116 Kan. 231 | Kan. | 1924
The opinion of the court was delivered by
J. E. Bourn and his wife sued the Farmers State Bank of Simpson and a number of its officers, alleging that while he was- on the point of selling a mill property, of which he was .the owner, subject to certain liens, mainly held by the bank, the defend
There was a first mortgage on the property for $8,160, $2,000 of which was due July, 1921. The bank had a second mortgage for $15,000. On October 7, 1921, the bank paid to the holder of the first mortgage the $2,000 and interest then due thereon, and the plaintiffs executed to the bank an instrument in the form of a warranty deed, which the plaintiffs have at all times regarded as given for security, and which the court held to be in effect a mortgage, but which the defendants pleaded as an actual conveyance, accompanied by an oral agreement that if Bourn would sell the property for the bank before March 1, 1922, he should receive for his services whatever it brought over the indebtedness against it, the bank'to accept $2,500 in cash and extend time on the rest of the debt. Bourn entered into negotiations with T. J. Burton to sell or trade him the mill property (which was valued in the deal at $50,000) for an incumbered farm, Burton to pay $2,500 down, which was to go to the bank to apply on what was owing to it. On February 21 and 22, Bourn, Burton and the bank officers and directors met to consider the matter. There was evidence sufficient to support findings, which the jury must be deemed to have made, that the proposed deal was agreed to between Bourn and Burton and would have been formally entered into except for the conduct of the defendants, who at these meetings represented to Burton that the bank owned the mill property outright, that Bourn did not own it and had nothing to do with it, and that it was worth no more than from $20,000 to $25,000; and that by reason of these representations Burton refused to trade.
1. The plaintiffs are asking damages against the defendants for having prevented them from selling the property by knowingly making false statements concerning it. The action is called one for slander of title and slander of property, although the analogy to slander of an individual is not complete. “An action for slander of title is an action for special damage sustained by reason of the speaking of slander of the plaintiff’s title to property. The action, in its nature, is not properly for words spoken or for a libel written or published, but is in the nature of an action of trespass on the case for special damages sustained by reason of the act of the
“If you believe from the evidence in this case that the defendants or any one of them, either collectively or individually, by means of a conspiracy or otherwise; falsely and maliciously made any or all of the statements as claimed by plaintiffs in their petition, in reference to plaintiffs’ property known as the Simpson mill, and that Tom Burton, by reason of such statements, if any, was induced, not to trade for the Simpson mills when he would otherwise have traded for said mill, and plaintiffs have suffered damage thereby, as claimed in their petition, your verdict should be for the plaintiffs and against such defendant or defendants for the sum, if any, you find plaintiffs actually lost thereby.”
"Malice, as spoken of in these instructions, means a wrongful act, done intentionally, and without just cause or excuse, and it is not necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant or defendants were actuated by express malice, hate, spite or ill will, if you believe from the evidence and circumstances of the case that the defendants or any one of them falsely made any of the slanderous statements charged in plaintiffs’ petition without probable cause, or that they were not made in good faith, you may infer malice therefrom, but you are not obliged to do so.”
The defendants say the jury should have been told that “before they could find for the plaintiffs they must first find express malice on the part of the defendants.” “Express malice” is used by law writers in different senses, and there is no general agreement as to the force to be given it. “In fact, such confusion has been created that it is a matter of the greatest difficulty, if it is not quite impossible, so to distinguish between express and implied malice as to render these terms intelligible to a jury.” (18 R. C. L. 7.) The language quoted is adapted from a note in which abundant illustrations are given. (38 L; R. A., n. s., 1072, 1073.) As employed in the foregoing instructions the phrase should be interpreted in the light of the context rather than in accordance with the technical meanings sometimes given it. The instructions made it clear that the defendants’ liability depended upon proof of intentional wrongdoing on their part, and this is the vital point so far as relates to their mental attitude. If the defendants knowingly made false statements with the purpose of preventing the sale of the property
The defendants’ brief contains quotations from various sources to to the effect that a mere false statement impugning the title of another, made under an honest mistake by one having an interest to protect, is not actionable. This may be readily conceded. Sometimes the language goes further and declares in effect that no action will lie unless it be proved that the defendant knew his claim of title was invalid, which is probably going too far. A number of passages quoted.by the defendants contain, in substance, the statement that “whenever a man claims a right of title in himself it is not enough for plaintiff to prove that he has no such right; he must also show that defendant could not honestly have believed in the existence of the right he claimed, or at least that he had no reasonable or probable cause for so believing.” (25 Cyc. 562.) This recognizes the existence of probable cause to believe the plaintiff’s title bad as a test of a defendant’s good faith in disparaging it, and is in accord with the instruction given rather than contradictory to it. In an early case this court said: “. . . This action cannot be maintained without showing malice and want of probable cause. If what the defendant did was in pursuance of a bona fide claim which he was asserting honestly, and especially if he was acting under the advice of counsel, though without right, he will not be liable.” (Stark v. Chitwood, 5 Kan. 141, 144.) This likewise is consistent with the charge of the court. While it says that both malice and want of probable cause must exist in order to make a cause, it does not forbid the inference of malice from want of probable cause, in such circumstances as those here presented.
