17 N.Y.S. 393 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The action is for libel. The complaint sets forth several causes of action. The answer commences with a general denial. It then al
The authorities cited by the appellant upon the first point were either at common law or prior to the act of 1854. The case which he mainly relies upoh (Stanley v. Webb, 4 Sandf. 21) was decided prior to the passage of this act, and it is no longer an authority. Indeed, it was subsequently held by the same court (in 1874) that proceedings before a police magistrate were “judicial proceedings,” within the meaning of the act, (Ackerman v. Jones, 37 N. Y. Super. Ct. 55, and cases there cited,) and that there was no distinction between such proceedings and the regular proceedings in a court of law. We have no doubt of the correctness of this decision. Fair and true reports of proceedings before police magistrates are within both the spirit and the letter of section 1907 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and their publication is thereby privileged.
The second point is also untenable. Whatever the rule may have been prior to the Code of Civil Procedure, matter tending to mitigate damages in an action for a personal injury is now partial defense. Code Civil Proc. § 508. It may therefore be set up as such. In the present case, if the matter set forth as a partial defense is established .upon the trial, it will eliminate so much of the libel set forth in the complaint as is covered by the privilege. Thus the libel will be shorn of some of its elements, and the damages will be proportionately reduced. The appellant, in his elaborate argument and citation of authorities on this point, overlooks this new provision of the Code, which seems to have been enacted for the very purpose of changing the old rule as laid down in Van Benschotten v. Yaple, 13 How. Pr. 100; Newman v. Otto, 4 Sandf. 668; and other cases. If matter tending only to mitigate or reduce damages is, under this section, a partial defense, then surely it may be pleaded as such. How, the matter here pleaded and admitted by the demurrer is, strictly speaking, a partial defense to the cause of action set forth; for it establishes a perfect defense to part of the libel. It also, and, indeed, as a sequence, tends to mitigate the damages recoverable for this entire publication. In either aspect, it was, under this section 508, properly pleaded as a partial defense. The judgment appealed from should therefore be affirmed, with costs, with leave to withdraw the demurrer on payment of costs of appeal and costs of demurrer at special term. All concur.