Wardlaw v. Peck

318 S.E.2d 270, 282 S.C. 199, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 475
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 25, 1984
Docket0182
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 318 S.E.2d 270 (Wardlaw v. Peck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wardlaw v. Peck, 318 S.E.2d 270, 282 S.C. 199, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 475 (S.C. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Bell, Judge:

This is an action for slander brought by Mary Jo Wardlaw against Robert Newton Peck. The jury returned a verdict of $4,000 actual and $20,000 punitive damages for Wardlaw. Peck appeals. We affirm.

The facts are substantially undisputed. Peck, an author of children’s books who teaches at Rollins College in Florida, was invited to speak to a convocation at Erskine College in Due West, South Carolina. Wardlaw, a student at Erskine, was to meet Peck at the Greenville-Spartanburg airport the day before the convocation and drive him to Due West, about an hour away. Due to confusion on her part, Wardlaw failed to meet Peck as planned. Arriving and finding no one at the airport, Peck telephoned the college chaplain and informed him, “You don’t keep a person of my stature waiting.” Peck then hired a cab at the college’s expense and arrived in Due West a little over an hour after the plane landed.

When Peck arrived at the college he was still very angry about not being met at the airport. The chaplain apologized for Wardlaw’s failure to meet the plane. Peck replied that he would “deal with Mary Jo the next day in convocation.”

*201 Attendance at the convocation was mandatory for Erskine students. Wardlaw and approximately six hundred students and faculty were present the next day. Wardlaw was pointed out to Peck, but otherwise they had no communication prior to his speech.

During his speech, Peck proceeded at various points to refer to Wardlaw. He stated that he generally liked everyone, but he hated one Erskine College student named Mary Jo Ward-law because she was late to pick him up at the airport. He repeatedly referred to Wardlaw as “Mary Jo Warthog” or “Warthog”. He likened her to a fictitious character in one of his books called “Janice,” who he said was the “bully of his childhood.” He described “Janice” as “built like a garbage truck” with “fists like cannonballs” and said she walked hunched over with her fists dangling before her so her left arm swung over her left leg and her right arm swung over her right leg. He said Mary Jo Wardlaw was late to the airport because she walked like “Janice.” He then mimicked Ward-law’s supposed walk by walking across the stage in front of the convocation audience in an ape-like position.

Mixed in with these comments, Peck made an additional statement which is the basis of this action. One of Wardlaw’s witnesses described the statement in these words:

Aside from the fact that there were a number of remarks made about Mary Jo, using Mary Jo War[t]hog or Warthog in the description, the thing that’s clearest, most clear to me, was ... at some point in the convocation someone made some disruption and Roger Findley’s name came out... from a fellow student, and then later on in the convocation... he [Peck] then made a statement that he had a recurring nightmare that Mary Jo and Roger Findley [a male Erskine student] were breeding under his sink.

Another witness recalled the statement as:

I have a recurring dream.****I see the Warthog in this dream breeding with Roger Findley under my typewriter.

Peck admitted he made the statement, but testified he had never met Wardlaw when he made it and he intended it in j est. He said his purpose was not to humiliate, but merely to poke *202 fun. When asked about the use of the word “breeding,” he said, “I was referring to bugs.” At trial Peck stipulated that Wardlaw is a chaste person who would not have sex with somebody under a sink.

Wardlaw’s complaint stated two causes of action: one for slander and the other for outrageous conduct causing severe emotional distress. As the case was tried prior to the decision of the Supreme Court in Ford v. Hutson, 276 S. C. 157, 276 S. E. (2d) 776 (1981) (recognizing the tort of outrage in South Carolina), the trial judge struck the second cause of action and submitted the case to the jury on the slander claim alone. He instructed the jury that, for the purposes of this case, a false oral statement which was intended and understood to impute unchastity or serious sexual misconduct to a woman was actionable without proof of special harm or damage to her reputation. This was the only theory of liability presented to the jury. 1

Peck makes two arguments on appeal; (1) the offending statement was not defamatory, because no one could interpret it as a literal charge of unchastity against Wardlaw; and (2) if the statement was an imputation of unchastity, he is not liable for it, because the South Carolina statute making imputation of unchastity to a female actionable per se creates an unconstitutional, gender based classification. We address each argument in turn.

I.

Peck contends his statement could not be understood by the convocation audience as imputing unchastity to Wardlaw because of the circumstances in which it was uttered. He maintains the audience knew he had never met Wardlaw. They also knew he did not know Roger Findley, but merely heard his name from someone calling out in the crowd. Peck urges us to interpret his statement in light of these surrounding circumstances allegedly known to his hearers. He points out that none of Wardlaw’s witnesses at trial *203 actually thought she was unchaste as a result of hearing the statement. He does not dispute, however, that the word “breeding” could carry a suggestion of the sex act.

Peck’s argument is an interesting attempt to revive the ancient doctrine that words alleged to be defamatory must be construed in mitiori sensu. Under the mitior sensus rule, if words could be construed in either a defamatory or a non-defamatory sense, the court was required, as a matter of law, to give them the nondefamatory meaning. See, Stanhope v. Blyth (1585) 4 Rep. 15a, 76 Eng. Rep. 891. The rule produced many charming examples of judicial ingenuity. For example, words suggesting the plaintiff was a “forger” were construed as imputing the occupation of an honest blacksmith rather than a felon. 2 Perhaps the most famous exercise of judicial imagination was Holt v. Astrigg (1607) Cro. Jac. 184, 76 Eng. Rep. 161, in which an action was brought for the words, “Sir Thomas Holt struck his cook on the head with a cleaver, and cleaved his head; the one part lay on the one shoulder and another part on the other.” The court adjudged for the defendant, refusing to interpret the words as imputing a felony:

... for slander ought to be direct, against which there may not be any intendment: but here, notwithstanding such wounding, the party may yet be living; and it is then but trespass.

The English courts had abandoned the mitior sensus rule by the early eighteenth century, replacing it with the modern rule that the words are to be taken in their natural sense as they would be understood by the hearer. See, Harrison v. Thornborough (1714) 10 Mod. 196, 88 Eng. Rep. 691. 3

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Bluebook (online)
318 S.E.2d 270, 282 S.C. 199, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wardlaw-v-peck-scctapp-1984.