Complaint is also made of an instruction to the effect that all persons are presumed to know the law, and the defendants were presumed to know that the deed in question was an equitable mortgage, but in determining whether the defendants were actuated by malice, either express or implied, the jury might consider whether they acted in good faith. One objection made to the instruction is that it allowed the jury to imply malice while finding good faith. We do not regard it as open to that construction. Another objection is that it assumes the deed to have been a mortgage. That fact was abundantly proved and practically conceded.
Various requested instructions relating to malice and to good faith were refused, and complaint is also made of this. We regard most of the questions of law involved in this assignment as substantially the same as those already considered. The instructions quoted appear to have sufficiently covered the matters referred to. Other instructions asked — such as one concerning conspiracy — are regarded as either sufficiently covered by the general charge or not of enough importance to form the basis for a reversal.
2. A final question with reference to the instructions was raised by a request for a directed verdict for the bank on the ground that a corporation cannot be held liable for slander, at all events unless the words complained of were expressly ordered or ratified by its governing body. There is still some conflict of opinion on that subject, but we accept the modern and prevailing view that a corporation may be liable for slander, and especially for slander of title, because of the utterance of an agent while acting within the scope of his authority. (14a C. J. 779-781.)
3. In answer to special questions the jury found that the defendants honestly believed that the instrument in the form of a deed was such in fact and conveyed the property to the bank, and that
It is also urged that the special findings above referred to are inconsistent with a further finding that the defendants conspired to slander the title of the plaintiffs to the mill property. The jury did not find that the defendants honestly believed that the bank was the absolute owner of the property, but that they honestly believed that it was the owner “subject only to the rights of the plaintiffs to find a purchaser for said mill property on or before March 1, 1922.” The evidence warranted a finding, which may be deemed to have been made, that the defendants conspired to lead Burton to believe that the plaintiffs had no rights whatever in relation to the property.
It is contended that there was no evidence to support other findings made by the jury which were favorable to the plaintiffs, including a negative answer to the question whether the defendants at all times acted in good faith in an honest endeavor to protect the interests of the bank in the mill property. To discuss them in detail would unduly extend the opinion. We hold the contention not to be well founded.
4. Bourn was permitted to testify as to his conversations with Burton concerning the proposed trade between them. This is objected to on the ground that the testimony was hearsay and included self-serving declarations. The objection is not well taken. The evidence was not introduced in order to persuade the jury of the existence of some fact by showing them that Bourn or Burton had at some time said that it existed. The purpose was to show that an oral agreement was reached by the two, and the primary evidence of that was what each said at the time; the question at issue was whether or not words had been used creating a tentative contract. The evidence was of a “verbal act.” “The theory of the hearsay rule is that, when a human'utterance is offered as evidence of the truth of the fact asserted in it, the credit of the assertor becomes the basis of our inference, and therefore the assertion can
5. The defendants assert that several witnesses were permitted to give their opinions as to the value of the mill property without-having sufficiently qualified as experts. We think the objections go rather to the weight than to the competence of the evidence, and it is to be presumed that the jury were not unduly influenced by the testimony of witnesses lacking in familiarity with the subject.
. Complaint is made because the court declared the deed in question to be an equitable mortgage before hearing the evidence, the defendants adding, however: “While the defendants, in view of the facts, could not complain of the ruling of the court had it been made at the end of the trial, still the court.could not legally, without hearing the evidence, declare the instrument to be an equitable mortgage.” Obviously the ruling was not prejudicial.
The judgment is affirmed.