McDougald v. . Coward

95 N.C. 368
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 95 N.C. 368 (McDougald v. . Coward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDougald v. . Coward, 95 N.C. 368 (N.C. 1886).

Opinion

(Bost v. Bost, 87 N.C. 477; Perry v. Jackson, 88 N.C. 103, cited and approved). The plaintiff's action, begun on July 6th, 1885, is prosecuted for the recovery of damages, for the utterance, by the defendant, of defamatory words concerning the plaintiff, on several different occasions, imputing a want of virtue, and charging acts of illicit sexual intercourse with divers persons, and among them the defendant's son. The speaking of the words, substantially as set out in the complaint, is not denied by the defendant, and he admits he meant to charge incontinency. Some of the charges he justifies as true, and disclaiming any malicious purpose, he sets out the mitigating circumstances under which the words were spoken.

The plaintiff avers her innocence.

The defendant alleges, that one of his conversations set out in the complaint, was a confidential and privileged communication, made under *Page 325 a sense of moral duty to the brother of certain unmarried young ladies relatives of the defendant, for their safety and good name.

The parties disagreeing as to the issues raised by the pleadings, the Court prepared and submitted to the jury, issues, which with the responses to each, are as follows:

I. Did the defendant, in speaking of the plaintiff, use the words set out in the second article of the complaint, thereby make a charge of incontinency against her? Answer, by consent: Yes.

II. Did the plaintiff have illicit sexual intercourse with Mike Coward? Answer: Yes.

III. Did the plaintiff have illicit sexual intercourse with John Coward? Answer: Yes.

IV. Did the plaintiff have illicit sexual intercourse with Dempsy Wood? Answer: Yes.

V. Did the defendant, in speaking the words to Luby Harper, as stated in the second article of the complaint, intend to charge sexual intercourse with the person there mentioned? Answer, by (370) consent: Yes.

VI. Were the words true? Answer, by consent: No.

VII. Did the defendant, in uttering the language set out in the complaint, to Grimsley, intend to charge plaintiff with unlawful intercourse with William Coward? Answer, by consent: Yes.

VIII. Were these words true? Answer, by consent: No

IX. Was the communication made to Grimsley privileged? Answer Yes.

X. What damage is the plaintiff entitled to? Answer: Five cents.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was refused, and judgment being rendered that she recover the sum awarded by the jury for damages, and the same sum in costs, she appealed to this Court.

The facts stated in the case on appeal, which cannot be much abridged without producing obscurity in regard to the rulings upon the evidence brought up for consideration, are these:

After two of the plaintiff's witnesses, who had been previously examined, had testified on cross-examination, without objection, that the defendant was much distressed in mind about the absence of his son John, the plaintiff introduced one John Patrick, who testified in substance, that on Saturday, the 20th of June, 1885, the defendant said to witness, that his boy John was gone again, and asked the witness if he had heard from him. The defendant said that it was the first boy he had ever known to be seduced, and that the plaintiff had seduced him. He further said that the plaintiff had gone to Black Mountain, and he had gone to Goldsboro to see if his son John had not followed her off, *Page 326 and that he went to Goldsboro to look for his son the day that plaintiff left for Black Mountain.

(371) The defendant also stated that his son Mike had had something to do with the plaintiff in Snow Hill, but that he knew nothing of his own knowledge of the plaintiff's improper connection with his said sons, and that when the plaintiff went to his house, he did not think there would be any trouble between her and his son John, and that his older boys were not at home. The witness then asked the defendant why he did not get his son Heber, a grown young man, to help attend to her, and defendant replied, that he "reckoned Heber had all he wanted of it, and was disgusted at it." Defendant asked witness, if he, the witness, heard from his son John, to let him know it, and if, further, he had heard the report about the plaintiff and his son John, and the witness replied he had heard some reports about John, and William Ormand.

This conversation was on Saturday, after the defendant came back from Goldsboro.

On cross-examination by the defendant, this witness testified, that no one was present and heard the conversation between himself and the defendant. Witness testified further, that defendant, in said conversation, said he watched around the train going West, on which the plaintiff was at Goldsboro, and his son Mike went in the train to see if his son John was there; that he had known the defendant thirty years; had seen him often and knew him well.

The defendant asked the witness the following question: "What was the mental condition of the defendant at the time of said conversation?" Question objected to by plaintiff, and the defendant's attorney stated that it was asked to show the mental excitement of defendants at the time of the conversation, and not to show insanity; the plaintiff having shown a conversation, not set up in the complaint, to increase damages, the defendant asked this question in mitigation, and the Court overruled the objection, and the plaintiff excepted. Thereupon the witness answered, that defendant's mind was as good as at any other (372) time, and that his manner was uneasy about his boy John being gone.

In support of the admissibility of the evidence thus admitted, the defendant's counsel promised the Court to give, and afterwards gave, evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had taught school in a school house within a short distance of defendant's dwelling; that his son John, aged about fourteen years, had been a pupil of the plaintiff in said school; that plaintiff had boarded at the house of the defendant; that defendant, believing that plaintiff had had sexual intercourse with his son John while he was her pupil, had about four weeks before *Page 327 discharged her as such teacher, and she had left his house; that soon thereafter, his said son had left his house on account of the said plaintiff, as the defendant believes, and had been absent about a month, and was then absent; that neither the defendant nor any of his family knew where John was, and supposed he had committed suicide; that defendant had searched extensively for him, and had been unable to find him, and that defendant and his wife were much distressed on account of John's absence.

There was also evidence on part of plaintiff, tending to show that defendant had not discharged the plaintiff for the cause above set forth.

The plaintiff was introduced as a witness in her own behalf, and testified, among other things, that no one had ever had sexual intercourse with her. On cross-examination, she said that she knew slightly Robert Taylor; that Taylor carried her in a buggy nine or ten miles to Snow Hill and returned with her at night, and "that he did not kiss her on that trip;" he did not kiss her "time and again on that trip," and did not "put his arm around her time and again on that trip."

The plaintiff was asked if Thomas Harvey had ever kissed her, and she replied he never had. She was asked if he ever felt of her leg, and this she denied.

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Related

Bost v. . Bost
87 N.C. 477 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1882)
State v. . Hinson
9 S.E. 552 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1889)
Perry v. . Jackson
88 N.C. 103 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1883)
Upchurch v. Robertson.
37 S.E. 157 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1900)
Harper v. Pinkston
112 N.C. 293 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.C. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdougald-v-coward-nc-1886.