аfter making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, who was United States District Attorney for the District оf Columbia, sued the defendant in an action for libel and recovered a verdict for $10,000. The Court of Appeals (36 App. D. C. 493). held that the judgment should hаve been arrested, for the reason that the publication was not libelous per se and was nqt shown to be defamatory by any averment of fact in thе Inducement or in the Colloquium.
The publication was not libelous per se, The meaning of the article and person to whom it referred were so ambiguous that, in order to constitute a cause of action, it was necessary to set out extrinsic facts, which, when coupled with the words, would show that the writer charged the plаintiff with corruption in office. Accordingly, the plaintiff in the Inducement averred’ that he was District Attorney, charged with the duty of prosecuting violatоrs of the law against gaming, and had procured an indictment against one for’ betting at the Washington Jockey Club, which indictment had been quashéd and, pending the appeal and conforming to the ruling of the court, he had instituted no other prosecutions: That, under these circumstances, the dеfendant had published of and concerning the plaintiff, the article which is set out in the complaint.
There were general allegations that the article was written concerning the plaintiff in his office as District Attorney, together with general statements in the Innuendo that the defendant mеant to charge him with corruption in office. There was, however, no distinct averment as to the meaning of those particular phrases in the publi
Such motions are not favored. In considering them, courts liberally сonstrue the pleadings, giving the plaintiff the benefit of every implication that can be drawn therefrom- in his favor. Sentences and paragrаphs may be transposed. The allegations in one part of the complaint may be aided by those in another and if taken together, thеy show the existence of facts constituting a good cause of action, defectively set forth or improperly arranged, the motiоn in arrest will be denied.
In the present case the defendant was put on notice of the extrinsic fácts surrounding the publication. The statements in the Innuendo, even if misplaced, may after verdict, be - treated as substantive allegations of fact given by transposition, their proper position in Inducement or Colloquium. The verdict cured the defects, if any, in the complaint and-made it improper to arrest the judgment.
Stanley
v.
Brit,
8 Tennessee, 222; Mc-
The plaintiff, Baker, had a judgment in the trial court. The defendant, Warner, took the сase to the Court of Appeals on various grounds, most of which were sustained. The plaintiff then brought the case here, assigning error on some of those rulings but not on others. We are not limited, however, to a consideration of the points presented by the plaintiff, but, this being a writ of error from an intermediate appellate tribunal, must enter the judgment, which should have been rendered by the court below; on the record then before it.
While we reverse the order to arrest the judgment, we affirm the ruling of the Court of Appeals that there was an erroneous instruction оn a matter material to the case and harmful to the defendant. The trial judge, summarizing the facts, charged that if the jury found from the evidence that plaintiff was District Attorney; that in the District there was a race track where races were run and bets were made, which some claimed could have been prevented by prosecutions instituted by the plaintiff and that he did not, in fact, prosecute such persons; if Warner was a сandidate for Congress and the plaintiff supported Pearre, his opponent, and the defendant, Warner, wrote and procured the publication of the article set out in the complaint, “then you are instructed, • as matter of law, that the said article is libelous and your
This was error, since it was for the jury and not for the court to determine the meaning of ambiguous language in thе published article. Where words are libelous
per se
the Judge can so instruct the jury, leaving to them only the determination of the amount of damages. Where the words are not libelous
pbr se
and, in the light of the extrinsic facts averred could not possibly be construed to have a defamatory meaning, the Judge can dismiss the declaration on demurrer, or, during the trial,- may withdraw the case from the jury. But there is a middle ground where though the words are not libеlous
per se,
yet, in the light of the extrinsic facts averred, they are susceptible of being construed as having a defamatory meaning. Whether they havе siich import is a question of fact. In that class of cases the jury must not only determine the existence of the extrinsic circumstances, which it is alleged bring to light the. concealed meaning, but they must also determine whether those facts when coupled with the words, make the publicatiоn libelous.
Van Vechten
v.
Hopkins,
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the other questions in the case. .
' The judgments of the Court of Appeals are reversed and the cаses are remanded to that court with directions to reverse the judgments of. the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia and'to remand the case to that court with directions to grant a new trial and for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
