156 Ark. 84 | Ark. | 1922
Appellant Polk brought this suit to recover damages for certain alleged slanderous statements made by appellee Daniels, individually and in his capacity of superintendent of the White River division of the Missouri Pacific Railroad, in the presence of certain witnesses, whose names were set out in the complaint. The statements were: “Mr. Polk, are you prepared to reimburse the company for the time yon defrauded them out of? Unless they are reimbursed, you stand liable to criminal prosecution by the company.”
The railroad and Daniels answered and admitted that Daniels had used the language quoted, but alleged that it was privileged, and the trial court accepted that, view, after hearing the testimony in behalf of the plaintiff, and directed a verdict in favor of the defendants.
Polk testified that on the 8th of September, 1920, the defendant Daniels, acting in his capacity as superiuteiident of tlie - railroad company, requested him to be present at a meeting to be held in the office of the superintendent at Aurora, Missouri, for the purpose of investigating the question of the seniority of an employee of the company named Grooms, and that in compliance with that request he was passed without paying transportation, so that he could attend the meeting, and, while being examined by the said Daniels, acting for the said railroad, he was asked the question set out above in the presence of a man named Donne and another named Moreland, the persons named in the complaint as being present, and that said statements were false and humiliating.
The testimony developed the fact that Daniels was hearing the grievances of certain employees who were members of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, and Moreland and Donne were officers of that organization, and it was their business and duty to be present at such hearing to present the cases of the aggrieved employees who were members of that order.
Polk had corresponded with Daniels about his own seniority as a section boss, in which capacity he was employed by the railroad company. He had also made complaint about the discharge of one of his sons who had been employed by him as a member of his section gang. It is the insistence of Polk that there was no charge against him, and that he was present for the purpose only of giving testimony in the matter of the seniority rights of Grooms, who was also a section hand and who had been discharged by the company, and that Donne and Moreland were not interested in the statement complained of, and that it was collateral to any subject under inquiry, and that Daniels took advantage of the occasion to vent his anger against the plaintiff, and that the statement had no relevancy to any matter under consideration. If the testimony is legally sufficient to support that contention, then a case was made for the jury, and a verdict should not have been directed in favor of the defendant. '
Polk testified that two of his sons had been members of his section gang, and that one of them had been laid off and the other one discharged, and that he wrote to AY. AY. Gnadt, at St. Louis, Missouri, wanting to know why they were laid off, and also why Grooms was laid off. Gnadt was the general- chairman at St. Louis of the brotherhood of which Polk was a member, and it was Gnadt’s duty to see that investigation was made of com- • plaints similar to the one which Polk had lodged with him. Polk testified:
“I called the general cháirman at St. Louis and asked him to have an investigation of cutting the boys off, and also relative to one of the Grooms boys, who had been laid off at Sulphur Bock for three weeks or something like that, and the general chairman sent me a letter and informed me that Moreland would be in Aurora, Missouri, on the 9th of September, 1920.” He was asked: “So you went up there .to investigate the discharge of Prank (Polk)?” and answered: “Prank and the Grooms boy. AYhile the Grooms boy was not discharged, he was just laid off.” He was also asked: “So you went over to Aurora on September 8, 1920, for the purpose of having an investigation there before the superintendent, Daniels, in his office, to see whether or not they were right or wrong in discharging your boy Prank?” and answered: “Yes sir, and young Grooms. I intended to bring that up, too. and my seniority right also, while I was there.”
It appears that there is, or was, a clause in the contract between the railroad company and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of AYay Employees which provided that any employee who was a member of that order and who was disciplined or dismissed should be entitled to a hearing before his dismissal became final. The right to discharge existed, but, under the railroad’s agreement with the brotherhood, it was customary for the aggrieved employee to go to the officer of the railroad company having the matter in hand, ■ together with some officer of the brotherhood, to investigate to see if the discharge was rightful.
Donne testified that in Daniels’ cross-examination of Pollc he asked about the employment of Polk’s son, and advised Polk that an investigation had been made of the. time-books kept by Polk as far back as January, 1919, and that he found certain days in the months of March and December, 1919, and a da3r in January, 1920, when Polk had put in time for his son when the son had not worked. Polk denied this, and, after some further discussion, Daniels made use of the language quoted which is the basis of this action.
Moreland then intervened and asked: “Are you discharging this man? If you are., why?” Daniels replied : “You have heard my statements. "We can verify them.” Moreland then asked: “You are discharging this man for padding the payrolls?” and Daniels stated that he was. Polk was then excused, and in his absence Moreland and Donne discussed the matter with Daniels. Daniels’ stenographer was present and. reported the proceedings, and at the conclusion of_ the conference Moreland asked for the charges in writing and for a transcript of the examination of Polk by Daniels, who assured Moreland his request would be complied with. Moreland was entitled to make this request, and it was Daniels’ duty to comply with it, as the representative of the railroad, under the terms of the contract between the railroad and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees.
