192 Tenn. 638 | Tenn. | 1951
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for our decision in this case is: Can a plaintiff sue two or more defendants for slander when he alleges in his declaration that “the said accusations Avere made by the defendants in the presence of each other, by common design or previously formed conspiracy and jointly, each aiding and abetting the other in such false and slanderous accusations”1?
The declaration of the plaintiff Avas demurred to because of the misjoinder of parties, that is, two parties were made defendants to an action for slander, The
The general rule is that an action may not be maintained against two persons jointly for uttering and publishing slanderous words where the declaration charges distinct causes of action against the several defendants. Annotation 34 A. L. R. 345 and cases there cited. See also 53 C. J. S., Libel and Slander, Subsection b, of Section 159, page 243, and authorities there cited. The question has never been determined in this State one way or the other insofar as we can find or as able counsel was able to find. The basis of this view is the fact that the words of one person cannot be regarded as the words of another. It is also reasoned in some of the authorities that the same words spoken by one may occasion greater injury than those spoken by another, and that each should be responsible only for the injury inflicted by his own independent act.
When there ‘ ‘ exists a common agreement or conspiracy between” two or more parties to injure a party by the utterance or publication of slanderous statements then the parties who thus agree or conspire are jointly liable. Schoedler v. Motometer Gauge & Equipment Corp., 134 Ohio St. 78, 15 N. E. (2d) 958; Woods v. Haefer, Tex. Civ. App., 63 S. W. (2d) 891, 893. When slanderous words are uttered pursuant to a conspiracy which includes among its purposes the slander of another, each person conspiring to issue such words is the spokesman for all. 11 Am. Jur., 584, 585, Sec. 54.
The rule and the exception above noted seem to us sound. This naturally and necessarily brings us to a consideration of the averments of the declaration in the instant case. Under these averments, do they suf
For the reasons thus stated we have concluded that the trial judge erred in sustaining the demurrer. The result is, therefore, that the judgment below will be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The costs of this