Plaintiff filed this civil action claiming damages for defamation, “attempted extortion,” intentional infliction of mental distress, and unfair and deceptive practices in commerce in violation of G.S. 75-1.1. Defendant moved, pursuant to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6), that the complaint be dismissed for its failure tо state a claim for relief. The trial court granted defendant’s motion and dismissed the action. Plaintiff appealed. We affirm the decision of the trial court.
A motion to dismiss made pursuant to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint.
Sutton v. Duke,
In the present case, plaintiff alleged in his complaint that defendant had caused its attorney, M. Leann Nease, to prepare a document which accused plaintiff of obtaining property by false pretense and that the defamatory statement had been published by transmittal of the document, together with a letter from Ms. Nease, to Lawson Brown, an attorney representing plaintiffs employer, North Central Production Credit Association (NCPCA). A copy of Ms. Nease’s letter to Mr. Brown, together with a copy of the document containing the alleged defamatory statement, was attached as an exhibit to plaintiffs complaint. The letter from Ms. Nease to Mr. Brown concerned defendant NCNB’s legal position with respect to a dispute with NCPCA over the proceeds of a sale of certain farm equipment in which both NCNB and NCPCA claimed a security interest. The document referred to in plaintiffs complaint was an unfiled complaint which Ms. Nease had prepared captioned:
NCNB National Bank of North Carolina
V
North Central Production Credit Association, The United States OF America Acting Through The Farmers Home Administration of The U.S. Department of Agriculture, and Doug Harris, individually and as an employee and agent of NORTH Carolina Central Production Credit Association
The unfiled complaint also alleged facts relating to the dispute existing between NCNB and NCPCA and alleged that plaintiff had made false statements to the debtor, the owner of the equipment, *672 and to NCNB concerning the sale of the equipment and the disbursement of the proceeds thereof, and had committed unfair or deсeptive acts affecting commerce in violation of G.S. 75-1.1. The unfiled complaint alleged that NCPCA had engaged in unfair trade practices and had converted $20,500.00 to which NCNB was entitled from the sale of the equipment. The letter from Ms. Nease to Mr. Brown concluded with the following paragraph:
I have enclosed for your review a copy of the complaint that NCNB plans to file in this matter. Unless it receives from Central, by March 26, 1986, the sum of $20,500.00 plus interest, at the legal rate, from September 6, 1985, NCNB will file this complaint.
Plaintiff contends that the allegatiоns of the unfiled complaint are defamatory as to him, and that defendant caused the defamatory material to be published by sending it to the attorney for NCPCA, his employer. He asserts that his complaint was, therefore, sufficient to state a claim for relief for defamation. We disagree.
It is now well-established that defamatory statements made in the course of a judicial proceeding are absolutely privileged and will not support a civil action for defamation, even if made with malice.
Scott v. Statesville Plywood & Veneer Co.,
While statements in pleadings and other papers filed in a judicial proceeding are not privileged if they are not relevant or pertinent to the subject matter of the action, the question of relevancy or pertinency is a question of law for the courts, and the matter to which the privilege does not extend must be so palpably irrelevant to the subject matter of the controversy that no reasonable man cаn doubt its irrelevancy or impropriety. If it is so related to the subject matter of the controversy that it may become the subject of inquiry in the *673 course of the trial, the rule of absolute privilege is controlling.
Scott v. Statesville Plywood & Veneer, supra,
at 76,
In North Carolina, the phrase “judicial proceeding” has been defined broadly, encompassing more than just trials in civil actions or criminal prosecutions.
Jarman v. Offutt, supra.
The scope of the accompanying absolute privilege has been held to include not only statements made by judge, counsel and witnesses at trial,
Ramsey v. Cheek,
Plaintiff argues that the statements made on defendant’s behalf by its attorney, Ms. Nease, are not absolutely privileged because no judicial prоceedings were pending at the time the statements were made and because the statements were not pertinent to any proposed judicial proceeding. Rather, plaintiff asserts that, at most, defendant is protected by a qualified privilege. A qualified privilege exists with respect to those communications which, even though defamatory, are made in good faith and without actual malice upon a subject in which the communicating party has an interest or with respect to which he has some duty.
R. H. Bouligny, Inc. v. United Steelworkers of America,
We find support for our holding in the Restatement (Second) of the Law of Torts, Section 586, which states:
An attоrney at law is absolutely privileged to publish defamatory matter concerning another in communications preliminary to a proposed judicial proceeding, or in the institution of, or during the course and as a part of, a judicial proceeding in which he partiсipates as counsel, if it has some relation to the proceeding.
The absolute privilege extends to parties to the litigation. Section 587 of the Restatement provides:
A party to a private litigation ... is absolutely privileged to publish defamatory matter cоncerning another in communications preliminary to a proposed judicial proceeding ... if the matter has some relation to the proceeding.
The comments to the above-cited sections indicate that the privilege is based upon the public interеst of securing to all persons freedom of access to the courts to settle their private disputes, and of securing to attorneys, as officers of the court, the freedom to fully represent their clients. Both sections extend the absolute privilege to statements preliminary to proposed litigation when the statement is relevant to a proceeding which is seriously contemplated.
Our holding is in harmony with those of numerous other jurisdictions which have extended the protection of absolute privilege to relevant communications made preliminary to proposed litigation either by statute or by recognition of the Restatement view.
See, e.g., Lerette v. Dean Witter Organization, Inc.,
In the present case, the allegedly defamatory statements and the circumstances of their publication are fully set forth in plaintiffs complaint. The plеading and attachments affirmatively disclose that the statements were published by the attorney for one party to the proposed suit to an attorney for another named party which unquestionably had an interest in the controversy. The statements were clearly relevant to the issues and subject matter of the anticipated litigation, as disclosed by the unfiled complaint, in that the statements expressed the legal and factual reasons for NCNB’s position with respect thereto. Thus, plaintiffs complaint discloses that the allegedly defamatory statements were absolutely privileged, necessarily defeating his claim for defamation. Plaintiff s claim for relief for defamation was properly dismissed.
Plaintiff also argues that his complaint is sufficient to allege a claim against defendant for “the tort of attempted extortion.” He contends that the “attempted extortion” consists of the statement in Ms. Nease’s letter to Mr. Brown to the effect that defendant would file the attached complaint unless NCPCA paid, by a specified date, the amount to which defendant claimed it wаs entitled.
Extortion may be defined as wrongfully obtaining anything of value from another by threat, duress, or coercion. Black’s Law Dictionary 696 (4th Rev. Ed. 1968).
See
G.S. 14-118.4 (1986). “Illegality is the foundation on which a claim of coercion or duress must exist.”
Bell Bakeries, Inc. v. Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co.,
In his brief, plaintiff has not addressed by argument, citation of authority, or otherwise, the issues of whether the allegations of his complaint are sufficient to state claims for rеlief for intentional infliction of mental distress or for unfair and deceptive practices in commerce. As a result, he may be deemed to have abandoned his purported claims based upon those theories, as well as any contentions that the trial court еrred by dismissing them. App. R. 28;
Raleigh-Durham Airport Authority v. King,
The tort of intentional infliction of mental distress consists of (1) extreme and outrageous conduct, (2) which is intended to cause and does cause (3) severe mental distress to the plaintiff.
Dickens v. Puryear,
Similarly, whether an alleged commercial act or practice is unfair or deceptive in violation of G.S. 75-1.1 is a question of law
*677
for the court.
Hardy v. Toler,
The trial court’s dismissal of plaintiffs complaint pursuant to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6) is
Affirmed.
Judges Arnold and Greene concur.
