Gattis v. Kilgo.

42 S.E. 584, 131 N.C. 199, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 584 (Gattis v. Kilgo.) 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
Gattis v. Kilgo., 42 S.E. 584, 131 N.C. 199, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 269 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

MoNtgomeRy, J.

In the opinion of the Court delivered at the February Term, 1901, and published in 128 N. C., 402, it was said: “Whether or not the speech of the defendant Kilgo, published by the defendants in pamphlet form and embodied with the whole proceeding in the matter of the investigation, was a privileged communication (and it would have been more accurate to have said a privileged occasion), was a question of law, there having been no dispute or uncertainty as to the circumstances attending the publication, and his Honor properly tried the case as one of qualified privilege.” In the new trial ordered in that opinion, it was anticipated that in that trial the question of malice in the defamatory publication would be the only matter before the trial Court. It was perfectly apparent to this Court,, and it seemed to be equally so to his Honor who presided at the first trial of this *200 case, that from the plaintiffs' evidence the investigation by the trustees of Trinity College of certain charges of incompetency and moral unfitness, made against its President, Dr. Kilgo, was a matter of justice to Dr. Kilgo and to the college, and that the college Avas in a sense a public institution; and therefore that the publication of the proceedings' in the investigation by the college was a privileged occasion. From a careful reading of the statement of the case on the present appeal, it seems clear that the plaintiff’s counsel acquiesced in that vieAv of the opinion of this Court. The plaintiff himself, Avhen upon the stand as a witness Avas asked by his counsel “Whether you Avere a Avitness before the Board of Trustees of Trinity College upon the investigation of the matter of the charges said to have been brought by Judge Clark against Dr. Kilgo,” and we .find nothing in the whole evidence tending to show that the meeting of the Board of Trustees was not properly called or Avas not properly constituted. The plaintiff also introduced in evidence a paper called a challenge of Judge Clark to the Board, in which challenge exception was made to certain individual members of the Board. But the regularity and authority of the Board AAnre recognized in the last lines of the challenge, in these Avords: “As an act of justice to yourselves, toi the college and to- myself — an act of justice that no North Carolinian should ever seek in vain — I ask that the triers be polled, and that no one shall sit on this investigation aa’Iio is not absolutely and altogether impartial and uncommitted by former deliberate expressions of his views.” The manner, too, in AA'hicli the plaintiff’s counsel conducted the plaintiff’s case sho.Avs "that the counsel regarded the publication of the defamatory matter as an occasion of privilege. The plaintiff, in his complaint, did not allege any matters, oi' make any admission to the effect that the publication of the matter Avas a prmleged occasion. The simple allegation of the complaint Avas that the publication had been made. *201 It was, therefore, incumbent on the defendants to show the privileged occasion. The plaintiff, however, was not satisfied to introduce evidence of the publication of the defamatory matter, and stop, which was all he was required to do upon the allegations of the complaint, and wait for his adversary to take up the burden of showing a qualified privilege. He went into matters showing the privileged occasion himself. And that can only be accounted for upon the supposition that he would have to meet that contention on the part of the defendants, when the defendants should have put in their evidence on that point, and that he> the plaintiff, had as well meet the matter in limine. Rut the counsel of the plaintiff, instead of being consistent in the matter of the introduction of evidence, and confining it matters going to show malice in the publication, brought into the trial a vast pile of evidence inconsistent with tlieir theory of the case and entirely incompetent if the occasion of the publication was privileged.

His Honor, however, in what he calls “Note Y,” in the record, as distinguished from what he designates.his charge, states that he, “in the admission of evidence of what transpired before the Hoard of Trustees upon the trial of TCilgo, the Court opened the door and permitted plaintiff to offer evidence of everything that happened there, to determine; as to whether there was a trial there.” As we have said, the plaintiff having alleged the publication by the defendants of matter which was and is libelous per se., and having introduced evidence of its' publication,' was entitled to judgment, if he had not shown by his own testimony an occasion of privilege in the publication of the defamatory matter, or unless the defendants had assumed the burden, and in their evidence had shown a privileged occasion in' the publication, of the matter.

Hut if his Honor, notwithstanding the manner in which the plaintiff’s counsel conducted the case, felt it his duty to investigate *202 the proceedings before the Board of Trustees of the College, to see whether there bad been, any trial, be should have admitted only such evidence under that bead as pertained to the regularity and the integrity of the proceeding. That be did not do., He allowed evidence to the effect that the meeting of the trustees was held with closed doors', that the stenographer was not sworn, that Judge Clark was refused a stenographer, that Judge Clark’s challenge to the Board was rejected, that Mr. Jurney said, “I am a Kilgo man; I told the District Conference at Rockingham yesterday I was coming here to fight for Kilgo, that I should fight for him with my fingers and with my teeth, and when my teeth gave out, I would gum it for him”; that Judge Montgomery nodded and consulted with Dr. Kilgo; and referred him to Greenleaf on Evidence, and that Dr. Kilgo’s conduct and behaviour when cross-examining the witnesses, including the plaintiff, were overbearing and offensive, and brutal to the plaintiff.

Especially should his Honor not have allowed as evidence that part of the challenge to.the Board which is in these words: “I have been pronounced in my views against the illegality of trusts, and I have concurred with the resolutions of the Western North Carolina Conference against the sale and manufacture of cigarettes, and I stand here by the terms of your invitation in Benefactor’s Parlor, Duke’s Building, a room thus doubly labeled with the reminder of the cigarette business, the influence of whose vast accumulations is like the darkness of Egypt, in that it can not only be seen, but can be felt. This institution itself becomes a partner in that very business by being the holder of a large block of its stock, from which it derives no small part of its income.”

His Honor also allowed a witness for the plaintiff to state that Dr. Kilgo, during the investigation, locked the door of the room against a correspondent of one of the daily papers *203 of tbe State; and another witness to state that just before the trial commenced, and as he got up to the building,, in the shade on the grass', Mr. Oglesby and Ur. Kilgo were lying on their stomachs with their heads close together, and seemed to be in an interesting conversation.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 584, 131 N.C. 199, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gattis-v-kilgo-nc-1902.