191 P. 502 | Or. | 1920
The only question for decision is whether the court erred in entering an involuntary judgment of nonsuit. If the words employed by the defendant are not actionable per se in this jurisdiction, then the inescapable conclusion is that the trial court ruled correctly.
Spoken words are either actionable or not actionable. Actionable words are divided into two classes: (1) Those which are actionable in themselves; or per se; and (2) those which are actionable only upon allegation and proof of special damage, or per quod. Defamatory words, where spoken, may or may not be actionable per se, depending upon whether or not they may properly be assigned to one or more of the several classes of cases which the rules of the common law have designated as actionable per se. If defamatory words are not actionable per se the complaint must allege and prove special damage. Words of both classes are actionable on the same ground and for the same reason: 17 R. C. L. 264. “The material element, ’ ’ this court has said:
“Which lies at the foundation of the action of slander is social disgrace, or damages to character in the opinion of other men”: Quigley v. McKee, 12 Or. 22 (5 Pac. 347, 53 Am. Rep. 320).
An examination of the authorities will disclose the fact, as illustrated in State v. Conklin, 47 Or. 509, 516 (84 Pac. 482), that statements may he found to the effect that spoken words are actionable per se if they impute the commission of an offense liable to indictment and punishment, without any qualifying expressions concérning the element of moral turpitude, or the character of the penalty prescribed for the, crime. The precedent last mentioned must, howéver, be read in the light of the facts there under investigation, and, when so read, it becomes manifest that the court was not called upon to decide, and did not attempt to decide, whether words were actionable per se if imputing a crime for which an indictment would lie, regardless of the presence or absence of moral turpitude, and regardless of the nature of the prescribed punishment. Perhaps it is not now important, except in the interest of accuracy, to determine whether the single fact that the imputed offense is indictable is alone sufficient, withqut the presence of either the element of moral turpitude or the element of infamous punishment; for the reason that although it may he difficult to phrase a satisfactory definition of moral turpitude (Ex parte Mason, 29 Or. 18, 22 (43 Pac. 651, 54 Am. St. Rep. 772), the words uttered by the defendant impute a charge' which, if true and constituting a crime, unquestionably involve moral turpitude: Pollard v. Lyon, 91 U. S. 225 (23 L. Ed. 308). In Brooker v. Coffin, 5 Johns. (N. Y.) 188 (4 Am. Dec. 337), the following rule was given as the test:
“In case the charge, if true, will subject the party charged to an indictment for a crime involving moral*247 turpitude, or subject him to an infamous punishment, then the words will be, in themselves, actionable.”
This test has been so often applied that it may be accepted as a correct statement of the law: Pollard v. Lyon, 91 U. S. 225 (23 L. Ed. 308); Davis v. Sladden, 17 Or. 259 (21 Pac. 140); Clark v. Morrison, 80 Or. 240, 244 (156 Pac. 429).
Under the custom of London a whore was “carted,” and on that account to characterize a woman as such was actionable per se in London; but with this exception a private act of incontinence, whether fornication or adultery, was cognizable only in the ecclesiastical courts: 1 Bishop’s New Cr. Law, §§ 38, 501; State v. Moore, 1 Swan (Tenn.), 136; State v. Smith, 32 Tex. 167; 2 Wharton Cr. Law (10 ed,), §§117, 1741; 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), 747; 13 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), 1119. Nor did repeated acts of fornication or adultery constitute a crime, even though committed with many persons: 1 Bishop’s New Cr. Law, § 501; State v. Evans, 27 N. C. (5 Ired.) 603; Reg. v. Pierson, 1 Salk. 382.
“A ‘whore’ is a woman given to promiscuous commerce with men, usually for hire”: Bishop on Statutory Crimes (2 ed.), §715; 40 Cyc. 933.
A prostitute is often defined as a female given to indiscriminate lewdness for gain (Davis v. Sladden, 17 Or. 259, 264 (21 Pac. 140); Bishop on Statutory Crimes, § 641); although it has been held that gain is not necessary: 32 Cyc. 732. The word.“prostitution” has no common-law meaning: People v. Cummons, 56 Mich. 544 (23 N. W. 215), and to be a common prostitute was not at common law indictable as a distinct and substantive offense: 32 Cyc. 732.
