2 S.E.2d 1 | N.C. | 1939
This is an action to recover damages for an alleged slander of plaintiff by the defendant. The slander charged is that the defendant falsely and maliciously uttered concerning the plaintiff: "That the plaintiff while her husband, B. A. Scott, was the principal of the public schools in *429 Northampton County, North Carolina, was forbidden by the authorities in charge from going upon the school grounds or premises of the Jackson High School at Jackson, North Carolina, for a period of six months." The charge is further supplemented by an allegation that the defendant stated that "the reason he was not reelecting Mr. B. A. Scott was due to the character and reputation of his wife." Plaintiff's husband was at the time of the alleged slanderous utterance, or immediately preceding that time, principal of the Dabney High School, which position he had held for ten years, and to which he had not been reelected; the defendant Harrison was chairman of the county board of education of Vance County, having something to do with the selection of principals and teachers in Dabney District. The plaintiff "for some time was employed by the Public School System in North Carolina."
The plaintiff alleges that because of the slanderous remarks of the defendant, her husband was required to accept as a condition to his reelection that he would not seek reelection to his present position of principal.
No special damage is alleged other than the above, and the slander was not laid with an "innuendo," attaching a special meaning to the words "character" and "reputation" used concerning the plaintiff.
The defendant demurred, setting forth that under the circumstances alleged the communication was privileged; and that the words alleged to have been uttered concerning the plaintiff were not actionable per se, and that since no special damage was set up in the complaint no sufficient cause of action was alleged therein against the defendant. From the judgment overruling the demurrer, defendant appealed.
1. It is alleged in the complaint that the slanderous words uttered of and concerning the plaintiff were made by the defendant to persons who had called by defendant's office in the bank. It does not appear from the complaint that the relation between the defendant and these persons was such as to bring the declarations within the rule of privilege, or qualified privilege, and the complaint is not objectionable in that respect, and defendant's demurrer to the complaint in that regard is without merit. Alexander v. Vann,
2. Where slanderous words or accusations are not actionable per se so that general damages may be awarded therefor, the courts will not sustain a complaint as sufficiently setting up a cause of action which does not allege some special damage sustained by the plaintiff by reason *430 of the slanderous remarks. In this respect the courts of this State adhere to the common law doctrine pertaining to libel and slander. The distinction between slanderous utterances actionable per se and those in which special damage must be alleged is traditional and does not always appear to be philosophical. The standards employed and the sense of moral values implied belong, perhaps, to a more practical age, and the rationale of some of the classifications is weakened or destroyed by changes which have come about through the years in the subjects to which they apply. It has been surmised that it was intended to confine actions of that sort to the graver accusations and those obviously calculated to result in damage. But the distinctions are too challengeable to support that view. Apparently they are not based on any desire to aid the litigant but upon social implications, and seems to be punitive in origin. "It is believed that in truth the requirements about special damages rest not upon any analytical distinction but wholly upon the historical division between defamations which were originally punished as sins, in ecclesiastical courts, and those inflicting temporal harm and remedial in the King's tribunals." McCormick on Damages, p. 464, note 28. See also note 5, p. 416.
Whatever may have been the origin, the courts are not permitted to go outside of the categories established by long usage to hold words, which to the layman may appear equally malicious and harmful, as actionable per se. Under this rule, false and slanderous utterances affecting one's business or occupation (Deese v. Collins,
We have carefully examined the allegations of the complaint and given due consideration to those allegations which have been pointed out as an averment of special damages.
Embarrassment, humiliation, and mental suffering, caused by the defamation, may be considered in connection with slanders which are actionable per se; Baker v. Winslow,
It is suggested that the condition imposed upon plaintiff's husband at the time of his reelection might eventually lead to his unemployment and result in damage to her. This, we think, is too remote and speculative for present consideration. Newell, Slander and Libel, 4th Ed., section 746, quotes DeGrey, C. J., in Onslow v. Horne, 3 Wils., 177, 2 W. Bl., 750: "I know of no case where ever an action for words was grounded upon eventual damages which may possibly happen to a man in a future situation;" and refers to the established rule that the damages must have accrued before the institution of the suit.
The plaintiff alleges that "for some time she was employed by the Public School System in North Carolina." Had she been presently so employed, there is no question but that the words complained of, in the connection used, would be actionable per se as words tending to bring her into disrepute and injure her in her occupation. Castelloe v. Phelps,
For these reasons, the judgment overruling the demurrer must be reversed. Since the court below ruled with the plaintiff, and she was under no necessity of asking to amend her complaint at that time, no presumption arises here, as in Ballinger v. Thomas,
The judgment overruling the demurrer is
Reversed. *432