115 Tenn. 663 | Tenn. | 1905
after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The right to publish is subject to the limitation that the report must be a fair one, made in the interest of the public, and without malicious purpose. Newell, Def., S. & L., p. 558, section 166; Ackerman v. Jones, 37 N. Y. Super. Ct., 42; Newell, p. 544, section 148, subd. 3; Saunders v. Baxter, 6 Heisk., 369; Stevens v. Sampson, 5 Ex. D., 53; 49 L. J. Q. B., 120; 28 W. R., 87; 41 L. T., 782; Newell, p. 556, section 162, subd. 7; Waterfield v. Bishop of Chicester, 2 Mod., 118; Newell, p. 556, section 9; Salmon v. Isaac, 20 L. T., 885; Newell, p. 556, section 10. Such report should not be mingled with comment, either in the body of it or in the heading, as in such case the presumption of malice would the more easily arise; the place for criticism of this character is in the editorial columns (Newell, Def., S. & L., c. 20, section 19; Mer
The report need not be a verbatim one, but it must contain the substance of the thing it undertakes to present, or the whole purport of any special, separable part. Newell, p. 552, section 156; Id., p. 554, section 161; Salisbury v. Union & Advertiser Co., 45 Hun (N. Y.), 120; Newell, 545; McBee v. Fulton, 47 Md., 403, 28 Am. Rep., 465; Flint v. Pike, 4 B. & Cr., 473; 6 D. & R., 528; Kane v. Mulvany, Ir. Rep., 26, 2 C. L., 402; Newell, p. 553, section 160, subd. 3; Lewis v. Walter, 4 B. & Ald., 605; Newell, p. 553, section 160, snbd. 4. It must not give undue prominence to inculpatory facts, and depress or minify such facts as would explain or qualify the former (Salisbury v. Union & Adv. Co., supra; Newell, p. 554, section 161; Thomas v. Croswell, 7 Johns. [N. Y.], 264, 5 Am. Dec., 269; Newell, p. 557; Grimwade v. Dicks, 2 Times L. R., 627; Newell, p. 555; Haywood & Co. v. Haywood & Sons, 34 Ch. D., 198; 56 L. J. Ch., 287; 35 W. R., 392; 55 L. T., 729; Newell, p. 555; Dodson v. Owen, 2 Times L. R., 111; Newell, p. 556, S. S. 8), and must not omit material points in favor of the complaining party, or introduce extraneous matters of an injurious nature to him (Cooper v. Lawson, 8 A. & E., 746; 1 W. W. & H., 601; 2 Jur., 919; 1 P. & D., 15; Newell, p. 558; Clement v. Lewis [Exch. Ch.], 3 Br. & B., 297; 3
• In short, the report must he characterized by fair-mindedness, honesty, and accuracy. Newell, Def., S. & L., p. 551, section 155; Stanley v. Webb, 4 Sandf. (N. Y.), 21; JMsall v. Brooks, 17 Abb. Prac. (N. Y.), 221; Id., 26 How. Prac., 426; Newell, p. 545.
If it be found of this character, it is not material that the matter it contains is injurious to the persons involved or referred to therein, since it is of the highest moment that the proceedings of courts of justice should at all times bé open to fair inspection, to> the end that the public may have the means of knowing how the duties of their officers are preformed, whether faithfully and intelligently or otherwise. In the presence of this public requirement mere private interests must give way. R. v. Wright, 8 T. R., 298; Wason v. Walter, L. C. 4 Q. B., 87; 8 B. & S., 730; 38 L. J. Q. B., 34; 17 W. R., 169; 19 L. T., 418; Newell, p. 554, section 147; Cowley v. Pulsifer, 137 Mass., 392, 50 Am. Rep., 318.
Where the published matter is plainly unambiguous, the question of its meaning and character is for the court; but where the meaning is ambiguous, where the words used are reasonably susceptible of two constructions, the one innocent and the other libelous, then it is a question for the jury which construction is the proper one. Newell, Def., S. & L., c. 15, secs. 1, 5.
“In these cases,” says Newell, “there may be two distinct questions for the jury: (1) Is the report fair and
“And, of course, there is in each case the previous question for the court, is there any evidence to go to the jury of inaccuracy or of malice? Where there is no suggestion of malice, and no evidence on which a reasonable man could find that the report is not absolutely fair, the judge should direct a verdict for the defendant. Thus where the report is verbatim or nearly so, or corresponds in all materia] particulars with a report taken by an impartial shorthand writer. But, if anything be omitted in the report which could make any appreciable difference in the plaintiff’s favor, or anything erroneously inserted which could conceivably tell against him, then it is a question for the jury whether such deviation from absolute accuracy makes the report unfair; and the trial judge will not direct a verdict for either party.” Id., pp. 558, 559, section 166.
It is generally agreed that the privilege, the right to publish without liability for damages, does not extend to mere pleadings filed in court, as, for example, bills in equity upon which there has been no judicial action.
