Harman v. Belk

600 S.E.2d 43, 165 N.C. App. 819, 2004 N.C. App. LEXIS 1502
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 17, 2004
DocketCOA02-1470
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 600 S.E.2d 43 (Harman v. Belk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harman v. Belk, 600 S.E.2d 43, 165 N.C. App. 819, 2004 N.C. App. LEXIS 1502 (N.C. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

GEER, Judge.

Plaintiff C.D. Harman appeals a judgment entered on a jury verdict finding that defendant William I. Belk did not slander plaintiff during the course of a deposition in another lawsuit. We hold that any error in the conduct of the trial was harmless because the trial court should have granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict following the close of plaintiffs evidence. The deposition was a judicial proceeding and Belle’s comments were not palpably irrelevant to that proceeding. The comments were, therefore, absolutely privileged.

Factual Background

Defendant Belk was engaged in the business of manufacturing bottled water through a company called Old Well Water, Inc. The company intended to enter into licensing agreements with colleges and universities to permit it to use the schools’ logos and market the water on campus and at various other outlets. Old Well entered into a distribution relationship with Collegiate Distributing, Inc., a company formed for that purpose by plaintiff Harman’s son, Sayers Harman. The plaintiff in this lawsuit, C.D. Harman (“Harman”), was an officer and director of and a source of financing for Collegiate Distributing.

Ultimately, Old Well Water and Belk sued Collegiate Distributing and Sayers Harman for breach of contract. Collegiate Distributing and Sayers Harman asserted various counterclaims, including breach of contract, unfair and deceptive trade practices, and fraud. They also filed a third-party complaint against William Reed Raynor, another officer of Old Well Water. At the trial of the Old Well lawsuit, the jury found in favor of Collegiate Distributing and Sayers Harman, but awarded only $1.00, which was then trebled to $3.00. They appealed and, in an unpublished opinion, this Court found no error. Old Well Water, Inc. v. Collegiate Distrib., Inc., 150 N.C. App. 717, 565 S.E.2d 112 (2002) (unpublished).

*821 During the course of the Old Well litigation, counsel for Collegiate Distributing and Sayers Harman deposed Belk. C.D. Harman was present at the deposition. When Belk was asked about a letter he had received from Sayers Harman making certain demands, Belk testified that the letter suggested to him “that [Sayers Harman’s] father and he were knaving [sic] on how to figure out at this juncture to sabotage our corporation, and to try to take our agreements and our trademarks.” Belk also stated that he believed C.D. Harman had been speaking to Collegiate Licensing and Georgia Tech, possibly in an effort to disrupt Old Well Water’s licensing agreements. He indicated that by late summer 1998, he was suspicious of Sayers Harman’s and C.D. Harman’s intentions toward Old Well Water.

Counsel for Collegiate Distributing and Sayers Harman explored Belk’s assertions:

Q. What evidence do you know that Sayers Harman’s father, Dale Harman, engaged in any sort of a conspiracy to damage Old Well?
A. We’ll let Jack [Belk’s counsel] do that on his questioning with Sayers.
Q. Well, I’m asking you what do you know.
[Belk’s Counsel]: If you presently have personal knowledge of precisely what Mr. Dale Harman has done testify to that. If you don’t, say so, and let’s pursue it through other forms of discovery.
A. It’s third party.
Q. . . . What third-party information do you have that he has engaged in such activities?
A. Through the other owners of Old Well Water and their employees and family.
Q. And what information is that that you’ve learned from these third parties?
A. Well, I said it is third party so I’ll wait on that.
Q. Well, I’m not going to wait. I want you to answer the question. What do you know?
[Belk’s Counsel]: (To witness) Well, he is entitled to ask you if a third party told you something then you have to *822 answer what the third party told you even if it is not of your personal knowledge.
A. There were instances that Sayers told Will Raynor that his father had devised a way to take our inventory. He was coming up there and was not going to pay for it in order to stiff us. He told the warehouse person that he was not — that Sayers was not — told him that he wasn’t going to sell our twenty ounce, so that we could not survive. He calls up — personal knowledge — with my distributor up here and spooks them to where they want to — they feel uncomfortable working with us. Cunningham. They are calling up Collegiate Licensing to try to see if they can help revoke our license. Just by the letters and the questions that you are asking. He told my partners that he — that I had put this initial investment but that he was going to get me out and work with them exclusively after I had put up the initial money for a loan. He mislead [sic] us on that — and kept a secret that we did not know. That Will and Elizabeth were his only payroll outside of himself. He misrepresented the fact that he was — had education and competence and business background to set up a distributorship and we — and then kept us away from what he was doing where we didn’t even know who the employees were, what he was doing, or anything.
Q. Now, all of those statements you are using pronouns. But do any of those pronouns apply to Dale Harman. And, that was the question, what did Dale Harman do to damage—
A: Dale Harman is the alter ego and he is the one that is behind this whole thing.
Q. Are you saying—
A. Reed Raynor told me pointblank that Dale Harman the first time he [met] him bragged about that he was in some special forces in the Marines and he liked to hurt people, that he broke their knees, and that he was a crud [sic] man. I thought that was kind of strange to hear that from a person that could have been his future father-in-law or I mean outlaw.
Q. What exactly did Dale Harman do that you know of or have personal knowledge of someone telling you that he did?
*823 A. I know that this is his money in the corporation. I know that he is an officer and director. I’m pretty positive that he is paying for the lawsuit. I’m pretty positive he has been talking to Collegiate Licensing. And I’m going to find out. Because if he is, he is going to be liable for it. I believe that he is behind this whole scenario. . . .
Q. But, you have no personal knowledge of any of that?
A. This is from what I was told.
Q. What did Reed Raynor tell you that Dale Harman specifically did in relation to the things that you have gone on about?
A. As a lawyer he liked to sue the city every year for his taxes and that he liked to blackmail people.
Q. Is that all he told you about Dale Harman?
A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 S.E.2d 43, 165 N.C. App. 819, 2004 N.C. App. LEXIS 1502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harman-v-belk-ncctapp-2004.