Plaintiff instituted this action to recover actual and punitive damages resulting from “slanderous and defamatory statements” made by defendant. Defendant’s answer asserted truth as a defense.
Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that she worked for the School Food Service of the Cleveland County Board of Education. She did secretarial work and bookkeeping. She prepared checks for the School Food Service employees by using the computer in the central office of the Board of Education; however, she did so under the direction of Peggy Fuller. Peggy Fuller was the computer operator for the Board of Education, and she prepared the payroll checks for all employees other than those in the School Food Service. Plaintiff was not trained to operate the computer, she could not operate it on her own, and she was afraid of it. Peggy Fuller resigned her position effective 30 April 1980. On 1 *250 May 1980, plaintiff was asked to use the computer to prepare the payroll for all ten-month employees of the Board. She responded that she did not know how to do this. Later that day, plaintiff was summoned to the office of defendant, Jerry Lee Blake, who was the superintendent of the county school system. Plaintiff told defendant that she did not know how to do the payroll. Defendant told plaintiff that she would do the job requested as best she could or else. Plaintiff testified that she asked defendant whether “or else” meant that she would be fired, that defendant said that it did, and that she left defendant’s office with the understanding that she had been fired. Defendant, who was called to testify for plaintiff, testified that he told plaintiff that “or else” meant that she would be choosing not to work for the Board, that plaintiff then said that she quit, and that he regarded plaintiff as having resigned from her job. Michael Goforth, a reporter for the Shelby Daily Star, telephoned defendant on 2 May 1980 to ask some questions. Defendant told the reporter that two people had resigned and that “[a]ny claim Mrs. Tallent was fired is false.” This statement was quoted in a newspaper article.
Defendant moved for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. Among other grounds, he argued that his statement to the reporter was in no way slanderous or defamatory and that plaintiff had failed either to allege or prove special damages. The trial judge allowed a directed verdict as to plaintiff’s claim for punitive damages, but he otherwise denied the motion. Defendant presented no evidence and renewed his motion which again was denied.
The judge submitted two issues as to liability, which were stated and answered as follows:
1. Did the defendant, Jerry Lee Blake, slander the plaintiff, Rhonda Walker Tallent?
[Yes.]
2. Were the statements concerning the plaintiff, Rhonda Walker Tallent, true?
[No.]
The jury set actual damages at $1,500.00. Defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict based upon the same *251 arguments previously presented. The judge denied the motion and entered judgment on the verdict.
On appeal, defendant presents and argues six assignments of error, but the six assignments are based upon only three exceptions. These exceptions are to the denial of a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the denial of a directed verdict at the close of all evidence, and the denial of judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The standards applicable to a motion for a directed verdict and to a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict are the same.
Dickinson v. Pake,
Plaintiff asserts in her brief, “[T]his is not a case of slander. It is, rather, a case of libel
per
se.” We cannot agree. The term defamation includes two distinct torts, libel and slander. In general, libel is written while slander is oral. Prosser, Law of Torts (4th ed. 1971), § 111, p. 737. Libel, being criminal in origin, always was regarded as the greater wrong, and greater responsibility was attached to it. “It was accordingly held that some kinds of defamatory words might be actionable without proof of any actual damage to the plaintiff if they were written, where such damage must be proved if they were spoken. [Footnote omitted.] This remains the chief importance of the distinction.”
Id.
§ 112, p. 752.
Accord, Kindley v. Privette,
The present case concerns a statement made by defendant to a reporter that was then quoted in a newspaper article. Under the above principles, plaintiff might have been able to pursue both theories, libel and slander, against defendant. However, plaintiff’s case was tried solely on the theory of slander; no issue as to libel was submitted. In fact, plaintiff did not present the newspaper article in evidence. The jury instructions have not been included in the record, and we must assume that the judge correctly instructed the jury in accordance with the issue submitted, the issue of slander. The argument on defendant’s motion for a directed verdict has been included in the record. The argument was in terms of slander. The theory upon which the case was tried must prevail in considering the appeal, interpreting the record, and determining the validity of exceptions.
Paul v. Neece,
In the present case, then, the issue for our decision is whether the evidence, when considered in the light most favorable to plaintiff, was sufficient for submission to the jury on the theory of slander. In arguing below that the evidence was insufficient, defendant stated, among other grounds, that his statement was not defamatory and that plaintiff had failed to prove special damages. We rest our decision on the second of these grounds.
*253
Slander may be actionable
per se
or only actionable
per quod.
Special damages must be pleaded and proved in the latter case, but not the former.
Badame v. Lampke,
Decisions in this State generally limit false statements which may be classified as actionable per se to those which charge plaintiff with a crime or offense involving moral turpitude, impeach his trade or profession, or impute to him a loathsome disease. (A fourth category has been added by statute; that is, statements charging incontinency to a woman. G.S. 99-4.)
Williams v. Rutherford Freight Lines, Inc. and Willard v. Rutherford Freight Lines, Inc., supra
at 388,
North Carolina cases have held consistently that alleged false statements made by defendants, calling plaintiff “dishonest” or charging that plaintiff was untruthful and an unreliable employee, are not actionable per se. See Satterfield v. McLellan Stores,215 N.C. 582 ,2 S.E. 2d 709 (1939); Ringgold v. Land,212 N.C. 369 ,193 S.E. 267 (1937). Such false statements may be actionable per quod-, if so, some special damages must be pleaded and proved. Ringgold, supra.
Stutts v. Duke Power Co.,
In the law of defamation, special damage means pecuniary loss. Emotional distress and humiliation alone are not enough to support a claim actionable
per quod. Williams v. Rutherford Freight Lines, Inc. and Willard v. Rutherford Freight Lines, Inc., supra.
Furthermore, “where, as here, it is essential that some special damage must occur before a claim is actionable,
at least some special damage must have occurred by the time the action is instituted. Id.
at 390-91,
It is suggested that the condition imposed upon plaintiff’s husband at the time of his re-election 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.
Scott v. Harrison, supra
at 431,
The alleged slander in the present case occurred on 2 May 1980. Plaintiff instituted her action on 13 May 1980. The evidence reveals no special damages resulting from the alleged slander at *255 that time. The loss of plaintiffs job with the Board of Education, of course, resulted from the events of 1 May 1980, not from the alleged slander of 2 May 1980. Plaintiff testified that she sought other employment, but she was not sure of the dates involved. She was not sure whether she had sought other employment at the time she filed this action. Plaintiff testified that she did not receive employment in May 1980, that she received employment in June 1980 which she held for only two weeks and lost by “mutual agreement” and that she received employment in August 1980 that she was still holding at the time of trial. There is nothing in her testimony to indicate that she ever was denied employment because of the alleged slander by defendant. Plaintiff also testified that she fell behind in monthly payments on various accounts in June and July of 1980, and that in October 1980 she filed “a Chapter Thirteen, which is part of the Bankruptcy Code, in which I made monthly payments to the Court to pay off my debts.” This testimony shows no pecuniary loss, and it involves events occurring after institution of this action on 13 May 1980. Finally, plaintiff testified that she suffered worry, loss of sleep, and emotional problems that led her to go to a doctor for medication in June and July of 1980. Special damages include illness sufficient to require medical care and expense. See Bell v. Simmons, supra. However, plaintiffs testimony shows no such damages before 13 May 1980 and fails to show the amount of any medical expenses incurred thereafter.
Therefore, plaintiff failed to show special damages sufficient to support a claim for slander actionable per quod, and defendant’s motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been allowed.
Reversed.