Moreland was asked this question: “Did you make this statement that day: ‘I came up to investigate and have a trial for Mr. Polk’s boys’?” and he answered: “If I am not mistaken, it was Polk’s boy’s case I handled, and not Grooms’.” ’
Donne was asked: “And you were present at Aurora with Mr. Polk and Mr. Moreland on this day, representing the brotherhood and Mr. Polk in his investígation?” and lie answered: “I was representing Mr. Polk.”
It does not appear that Polk knew any charge had been -preferred against him, but he knew the discharge of his son would be inquired into, for this was one of the matters which he had asked to have investigated, and he had been notified by the representative ,of the order of which he was a member when and where the investigation would be made, and the investigation was being held, pursuant to his request.
The facts in the case of Polk and that of his son appear to be'identical, and that is that the railroad contended that the son had been carried on the payroll when he was not working. This ivas a matter about which Daniels examined Polk, and his answers appeared not to have been satisfactory. If Polk was in fact padding the payroll, this was ample justification for not only discharging the man whose name was being fraudulently carried on the payroll, but also for discharging the man who committed the fraud, and this fact was the reason assigned by Daniels at the hearing before him for the discharge of Polk’s son and of Polk himself.
We think the language of Daniels, quoted above, was uttered under a qualified privilege. The law in such cases was stated in the case of Bohlinger v. Germania Life Ins. Co., 100 Ark. 477, as follows: “A communication is held to be qualifiedly privileged when it is made in good faith upon any subject-matter in which the person making the communication has an interest or in reference to which he has a duty, and to a person having a corresponding interest or duty, although it contains matter which, without such privilege, would be actionable. Upon such occasion and under such circumstances, although the matter communicated is defamatory and false, the law will not infer malice, but the existence thereof must be shown by some evidence beyond the falsity of the statements communicated.”
In the case of Christopher v. Akin, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 104, 214 Mass. 332, 101 N. E. 971, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts said: “ * * * 'Whether a communication is or is not privileged does-not depend so much on the manner or form in which crime is imputed* where the alleged slander consists, as here, of a charge of crime, as on the occasion and circumstances under which the charge is made. If made in good faith in reference to a matter in which the person making it is immediately-interested, and for ■ the purpose of protecting his interest, and in the belief that it is true, and .without any malicious motive, the communication is what is termed privileged; that is, the occasion and the circumstances under which it is made are held to be such as, if nothing more appears, to excuse or justify the statements that arc made.” ■ ■
A similar statement of the law is found in Newell on Slander and Libel (3d ed.) pp. 477, 478, and also in the numerous cases cited in appellees’ brief.
The only testimony here which would indicate malice or other improper motive on the part of Daniels is the testimony of Moreland that Daniels appeared to be antagonistic in his examination of Polk. But we think that testimony insufficient to support a finding that Daniels was prompted -by malice. Daniels’ belief in Polk’s guilt, which was apparently sincere, although we presume it was mistaken, would make him antagonistic to Polk. There was no denunciation or abuse, nothing except earnestness in the examination of Polk by Daniels, and the language quoted as actionable was not collateral to the inquiry because the discharge of Polk’s son was one of the subjects of the inquiry, and, as we have said, the alleged cause of the son’s discharge furnished equal ground for the discharge of Polk himself.
In exoneration of the railroad, counsel for it cites the case of National Packing Co. v. Boullion, 105 Ark. 326, and other cases to the same effect, holding that, to establish liability against a corporation for slander, the utterance of the slander must be shown to. have been made by its authority or ratified by it, or to have been made by one of its servants or agents in the scope of his employment, and in the course of the business in which he is employed-. This is, of course, the correct test of a corporation’s liability for slander. But -we think, under that test, the jury might have found that the railroad would be liable if Daniels is liable, upon the ground that Daniels was acting within the scope of his employment, and in the course of the business in which he was employed, in repeating, in the presence of Moreland and Donne, the ground of the company’s complaint against Polk and the reason for his discharge, for, as we have said, the railroad was required to furnish specifications of the charges, and to do so in writing when requested so to do, and Daniels was the employee of the company whose business it was to discharge that duty.
There was no testimony that any rules of procedure had been prescribed for such -a hearing, as was had at Daniels’ office, and Daniels complied with the terms of the agreement' between the railroad and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees when he offered to furnish in writing the specifications of the charges on which Polk was discharged.
We conclude therefore that the verdict was property directed in defendant’s favor, and the judgment is affirmed.