Thalhimer Bros. v. Shaw

159 S.E. 87, 156 Va. 863, 1931 Va. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 159 S.E. 87 (Thalhimer Bros. v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thalhimer Bros. v. Shaw, 159 S.E. 87, 156 Va. 863, 1931 Va. LEXIS 239 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for defamation. The notice of motion contains two counts, one for slander at common law and the other for insulting words, under the Virginia statute. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff on both counts.

The defendant contends there was not sufficient publication of the defamation on which to base a verdict on the common-law count. The record discloses the following evidence on this point:

The plaintiff was employed as. a saleswoman by the defendant, who operated a large department store in the city of Richmond. One of the regulations enforced by the defendant and known to the plaintiff was that on leaving the store at the close of the day’s work all employees should account for any article of merchandise which might be in their possession and show to- another employee, stationed at the door, any package which they had. The plaintiff’s account of what took place as she was leaving the store on November 22, 1927, is that as she approached the door Mr. Hall, a floor manager, asked her: “Mrs. Shaw, didn’t I see you as you left the booth tonight put a scarf in your pocketbook?” To which she replied: “You certainly did not.” She claims to have then given her pocketbook to Hall, who, in her presence alone, opened it and found therein [867]*867a pair of bloomers, whereupon he said: “Mrs. Shaw, this is an awful thing I have caught you doing—stealing.”

After some further conversation, they proceeded to the office of Mr. May, the treasurer and general manager of the defendant corporation, where it is claimed Hall repeated the insulting words to Mr. May, in the presence of the plaintiff. There is no positive testimony that anyone was present except the three parties named. There is evidence from which it fairly may be inferred that at least two other employees knew of the charge against the plaintiff before she left the office. One was Miss Anne Gregory, secretary to Mr. May, who was in his office when the plaintiff and Hall entered. Miss Gregory stated that she left immediately, but later was recalled and Mr. May, with the consent of the plaintiff, dictated to her a statement to be signed by the plaintiff; that she then left the office, typed the statement, and returned with it.

The plaintiff testified that before she signed the paper she asked Mr. May not to make her sign anything to the effect that she stole the bloomers, because she did not. That he shoved the statement at her and said: “Sign it. You know you stole them. Who stole them if you didn’t steal them? They were in your pocket book. Who put them there?” She signed the statement because the bloomers were found in her bag. The names of Mr. Hall and Miss Anne Gregory were attached to the paper as witnesses.

Sometime during the plaintiff’s stay in the office she became sick, and Miss Crowder, another employee, was called in to' attend her. While they were alone in the room Miss Crowder asked the plaintiff: “Mrs. Shaw, have you had any financial troubles or anything to cause you to have done this ?” When they came out of the room Mr. May asked Miss Crowder: “Did she confess?”

While the above evidence is in conflict with that for the defendant, the point to be determined is, was it sufficient to submit the question of publication to the jury.

[868]*868The modern authorities hold that a communication containing defamatory matter made to a business associate or servant in the ordinary and natural course of business is not actionable. In a note appended to the case of Globe Furniture Co. v. Wright, 18 A. L. R. 772, many English and American authorities, for and against the rule, are collected. Some of the cases hold that the occasion being qualifiedly privileged, whether or not the communication comes within the privilege, depends upon the existence or non-existence of malice. Other cases hold that such communication to a party charged with a duty or interest therein is not publication.

In the case of Edmondson v. Birch & Co. (1907), 1 K. B. (Eng.) 371, 1 B. R. C. 444, 7 Ann. Cas. 192, it was held that where a business communication containing defamatory statements was dictated to a stenographer, transcribed, and copied in a copy letter book by another clerk on a privileged occasion, the privileged occasion' covered such publication so that the statements were not actionable. One of the English judges said:

“In my opinion, the law on the subject, as laid down- in the cases, amounts to this: If a business communication is privileged, as being made on a privileged occasion, the privilege covers all incidents of the transmission and treatment of that communication which! are in accordance with the reasonable and usual course of business.”

It was held in the following cases that a letter containing libelous matter dictated in the usual course of business by an officer of a corporation to a stenographer employed by the corporation, who transcribed and mailed it to the person affected, does not constitute such publication as will support an action for libel. Morgan v. Wallis, 33 Times L. R. (Eng.) 495; Harper v. Hamilton Retail Grocers’ Ass’n, 37 Can. L. J. 31; Owen v. J. S. Oglivie Pub. Co., 32 App. Div. 465, 53 N. Y. Sup. 1033, 6 N. Y. Ann. Cas. 76; Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Jones, 18 Ga. App. 414, 89 S. E. 429; Cartwright-Caps Co. v. [869]*869Fischel & Kaufman, 113 Miss. 359, 74 So. 278, L. R. A. 1918-F, 566, Ann. Cas. 1917-E, 985; Chalkley v. Atlantic C. L. Ry. Co., 150 Va. 301, 143 S. E. 631.

In Taylor v. McDaniels, 139 Okl. 262, 281 Pac. 967, 66 A. L. R. 1246, it is held that a letter containing libelous matter, written at the solicitation of the plaintiff, delivered to the agent, and by the agent showed to other people, is not such a publication as will sustain an action for libel.

In Ecuyer v. New York Life Ins. Co., 101 Wash. 247, 172 Pac. 359, L. R. A. 1918-E, 536, the plaintiff, a clerk in one of the defendant’s branch offices, charged with the duty of collecting premiums and accounting therefor to the' company, was by the traveling auditor found to be short in two of his accounts; the cashier and the auditor called the plaintiff’s attention to the shortage and demanded payment. The plaintiff acknowledged that the receipts for the money were signed by him, but said he did not remember signing them and did not know what became of the money, and that the other employees had access to the cash box. The plaintiff refused to pay the money, and the cashier, with his consent, called the plaintiff’s father in to the conference. During this conference between the cashier and the auditor, representing the company, and the plaintiff and his father, the plaintiff was charged repeatedly with having stolen the company’s money—not only these particular sums but other money belonging to the company. The plaintiff still refused to pay. The next day the father, without his consent, went back to see the company and made the shortage good. Shortly thereafter an action for slander was instituted. The court held that it was a privileged occasion, and the presence of the father, with the consent of the plaintiff, did not destroy the privilege, but that it was for the jury to say whether or not the privilege had been abused. The question of publication was not discussed in the opinion.

Publication was briefly discussed in the case of Switzer v.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E. 87, 156 Va. 863, 1931 Va. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thalhimer-bros-v-shaw-va-1931.