It makes no difference then whether we construe the words used by the defendant to mean the acts of
This rule of the common law that spoken words imputing unchastity to a female are not actionable per se, because not imputing a crime, is gradually, but surely, undergoing a change. This change is being brought about both by statute and by judicial decision.. In England a change was wrought by the Slander of Women Act, 1891, Stat. 54, 55 Yict., Chapter 51, which enacts that words imputing unchastity or adultery to a woman or girl shall be actionable without proof of special damage. In America similar statutes have been passed in a number of the states, while' in other states the courts, declaring the old rule to be a reproach upon the law, have repudiated the arbitrary and harsh rule of the common law, and held that words imputing unchastity to a female are actionable per se, even though not involving a criminal offense. If the ^question were res integra, the writer would take the view that this court should adopt the better and by far the more logical rule that
In many and probably most of the states of the Union an act of incontinence in some or many of its different forms is made punishable criminally, with the result that in such jurisdictions words imputing unchastity are in many instances actionable per se, for the reason that in such instances they impute a crime involving moral turpitude. In some American jurisdictions the common law has been followed without objection; but in others, although adhering to the old rule, the courts have not done so without protesting loudly and bitterly: Williams v. Riddle, 145 Ky. 459 (140. S. W. 661, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 1151, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 974); Linney v. Maton, 13 Tex. 449; Battles v. Tyson, 77 Neb. 563 (110 N. W. 299, 15 Ann. Cas. 1241, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 577); Jones v. Herne, 2 Wils. 87; Lynch v. Knight, 9 H. L. Cas. 577 (8 Jur., N. S., 724, 5 L. T. 291, 8 Eng. Rul. Cas. 382); Smith v. Silence, 4 Iowa, 321 (66 Am. Dec. 137); Landerback v. Moore, Tappan (Ohio), 349, Appendix A; 17 R. C. L. 280, 282.
The def endant argues that the words spoken by the defendant impute a violatioh of Section 2087, L. O. L., which reads thus:
“If any person shall willfully and wrongfully commit any act which grossly injures the person or property of another, or which grossly disturbs the public peace or health,' or which openly outrages the public decency and is injurious to public morals, such person, if no punishment is expressly prescribed therefor by this Code, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished * * .”
This statute was designed to cover offenses against the public peace, the public health, and the public morals, not elsewhere made punishable by the Code, and which were known at common law as “indictable nuisances”: State v. Waymire, 52 Or. 281, 285 (97 Pac. 46, 132 Am. St. Rep. 699, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 56). We must therefore look to the common law to ascertain what acts openly outrage the public decency and are injurious to public morals: 29 Cyc. 1279.
Although at common law a single act of private incontinence was not indictable, one in a public place and witnessed by people was indictable (Bishop on Statutory Crimes (2 ed.), §711); and although at common law the mere cohabitation of a man and woman between whom the bond of marriage did not exist was not a crime, yet it was a crime if something publicly indecent existed in the manner of association: 20 R. C. L. 406; Adams v. Commonwealth, 162 Ky. 76 (171 S. W. 1006, L. R. A. 1916C, 651). In .the absence of legislation, fornication and adultery were not crimes under the common law, unless accompanied by such circumstances as per se constituted a misdemeanor, as, for example, when it was open or notorious amounting to a public nuisance: 1 Bishop’s New Cr. Law, 38; 1 R. C. L. 632; Richey v. State, 172 Ind. 134 (87 N. E. 1032, 139 Am. St. Rep. 362, 19 Ann. Cas. 654). Generally all acts of gross and open lewdness, are indictable at common law: 1 Bishop New Cr. Law, § 500; 2 Wharton’s Cr. Law (10 ed.), §1432. Again noticing Section 2087, L. O. L., it will be observed that, as said in State v. Nease, 46 Or. 433, 443 (80. Pac. 897, 899), the legislature embodied “in the statute, as a description of the offenses prohibited, the essential ingredients of a common-law nuisance.”
To say of an unmarried woman that she is a prostitute, or a whore, is merely to ascribe to her a condi
The words spoken by the defendant, when given the meaning which they are ordinarily understood to carry, cannot be said to impute the commission of a crime; and therefore are not actionable per se; and although the words uttered by the defendant do impute unchastity to the plaintiff, that circumstance does not render them actionable per se, hut the plaintiff must, before she can recover, allege and prove special damage. The plaintiff did not allege, nor did she attempt to prove, special damage, and therefore the judgment must be affirmed. Affirmed.