Alexander v. . Vann

104 S.E. 360, 180 N.C. 187, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 360 (Alexander v. . Vann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. . Vann, 104 S.E. 360, 180 N.C. 187, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 60 (N.C. 1920).

Opinion

Bkown, J.

We are-of opinion that Judge Devin was correct in bolding tbat tbe words of tbe letter are libelous of themselves, and actionable because tbe doctrine of qualified privilege does not apply. Tbe undisputed facts are tbat tbe plaintiff was a deputy sheriff of Hert-ford County under Sheriff Garrett at tbe time tbe said libelous letter was written and mailed to tbe sheriff of Pitt County. On 5 May, 1917, Sheriff Garrett received a telegram from sheriff McLawhorn of Pitt County requesting him to arrest one Zemas, a Hungarian of desperate character, a fugitive from justice, who bad murdered his wife, for whose capture a reward of $200 bad been offered. Eley Reid, a colored man, captured Zemas in the swamps of Chowan River, and, single-handed, delivered him to the sheriff of Hertford County at Winton. Sheriff Garrett had been requested to have the prisoner well guarded by two men at the expense of Pitt County. He deputized the plaintiff, a regular deputy, to take the prisoner, to Pitt County, and appointed said Reid, a very-powerful man, to act as guard. The plaintiff took the prisoner and placed him with himself and Reid in the smoker of a white coach, and delivered him safely to Sheriff McLawhorn at Greenville, Pitt County, N. C. The plaintiff, with Reid, then returned to Hertford County. The evidence shows that the plaintiff rode in the white coach, and Reid was in the colored coach except for a short distance, when he first got on the train he was called into the smoker of the white coach by one Mr. Ames, a railroad detective who knew him, and having heard of the capture of Zemas, the Hungarian wife-murderer, asked of Reid the details of the capture. When Reid had related the story to Mr. Ames, he returned to the colored coach and remained there until he reached Ahoskie, his destination.

In the fall, just prior to the publication of the letter in question, J. N. Yann, the defendant in this action, was for the third time defeated by A. E. Garrett in the election for sheriff of Hertford County, and at the time of the publication of the said libelous letter, J. N. Yann was a private citizen of Hertford County, and was unfriendly toward Sheriff Garrett.

Eley Reid was at the time the said letter was written an exconvict, and he is a negro.

The alleged libel is contained in the following letter received by Sheriff McLawhorn from the defendant:

*189 Ahoskie, N. C., March 9, 1917.

Sheeiee McLawhoeN, Greenville, N. C.

Deab Sib: — I read with surprise, and disgust to a certain degree, that account of the capture of the criminal from your section by Eley Eeid of this county.

Judging from the report that Deputy Alexander brought back here, you gentlemen evidently did not recognize Eeid as being a negro, nor did Alexander have self-respect to inform you of this fact, judging from the entertainment he reports you gentlemen have accorded Eeid. A friend of mine says that Alexander actually had Eeid in the white coach on the seats with gentlemen on his return trip here.

Eeid is a negro, and an exconvict, and Alexander is a very little better, and I should say, except by birthright, Eeid is a superior man.

Eegretful to say the high office of sheriff of Hertford County has reached a very undignified state to which the better element of people here do not approve.

I am not giving you this information in confidence by any means, but I do think it .the duty of all respectful whites who are proud of their Caucasian blood from which they sprang, to state these facts.

I am yours very truly,

J. E. VaNN.

As we understand it, a privileged communication is one which, under ordinary circumstances, would be defamatory made to another in pursuance of a duty, political, judicial, social, or personal, so that an action for libel or slander will not lie though the statement be false unless actual malice be proved in addition. The great underlying principle of the doctrine of privileged comm unications rests in public policy. Qualified privilege extends to all communications made bona fide upon any subject-matter in which the party communicating has an interest, or in reference to which he has some moral or legal duty to perform. The occasion on which the communication was made may rebut the inference of malice or it may tend to prove malice, and that'the defendant was actuated by motives of personal spite or ill-will independent of the occasion on which the communication was made. Mr. Newell says, see. 497, that a communication to be privileged must be made upon a proper occasion, from a proper motive, and must be based upon reasonable or proper cause. The learned author further says, sec. 501, that if the communication, whether written or oral, be of such a.character that the expressions in it are beyond what common sense indicates to be justifiable, it cannot be held as privileged. In regard to communications containing charges against public officers, Mr. Newell says: “It is the *190 duty of all wbo witness any misconduct on the part of a magistrate or any public officer to bring such misconduct to the notice of those whose duty it is to inquire into and punish it; and, therefore, all petitions and. memorials complaining of such misconduct, if prepared in. good faith and forwarded to the proper authorities, are privileged.”

This Court has recognized and acted upon these just principles of the common law. This Court held unanimously, in Logan v. Hodges, 146 N. C., 38, that: “A postal card containing a libelous communication concerning a public official of a county, though written in the public interest, is not absolutely or qualifiedly privileged when not addressed to some person having jurisdiction to entertain the complaint, or power to redress the grievance, or some duty to perform, or interest in connection with it.” In Fields v. Bynum, 156 N. C., 413, this Court said: “To justify words alleged to have been slanderously spoken, and to bring himself within the protection which attaches to communications made in the fulfillment of a- duty, the defendant must show something more than an honest belief in the truth of Ms utterances, for he must show that the communication was made in good faith on an occasion which justified his making it; and the manner in which it is uttered may take them.out of the privilege.” We also said in the same case that where the expressions are allowable, the manner in which they are made public may take them out of the privilege. Dawkins v. Lord Paulet, L. R., 5 Q. B., p. 102; Newell on Slander, p. 477.

We fully concur in what is said by Mr. Justice Hoke in S. v. Publishing Co., 179 N. C., 720, as follows: “It is to the public interest that the conduct and qualifications of officials and candidates for public office be subjected to free and fair criticisms and discussion by their constituents, and such presents a case of qualified privilege, and to convict of libel for defamatory publication of this character by a newspaper and its editor, it must be shown that it is both false and malicious, its falsity not of itself sufficient to establish malice, there being a presumption that the publication was made in good faith.”

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 360, 180 N.C. 187, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-vann-nc-1920.