Johnston v. Belk-McKnight Co. of Newberry, S. C., Inc.

198 S.E. 395, 188 S.C. 149, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 4, 1938
Docket14736
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 198 S.E. 395 (Johnston v. Belk-McKnight Co. of Newberry, S. C., Inc.) 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
Johnston v. Belk-McKnight Co. of Newberry, S. C., Inc., 198 S.E. 395, 188 S.C. 149, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 148 (S.C. 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The respondent brought action to recover of the defendant damages for the alleged utterance of slanderous language in and about her, in connection with the forgery and utterance of a check bearing the name of Fred H. Dominick, which was accepted and cashed by the appellant, and which proved to be spurious.

The allegations of the complaint are to the effect that J. N. Beard, the manager of the appellant’s mercantile store In Newberry, S. C., in the presence of others charged the respondent with having forged the check and with having it cashed at the store, and of having received in exchange for it certain merchandise and cash; that the charges were made and spoken of respondent by the said J. N. Beard maliciously and with intent to hold respondent up to hatred, ridicule and contempt.

*152 The answer contains, as a first defense, an admission of the corporate capacity of the defendant, and a general denial. For a second defense: That whatever was said by J. N. Beard, manager of defendant’s store, of, to, or concerning the plaintiff was said by him in good faith, without malice or ill will toward plaintiff, and in the investigation of the utterance of the said check, in the discharge of his duty.

For a third defense: That all acts done and committed by the defendant and its employees, with respect to the transaction described in the complaint and answer, were done and committed without malice or ill will against the plaintiff, and in good faith and in the prosecution of an inquiry relating to the commission of a crime, and in an effort to collect the money due the plaintiff.

The case was tried before Judge Oxner, with a jury, at the spring 1937, term of Court for Newberry County, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant. There was no appeal therefrom.

November 18, 1937, the respondent, plaintiff then, gave notice of a motion for new trial based on after-discovered evidence. The motion came on to be heard by his Honor, M. M. Mann, presiding Judge in the Eighth Circuit, who granted the motion by an order set out in the record. In support of the motion were several affidavits and documents, and in opposition thereto. were other affidavits, all centering about the fact that at the September, 1937, term of the Court of General Sessions for Newberry County, William Laboon and Nancy Baboon, alias Nancy Griffin, had plead guilty to forging and uttering the check to which was signed the name of Fred H. Dominick, with the forging and uttering of which the respondent, it is alleged, was charged. This evidence, used on the hearing of the motion, is voluminous, embracing the whole of that, oral and documentary, taken on the trial of the case. We shall not attempt to reproduce even a synopsis of it, but shall adopt and follow the example of Judge Mann, who said in his order granting the motion for new trial:

*153 “No special phase of the testimony is commented upon for the reason that this ruling can be made without any such definite references, and for the further reason that I do not care to express any opinion as to the credibility of any witness or probative value of any part of the testimony. This I wish expressly to leave to the jury who may pass upon the case.”

From this order, the defendant appeals upon seven exceptions, which appellant’s counsel elects to group and treat in argument under three heads.

Before coming to a consideration of the arguments on the appeal, it may be well to state the law regulating the consideration and determination of motions for new trial based on after-discovered evidence.

That matter is fully treated in the case of McCabe v. Sloan, 184 S. C., 158, 191 S. E., 905. This is the utterance of the Court thereabout, quoting 20 R. C. E., 290:

“In order to warrant the granting of a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, it must appear, (1) that the evidence is such as will probably change the result, if a new trial is granted. (2) That it has been dis-' covered since the trial. (3) That it could not have been discovered before the trial by the exercise of due diligence. (4) That it is material to the issue. (5) That it is not merely cumulative or impeaching.” (Page 908.)

As we gather from the able and ingenious argument of the counsel for appellant, he contends by Exceptions 1, 3, 6 and 7 that the Circuit Judge erred in granting the motion for new trial for the following reason. The defendant has not pleaded justification; but did plead general denial, privilege and lack of malice. That the newly discovered evidence relates solely to the question whether the plaintiff had in fact forged a check which was cashed by the defendant. He argues that such newly discovered evidence would not be admissible on a new trial because it would not be relevant to the issues made by the pleadings.

*154 It is true that the defendant did not plead justification; that is to say, it did not plead the truth of the alleged slanderous utterances charged to it. But it did plead privilege and want of malice. Clearly these pleas, if well pleaded, were in mitigation of damages. In sustaining these pleas, it introduced the evidence of at least two witnesses to the effect that the plaintiff was the person who presented the forged check and received in return merchandise and cash.

We think the defendant had the right to offer such evidence in mitigation of damages. The effect of such evidence, if the jury believed it and acted upon it, was to prove the plaintiff guilty of forging, or at least of uttering, the forged check. We think this postulate will not be disputed.

It would seem then that evidence discovered after the trial, which tends to prove that persons other than the plaintiff committed and uttered the forgery, would be relevant and admissible, if such evidence conforms to the requirements regulating the granting of new trials on after-discovered evidence.

Again this Court takes occasion to say that it does not express nor intimate any opinion of the force and effect, or probative value of the evidence offered in support of, or that in opposition to, the motion for new trial.

It is specifically alleged as error that Judge Mann misapprehended the issues made by the pleadings • when he said in his order: “The plaintiff is accused with having uttered and passed the alleged forged check”; the error being that the question at issue made by the pleadings was whether the manager of defendant’s store uttered the alleged slanderous words of, to, and concerning the plaintiff as they are set out in the complaint. If there be some slight inaccuracy in the statement in the order, we do not see hów it can be injurious to the respondent on a new trial. It is possible, it may be probable, that the Circuit Judge was misled into making that statement by the al *155 legations contained in the third defense of the answer, to wit:

“On information and belief that on or about the fifth day on November, 1936, on an information sworn out by J. J.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.E. 395, 188 S.C. 149, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-belk-mcknight-co-of-newberry-s-c-inc-sc-1938.