of that juvenile to the Director of the Department of Social Services in the county where the juvenile resides or is found. . . . The report shall include information as is known to the person making it including . . . information which the person making the report believes might be helpful in establishing the need for protective services or court intervention.
N.C.G.S. § 7A-543, para. 1. In order to encourage people to report circumstances that prompt them to believe a child is in jeopardy, N.C.G.S. § 7A-550 (now N.C.G.S. § 7B-309) provides immunity from liability to those who act in accordance with the reporting statute. Notably, in addition, this latter section presumes the reporter’s good faith:
Anyone who makes a report pursuant to this Article, cooperates with the county department of social services in a protective services inquiry or investigation, ... or otherwise participates in the program authorized by this Article, is immune from any civil or criminal liability that might otherwise be incurred or imposed for such action provided that the person was acting in good faith. In any proceeding involving liability, good faith is presumed.
N.C.G.S. § 7A-550 (1995) (emphasis added).
Read without this last sentence, these two provisions together codify a “qualified or conditionally privileged communication” as recognized at common law, “ ‘[t]he essential elements [of which] . . . are good faith, an interest to be upheld, a statement limited in its scope to this purpose, a proper occasion, and publication in a proper manner and to proper parties only.’ ”
Stewart v. Nation-Wide Check Corp.,
Just as public policy underpins the immunity provided under these statutes, so in the common law “[t]he great underlying principle of the doctrine of privileged communications rests in public policy.”
Alexander v. Vann,
Similarly, under sections 7A-543 and -550, when the statutory steps are followed, the responsibility to report suspected child abuse is conjoined with immunity from civil or criminal liability. Equally important, this responsibility, when met by complying with those requisites, is conjoined with the statutory
presumption
that such reports are made in good faith. Thus, the state interest in protecting minors from abuse and neglect
Significantly, the reрorting statutes together provide immunity not merely
conditional upon
proof of good faith, but a “good faith” immunity, one which endows the reporter with the mandatory
3
pre
sumption
that he or she acted in good faith.
See Lehman v. Stephens,
One purpose of summary judgment is to bring an action to an early decision on its merits, avoiding the delay and expense of trial when no material facts are at issue.
E.g., Harris v. Walden,
Briefly, our review of the propriety of summary judgment retraces these rules: Summary judgment is properly granted when the forecast of evidence “reveals no genuine issue as to any material fact, and when the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of
law Koontz v. City of Winston-Salem,
On her motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s claim of slander
per se,
defendant was entitled to immunity and to the presumption of good faith once she showed she had complied with the reporting statutes by having “cause to suspect”
4
child
On a motion for summary judgment, when the movant, charged with slander, is endowed with the presumption of good faith— whether, in this case, by a statutory presumption benefiting reporters of child abuse,
e.g., Davis v. Durham City Schs.,
The burden of production and the quantum of evidence that must be shown to overcome a presumption is stated in Rule 301 of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence:
In all civil actions and proceedings when not otherwise provided for by statute, by judicial decision, or by these rules, a presumption imposes on the party against whom it is directed the burden of going forward with evidence to rebut or meet the presumption .... The burden of going forward is satisfied by the introduction of evidence sufficient to, permit reasonable minds to conclude that the presumed fact does not exist. If the party against whom a presumption operates fails to meet the burden of producing evidence, the presumed fact shall be deemed proved....
N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 301 (emphasis added); see also Kenneth S. Broun, Brandis & Broun on North Carolina Evidence § 49, at 158 (“Where only the burden of going forward is placed upon the opponent, as in Rule 301, that burden is satisfied by the introduction of evidence ‘sufficient to permit reasonable minds to conclude that the presumed fact does not exist.’ ”). The official commentary to this rule of evidence states:
Proof of the basic fact [compliance with N.C.G.S. § 7A-543 (now N.C.G.S. § 7B-301)] not only discharges the proponent’s burden of producing evidence of the prеsumed fact [good faith] but also places upon the opponent the burden of producing evidence that the presumed fact does not exist. If the opponent does not introduce any evidence, or the evidence is not sufficient to permit reasonable minds to conclude that the presumed fact does not exist, the proponent is entitled to a peremptory instruction[ 5 ] that the presumed fact shall be deemed proved.
