153 N.C. 266 | N.C. | 1910
The defendant W. E. Perry was executor of S. D. Perry, deceased. The present plaintiff Frank Perry brought an action against the executor to recover a certain amount which he claimed to be due him. At the first trial in the Superior Court the jury found against the plaintiff. A new trial was granted because of the comment of the judge upon the plaintiff’s counsel. At the second trial the jury found in favor of the plaintiff, and this judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court. The plaintiff Frank Perry then sought to charge the executor personally with the costs of said litigation, and at the October Term, 1908, lodged a motion to this effect, supporting it by an affidavit in which he charged the executor with bad faith in defending the action. In response to this affidavit, and in order to show his good faith in defending said action, the executor filed an affidavit upon which this action for libel is brought. The motion was denied and the executor was not taxed personally with the costs.
The substance of the paragraphs in aforesaid affidavit upon which the plaintiff relies, as ground for this action for libel, is
In this present action tbe complaint avers that tbe said affidavit of tbe defendant is “false, malicious and defamatory,” yet surely tbe defendant cannot sue tbe plaintiff for libel in so alleging.
It looks very much like what Pearson, G. J., styled, in one of bis opinions, as “cross-firing with small shot.”
Tbe law has been summed up and stated, with full citation of authorities in Nissen v. Kramer, 104 N. C., 574, and Ramsey v. Cheek, 109 N. C., 270. This ease falls under tbe bead of “absolutely privileged,” as defined in Ramsey v. Cheek, supra. Tbe judgment of nonsuit is
Affirmed.