Bell v. Clinton Oil Mill

124 S.E. 7, 129 S.C. 242, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 19, 1924
Docket11556
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 124 S.E. 7 (Bell v. Clinton Oil Mill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Clinton Oil Mill, 124 S.E. 7, 129 S.C. 242, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 46 (S.C. 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Action for $50,000 damages on account of an alleged slander uttered by one' Matthew, an agent of the defendant corporation to one Geiger, another em *246 ployee of and concerning the plaintiff, who had been an employee also. The slanderous words set forth in the complaint were:

“You had better fell Bell that the amount due by him is going to be reported to the bonding company and that he had better pay it up at once.”

Matthew, who is also a defendant in the case, was produced as a witness for the plaintiff, and he testified that the statement made by him to Geiger was this:

“You might get word to1 TheO'. (referring to the plaintiff) that the company is going to place his account with the bonding company.”

The case appears tO' have proceeded upon the latter statement as the basis of the action, rather than that alleged in the complaint. The complaint alleges that by said language the defendants intended to charge, and did thereby charge, the plaintiff with having committed a breach of trust, with having appropriated to his own use money belonging to said corporations, or some one of them, thereby charging him with having committed a felony and a crime against the laws of South Carolina, and that said language was so understood by those who were present and heard it; that the charge was false and malicious, and damaging to his character, etc.

The answer put in issue the material allegations of the complaint, except that they admitted that Matthew spoke the words admitted by him as stated above, but in his private capacity, as a friend of the plaintiff, and with no purpose to injure him. To understand the connection, an explanation of the circumstances is necessary, as to which there appears to be no controversy, as follows:

From 1914 until August 10, 1922, the plaintiff was employed by the defendant American Agricultural Chemical Company and its various subsidiary corporations as cashier. Beginning, it seems, in July, 1915, the plaintiff was allowed to draw certain amounts of money, as advancements upon *247 his expense account. By August, 1921, the advancements amounted to $845.12, and his expense accounts to $574.30, leaving a balance due by him of $270.82. About March, 1922, demand was made upon plaintiff for said balance, which he was unable to pay. He, however, made an arrangement with. Mr. Darlington, district manager, to pay the indebtedness at the rate of $20 per month. The counsel for the plaintiff say in their printed argument:

“This arrangement was carried out up until the time Mr. Bell left the A. A. Company in August, at which time he had paid $158, leaving a balance due on the account of approximately $300.”

Exactly how this balance was arrived at is not explained, nor is it material to the issues. It sufficiently appears that when the plaintiff severed his connection with the company he owed a balance on the account. During the period of the plaintiff’s service, the A. A. C. Company held a blanket bond of the National Surety Company, indemnifying it from pecuniary loss which it or its subsidiary companies might sustain “by any act of personal dishonesty, forgery, ■theft, larceny, embezzlement, wrongful conversion, abstraction, or misapplication,” by any of the employees designated in an attached schedule, which included the name of the plaintiff. As soon as the plaintiff left the employment of the company, the treasurer, whose office was in New York, began pressing for a settlement by him of the balance due on the account. On August 11, 1922, he wrote to Mr. Darlington, who was district manager, with offices in Columbia, taking the position that the indebtedness was due to the fact that the plaintiff had not returned certain funds advanced to pay traveling expenses, “in other words, it would appear that these funds were appropriated to his own use, which, of course, allows us to take this matter up with the bonding company,” and concludes by saying:

“You might say to Mr. Bell that, unless he liquidates this indebtedness to us by Friday,. August 18th, we will *248 ask the bonding company to reimburse us, and let them make such arrangements with Mr. Bell as they see fit.”

Having no reply from Mr. Darlington to that letter, the treasurer wrote him again on August 30th, calling his attention to the letter of August 11th, and saying:

“I am of the opinion that, unless we now ask the bonding company to take this matter up', we will lose any advantage that we now have under the bond. It seems to me that Mr. Bell would much prefer to borrow the amount he owes ús and liquidate this indebtedness rather than have the bonding company make demands for the return of our funds. Will you please let me have your opinion in the riiatter?”

On September 5th Mr. Darlington replied to the letter of August 30th saying:

“Relative to asking the bonding company to1 make good this amount, would suggest that you look into this carefully, for the reason his indebtedness with this company had the approval of Mr. Jones, who was in authority at that time, and this is not a question of shortage. I am merely giving you this information for what it is worth. You no doubt know how to handle it better than I would, so proceed as you think best in the matter.”

On September 12th, the treasurer replied to the letter of the 5th, saying:

“I note your suggestion that the authority of Mr. Jones might have some bearing on our being able to recover from the bonding company,” — and directing Mr.' Darlington to make a formal demand upon plaintiff for the balance on the account, and to1 forward a detailed statement of it for submission to the bonding company, with which he complied. It appears that Mr. Darlington, district manager, arid Matthew, his assistant, had joint supervision of such accounts as the pláintíff owed and of claims against the bdnding company in connection therewith. The exact date does not appear in the record, • evidently after the corre *249 spondence referred to between Darlington and the treasurer, dated August 11th, August 30th, September 5th, and September-12th; but about that time Matthew had before him this correspondence, and said to Geiger, another employee, “You might get word to Theo. [referring to the plaintiff] that the company is going to place his account with the bonding company” — manifestly meaning that the company intended to make a claim against the bonding company for the balance due by the plaintiff, as a liability under the bond.

This is the slander of which the plaintiff complains, interpreted by him as a charge that the plaintiff had committed a breach of trust by appropriating to his own use money belonging to the company, and had thereby committed a crime against the laws of South Carolina; in other words, that he had committed a breach of trust with fraudulent intent. The language quoted does not upon its face impute to the plaintiff the commission of a crime; it is therefore not actionable per se.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.E. 7, 129 S.C. 242, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-clinton-oil-mill-sc-1924.