165 So. 616 | Miss. | 1936
Lead Opinion
Appellant brought this action in the circuit court of Hinds county against appellee to recover damages for an alleged slander of him by appellee. Appellee's demurrer to the declaration was sustained, and appellant declining to plead further, final judgment was rendered dismissing the cause. From that judgment, appellant prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant was president of the North American Mutual Insurance Company, which company was engaged in the writing of health and accident insurance. Appellee was engaged in the same character of business. W.E. Palmer was appellee's agent to solicit insurance and collect premiums. The declaration charges the alleged defamation in this language: "That on or about the said 8th day of July, 1935, the defendant, through its duly authorized agent Palmer, went to the home of Lottie Robinson, and others in the City of Canton, for the purpose of soliciting of and from the said Lottie Robinson, and others, an application, or applications, for life and health insurance in its own said company and for the purpose of collecting premiums. That at the said time and place the said agent Palmer, then and there acting for and on behalf of said defendant in the course of his employment and in the furtherance of the business of the said defendant and while actively soliciting applications for policies for and on behalf of said defendant, saw a policy *826 which had been theretofore written by the North American Mutual Insurance Company, the mere sight of which provoked and aroused the said agent Palmer, and without any reason, excuse or justification the said agent then and there acting for his said master, and in the direct line of his employment, and in the presence and hearing of the said Lottie Robinson and various and sundry persons without any justification whatsoever, did falsely, maliciously, carelessly, and willfully speak, publish and declare, in the presence and hearing of various and sundry persons then and there present, the following wicked, infamous, false, and defamatory slander of and concerning the plaintiff, to-wit: That said policy, meaning the policy of the said North American Mutual Insurance Company, was no good; that said company was no good, and that the president of said company, meaning the plaintiff, was put in jail for doing some crooked work while working for another company and that as soon as he, meaning the plaintiff, got out of jail, he, meaning the plaintiff, organized the said North American Mutual Insurance Company, and that he, the said plaintiff, had beat an old negro out of his money, and would beat the policy holders of said North American Mutual Insurance Company of Jackson, Mississippi, out of money, meaning thereby to charge, and did in fact charge and convey the impression that the plaintiff, as a representative of an Insurance Company, had beaten people out of money for which he had been sent to jail, and maliciously intending to convey the impression that the said plaintiff in his said employment had committed a crime against the laws of the state."
The demurrer was sustained upon the ground that Palmer, in uttering the language set out in the declaration, was acting beyond the scope of his authority, and therefore did not bind the appellant, his principal. In Loper v. Yazoo M.V.R. Co.,
In Davis v. Price,
Was Palmer's tort one of the normal risks of appellee's business? Putting it differently, should appellee have reasonably anticipated it as a probable occurrence? We think this question must be answered in the negative. Suppose Palmer had committed an assault and battery upon appellant with the view of getting rid of a competitor, or, for the same reason, had embodied the defamatory language in writing and published it, which would have been a crime, we think it clear that he would have been acting beyond the scope of his authority. We are unable to see any difference in principle in an attempt to destroy a competitor in that manner and an attempt to destroy one as Palmer did.
Craft v. Magnolia Stores Co.,
Hines v. Shumaker,
We think the difference between that case and the present case is that the action of the superintendent there naturally grew out of the authority conferred upon him by his principal, although not expressly authorized. The principal could have reasonably anticipated the probability of such action, therefore it was one of the normal risks of the business.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
This defect in the declaration was specifically pointed out in one paragraph of the demurrer thereto.
Dissenting Opinion
From the quoted part of the declaration in the majority opinion, it appears that Palmer, the authorized agent of the Industrial Life Health Insurance Company, on or about July 8, 1935, went to the home of Lottie Robinson, in the city of Canton, Mississippi, for the purpose of *830 soliciting from her and others an application or applications for life and health insurance, and for the purpose of collecting premiums. It was, therefore, for the purpose for which Palmer was employed that he went to the home of Lottie Robinson, and uttered the slanderous statements against Hand and the insurance company represented by him for the purpose of securing for his (Palmer) company business which had been procured by Hand for his company. It is alleged that said agent, Palmer, then acting for and on behalf of said defendant, and while actively soliciting applications for policies on behalf of said defendant, saw a policy which had been written by the North American Mutual Insurance Company, of which Hand was president, and proceeded to utter the slander set out in the majority opinion that said policy (meaning the policy of the North American Mutual Insurance Company) was no good; that said company was no good, and that the president had been put in jail for doing some crooked work while working for another company, and that he had beaten an old negro out of his money, and would beat the policyholders of the North American Mutual Insurance Company out of their money, etc., by which Palmer meant to charge that Hand, as a representative of an insurance company, had committed a crime against the laws of the state.
If these statements contained in the quoted statement in the majority opinion from the declaration do not bring Palmer within the purview of our law making the master responsible for the torts of his servants committed in the course of their employment in the furtherance of the master's business, then it is difficult to conceive of language that would state a case.
The authorities relied upon in the majority opinion do not sustain it, but, on the contrary, appear to sustain the appellant's view. The case of Loper v. Yazoo M.V.R. Co.,
I do not conceive that the statement quoted from A.L.I. Restatement, Agency, section 229, was intended to change the law announced in this state.
In Richberger v. American Express Co.,
The cases of Walters v. Stonewall Cotton Mills,
It is said in the majority opinion that the case of Hines v. Shumaker,
I think the judgment should be reversed, and the demurrer overruled. *834