Courtney v. American Ry. Express Co.

113 S.E. 332, 120 S.C. 511, 24 A.L.R. 128, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 5, 1922
Docket10907
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 332 (Courtney v. American Ry. Express Co.) 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
Courtney v. American Ry. Express Co., 113 S.E. 332, 120 S.C. 511, 24 A.L.R. 128, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 151 (S.C. 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Action for damages on account of an alleged slander of the plaintiff by the defendant Park, a route agent of the corporation defendant. The plaintiff had a verdict of $5,000 against both of the defendants, and from the judgments entered thereon they have appealed.

The evidence on behalf of the plaintiff tended to establish the following facts, which in disposing of the motion for a directed verdict will be assumed to be true:

For some time prior to May 6, 1920, the plaintiff, Courtney, was employed by the defendant express company as *513 a special agent, charged with the duties ordinarily incident to that position which need not be detailed. On that day he was discharged by W. E. Terrell, superintendent of the company, the alleged ground of his discharge being the filing of an expense account for a trip to Rock Hill, which it was asserted he had not made. The defendant Park at that time was a route agent of the company and had investigated the charge against the plaintiff, making a trip to Rock Hill in conducting the investigation. Two weeks later the incident was closed by the discharge of Courtney. Park was at the railroad depot at Branchville, waiting around the station platform for a train. While there became engaged in conversation with a man whom Kaigler, the plaintiff’s main witness, did not know, but who was identified by Park when he testified as W. G. Minnick, a special agent of the company. Kaigler was a bystander, in nowise connected with the company or either of the other two men. He testified that he overheard the conversation between Park and Minnick; that they were talking about Courtney; that Minnick said to Park, “You had a good man up there as C. O. D. Collector”; and that Park replied, “We fired him like we would an ordinary thief.’’ ’ It is upon this statement by Park to Minnick, overheard by the bystander, Kaigler, that the action for slander is based.

Upon the trial of the case in circuit, both sides went fully into the circumstances of Courtney’s discharge by Superintendent Terrell, and into the merits of the controversy between Terrell and Courtney as to whether Courtney was in fact at Rock Hill upon the occasion, for the expenses of which trip he had filed an expense account with the company. An array of witnesses appeared, with hotel registers, certificates, affidavits, and other documents, upon this issue. As we view the case, this matter was entirely foreign to the issue before the Court and will be dismissed from further consideration.

*514 At the close of all the testimony the defendant express company moved for a directed verdict in its favor, upon the ground that there was no evidence tending to show that at the time that the alleged slander was uttered the route agent, Park, was so acting within the scope of his employment as to bind the express company, his employer. The motion was refused, and the defendant urges that refusal as a ground of reversal. , This brings up the only real issue in the case, so far as the express company is concerned. We are of the opinion that the motion should have been sustained for the reasons which follow.:

After much discussion and great divergence of opinion, it may .be regarded as settled by practical unanimity of text-writers and decided cases, that slander is in the same category with all other malicious torts, and that a corporation may be liable for it as well as for any of the others, under like circumstances. As declared by this Court in Hypes v. Southern R. Co., 82 S. C. 315, 64 S. E. 395, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 873, 17 Ann. Cas. 620, which has become a leading case upon the subject (quoting from the syllabus) :

“A corporation is liable for slander of one of its employees by another in reference to a matter growing out of such contract relation, the matter being one within the duty of the slandering employee to adjúst, whether the corporation subsequently ratified the slanderous act of its employee or not.”

The facts of that case fairly illustrate the rule and the limitation of the master’s liability, which is this:

In order to hold the master liable for the tort of his servant, the servant must have been at the time engaged in the discharge of duties intrusted to him in reference to the particular matter in hand and acting within the apparent scope of his employment. The plaintiff, *515 Hypes, was an engineer, and at the end of the month turned in his time report, showing the number of hours he had worked during the month. His claim was disallowed to the extent of $37. After some correspondence Hypes had an interview with the superintendent at division headquarters, in which they took up the matter in hand, the claim for unpaid time. During the interview the superintendent charged Hypes with stealing from the company, and in the presence of outsiders called him several times a thief. The question came up on demurrer to the complaint, which alleged that at the time of uttering the slander the superintendent was acting in the discharge of his duties as such, and what he said was within the scope of his authority, while going over the books, considering the question of plaintiff’s time, which he had full authority to settle. The Court quoted with approval the following from a Mississippi case:

“A corporation is liable for slander spoken by its agent, while acting within the scope of his employment and in the actual performance of the duties of the corporation touching the matter in question.”
“The reason the master is liable for the act of the servant at all is because the servant is acting in that matter in the. master’s stead and for him. Obviously, if the servant is not acting for the master, he cannot be said to be his representative in that act.” Sullivan v. Railway Co., 115 Ky. 447, 74 S. W. 171, 103 Am. St. Rep. 330.

In Washington Gaslight Co. v. Lansden, 172 U. S. 534, 19 Sup. Ct. 296, 43 L. Ed. 543, the Court declares:

“In order to hold a corporation liable for the torts of any of its agents, the act in question must be performed in the course and within the scope of the agent’s employment in the business of the principal.”

And again:

*516 “There must be some evidence from which an authority might be implied on the part of the manager to represent the company as within the general scope of his employment, in regard.to the subject-matter of the correspondence between Brown and himself.”

In 26 Cyc. 1526, discussing the matter of scope of employment, admittedly difficult of definition, it is said:

“The test is not of the character of the act, nor whether it was done during the existence of the servant’s employment, but whether the injury complained of was committed by the authority of the master expressly conferred or fairly implied in the nature of the employment and the duties incident to it.”

In 5 Thomp. Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 332, 120 S.C. 511, 24 A.L.R. 128, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtney-v-american-ry-express-co-sc-1922.