60 So. 719 | La. | 1913
A commissioner of food and drugs was to be elected by the State Board of Health on August 6, 1909. Plaintiff was a candidate for the office; but he was not elected, as his name was not even submitted to the board, and that body chose to elect another to the position.
Plaintiff brought this suit for damages in the sum of $110,000 against the defendant, on whom he charges his defeat; his contention being that he would have been elected, as the board stood five in his favor to two against him, had it not been for influence the defendant brought to bear against him. He charges that the defendant, in order to accomplish his defeat, assailed his .good name and reputation in the community to the extent that it influenced the members of the board, who were favorable to his election to the last moments before the election was held. He alleges that one of the defendants wrote a letter in which he charged that plaintiff, as the president of the Co-operative Dental Manufacturing Company, domiciled in this city, grossly and wrongfully mismanaged the affairs of the company, as well as misapplied its funds. The letter contained a number of expressions that were anything but complimentary to the plaintiff.
Plaintiff in his petition charges that the charges that were brought against him were without justification, libelous, and unlawful, all for the purpose of injuring him and defeating him as a candidate; that, as the aspersions upon his good name came to his knowledge only a short time before the election was held on the date before mentioned, he was not prepared to meet the accusations ; that, none the less, he sought to be heard, and was not allowed that right.
Pacts Relating to the Estoppel Pleaded.
Anterior to the date of plaintiff’s candidacy, he availed- himself' of the bankrupt law and was adjudged a bankrupt. 1-Ie filed a list of his liabilities and assets; but he did not include the claim upon which he has brought this suit. The position of plaintiff is that there was no necessity under the law of his including this claim; that it is not a claim one has to transfer to the trustee, it being a claim for damages growing out of a libel.
Technically denominated, slander comes under the same rules, in the sense of the act cited, which apply to libel. The rights of action, as recited in the bankrupt act, are declaratory, and it has been held that the trustee or assignee “cannot enforce the rights of action of a peculiarly personal character.” In re Haensell (D. C.) 91 Fed. 355; Sibley v. Nason, 196 Mass. 125, 81 N. E. 887, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1173, 124 Am. St. Rep. 520, 12 Ann. Cas. 938; North Chicago St. R. Co. V. Ackley, 171 Ill. 100, 49 N. E. 222, 44 L. R. A. 180, and note.
The exceptions before noted were correctly overruled. We affirm the court’s ruling.
Privileged Communication.
Another chapter in this litigation is that, in the year 1908, the necessity of creating the office of a State Pood Commission was agitated, and the year following the office was created, and a commissioner was elected by the members of the State Board of Health, -as they were authorized to do, by statute. One of the defendants was a member of the Board of Health (Dr. Ledbetter). He is a distinguished member of the medical profession, and president of the local medical society. He favored selecting the very best man available for the position — a man who had thorough knowledge of chemistry, and not one, as was the plaintiff, with a purely theoretical knowledge of chemistry, only acquired during the courses usually followed in colleges and universities, which are entirely experimental and theoretical. This desire on the part of some of the members of the board and of citizens gave rise to discussion. The physician before named was particularly opposed to the employment of any other than a regular chemist — one who could analyze foods and drugs and determine for himself whether the goods examined should be offered to an unoffending and innocent public. There were no chemists about; they were in demand. Plaintiff was about to be elected ; it was almost certain that he would sue
The editor soon afterward gave this information to one of the members of the Board of Health, now one of the defendants in this case. The editor on the day following called on the Governor of the state and said to him, preliminarily, that he had not supported him as a candidate for the office of Governor; that he, none the less, deemed it proper to inquire of the Governor whether the plaintiff had said to him that he (plaintiff) had the support of the press as a candidate for the office in question. The Governor evidently gave no thought to the editor’s opposition or the fact that he had opposed him. He replied that he did not think that politics should have anything to do with selecting a candidate for the position; that, as it was a new office which was to be filled, he thought it advisable that the new incumbent should be met with encouragement and kind words in his new field, and should not be weighed down by unkind comments of an antagonistic press, and that that was his reason for inquiring at the time what would be the attitude of the press if plaintiff were elected. About this time the subject of the letter, to which we will refer in a moment, was mentioned in the conversation, and the Governor said, in substance, that he would be pleased to see the letter which reflected upon the competency of the plaintiff; he thought that the member of the Board of Health who had the letter should submit it to him. Upon learning this, the member of the board who had the letter called on the Governor and handed it to him to be read. From this time, the Governor ceased to take any interest in plaintiff’s candidacy; he sent for plaintiff, who called at once, and told him, in substance, that which the letter contained, and informed him that it was very serious. (This is not gleaned from the Governor’s evidence, for he was not a witness in the case; it was sworn to by other witnesses.) The Governor said to the plaintiff, when he called on him in answer to a telephone message,
Plaintiff was informed, when he appeared before the board, that the members had changed their minds; that all were against him, an'd he had no chance whatever of election. One who had not been a candidate was elected.
It does not appear that defendants were actuated by malice or with a desire of injuring any one; they sought nothing for themselves; and, from the weight of the testimony, we infer that they desired the election of another than plaintiff for the reasons before stated. That motive, considered in connection with the evidence of the case, cannot be condemned as malicious.
The damaging letter referred to above was only written by the defendant at the very earnest solicitation of the member of the Board of Health, who, even with more impressiveness than the editor before mentioned, stated that one was indifferent to his duties as a good citizen who declined to write any information which he had, and which the member of the board said was absolutely necessary in order to place the matter properly before the board, as it would not be convenient for the dentist Knapp to appear in time before the Board of Health. This letter contained the charges of mismanagement of the affairs of the company and misdirection of its funds.
It must be remembered that the plaintiff, as the president of the Co-operative Dental Manufacturing Company, had not been successful. One who undertakes' the management of a company, in case of absolute failure, is exposed to incur the ill will of those who lose their investments. He is fortunate if he escapes stinging criticism and provoking censure, for in nearly every instance all failure is followed by imputation of fraud, culpability, and damaging reproaches.
The other defendant, the member of the Board of Health, with the earnestness of his nature, thought that plaintiff should not be appointed, as he did not think that it would be to the best interest of all concerned.
We have not found malice in any respect, although in some instances the parties went further than was necessary — beyond proper moderation — but we cannot condemn defendants as men who sought willfully and without proper cause to injure a fellow man under the circumstances. As there was no malice, it becomes exceedingly difficult to hold that damaging information intended exclusively for a board, is actionable, particularly as these medical boards (both local and state) are the important and useful boards of the state.
A communication is privileged whenever an officer acted sincerely in the discharge of a public duty. We are not prepared to hold that the member of the Board of Health to whom this letter was handed, with the understanding that it would be used only for the purpose intended — that is, to be read to the Board of Health — did not act sincerely in the discharge of a public duty. From that point of view, he is not liable. White v. Nicholls, 3 How. 266, 11 L. Ed. 591.
We quote the following from the syllabus in McAllister v. Detroit Free Press Co., 76 Mich. 338, 43 N. W. 431, 15 Am. St. Rep. 318:
[4] “The truth is privileged, if published from good motives and from justifiable ends; and that which is not true, but honestly believed to be true, and published in good faith by one in the performance of public or official duty in certain cases, is also privileged.”
In the case now in hand for decision, there was no publication of the letter. True, it was handed to the Governor of the state in order to assist legitimately in the proper direction and management of these different boards.
A similar view was expressed in the following case: Mertens v. Bee Publishing Co., 5 Neb. (Unof.) 592, 99 N. W. 847.
For reasons stated, the judgment is affirmed.