Lile v. Matthews

598 S.W.2d 755, 268 Ark. 980, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 9, 1980
DocketCA 79-331
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 598 S.W.2d 755 (Lile v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lile v. Matthews, 598 S.W.2d 755, 268 Ark. 980, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1310 (Ark. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinions

David Newbern, Judge.

This is a slander case in which we are asked to reverse a judgment awarding the appellee general damages of $14, $30,000 compensatory damages and $20,000 punitive damages. The appellant asserts, at first, two errors consisting of admissions of hearsay evidence. We agree with the appellant, but we find one of these errors was not prejudicial and the other went only to the question of damages and thus does not require complete reversal. The appellant argues further with respect to privileged communication. We do not find that argument persuasive.

The appellant, Olive Lile, was in the practice of befriending young persons whom she hired as companions and helpers. They lived in her home and helped with domestic and business chores. The appellee, Sherry Matthews graduated from high school. She lived with the appellant two months. The appellee’s testimony was that she left the appellant’s home and employ because she was somehow being “used” in financial transactions. While helping Ms. Lile balance her checkbook she found a cancelled check made out to her (the appellee) for $200 which she had not seen before. When she questioned Ms. Lile about it, Ms. Lile allegedly was unresponsive. The appellee said she was paid no wages by Ms. Lile, other than her room and board, but was allowed to charge items to Ms. Lile’s accounts at various stores from time to time.

The appellee testified that she was arrested and tried in 1975 for possession of stolen property, two costume jewelry bracelets and a clock, which Ms. Lile accused her of having taken. The appellee contended all three items were gifts from Ms.Lile, and that the clock had not been removed from the appellant’s home. That criminal trial resulted in the judge holding the case for one year after a hearing and then dismissing the charge.

In 1976, Cohn’s Department Store brought suit against the appellee and the appellant to collect for some items charged to Ms. Lile for wiiich she refused to pay because the charge tickets had been signed by the appellee. Ms. Matthews had signed her own name and not that of Ms. Lile. The suit was dismissed as to the appellee.

Freda Hendricks testified she was, in 1977, living in Ms. Lile’s home in a capacity like that described by the appellee, and upon entering Ms. Lile’s bedroom to deliver her newspaper one morning, she heard Ms. Lile talking on the telephone and describing the appellee as being “on dope,” and a thief as well as other remarks alleging she was sexually promiscuous. Ms. Henricks testified that Ms. Lile hung up the phone and told Ms. Hendricks she had been speaking with Mr. Stockard of Kempner’s Department Store because she had seen the appellee acting in a television commercial presented by the store, and she wanted to warn him. Ms. Hendricks testified the appellant called Dillard’s and Montgomery Ward’s before Ms. Hendricks left the room, and from another part of the house she later heard the appellant repeating the message the appellant had allegedly given Mr. Stockard.

The appellee testified that she heard about the allegations made to Kempner’s, and at that point she was highly embarrassed and depressed. She consulted a physician and was given medication. She said she thereafter gave up her fledgling modeling career because she was too embarrassed to seek work.

Other facts will be stated as necessary..

1. Hearsay Identification

At the trial, part of the deposition of Patti George was read into evidence. The essence of the textimony was, first, that Mr. Stockard had stated to Mr. Lynn Kempner in the presence of Ms. George that he had been told Sherry Matthews was a thief and “involved with drugs” and had “forged an account.” Mr. Stockard did not, on that occasion, reveal the source of that information. At the trial, he denied that it had come from Ms. Lile. Secondly, Ms. George testified as follows:

Q. Had Mrs. Lile been on the [Kempner’s] premises anytime shortly before this conversation with Mr. Kempner?
A. Yes she had.
Q. Can you tell me what about?
A. I don’t know if it was the day before or — I believe I was walking to the elevator. I don’t know Mrs. Lile. There was an elderly woman sitting in a chair outside his office. ... I asked Mrs. Cohn, who works at Kempner’s who the lady was. She said it was Mrs. Lile

This testimony had been objected to earlier in the proceedings, and the objection was renewed in a specific and timely manner. The objection was that Ms. Cohn’s identification of Ms. Lile was hearsay. The appellee argues it was not, citing cases which appear to have admitted identification evidence of this sort without much discussion why it does not violate the hearsay rule.

If this evidence was hearsay, we conclude it was harmless error to admit it. The jury had before it direct evidence that Ms. Lile had uttered the defamatory statements to Mr. Stockard and others, and that was the theory of the appellee’s case. The testimony identifying Ms. Lile as a person who was at the Kempner’s Store added nothing. Ms. George’s deposition is indefinite as to when Ms. Lile was there. It does not say “outside” whose office she sat.

Although it might be said that this evidence was calculated to prove Ms. Lile was in a position to have uttered the defamatory words at a time vaguely close to the incident Ms. George observed when Mr. Stockard told Mr. Kempner he had received derogatory information about the appellee, we cannot say there is any chance the verdict in this case was to any degree based on that evidence as opposed to the direct testimony of Freda Hendricks.

2. Privilege

The appellee’s complaint contained a count alleging liability of the appellant for her statements to a prosecuting attorney which led to her 1975 arrest. The appellant moved to strike that count on the ground that statements made to a prosecutor in connection with reporting a crime are privileged because they are part of “judicial proceedings.” Neither the appellant’s abstract nor the record, as far as we can determine, shows the specific action taken by the court on the motion. However, the court’s instructions make it clear the only allegation to be considered by the jury was Ms. Lile’s alleged statement to “an employee of Kempner’s.”

The appellant contends evidence of the 1975 arrest of the appellee should not have been admitted. The record shows the appellee testified she received two bracelets and a clock as gifts from the appellant. Just after that testimony was received, the direct examination of the appellee continued as follows:

Q. Did you subsequently get arrested?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. What was the charge.
MR. MADDEN [Defendant’s Counsel]:
Objection, your Honor, he is talking about some other court proceedings.
THE COURT:
Will you gentlemen approach the bench?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
598 S.W.2d 755, 268 Ark. 980, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lile-v-matthews-arkctapp-1980.