MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Edward M. Korry, former United States Ambassador to Chile, charges in this diversity action that defendant International Telephone & Telegraph (“ITT”) through its employees, and defendant Harold Geneen, its president, along with others not charged, consрired to and did injure him through various false statements. 1 Defendants have moved to dismiss, raising statute of limitations objections and attacking the sufficiency of each of plaintiff’s claims. 2 We dismiss the complaint but grant plaintiff leave to replead some claims.
The complaint purports to state a cause of action on five different theories. The first claim, which plaintiff characterizes as based on a theory of prima facie tort, contains allegations relied upon in each of the other claims. Taking those allegations as true, it emerges that in 1973 ITT employees made false statements before three United States Senate Committees and Subcommittees and to persons assoсiated with those committees, to the effect that (a) ITT had not been involved in efforts to subvert Chilean elections or undermine the government of Salvatore Allende, but (b) that Ambassador Korry knew of, and had responsibility for, ITT involvement in such efforts. Thеse statements were part of a larger course of conduct calculated to injure Kor *195 ry, upon which ITT embarked in order to protect its reputation, protect an ITT claim filed with the Overseas Private Investment Corporаtion (“OPIC”), shelter itself from possible civil and criminal liability, and to satisfy a vindictive desire to harm Korry. The result was the destruction of Korry’s ability to pursue a career in either international relations or journalism. The first claim contains general allegations that the conspiratorial “course of conduct” continues into the present and was not confined to the making of statements. Nowhere, however, does it mention any act other than the making of statements, or desсribe any statement made after April of 1973.
The other four claims rely on the core of facts set forth in the first. The second claim, styled as an action for damages for interference with economic relations, contains the added allegation that the defendants’ acts were calculated to, and did, interfere with an employment contract Korry entered into in June, 1973, with the United Nations Association. The third claim is for damages for intentional infliction of emotiоnal distress. The fourth, a slander claim, additionally alleges that in December, 1976, one Robert Berellez, an ITT employee, told Justice Department employees that Korry had been privy to ITT plans to interfere with Chilean politics; thаt at an ITT shareholders’ meeting in May, 1977, one Howard Aibel, another ITT employee, falsely charged Korry with fabricating reports about ITT operations in Chile; that defendant Geneen, at the same shareholders’ meeting, called Korry а communist and described him as “a bitter, disillusioned man, who has forsaken his country.” In his fifth and final claim, plaintiff invokes all the facts previously asserted in support of a demand for injunctive relief.
Defendants move to dismiss the first claim, based on prima fаcie tort, for failure to state a cause of action. We grant that motion. Plaintiff alleges that defendants’ actions were motivated by four distinct desires: (a) to injure him; (b) to protect ITT’s reputation; (c) to shield the corporation from possible liability; and (d) to protect ITT’s OPIC claim. Since it is well settled that a claim of prima facie tort does not lie where the defendants’ action has any motive other than a desire to injure a plaintiff,
Benton v. Kennedy-Van Suan Mfg. & Eng. Corp.
(1st Dept.1956)
Defendants contend that plaintiff’s second and third claims are time-barred. We agree. In applying statutes of limitations, we look to the essence of plaintiff’s claim, not thе label he chooses to tag onto it.
Morrison v. National Broadcasting Co.
(1967)
To avoid this result, plaintiff urges that the claimed wrongs are part of a “continuing conspiracy.” He contends that the Statute of Limitations should not begin to run as to any aсt until the course of conduct had ended — in this case May, 1977. We cannot accept this reasoning. Periods of limitations must, by statute, “be computed from the time the cause of action accrued.” C.P.L.R. § 203(a). In a civil conspiracy action, the conspiracy itself is not actionable, but recovery may be had for the injury caused by specific acts. A person harmed may sue at the time each such act occurs, without having to wait until the termination of the consрiracy. The Statute of Limitations therefore commences to run with respect to each act when it occurs.
