Amann v Damm: 22 May 1860

The defendant, bona fide believing that the plaintiff, who was a clerk to one M, a customer of the defendant’s. and who had been sent to the defendant’s shop bv M had while there stolen a box from an inner room, went to M., and, after telling him of his loss, intimated his suspicion of the plaintiff, saying, ‘There was no one else in the room, and he must have taken it.’ Held, that the communication was privileged by the occasion. Where slanderous words are uttered in a foreign language, the declaration should aver that the persons in whose presence they were spoken understood the language.

[1860] EngR 756, (1860) 8 CB NS 597, (1860) 144 ER 1300
Commonlii
England and Wales

Defamation

Updated: 02 January 2022; Ref: scu.285595