Gathings v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.

167 S.E. 652, 168 S.C. 385, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 6, 1933
Docket13575
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 652 (Gathings v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea 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
Gathings v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 167 S.E. 652, 168 S.C. 385, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 20 (S.C. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice StabeER.

This is an action for damages on account of certain alleged slanderous statements made concerning the plaintiff by an agent of the defendant. The plaintiff, who had been for some time the manager of the defendant’s Hampton Avenue store in the City of Greenville, was transferred, in February, 1930, to its West Greenville store. The third paragraph of the complaint states the offense charged: “That on or about February 20th, 1930, a short while after above transfer was ordered, and while plaintiff herein was in charge of defendant’s West Greenville Store, the Superintendent and General Manager throughout this section entered said,store and spoke to plaintiff in the presence of customers therein at said time, asking if State authorities had inspected that particular store that day and further stated that they had inspected store from which plaintiff was transferred and found short weights and had a case against plain *388 tiff for short weights and that he, the said General Manager, would have to discharge plaintiff for such conduct while in charge of Hampton Avenue Store, charging and accusing publicly the plaintiff herein of perpetrating a fraud on the trading public all of which was slanderous and maliciously spoken and done, and at other times said agent of defendant spoke similar words thereto concerning plaintiff and by the speaking of said false and defamatory words and making said accusations, false and untrue of plaintiff, plaintiff has been injured in his reputation, humiliated, and suffered damages in the sum of Three Thousand ($3,000.00) Dollars.”

The defendant entered a general denial, and, as a further defense, alleged that it had “long been the practice of the defendant corporation, in order to facilitate business with its various customers, to have its employees, during slack periods of trade, put up certain staple articles of food, such as flour, sugar, etc., in small packages with the weight indicated on each package, and that this practice had been in force at the various stores in this district”; and that shortly after plaintiff’s transfer from the Hampton Avenue to the West Greenville store, the State authorities visited the former store and found certain packages of goods to be slightly overweight or slightly underweight, which constituted technical violations of the statute governing weights and measures; and denied that its assistant superintendent or general manager, at any time or place, had charged plaintiff with fraud or criminal intent, or with perpetrating a fraud upon the public, specifically alleging that all statements made by its superintendent to plaintiff with reference to any underweights or overweights were made in good faith, such errors being attributable to carelessness or inadvertence in the putting up and weighing of the packages. It also alleged that J. D. Creed, the assistant superintendent of the defendant, realizing that such errors would constitute a source of embarrassment to the company and its employees, called a conference of the store managers, to be held in Greenville *389 on February 20, 1930; “that at this conference the principal subject of discussion was the prosecutions that had been started against the managers of said stores, and the methods by which errors in weight could be avoided; that the said J. L,. Creed urged upon the store managers to exercise great vigilance and caution in order to prevent errors of this kind and charged them with the duty of seeing, personally, that each package was correctly weighed and marked; that in the course of discussion at said meeting, the said J. T. Creed did not intend, by any of his remarks, to charge plaintiff with fraud or criminal intent, and such statements made by him were, in fact, true”; that the assistant superintendent later visited the West Greenville store, then under the management of plaintiff, and found that the store and stock of goods were not being kept in order and with the neatness required by the rules of the company; and that in these circum.stances the plaintiff was discharged upon the ground of carelessness and negligence in the conduct of the business.

On trial of the case in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, November 9, 1931, the jury found for the plaintiff $2,000.00 actual and $400.00 punitive damages.

The appeal involves three exceptions, all of which relate to alleged error in the Court’s instructions to the jury. These we will now consider.

The plaintiff’s fifteenth request, charged by the Court, was as follows: “The action of slander is intended not only to recompense a plaintiff for an injury done to his character, but also to punish the defendant for his malice. Any evidence which shows that the slander has been again and again repeated is competent to prove malice. The greater length of time in which the defendant has repeated his publication, evidences that his words have not been the result of passion and shows a deliberate. purpose to injure plaintiff.”

The contention of the appellant is that this was a charge on the facts, being “the equivalent of saying that any evidence of repetition of the slander is malice, and the greater *390 length of time in which the slander is repeated is evidence that the words are not the result of passion, and practically directs the jury to find that if there was a repetition over a period of time, they must infer from this ‘a deliberate purpose to injure plaintiff.’ It was not left with the jury to say whether the repetition was malicious.” The respondent argues that, when the charge is read as a whole, it will be seen that there was no prejudicial error ; that no practical juror could take the excerpt complained of, associated with other portions of the charge, and conclude that the trial Judge expressed any opinion on the facts; and that -the entire request refers to the general law pertaining to proof of malice by evidence of repetition of slanderous words, and only instructs the jury that evidence of such repetition- — • leaving to them to say if there was repetition — is competent to prove malice.

In Norris v. Clinkscales, 47 S. C., 488, 25 S. E., 797, 806, will be found a full discussion of what is meant by the provision of the Constitution, Section 26 of Article 5, that "Judges shall not charge juries in respect to matters of fact, but shall declare the law.” The Court said, inter alia: “A Judge violates this provision when he expresses in his charge his own opinion upon the force and effect of the testimony, or of any part of it, or intimates his views of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the evidence in whole or in part.”

The charge here objected to is taken from the opinion of the Court in the case of Morgan v. Livingston, 2 Rich., 584. In that case the appellant moved the Court for a new trial on the ground that the Judge had committed error in admitting, over objection, evidence of slanderous words uttered more than two years before the commencement of the action. On appeal the Court, in disposing of an exception to the admission of this testimony, used the language charged by the trial Judge in the case at bar; but did not pass upon its correctness as a charge to the jury. The difference is manifest.

*391

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Friedman v. Goodman
151 S.E.2d 455 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1966)
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191 S.E. 811 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1937)
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170 S.E. 153 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.E. 652, 168 S.C. 385, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gathings-v-great-atlantic-pacific-tea-co-sc-1933.