1 Cliff. 204 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island | 1858
In the first place, the plaintiff complains that the defendant, in the introductory part of his plea, has’ introduced and attempted to put in issue matters of fact not necessary to be alleged, and which are wholly impertinent and foreign to the cause. Various specifications are made under this head, but, in the view we have taken of the plea, they may all be considered together. Defences in actions of libel and slander, which go to a general denial of the whole declaration, must be tried under the general issue. Certain other -de-fences must be pleaded specially, and cannot be thus given in evidence, even although they afford a conclusive bar to the action. Whenever the defendant means to insist that the imputation of the charge, as laid in the declaration, is true, he must plead such de-fence specially, for the reason that the matter which supplies the justification is collateral to the cause of action, and the proof of it does not contradict or repel any fact which the plaintiff would be bound to prove. On grounds of convenience and policy, also, it is obviously just and necessary that a party charged with the commission of an illegal or immoral act should be apprised of the nature and circumstances of the charge, in order that he may be prepared to meet it, and, if it be unfounded, to refute it. These considerations induced courts of justice at a very early period to adopt the rule that the defendant, if he means to rely on the truth of that which he has published, either in-bar of the action or in mitigation of damages, must plead it specially. No rule can be more firmly established than that the ■ defendant cannot' give in evidence the truth of the imputation, without pleading such
Complaint is also made that the plea does not fully answer the declaration. None of the authorities, when carefully examined, require any more of the defendant than that his plea should answer the whole substance of the plaintiff’s declaration. When the plaintiff has proved the substance of his declaration, he has made out his case; and upon the same ground, and for the same reason, when the pleadings and proofs of the defendant have substantially answered the charge, as laid in the declaration, the defense is complete. 1 Starkie, Sland. & L. 374.
Another ground of complaint is that the plea is wanting in the requisite certainty to apprise the plaintiff of the nature and circumstances of the charge. Courts of justice agree that a plea of justification, in actions of libel and slander, must contain a specific charge set forth with certainty and particularity; and it is sometimes said that the plea ought to state the charge with the same precision as in an indictment. To maintain an action of libel, however, it is not necessary that the publication should impute an actionable offense to the plaintiff. Any writing, picture, or sign which derogates from the character of an individual, by imputing to him either bad actions or vicious principles, or which tends to diminish his respectability and abridge his comforts, by exposing him to disgrace and ridicule, is actionable without proof of special damage. Cooper v. Greeley, 1 Denio, 363; Clark v. Binney, 2 Pick. 115. When the charge is general the defendant is required to state the substantial facts which constitute its elements; and when that condition is fairly fufilled, he has done all that the law requires to maintain his plea. Such a plea, says Spencer, C. J., in Van Ness v. Hamilton, 19 Johns. 368, must be certain to a common intent. It must be direct and positive in the facts set forth, and must state them with all necessary certainty. All the material facts set forth in the plea must be considered as admitted by the demurrer; and, assuming them to be correctly stated, it is difficult to perceive in what other manner the justification in this case could have properly been interposed. One of the specifications under this head is, the want of a more definite description of the territory claimed to be included in the “circle of professional business” embraced in the contract between these parties. That phrase is the one employed by the parties in making the contract, and the contract is fully set forth in the plea. Both parties having* adopted that description as one suitable to express their intentions, it cannot now be held that it is insufficient to apprise the plaintiff of the nature and circumstances of the charge. Without entering more into detail, we are of opinion that the plea is sufficient, and the demurrer is accordingly overruled.