121 N.E. 341 | NY | 1918
The action is for libel. One Conrad, a doctor in the city of New York, was convicted of the crime of attempted abortion. The plaintiff, who was then the attorney for the County Medical Society, had much to do with the prosecution. He laid the trap in which Conrad was caught. A woman visited Conrad and pretended to need his services. She did this at the plaintiff's instance. She was acting as his ally and the ally of the police. Conrad was arrested in the act of examining her. He said that the purpose of the examination was innocent. A jury found that it was criminal. His conviction was affirmed; and he served a term in prison.
In 1905, the convict, then released, petitioned Governor Higgins for pardon. His aim was restoration to citizenship that he might practice his profession. The County Medical Society filed a protest against the pardon. In this protest it charged that Conrad was guilty of many other like crimes. He was pictured as having practiced a business of abortion for years both in New York and in Atlantic City. The protest was signed by the society in its corporate name by its president and other officers. It was signed also by the plaintiff in the name of his *443 firm as counsel. The petition for clemency, thus opposed, was denied.
In 1911, Conrad renewed his application. His petition was addressed to Governor Dix, and was signed by the defendant, a member of the bar. The gist of his grievance was persecution by the plaintiff. The charge was that the plaintiff had inflamed the society through false complaints, and had trapped an innocent man into a false appearance of guilt. There was a bitter assault upon the plaintiff's character. It was said in substance that he had used his position as counsel for the society to manufacture cases and extort money from his victims. He was characterized as an unprincipled, blackmailing, depraved scoundrel. Attached to the petition is a second document, also signed by the defendant. In this he says "the above was prepared for me and receives my heartiest concurrence." Then follows a statement of his friendship for Conrad and his faith in Conrad's innocence.
There is evidence that before submitting this petition, the defendant went over it with his client. He asked why attack upon the plaintiff's character was necessary. The client said that it was necessary to break the force of the protest which had been filed in opposition to the previous petition. He said that this protest, though in form that of the society, was in fact the work of the plaintiff, that its charges were false, and that the governor ought to know the truth about their author. The defendant says that in submitting the petition to the governor, he made an oral statement. He told the governor, he says, that he appeared as counsel for Conrad; that he had no personal knowledge of the truth of the petition; that pardon had been recommended by the trial judge and by many other worthy citizens; that the only opposition came from the County Medical Society; that the society in submitting its protest to Governor Higgins, had relied upon the information furnished by the plaintiff; *444 that the scandalous charges in the protest were false; and that those charges ought not to defeat a pardon if the man who made them was unworthy of belief. There was no general publication of the petition. It was handed to the governor, and to no one else.
This action for libel followed. There have been three trials. On the first trial, the complaint was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff's case. The Appellate Division reversed, and ordered a new trial. The court held (
The defamatory charges against the plaintiff were false. There is no blot upon his character. Indeed, there is no attempt at justification. The defense is not justification, but privilege. The defendant says that in presenting this petition to the governor, he acted as *445
counsel for a client. The rule is that counsel are privileged in respect of any statements, oral or written, made in judicial proceedings, and pertinent thereto. In England, the immunity is broader. There the privilege exists whether the statements are relevant or not (Munster v. Lamb, 11 Q.B.D. 588; RoyalAquarium v. Parkinson, 1892, 1 Q.B.D. 431; Barrett v.Kearns, 1905, 1 K.B. 504; Odgers on Libel and Slander, 233). With us the condition is added that the privilege will be lost if the libel is irrelevant (Youmans v. Smith,
We think it was error to rule that the defamatory charges were not pertinent to the appeal for mercy. There is no room in such matters for any strict or narrow test. Much must be left to the discretion of the advocate. The privilege embraces anything that may possibly be pertinent (Youmans v. Smith, supra). We cannot say that the plaintiff's reputation was so plainly foreign to the issue that counsel should have refused to join a client in attacking it. The client took the ground that the plaintiff had planned the prosecution, had used it as a means of winning profit and reputation, and had blocked an earlier petition for pardon by overwhelming his victim under an avalanche of charges. Counsel was assured that those charges were false. If the governor believed them, pardon was almost certain to be refused. They revealed Conrad, not as an offender in one instance, *446
but as a hardened criminal. The argument was that the governor should not believe them. They had been put forward, it was said, by the plaintiff, who was the head and front of the conspiracy; he had hoodwinked the society into adopting them; in fact they were his work; and his character was such that he was unworthy of belief. Those statements may have been false, but they were not impertinent (Conley v. Key,
The question remains whether the defendant's privilege is qualified or absolute. The difference is that malice destroys the one and does not change the other (Odgers on Libel and Slander, p. 227). If the statements had been made in court, there is no doubt, since they were pertinent, that the privilege would have been absolute (Sickles v. Kling,
The question, therefore, is whether absolute privilege ought now to be extended to an application for a pardon. It was so extended by the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas in Connellee v.Blanton (
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, POUND and CRANE, JJ., concur; ANDREWS, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed, etc. *449