
    Sadie Kennedy, Plaintiff, v. Katherine Breen, Defendant.
    Supreme Court Special Term, Queens County,
    July 7, 1942.
    
      William, H. Abraham, for the plaintiff.
    
      George H. Boyce, for the defendant.
   Froessel, J.

Defendant moves to dismiss the amended complaint for legal insufficiency. 1 he action is for slander. A previous complaint was dismissed on that ground and leave given to plead over. In the original complaint no reference whatever was made to plaintiff’s occupation. The first three paragraphs of the amended complaint are entirely new. They show plaintiff’s employment at the Creedmore State Hospital; that by occupation, she is a licensed practical nurse for the sick and insane and is an attendant at said hospital; that she enjoyed a good character and reputation and was respected by nurses, doctors, patients and others. The slanderous words have been reasserted.

In my opinion the amended complaint states a cause of action. To charge that a person in plaintiff’s occupation cut my bag because she didn’t find any money in it ” and “ has been cutting up all my clothes, my dresses, stockings and my pocketbook" is, in my opinion, slanderous per se. Not only do these words charge the plaintiff with the crime of malicious mischief (Penal Law, § 1433) but, in my opinion, they refer to and touch plaintiff in her profession or occupation as a practical nurse, whose duties have a wide scope, and definitely impute unfitness on her part.

In view of the foregoing views special damage need not be pleaded, and the motion is, accordingly, denied.  