K-Mart Corp., Inc. v. Pendergrass

494 So. 2d 600, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3576
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 6, 1986
Docket84-569
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 494 So. 2d 600 (K-Mart Corp., Inc. v. Pendergrass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K-Mart Corp., Inc. v. Pendergrass, 494 So. 2d 600, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3576 (Ala. 1986).

Opinions

This is a defamation case involving a corporation and its employee, in which the employee sued her employer and received a jury verdict in her favor. The corporation contends the verdict should have been set aside because the employee failed to prove publication.

On Saturday, February 20, 1982, in the K-Mart store in Scottsboro, a cashier found on the floor $11.05 that she could not account for. The cashier turned the money over to plaintiff, Bonnie Ruth Pendergrass, the checkout supervisor. After a discussion with Ferrill Rankin, the merchandise supervisor, about what to do with the money, plaintiff put the $11.05 in an envelope, wrote the names of all on-duty cashiers on the envelope, stamped "K-Mart" on it, and took it home withher.

K-Mart had at the time a standard, detailed procedure for handling money found and unaccounted for, that being that such money was to be properly identified and placed in the storesafe. If, after a period of sixty days, the money was still unaccounted for, it became the property of the finder. Plaintiff, being the checkout supervisor and responsible for placing all the money counted and bagged at checkout time into the store safe, was aware of the procedure for handling unaccounted-for money. Yet, on two prior occasions, when unaccounted-for money had been turned over to her, she had put it in the service desk, only to find the money missing the next day. After this happened, plaintiff began taking unaccounted-for money home with her and returning it to the store the next day. She told at least one K-Mart employee about her new procedure for dealing with unaccounted-for money.

The day after the $11.05 was found and plaintiff took it home with her, the cash register receipts revealed that one of the registers was $11.05 short. The store manager, David Smith, asked Doris DeRose, the personnel manager, to investigate the shortage. Ms. DeRose called plaintiff at home, and plaintiff told her that she had taken the $11.05 home and that she still had it. According to plaintiff, Ms. DeRose stated, "Well, oh good. We were worried about it."

Plaintiff was off on Monday. Tuesday morning when she went in to work, she took the money to the manager, David Smith, who was in Ms. DeRose's office. K-Mart's district loss control director, Roger Hurt, was with Mr. Smith. Mr. Hurt had come to the Scottsboro store to investigate the handling of the $11.05 found the previous Saturday. Plaintiff gave the envelope containing the money to Mr. Smith. Mr. Hurt questioned plaintiff about her reason for departing from K-Mart procedure and keeping the money in her possession. The discussion developed into a heated argument. Plaintiff said that she was not a thief and "didn't need their damn money," whereupon Mr. Hurt filled out a separation report and requested that plaintiff sign it.

The separation report read, in pertinent part, as follows:

"Violated company policy by failing to report and turn in money found at register # 1 the same day it was found. It was discovered in her possession two days later."

Plaintiff refused to sign it and left the office. She collected her accrued pay, and angrily left the store, and on her way out told at least one person that she was going home and "get out of this you-know-what." There was also testimony to the effect that *Page 602 before leaving the store, plaintiff went to the employee lounge and verbally expressed her anger at K-Mart.

Ferrill Rankin, the merchandise supervisor, testified that the afternoon after plaintiff left K-Mart's employment, she overheard Doris DeRose, who, as personnel manager, was plaintiff's and Rankin's superior, tell someone (this person was not seen by Ms. Rankin and was never identified at trial) that K-Mart had fired plaintiff. According to Ms. Rankin, she approached Ms. DeRose, asked her why plaintiff was fired, and DeRose said, "For stealing." Ms. Rankin testified that she then went to the employee lounge, and that everyone there was talking about plaintiff's being fired for stealing.

Ms. DeRose testified that she never told anyone that plaintiff had been fired for stealing. David Smith and Roger Hurt also testified that they never told anyone that plaintiff was fired for stealing. The current manager of the Scottsboro K-Mart, however, testified that on one occasion Roger Hurt told him that plaintiff had been fired for misappropriation of company funds.

Plaintiff, herself, testified that she related the circumstances surrounding her discharge only to her husband. Yet, sometime after plaintiff left K-Mart, plaintiff's mother heard a rumor in the community that K-Mart had fired her daughter for stealing. Plaintiff's brother-in-law also heard the rumor in a restaurant in a neighboring town.

At trial, at the close of all the evidence, K-Mart moved for a directed verdict on the grounds that, inter alia, plaintiff had not proved publication of the alleged defamation, malice, or damages. The trial court denied K-Mart's motion and sent the case to the jury. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $243,000.00. K-Mart moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or, in the alternative, for a new trial, based, inter alia, on those grounds previously asserted in its directed verdict motion. A hearing on K-Mart's JNOV-new trial motion was held, and the court denied the motion. K-Mart appeals.

Plaintiff alleges four separate instances of defamation based on the above facts:

1. the separation report;

2. one of K-Mart's employees (Roger Hurt) told another K-Mart employee (the current manager) that plaintiff had been fired for misappropriation of company funds;

3. one or more of K-Mart's employees told someone outside the corporation that plaintiff had been fired for stealing; and,

4. one of K-Mart's employees (Doris DeRose) told another K-Mart employee (Ferrill Rankin) that plaintiff had been fired for stealing.

Defendant K-Mart argues on appeal that the trial court erred in denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because plaintiff did not prove that K-Mart published the alleged defamation.

Publication of the alleged defamatory matter is, of course, an element of a plaintiff's prima facie defamation case.Montgomery v. Big B, Inc., 460 So.2d 1286 (Ala. 1984); Willisv. Demopolis Nursing Home, Inc., 336 So.2d 1117 (Ala. 1976). A plaintiff usually satisfies the publication element by proof of communication of the defamatory matter to someone other than himself. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 113, at 776 (4th ed. 1971). K-Mart maintains that the instant case is controlled by a "special" publication rule applicable to corporations and set forth in Burney v. Southern Railway Co., 276 Ala. 637,165 So.2d 726 (1964), and McDaniel v. Crescent Motors, Inc.,249 Ala. 330, 31 So.2d 343 (1947).

In McDaniel this Court said:

"The fact that the words were spoken by one of defendant's managers in the presence of two other managers in the course of transacting defendant's business, and in the line of their duty as officers of defendant, all in respect to defendant's relations with plaintiff as an employee against whom complaint had been made in connection with his duties *Page 603 as an employee and in respect to that complaint does not alone make the conversation a publication so as to constitute slander." 249 Ala. at 332

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Bluebook (online)
494 So. 2d 600, 1986 Ala. LEXIS 3576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-mart-corp-inc-v-pendergrass-ala-1986.