On 14 November 2007, Mark W. White (plaintiff) filed a libel suit against Robert J. Trew (defendant) alleging that defendant had published factually false and inaccurate information about plaintiff in plaintiff’s “annual review.” Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, which was denied on 22 December 2010. Defendant appeals, alleging that sovereign immunity shields him from personal liability and that a required element of the libel claim has not been met. After careful consideration, we affirm the decision of the trial court.
I. Background
Plaintiff was a tenured associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at North Carolina State University (NCSU). Defendant is a tenured full professor in the same department and, during the time period relevant to this case, served as the department head.
During his time as department head, defendant wrote an “annual review” of plaintiff. In this review, defendant stated that plaintiff was not meeting the expectations of the department and provided accounts of instances that led defendant to this conclusion. Defendant then passed the annual review on to the Dean of Engineering and in-house counsel at NCSU. Plaintiff objected to sev
This annual review serves as a job evaluation and, as such, is part of plaintiffs personnel file at NCSU. When defendant took no action in response to the alleged inaccuracies, plaintiff filed a grievance petition with the NCSU grievance committee on 14 November 2007. Plaintiff later filed this libel suit on 11 September 2008.
II. Interlocutory Appeal
Defendant appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss, which is itself an interlocutory order. “An interlocutory order is one made during the pendency of an action, which does not dispose of the case, but leaves it for further action by the trial court in order to settle and determine the entire controversy.” Veazey v. Durham,
III. Arguments
Defendant presents three arguments on appeal. First, defendant argues that his actions were covered by sovereign immunity because they were performed in his official capacity as an employee of the State of North Carolina. Second, defendant argues that this suit should be barred because plaintiff failed to fully exhaust the administrative remedy available to him under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 126-25. Finally, defendant argues that plaintiff cannot prove a required ele
A. Dismissal Based on Sovereign Immunity
Defendant argues that the suit was filed against defendant in his official capacity, not in his individual capacity, and thus, because sovereign immunity bars intentional tort claims brought against the State and its employees in their official capacities, sovereign immunity bars this claim. We reject this argument.
We review the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to dismiss denovo. Transportation Services of N.C., Inc. v. Wake Cnty. Bd. Educ.,
Determining whether a plaintiff sued a defendant in his official or individual capacity is of prime importance in a libel suit against a public employee because
[ s]uits against the State, its agencies and its officers for alleged tortious acts can be maintained only to the extent authorized by the Tort Claims Act, and that Act authorizes recovery only for negligent torts. Intentional torts committed by agents and officers of the State are not compensable under the Tort Claims Act.
Kawai Am. Corp. v. University of N.C. at Chapel Hill,
Sovereign immunity does shield public employees from most activities undertaken in their official capacities because those employees are seen as agents of the State, but such immunity only extends so far. Public employees “remain personally liable for any actions which may have been corrupt, malicious or perpetrated outside and beyond the scope of official duties.” Locus v. Fayetteville State University,
When a complaint against a public official does not clearly indicate what capacity the defendant is being sued in, the complaint may be treated as a suit against a defendant solely in his official capacity. E.g., Johnson v. York,
The phrase “individual capacity” need not appear in a complaint in order for an action to be brought against a public employee in his individual capacity. See, e.g., Epps v. Duke University,
The crucial question for determining whether a defendant is sued in an individual or official capacity is the nature of the relief sought, not the nature of the act or omission alleged. If the plaintiff seeks an injunction requiring the defendant to take an action involving the exercise of a governmental power, the defendant is named in an official capacity. If money damages are sought, the court must ascertain whether the complaint indicates that the damages are sought from the government or from the pocket of the individual defendant. If the former, it is an official-capacity claim; if the latter, it is an individual-capacity claim; and if it is both, then the claims proceed in both capacities.
Meyer v. Walls,
Plaintiff, in his complaint, makes it clear that he seeks monetary compensation not from NCSU, but from defendant himself. Plaintiff repeatedly seeks to “have and recover from Dr. Trew damages for reputational harm” that defendant’s alleged actions caused. Accordingly,
Defendant further argues that, regardless of plaintiffs intent, all of plaintiff’s allegations involve actions directly related to defendant’s official duties. Defendant argues that the action involved — the writing of an annual review of an employee — is an action that can only be performed in one’s official capacity and, therefore, defendant can only be sued in his official capacity for any tortious conduct that may have occurred as part of that review process. This is not the case.
Public officials are only protected from liability when they act without “malice or corruption.” Smith v. State,
Plaintiff alleges that defendant acted maliciously when defendant wrote the annual review. Even if the writing of a review is an activity defendant could have only carried out in his official capacity, because plaintiff alleges that defendant carried out this activity maliciously, defendant is not protected by sovereign immunity and plaintiff properly sued him individually.
Whether defendant acted with malice is an area of dispute between the parties, but, because this is an interlocutory appeal and we are at an early stage of the proceedings, we need not decide whether defendant did, in fact, act with malice. We need only decide whether the motion to deny was properly granted based on the pleadings, and we conclude that it was.
B. Dismissal Based on Plaintiffs Election of Remedies
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred by denying defendant’s motion to dismiss because plaintiff elected to pursue the remedy available to him under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 126-25 by filing a grievance with the NCSU grievance committee. Because plaintiff has not exhausted this administrative remedy, defendant argues that plaintiff is barred from bringing this suit.
Section 126-25 allows any government employee to seek the removal of information he objects to from his personnel file by following the grievance procedure of the department in which he is employed. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 126-25 (2009). If an employee is dissatis
“[W]hen an effective administrative remedy exists, that remedy is exclusive.” Johnson v. First Union Corp.,
In this case, plaintiff seeks compensation from defendant for damage caused by defendant’s alleged false statements. Plaintiff’s complaint does not ask to have the information removed from his file. The relief plaintiff seeks is different from the statutory remedy provided, so the administrative remedy provided by section 126-25 does not bar plaintiff from pursuing this libel suit.
C. Dismissal Based on Lack of Publication
Defendant last argues that the trial court should have granted his motion to dismiss because statements made in communications among employees and agents of an employer are not “published” for the purposes of defamation. He asserts that, because the annual review was only made available to faculty and administrators of NCSU, it was not published.
“There is no basis for an action for libel unless there is a publication of the defamatory matter to a person or persons other than the defamed person.” Arnold v. Sharpe,
Defendant argues that this holding should be read to say that employees of the same employer can never be third persons to statements made by other employees. That is not how we interpret this holding. Our Supreme Court, in deciding Satterfield, cited to a New York case when making its decision. That case, Owen v. Ogilvie Publishing Co., involved almost the exact same fact pattern. Id. (citing Owen v. Ogilvie Publ’g Co.,
We do not deny but that there can be publication of a libel by a corporation by reading the libelous matter to a servant of such corporation, or delivering it to be read. Where the duties devolved upon such servant are distinct and independent of the process by which the libel was produced, he might well stand in the attitude of a third person through whom a libel can be published. But such rule may not be applied where the acts of the servants are so intimately related to each other as is disclosed in the present record, and the production is the joint act of both.
Id. at 467 (citing Owen,
IV. Conclusion
We hold that the trial court did not err by denying defendant’s motion to dismiss.
Affirmed.
