87 Pa. Super. 358 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued October 21, 1925. This is an action for slander. The facts as disclosed by the record are briefly as follows: Defendants and other wholesale produce dealers are members of the Philadelphia Produce, Credit and Collection Bureau. The by-laws of the bureau provide that all bills for goods sold to any purchaser shall be due and payable on the Saturday after the sale shall have been made and that if a bill is not paid by the purchaser on or before noon of the succeeding Wednesday, the creditor, who is a member of the bureau, shall report that fact to the bureau. A member who fails to make such report is subject to a fine. Members are prohibited from selling on credit to any person or firm whose delinquency has been so reported by a member, until they have been duly notified by the secretary of the bureau that the overdue account has been paid. Failure to comply with this provision by any member subjects him to a fine. Defendants had among their customers the plaintiff company, which carries on a retail produce business in the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia, and also another customer by the name of Hartman, whose place of business was in Trenton, New Jersey. The latter was indebted to defendants in the sum *361 of $216.25. On Wednesday, July 25, 1923, defendants telephoned to the bureau that J. Hartman was indebtèd to them in the sum of $216.25. Later in the day defendants sent to the secretary of the bureau written notice that "J. Hartman — Terminal Market" was delinquent in its account with them in the sum of $216.25, although in fact plaintiff was not indebted to defendants. On the same evening there was delivered to each member of the bureau by messenger notice of the report received from defendants about plaintiff, with the result that when the president of plaintiff company went the next day to make his customary purchases he was informed by members of the bureau from who he desired to purchase produce that his name was on the "black list," and that he could not purchase any goods on credit. Not being prepared to buy for cash he was unable to obtain any produce that morning and could not supply his customers that day. When Mr. Hartman called defendant's attention to the situation, they discovered their error and notified the bureau, which immediately sent a notice to its members, withdrawing plaintiff from the "black list." In plaintiff's statement of claim there was no averment of any special damage resulting to plaintiff from the alleged slanderous words, nor was there any proof of such damage at the trial. The claim was for general damages flowing from words said to be actionable per se. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $500 and the present appeal is from the judgment entered thereon.
Counsel for appellant states at the beginning of his written argument that the question involved in this appeal is the nature of the communication; that if qualifiedly privileged, the assignments of error must be sustained; and if not, the appeal should be dismissed. The learned trial judge instructed the jury that the communication was not qualifiedly privileged. It is well settled in this State that when words are spoken of another *362
which tend to injure him in his business or calling, they are slanderous per se and neither express malice nor special damage need be proved. (Holland v. Flick,
A privileged communication is one made upon a proper occasion, from a proper motive, in a proper manner and upon reasonable or probable cause: Conroy v. Pittsburgh Times,
But there is another reason why it was not privileged. If one merchant writes to another asking for information as to the credit standing of a third person, the answer to such inquiry is deemed to be made on a proper occasion. If, instead of waiting for formal inquiries, members of an association of merchants agree to exchange such information voluntarily with one another, the situation is not altered, because this may be construed to amount to an outstanding inquiry on the part of each member of all others with the same force and effect as though a specific inquiry had been made in any given case. Where, however, the information is furnished pursuant to the terms of an agreement, the manifest purpose of which is to compel the payment of delinquent accounts, the privileged character of the communication is destroyed. The fundamental purpose of the association of which defendants were members was not only to protect its members against irresponsible debtors, but one of its avowed purposes was to compel prompt payment of debts by a species of boycott. While the legal effect of such a provision has not been declared by the appellate courts of this State, and the decisions of courts of other jurisdictions are not in harmony upon the subject, *364
we are of opinion that the decided weight of authority supports the following statement of the law in Newell on Slander and Libel, 4th Ed., p. 441: "Nor are such communications privileged where they are made use of to blacklist delinquent persons with a view to coercing payment of debts, rather than protection of the members." In American and English Annotated Cases, Vol. 2, p. 57, the law is summarized from a number of cases there cited, and it is stated that "a communication by a member of a credit association to the other members, black-listing a person as a delinquent debtor, is libelous if it is made for the purpose of coercing the payment of a debt." This doctrine finds support in Weston v. Barnicoat,
All of the assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.