Hooper-Holmes Bureau, Inc. v. Bunn

161 F.2d 102, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2736
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1947
Docket11689
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 161 F.2d 102 (Hooper-Holmes Bureau, Inc. v. Bunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper-Holmes Bureau, Inc. v. Bunn, 161 F.2d 102, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2736 (5th Cir. 1947).

Opinions

LEE, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, plaintiff below, filed suit against appellant, defendant below, in a Florida State court for slander, based upon three mercantile reports made by the defendant on plaintiff. The defendant removed the cause to the court below. The amended complaint alleged that the defendant had maliciously published libels that brought plaintiff into occupational disrepute. On this appeal the defendant relies upon the defense of qualified privilege rather than the defense of the truth of the published matter. The court denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict both at the close of plaintiff’s case and at the close of defendant’s case. The jury rendered a verdict of $2,500. This appeal is from a judgment entered thereon.

The defendant is engaged in the business of making reports to insurance companies and prospective employers on the financial standing, health, character, and reputation of applicants for insurance, credit, or employment, and upon claimants under insurance policies. The defendant makes reports pursuant to a specific request from a client previously designated by its national office and delivers the report in confidence to the client. The defendant never publishes reports in any other manner.

In April, 1937, after a dispute had arisen between plaintiff and the Miami manager, plaintiff severed his employment with the Peninsular Life Insurance Company as a salesman of industrial insurance. Plaintiff testified that after his “resignation” the Prudential Life Insurance Company, the Gulf Life Insurance Company, and other companies in Miami refused him employment. He took employment outside the insurance field at less remunerative tasks. In 1938 he went to work for one I. D. Padorr as a salesman and solicitor in his photographic business.

In 1940 he applied to the Maccabees, a fraternal order writing insurance. After this application, Johnson, the Miami manager of the Maccabees, showed him a portion of a report issued by the defendant. This report recited that the plaintiff was discharged by the Peninsular Insurance Company for dishonesty. After Bunn denied the truth thereof, Johnson, upon his own recommendation, obtained employment of Bunn with the Maccabees. One Cohen, employed as an inspector in the office of the defendant in Miami had prepared this and the two subsequent reports. Shortly after-wards, Bunn tried to prove to Cohen the falsity of this first report, but Cohen replied that, because plaintiff had struck Padorr, a friend of Cohen, he would fix it so that the plaintiff would never be able to get a job so long as he lived in Miami.

On April 11, 1940, the Maccabees received a second report from the defendant, requested for the purpose of permitting the plaintiff to obtain insurance from the Maccabees. This report, in addition to the statement that the Peninsular had discharged plaintiff for dishonesty, stated that Padorr [104]*104had discharged the plaintiff for unsatisfactory service. In April, 1940, plaintiff applied to the Guaranty Life Insurance Company, at its office in Miami, for employment. The Guaranty Life requested from defendant a report on plaintiff. This report, dated April 26, 1940, and made by Cohen, in addition to the derogatory statements found in the previous two reports, stated that Bunn’s services with the Maccabees were not altogether satisfactory. The-Guaranty Life refused employment to plaintiff. The reason for its refusal does not appear in the record. After the refusal of Guaranty Life, Cohen told the plaintiff that as long as he applied for a job Cohen would put a bad report against him, and that "we have” instructed Johnson to get rid of him.

These three reports on plaintiff were ordered through the defendant’s Miami office. The defendant claims that Cohen was one of five or six inspectors in the Miami .office at the time these reports were delivered. The plaintiff contends that Cohen was the only employee of the defendant in the Miami office besides one Clark, the manager.

Cohen himself never sent out the reports directly to the clients but delivered them to Clark. Clark testified that he checked each report for content and clarity before he mailed them to the clients. Clark did not testify that he did anything'to check the accuracy of the reports.

Since the jury upon conflicting evidence on the falsity of the reports necessarily found for the plaintiff and the defendant has not attacked the verdict, we may assume the falsity of the reports on this appeal.

The three reports made by the defendant to its two clients, the Maccabees and Guaranty Life, in regard to plaintiff’s-qualifications for employment and for insurance were privileged communications.1 Plaintiff to recover for damages caused by defamation in these privileged reports must prove the publication was made from express malice.2

As its first point, the defendant argues that the court below erred in refusing its motion for a directed verdict because the evidence was insufficient to show express malice on the part of the defendant. In support of this motion the defendant further argues: that the alleged malice of Cohen, who was not acting within the scope of his employment, cannot be imputed to the employer in the absence of authorization, notice, or ratification. On oral argument before this court the defendant for the first time puts a new twist to this motion : it now claims that, as a matter of law, the personal malice of Cohen cannot be imputed to the defendant irrespective of the question of scope of employment because Cohen’s superior rather than Cohen himself read the report and mailed the report. In support of the motion, the defendant at the trial further contended that the only evidence attempting to prove malice on the part of the defendant is the uncorroborated testimony of the plaintiff with respect to alleged conversations with a subordinate employee of the defendant relating to past, closed transactions which were hearsay and should not have been admitted.

A corporation may be liable for libel by its servants.3 The defamatory statements made by a servant speaking within the scope of his employment but with a bad motive subjects the corporation to liability.4 The defamatory statements made by a servant only for his own purposes, although made during a transaction in which the servant is acting for the corporation, does not subject the corporation to liability.5 A servant under a duty to gather information on the wrongful conduct of another person subjects his corporation to liability for [105]*105malicious statements made in connection with his employment and with a purpose to serve it.6 An act may be done within the scope of employment although done in part to serve the purpose o f the servant.7

Discussing the master’s responsibility for torts committed by his servant, the Supreme Court of Florida, in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Michel, 1935, 120 Fla. 511, 163 So. 86, 88, said: “The rule is well settled that the master is responsible for the torts committed by his servant in the scope or range of his employment.

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Hooper-Holmes Bureau, Inc. v. Bunn
161 F.2d 102 (Fifth Circuit, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
161 F.2d 102, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-holmes-bureau-inc-v-bunn-ca5-1947.