N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 301 official commentary (emphasis added).
Evidence offered to mеet or rebut the presumption of good faith must be sufficient by virtue of its reasonableness, not by mere supposition. It must be factual, not hypothetical; supported by fact, not by surmise. If plaintiff’s forecast of evidence of malice is “not sufficient to permit reasonable minds to conclude” that the reporter’s presumed good faith was nonexistent, then summary judgment for defendant is proper.
In order to overcome the presumрtion of good faith that by virtue of the statute inhered to defendant’s properly reporting what she saw, it was incumbent on plaintiff to show defendant’s actual malice. “If plaintiff cannot meet his burden of showing actual malice, . . . privilege . . . bars any recovery for the communication, even if the communication is false.”
Clark,
Actual malice may be proven by evidence of ill-will or personal hostility on the part оf the declarant or by a showing that the declarant published the defamatory statement with knowledge that it was false, with reckless disregard for the truth or with a high degree of awareness of its probable falsity.
Kwan-Sa You v. Roe,
Although summary judgment is rarely appropriate in actions like defamation in which the litigant’s state of mind, motive, or subjeсtive intent is an element of plaintiff’s claim,
e.g., Proffitt v. Greensboro News & Record, Inc.,
We hold that the trial court, in surveying the materials before it on defendant’s motion for summary judgment, properly granted summary judgment to defendant Harris on the issue of slander per se. Viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, the evidence forecast in the parties’ pleadings, affidavits, and answers to interrogatories shows no genuine issue of material fact. Because defendant’s compliance with the reporting statutes entitled her to immunity from civil liability, plaintiff’s claim against her for slander per se was barred. Further, the statutory presumption of defendant’s good faith remained unrebutted where plaintiff failed to adduce facts sufficient to permit reasonable minds to conclude that defendant acted with actual malice.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Effective 1 July 1999, for acts committed on or after that date, the General Assembly recodified thе North Carolina Juvenile Code by repealing all existing statutory provisions, including those from chapter 7A cited in this opinion, and adding them into new chapter 7B. Act of Oct. 27, 1998, ch. 202, pt. Ill, secs. 5-6, pt. XIV, sec. 37(b), 1998 N.C. Sess. Laws 695, 742, 895. The acts in this case were committed in May 1997; thus, the pertinent statutes in this opinion reflect the codification in effect at that time. Where applicable, we have added a parenthetical indicating thе new statute number.
. The statute specifies a child “abused, neglected, or dependent, as defined by G.S. 7A-517 [now N.C.G.S. § 7B-101 (1999)].” N.C.G.S. § 7A-543. Our use of the phrase “child abuse or neglect” incorporates by reference the definitions of all three situations as stated in that statute.
. The difference between “permissive” and “mandatory” presumptions — both rebuttable — is that with the former, the basic fact underlying the presumption has been established, but thе presumed fact may or may not be found to exist; in the latter, “[once] the basic fact has been established, the presumed... fact must be found unless sufficient evidence of its nonexistence is forthcoming.” Kenneth S. Broun, Brandis & Broun on North Carolina Evidence § 44, at 148 (5th ed. 1998). “[T]he only questions [as to their distinction are] . . . the quantum of rebutting evidence required and the effect on burdens of proof.” Id. at 149, n.200.
. Notably, this phrase gives wide margin to whatever prompts the reporter to notify DSS. By contrast with “reasonable cause to believe or suspect” in the statutes of many other states,
see
Danny R. Veilleux,
Annotation: Validity, Construction, and Application of State Statute Requiring Doctor or Other Person to Report Child Abuse,
. In the context of a summary judgment proceeding, entitlement to a “peremptory instruction” means simply that the fact is deemed proved for purposes of the burden of production.
