Smith v. Dawson
Smith v. Dawson
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit for damages based on a charge made by appellee that a certain check which purported to have been given by appellee to appellant for $15 was a forgery, which was instituted by appellant against appellee. It was alleged by appellant that on or about January 4, 1920, ap-pellee received a statement from the Pear-sall National Bank inclosing checks of ap-pellee which had been paid by the bank to the various persons to whom they had been given during December, 1919, and appellee had stated to S. R. Brooks, in the presence of Frank Davis and other persons, that the check to appellant for $15 was a forgery. Afterwards it was alleged appellee stated that the man who forged the check had left town and was a thousand miles away, thereby charging that appellant had forged the check. It was alleged that appellee told the assistant cashier, L. F. Merle, and the cashier, that appellant forged the check, that appellant was absent at the time in the republic of Mexico, and that such statements. made by appellee were false, and that he had executed the check to appellant in settlement of a debt due by him to appellant. It was also alleged that appellee had stated in the presence of the mother and uncle of appellant that it would be all right if appellant would pay to him the amount of the check. Appellee denied that he had charged appellant with forgery in the presence of Brooks and others, and pleaded privilege as to his conversation with the assistant cashier, and good faith and freedom from malice. Appellee, in effect, admitted that he was wrong in claiming that he had not given the check, and offered to pay it to the bank. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court struck from the evidence the check which had been introduced by appellant, and a vexdict was instructed by the court, and judgment rendered in favor of appellee.
The statement of facts fails to show any facts tending to prove that the check was based on a gambling transaction, for it was all stricken out. The evidence in the bill of exceptions, however, shows that the check was given for a debt incurred by appellee in a game of chance with appellant, who thus describes it:
“On that day we were flipping half dollars for $5 a shot. Dawson came in early in the morning, and we got to shooting half dollars, flip heads and tails for $5 a shot. We flipped on for a while, and two or three men came in, Mr. Tyner came in, and I told Dawson we would have to stop, and he gave me a check for what he owed me, which was $15.”
This was not denied by appellee. The check was sufficient to form a basis for a charge of forgery, and, if the payee was falsely charged with the forgery by appellee, he will be liable for all damages arising from such slander, and the cause should have been submitted to the jury, under the testimony, which should not have been stricken out.
The case was a proper one for the consideration of a jury, and for the error in, striking out the check and evidence in regard to it, the judgment is reversed, and the-cause remanded.
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