Lead Opinion
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). “A corporation is liable in damages for the publication of a libel as for other torts. To establish its liability, the publication must be shown to have been made by its authority, or to have been ratified by it, or to have been made by one of its servants or agents in the course of the business in which he was" employed. And the same is true аs to slander. Some of the cases hold a corporation liable for a slander maliciously uttered by an agent within the scope of his employment though not expressly authorized or subsequently ratified. Other cases hold that the corporation to be liable must have authorized the uttering of the slanderous words or have ratified them.” Newell оn Slander and Libel (3d Ed.) § 448. I think that the sounder view and the one supported by the overwhelming-weight of authority is the one which draws no distinction between slander and libel and places them uрon practically the same footing as malicious prosecution and other torts, and which renders the corporation liable for the slanderous utterances of its agents while acting within the line and scope of authority whether previously authorized or subsequently ratified or not. Mills v. Grant,
The only cases, other than a few old ones subsequently repudiated by decisions of the samе state, recognizing a distinction between libel and slander in respect to the liability of corporations, are the ones cited in the foregoing opinion of the court.
The case of Singer Co. v. Taylor, supra, quotes approvingly 10 Cyc. 1216, and from Mr. Odgers in his work on Libel and Slander (star page 368). The quotation from Cyc. seems to be based upon Redditt v. Singer Mfg. Co.,
*29 “Corporations are now responsible civilly, tbe same as natural persons, for wrongs committеd by tbeir officers, agents or servants, while acting in the course of their employment or which are authorized or subsequently ratified.”
This being a sound principle broadly stated should apply to all wrongs whether involving a malicious prosecution, libel, sladder, or other torts, at least the Mississippi court in the case of Rivers v. Yazoo R. R. Co.,
I fully appreciate the admonition in brief of appellant’s counsel against departing from the rule of stare decisis, but while certainty and repose is desirable, it should not be founded upon a glaring and undebatable error, and the sooner that a structure, based upon a false foundation, is demolished, the better for our jurisprudence. “Where a grave and public and palpable error widely affecting the administration of justice must be either solemnly sanctioned or repudiated, fiat justitia, ruat ccelum, should apply, and not’ the rule of stare decisis.” Indeed, the false doctrine deсlared in the Owsley Case, 37 Ala. remained the law in this state until repudiated and corrected in the Jordan Case nearly 20 years thereafter. I therefore hold that amended counts 2 and 6A were not subject to the defendant’s demurrer for failing to aver that the slander was authorized or subsequently ratified by the defendant corporation as it avers that the agent was acting within the line and scope of his authority when uttering the slanderous words.
I therefore dissent from the holding of the majority and in which GARDNER, J., concurs.-
