Brewer v. CAROLINA COACH COMPANY

116 S.E.2d 725 (1960) 253 N.C. 257

Wayne H. BREWER
v.
CAROLINA COACH COMPANY, W. K. Richards, O. O. Barnes, and Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, Local Division 1437, and G. N. Green.

No. 249.

Supreme Court of North Carolina.

November 2, 1960.

*726 Brock Barkley, Charlotte, for plaintiff.

James K. Dorsett, Jr. and Armistead J. Maupin, Raleigh, for defendants Coach Co., W. K. Richards and O. O. Barnes.

William Joslin, Raleigh, for defendants Union and G. N. Green.

DENNY, Justice.

A careful examination and consideration of the appellant's assignments of error based on exceptions to the orders of the court below, striking the paragraphs of the complaint and portions of other paragraphs thereof referred to hereinabove, leads us to the conclusion that these orders should be sustained.

The complaint as originally drafted and filed contains 48 paragraphs, including sub-paragraphs, and covers 16 pages of the record. The portions of the complaint which were stricken contain numerous allegations which set forth matters foreign and immaterial to the controversy, or are wholly evidential—allegations which are not essential to a statement of the plaintiff's cause of action, if indeed he has one. Furthermore, the original complaint filed in this action does not meet the requirements of good pleading within the purview of G.S. § 1-122, as interpreted and applied by the decisions of this Court. Daniel v. Gardner, 240 N.C. 249, 81 S.E.2d 660; Council v. Dickerson's Inc., 233 N.C. 472, 64 S.E.2d 551; Hawkins v. Moss, 222 N.C. 95, 21 S.E.2d 873. Moreover, the motions to strike were made in apt time as required by G.S. § 1-153.

In fairness to the appellant's present counsel, it appears from the record that he did not draft the original complaint or appear for the appellant in the proceedings before the Board of Arbitration. These assignments of error, however, are overruled.

*727 As we construe the complaint in this action, it purports to be an action for damages, allegedly resulting from the giving of false and perjured testimony, which testimony it is alleged was procured by the intimidation of material witnesses by the defendants.

The gravamen of the plaintiff's complaint is that "the Board of Arbitration was completely persuaded by the Gammon report (the report of the driver of the defendant Coach Company's other bus that was involved in the accident), which report definitely declared the * * * accident to have happened on the straightway and not on the curve (as this plaintiff stated in his report)."

In paragraph 24 of the plaintiff's complaint he alleges that "the defendant company through its Supervisor Richards and its safety inspector Barnes called in Gammon to further confirm the false report by having Gammon pin-point the point of impact * * * as having happened on the straightway and not on the curve and other false details of the accident conforming to their scheme; that it was upon these facts synthetically created and nurtured by Barnes, Richards and Green, with the cooperation of Gammon, that the Board of Arbitration found in favor of the defendant company and upheld the defendant company's action in its dismissal of this plaintiff."

We note, however, in the opinion and award of the Board of Arbitration, which the plaintiff included in his case on appeal, the opinion states: "On cross-examination Brewer said also that the accident occurred at a place where the road was straight and level. Earlier he had stated that it occurred on a curve in the road. Brewer was unable to remember some of the things he had made (stated) in signed accident reports made for his Company. He said they had been dictated by him and not read before signed."

Perjury and subornation of perjury are criminal offenses, subject to punishment prescribed by G.S. § 14-209 and G.S. § 14-210. However, it seems to be the general rule that a civil action in tort cannot be maintained upon the ground that a defendant gave false testimony or procured other persons to give false or perjured testimony.

In 12 A.L.R., Annotation:—Testimony —Civil Action for Damages, at page 1264, cases from eleven states are collected, including North Carolina, in support of the following statement. "Aside from defamation and malicious prosecution, the courts refuse to recognize any injury from false testimony, on which a civil action for damages can be maintained. * * * no action for damages lies for false testimony in a civil suit, whereby the plaintiff fails to recover a judgment, or a judgment is rendered against him."

The North Carolina case cited above in A.L.R. is Godette v. Gaskill, 151 N.C. 52, 65 S.E. 612, 24 L.R.A., N.S., 265, 134 Am. St.Rep. 964. This was an action against the defendant for wilful and false testimony as a witness in an action formerly tried, which had been brought by the plaintiff against one Bowen, alleging that by reason of such false testimony of the defendant the plaintiff had lost his suit against Bowen. This Court, speaking though Clark, C. J., said: "There is no precedent in this state; but an action on this ground has been brought in other jurisdictions, which have uniformly held that such actions cannot be maintained. * * *

"The authorities * * * rest upon two grounds: (1) There was no precedent for such action * * *. (2) It `would overhale,' as Chancellor Kent says, in (Smith v. Lewis) 3 Johns. (N.Y.) 166, 3 Am.Dec. 469, the decision of the former case to which the plaintiff in the new action had been a party. We think there is a third reason, in that it would multiply and extend litigation if the matter could be re-examined by a new action between a party to the action and a witness therein; and, more than that, witnesses would be intimidated if their testimony is given under liability of themselves *728 being subjected to the expense and annoyance of being sued by any party to the action to whom their testimony might not be agreeable. It would give a great leverage to litigants to intimidate witnesses.

"* * * Such action did not lie at common law, and we have no statute authorizing it."

It is said in 41 Am.Jur., Perjury, section 81, page 44: "Ordinarily, aside from defamation and malicious prosecution, the courts will not recognize any injury from false testimony upon which a civil action for damages can be maintained. * * *" And in Section 82 of this same authority, at page 45, it is said: "Ordinarily, the fact that a defendant has suborned a witness to give false testimony in a civil suit, whereby the plaintiff has failed to recover a judgment, or a judgment has been rendered against him, does not constitute ground for the recovery of damages. * * * The rule, however, appears to be otherwise with respect to an action for subornation of a witness to defame the character of one not a party to the action and the latter has been held to be entitled to recovery for such subornation."

In 70 C.J.S. Perjury § 92, page 559, we find this statement: "The general rule, in the absence of statute, is that no action lies to recover damages caused by perjury, false swearing, subornation of perjury, or an attempt to suborn perjury, whether committed in the course of, or in connection with, a civil action or suit, criminal prosecution or other proceeding, and whether the perjurer was a party to, or a witness in, the action or proceeding." For additional authorities see 54 A.L.R.2d, Annotation:—Testimony—Civil Action for Damages, at page 1317.

The judgment of the court below in sustaining the demurrer ore tenus and dismissing this action will be upheld.

Affirmed.