Stewart v. Riley

172 S.E. 791, 114 W. Va. 578, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 167
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
Docket7750
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 S.E. 791 (Stewart v. Riley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Riley, 172 S.E. 791, 114 W. Va. 578, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 167 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge :

This is an action of trespass on the case brought by Luther Stewart by reason of allegedly slanderous words injurious to the plaintiff’s trade, office or employment uttered by W. F. Riley. The defendants in the circuit court of Wyoming-County were W. F. Riley and Morrison Coal Company, a. *579 corporation. The trial court directed a verdict as to the corporation. No error is cross-assigned on this account. To a judgment for $350.00 against the defendant, W. P. Riley; this writ of error is prosecuted.

Admittedly, the plaintiff, while working at the Glen Morrison operation of Morrison Coal Company, lost the index and second fingers of his left hand. Plaintiff’s contention is that he lost his fingers by accidentally striking them off with an ax while trimming the cap board of á prop he was about to place in his working room in the mine. The injury occurred on May 14, 1932, while the defendant, W. P. Riley, was employed as general superintendent by that company, and while he was stationed at Glen Morrison. The Morrison Coal Company was a subscriber to the Compensation Fund. The injury was at once reported to W. M. Thompson, the assistant mine foreman, who was inside the mine near the scene of the accident. He, with Worley Walker and another, after Stewart had been sent outside, went at once to the place of the accident. As soon as the plaintiff was brought out of the mine, W. A. White, the general mine foreman, was informed of the accident, and, immediately after causing the plaintiff to be taken to the hospital, entered the mine for the purpose of investigating the circumstances of the injury. Having done so, he returned to the outside within about an hour and a half after the injury and reported to the defendant Riley, the superintendent, circumstances from which he concluded, and from which Riley concluded, that the plaintiff likely had come to his injury by deliberate means. After the report of the circumstances of the accident was made to the defendant Riley, he is alleged to have said on that same day in the presence of witnesses that the plaintiff had cut his fingers off purposely. There is some conflict in the proof as to just what Riley did say, his own testimony indicating that his statement was to the effect that it looked like plaintiff had cut his fingers off purposely. Plaintiff and other witnesses testified that he made this statement as a direct charge and that he did not qualify it. However, there was no denial of his having made a statement substantially as alleged in plaintiff’s declaration. The declaration is confined to the one utterance of May 14, 1932, seeking recovery on that statement alone.

*580 No point is made on this writ of error that the words allegedly slanderous were not uttered by Riley. Neither was the truth of the words pleaded. Defamation of the kind alleged is actionable per se and no special damages need be alleged or proved in order for plaintiff to recover. Hancock v. Mitchell, 83 W. Va. 156, 98 S. E. 65.

The defense is that the trial court erred in not considering the words qualifiedly privileged and, inasmuch as no malice was' shown, in not, on that account, instructing the jury to return a verdict for the defendant Riley. Plaintiff in error says that in any event the trial court should have instructed the jury that the defendant Riley stood in a relationship entitling his statements to be qualifiedly privileged, that' the occasion upon which they were uttered was a privileged occasion, and should have submitted to the jury, under proper instructions, the question of whether the words assigned as actionable were uttered in a manner showing them to have been actuated by malice.'

The second point of error is assigned in the refusal of the trial. court to admit an order subsequently entered by the Workmen’s Compensation Commissioner refusing compensation to Stewart because of the fact that this injury, in the opinion of the commissioner, was self-inflicted.

To the main defense, that of qualified privilege, the defendant in error counters (1) that there was no privilege, and (2) that if there was a qualified privilege, Riley, as a matter of law, exceeded its bounds by an unnecessarily defamatory statement, and that if this is not so, then the statement was made with malice.

To the second proposition, the defendant in error simply says that the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Commissioner is not relevant.

We are not, of course, here concerned with the question of absolute privilege. The defense rests upon qualified privilege.' It seems to be quite clear from the decided cases that in order .for the defendant to get the benefit of qualified privilege and in order for that privilege to bar recovery, two things must combine: First,'the occasion upon which the words are spoken must be a privileged occasion, and, second, the occasion being *581 privileged, the communication must have been made legitimately within the privilege that existed. Where these two elements are established in defense, the burden shifts back to plaintiff to show actual malice. Rigney v. Keesee & Co., 104 W. Va. 168, 171, 139 S. E. 650.

Reporting the circumstances of injuries that take place in the course of their business is directly enjoined upon the subscribers to the compensation fund by the statute itself. Code, 23-2-2, 3. In addition, the premiums to be paid by a subscriber into the fund are based partly upon the accident experience of the subscriber. Upon the happening of an accident or an injury, this duty and this interest naturally devolves upon the superintendent of a mining operation. Pursuant thereto, the superintendent would naturally be expected to make inquiry of the other employees of the company who were at or in the vicinity when the injury took place or for other reasons might directly or indirectly come into the possession of knowledge affecting its circumstances. It is apparent from the proof that this is exactly what Riley was doing at the time he uttered the words sued on. While no cases directly and altogether in point have been found, we think that, under the decided cases, the occasion upon which Riley spoke was clearly a privileged occasion. See Elmore v. Atlantic Coast Line Railway Co., 189 N. C. 658, 127 S. E. 710; Western Union Telegraph Company v. Buchanan, (Tex.) 248 S. W. 68; Nord v. Gray, 80 Minn. 143, 82 N. W. 1082; Koehler v. Sircovich, (Tex.) 269 S. W. 812; Hoyle v. Young, (Va.) 1 Wash. 150, 1 Am. Dec. 446. See also Higgins v. Coal Co., 103 W. Va. 504, 138 S. E. 112, in which this court held that a letter addressed to the Compensation Commissioner by a subscriber to the fund concerning a pending claim was absolutely privileged.

Where, as here, there is no conflict in the evidence concerning the circumstances under which the words declared on were uttered, the question of privilege is one of law for the court. Rigney v. Keesee & Co., 104 W. Va. 168, 171, 139 S. E. 650; Ward v. Ward, 47 W. Va. 766, 772, 35 S. E. 873.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.E. 791, 114 W. Va. 578, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-riley-wva-1934.