101 S.E. 97 | N.C. | 1919
This was an action for libel, brought by the plaintiff, chairman of the board of education of Avery County, against the defendant Carr, owner and publisher of the "Mountaineer and Avery Herald," a newspaper published in Avery County, and the defendants, Guy and Baird, who were the cashier and assistant cashier of the Avery County Bank. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's evidence the court granted a motion for nonsuit, from which the plaintiff appealed. The defendant Carr, owner and publisher of "The Mountaineer and Avery Herald," at Newland, N.C. published an article therein which charged that the county superintendent of education had no right to pay out of the county school funds the expenses of the chairman of the county board of education to the teachers' assembly at Charlotte. The plaintiff, who was chairman of the county board of education, called upon the defendant Carr to publish his proofs, and he thereupon printed an affidavit by the defendants Guy and Baird, cashier and assistant cashier of the Avery County Bank, sworn to before a notary public, that the bank had paid a voucher to the plaintiff signed by him as chairman of the board of education and by the superintendent of public instruction of the county, which voucher stated on its face that it was to pay the expenses of the plaintiff for the trip to the (580) educational meeting at Charlotte in November, 1917.
At the trial the plaintiff offered evidence of the publication of the affidavit in the paper; that no such voucher had ever been issued *622 or authorized to be issued, or had been paid by the bank, and also put in evidence the monthly statements of the bank, with the accompanying vouchers issued by the county board of education, and paid by the bank, and stubs of all vouchers issued by the board, which showed no such voucher.
The exhibition of the affidavit to the notary public and to Carr was a publication by the defendants Guy and Baird, Logan v. Hodges,
The publication was not absolutely privileged, for it was not in the performance of public service, in which case, notwithstanding proof of the falsity of the charge, and actual malice, an action cannot be maintained thereon. It was qualifiedly privileged, because, though the defendant was under no legal obligation to act, it was a publication required by the public good if the charge were true. In cases of qualified privilege the falsehood of the charge will not of itself be sufficient to establish malice, for there is a presumption that the publication was made bona fide.Fields v. Bynum,
But in cases of qualified privilege, though the falsity of the charge (taking the evidence for the plaintiff to be true, as we must on a nonsuit) would not of itself prove malice, there was evidence sufficient to go to the jury of malice from the fact that the defendants Guy and Baird had paid these vouchers, and they knew, or should have known, that the charge was false. The school vouchers were public records, and all three defendants could have ascertained the falsity of the charge by the means of information in their power. They published an affidavit in regard to the discharge of his duty by a public officer, which was tantamount to the charge of embezzlement.Osborne v. Leach,
The defendants rely upon Rice v. McAdams,
The judgment of nonsuit must be
Reversed.
Cited: S. v. Publishing Co.,