However, the rule of privilege, in general, covers proceedings which are in their nature only preliminary if
In the case last mentioned the special phase of the question we now have before ns was considered and decided. It was there held that, after a bill in equity had been submitted to a judge at chambers on an application for a preliminary injunction, and the order had been granted, this was such judicial action as rendered the bill matter of privileged publication. Said the court: “It is a matter submitted to a judge, and he acts upon it. It is within the rule, and the cases which we have referred to. . . . If this was not judicial action, it would be difficult to say what would be, short of a full trial of the case.-. Although the motion was in chambers, still, under our practice, as all such motions and interlocutory orders are made in chambers, technically we cannot say that it Avas not id court.” 20 R. I., 679, 40 Atl., 866, 78 Am. St. Rep., 900. And see the discussion of the general subject in McBee v. Fulton, 28 Am. Rep., 464-474. On page 473 it is said, quoting the judgment of Cockburn, C. J., in Wason v. Walter, L. R. Q. B., 73: “Whatever disadvantages attach to a system of unwritten laAv, and of these we are fully sensible, it has at least
Applications for preliminary injunctions are in this state usually of the same ex parte character described in the Rhode Island case, and under this practice the hill referred to in the present case was presented to Judge Cartwright, and the fiat was granted by him. The granting of that fiat was a judicial act. The hill, therefore, after haying been made the subject of such action, and upon thereafter having been placed in the files of the chancery court, became a paper which might be published within the protection of the privileged list.
We shall'now apply the foregoing principles, so far as may be necessary, to the questions raised by the assignments of error.
We shall pretermit any discussion of the matters contained in the first and second assignments.
r^The third assignment makes the point that the circuit judge erred in charging the jury as set forth in the propositions marked (A), (B), and (C), in the statement. The instructions thus given were, in substance, that the publication complained of was, on its face, libelous, that ■ is was not privileged, and that the defendant below was • liable in damages therefor.
We are of the opinion that his honor acted correctly. in instructing the jury that the publication was libelous on its face, since it stated matter which would support a charge of fraudulent breach of trust against the plain
His honor acted incorrectly in instructing the jury unconditionally that the matter contained in the publication was not privileged. He should have given them in charge the first, second, and fifth instructions appearing under the fourth assignment of errors, and should at the same time have construed to the jury the language of the bill, also the language of the publication. It is the duty of the court to construe “unambiguous writings upon which the rights of parties are based.” Quigley v. Shedd, 104 Tenn., 560, 566, 567, 58 S. W., 266; Railway v. Wynn, 88 Tenn., 321, 14 S. W., 311; Barker v. Freeland, 91 Tenn., 112, 18 S. W., 60; Toomey v. Atyoe, 95 Tenn., 373, 32 S. W., 254; Railroad Co. v. McKenna, 13 Lea, 280; Kendrick v. Cisco, 13 Lea, 247. Having so construed the writings, he should have left it to the jury to say whether the matter as actually published was a fair and substantially accurate report of the contents of the bill, and without actual malice; and upon this basis should have placed the question of privilege or nonprivilege, liability or nonliability.
We do not think his honor erred in refusing to charge the third instruction appearing under the fourth asssignment of error. The jury would necessarily determine the matter therein referred to in deciding whether the publication complained of was a fair and substantially accurate report of the bill, and this they will be enabled
The court helow did not err in refusing to charge plaintiff in error’s fourth instruction. The error in this instruction was that plaintiff in error thereby sought to haye his honor charge the jury that the publication complained of was, in all its material particulars, substantially a repetition of the allegations contained in the chancery bill, thereby asking the court to usurp the functions of the jury. As already indicated, it was the duty of the court to construe the bill and also the publication, and then leave it to the jury to say whether the latter was a fair and substantially accurate report, or reproduction of the former.
The proposition in respect of malice, contained in the instruction referred to, would also have been misleading to the jury if given in union with the erroneous matter just referred to. They were sound only upon the hypothesis that the jury should find that the publication contained a fair and substantially accurate report of the contents of the bill upon the subject referred to in such report. If the publication failed, in the estimation of the jury, to come up to this description, then it could not be held privileged, and, being libelous on its face, malice in law would be presumed. If it did attain the plane of privilege, then plaintiff in error could be held liable only upon proof of express malice as set forth in the instruction under examination. We assume that it was the purpose of the instruction
The sixth instruction, appearing under the fourth assignment, was properly refused, because too general. It is not sufficient to instruct the jury merely that, if the publication was made “in good faith” and without express malice, they should find for the defendant. They should be instructed as to the nature of this good faith, which embraces, not only the absence of express malice, but also the positive, virtue of a fair, impartial, and substantially accurate report of the proceeding which is the suject of the publication.
The court below did not err in refusing the seventh instruction. The charge as given sufficiently covered the question of damages.
The fifth assignment must be sustained. The testimony therein referred to was incompetent. 1 Elliott on Ev., section 252. It consisted merely of statements made by a reporter of the Nashville American, after the publication had appeared in the paper, expressing Ms opinion that the chancery bill was capable of two constructions, and giving the reason why he had adopted the one construction rather than the other in preparing Ms matter for the press. . This was merely the narrative of a past transaction, not the statement of an agent while in the active discharge of his duty as such, and in respect of matters then in course of dispatch. Nor was the testimony rendered competent through the state
We have considered the other reasons offered in defendant in error’s brief in support of the competency of the evidence, and find none of them well taken.
For the errors indicated, the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.