*196
Rutkin v. Reinfeld
(2d Cir. 1956)
Our holding that statements made prior to July 18, 1976 are not actionable leaves the second and third claims without substance. Remaining are only conclusory allegations that injury-causing acts took place on or after that date. Accordingly, those causes of action are dismissed. We do, however, grant plaintiff leave to repleаd them within 30 days if he can allege, with the requisite specificity, actionable wrongs attributable to defendants, committed on or after July 18, 1976.
Defendants also move to dismiss the fourth claim, for slander, for failure to state a cause of actiоn. Specifically, they contend that (a) plaintiff has not pleaded the objectionable language with the requisite specificity, and (b) that he has pleaded neither special damage nor language that is slanderous per sе. We reject the former contention but accept the latter. To be sure, as defendants assert, plaintiff has not pleaded the purportedly defamatory statements in haec verba, but since New York’s strict pleading rule for slаnder does not apply in this court, he is under no requirement to do so. F.R.C.P. 8(a),
Pierre v. Printing Developments, Inc.
(S.D.N.Y.1977)
To state a claim for slander, however, plaintiff must plead either speсial damages or language that is slanderous per se.
Gurtler v. Union Parts Mfg. Co.
(1956)
*197
Plaintiff also attempts to portray as slanderous per se the statements of Berellez, to Justice Department officials, and Aibel, at the shareholders’ meeting, concerning his knowledge of ITT operations in Chile. Plaintiff contends that these statements were meant, and in fact understood, to charge him with the crime of perjury.
4
See Restatemеnt 2d, Torts (1976) § 571. Since those statements are not defamatory on that theory without reference to the extrinsic fact of the contents of plaintiff’s prior testimony, they are not actionable per se.
5
See
O’Connell v. Press Publishing Co.
(1915)
Because the statements аre not slanderous per se, plaintiff must plead special damage to state a valid slander claim.
Gurtler, supra.
We find that he has failed to do so. He alleges that the defamations destroyed his livelihood, injured his reputation, and caused him emotional distress, to an undifferentiated total of $2 million in damages. Of these injuries, only the lost earnings could constitute special damages.
6
Restatement 2d, Torts (1976) § 575. Such a generalized allegation does not suffice as a pleading of sрecial damage. F.R.C.P. 9(g),
El Meson Espanol v. N.Y.M. Corp.
(2d Cir. 1975)
Finally, defendants move for dismissal of the fifth claim, for injunctive relief. Sensitivity to the constitutional implications of prior restraints on speech,
Near
v.
Minnesota
(1931)
In summary: We dismiss the first claim for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted; the second and third claims for failure to plead any acts within the statutory period of limitations; the fourth for failure to plead special damages; and the fifth because of constitutional considerations. We grant leave to amend the complaint within 30 days to allege acts ocсurring on or after July 18, 1976 in support of the second and third claims, and to allege special damage in regards to the fourth claim. The first and fifth claims are dismissed without leave to replead.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The uncharged co-conspirators are alleged to include Richard Nixon, John Mitchell, John Erlichman, and Richard Helms.
. Because of our disposition of the motion, we need not consider other arguments raised by defendants.
. Plaintiff contends that until June 1975, defendants “fraudulently concealеd” material facts so as to prevent him from being able to bring this action. He urges that this “concealment” should toll the Statute of Limitations. See
Fitzgerald v. Seamans
(D.D.C.1974)
. While plaintiff depicts these statements as slanderous per se in the complaint, he did not do so in either his responsive papers to this motion or upon oral argument.
. Plaintiff has not suggested that the Justice Department officials or the audience at the shareholders’ meeting were familiar with his prior testimony. We therefore need not consider whether such knowledge — not held by the general public — would suffice to render the Aibel and/or Berellez statements defamatory on their face and actionable per se.
Defendants have not claimed that the December, 1976 statements to Justice Department officials were privileged, and we do not pass upon that issue.
. Recovery can, of course, be had for emotional distress caused by an otherwise actionable defamation. Restatement 2d, Torts, (1976) § 623.
