On the former appeal by the plaintiff in this case, from a judgment on demurrer for the defendant (Bowie v. Evening NewsCo.,
"(Special Dispatch to the News), Annapolis, Oct. 20. — Corruption in official circles of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County was strongly hinted at by Judge Robert Moss of the circuit court in his charge to the grand jury this morning. The judge's charge also included a stinging rebuke to Sheriff Bowie of the county. After declaring the increase of bootlegging was a disgrace to the county, Judge Moss said a clean-up of conditions was in order. He referred to Garfield Chase (colored), who was employed as a `stool pigeon' by the sheriff's office in running down bootlegs, and said repeated attempts to tamper with Chase and make him useless as a State's witness had been made. He blamed Sheriff Bowie for permitting these attempts, and intimated that a member of the city police force was responsible for them. The court insisted that Chase be indicted either for bootlegging or for perjury, and urged the jury to go to the bottom of the plot to save those against whom Chase was to testify."
This publication was held to be actionable per se as imputing to Sheriff Bowie, the plaintiff, a dereliction in the performance of his official duty in regard to the enforcement of the prohibitory liquor law of the county. After the remand of the case to the Superior Court of Baltimore City, the defendant filed a general issue plea to the declaration, and also special pleas denying the alleged falsity of the published statement, and alleging that it was a substantially correct report of Judge Moss' charge to the grand jury, and was a privileged publication. The trial resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and on this second appeal by the plaintiff, the questions to be decided are raised by a demurrer to the special pleas and by certain exceptions relating to the evidence and the prayers.
In denying that the charges against the plaintiff in the publication complained of were false, the special pleas in effect asserted the truth of the accusations. By thus pleading justification, the defendant assumed the burden of proving that the plaintiff was in fact guilty of the official delinquency *Page 289
imputed to him in the newspaper report under consideration.McBee v. Fulton,
When an alleged libelous charge is general in its nature, a plea of justification must specify the facts upon which the charge is founded, but when the libel consists of a specific accusation, a general averment of its truth is sufficient.Bingham v. Gaynor,
In the first of the cases just cited, the Court of Appeals of New York said: "A general allegation charging a person with something that is libelous per se cannot be successfully answered by a general allegation in the answer that the charge is true. In Wachter v. Quenzer,
In the present case it is urged by the plaintiff that the quoted allusions to him in the defendant's newspaper were general reflections upon his official conduct, and that the defendant should not have been permitted to assert at the trial that the imputations were true, without specifying by pleas *Page 291 the particular charges which he would be required to meet. The conceded purpose of the pleas, in denying that the published references to the plaintiff were false, was to enable the defendant to offer evidence that the publication was true and therefore justified, and testimony designed to support that theory was in fact offered and admitted. But the defendant was not entitled to make such a defense unless the pleas sufficiently notified the plaintiff as to the nature and scope of the proposed attack upon his official record. The adequacy of the pleas, for the purposes of a defense of justification, depends upon the question as to whether the charges said to be libelous were general or specific.
In considering on the former appeal the meaning and effect of the publication, and deciding that the declaration alleging it to be a libel was not demurrable, the Court, speaking through Judge Offutt, said that "the natural and plain inference to be drawn from the whole article, including the headlines, is that Bowie was rebuked for some dereliction in the discharge of the duties of his office which was connected in some way with the increase of `bootlegging,' which was a `disgrace'," and that the "plaintiff was a public official, enjoying his office as a result of public confidence and trust, and when the public were informed in the most striking and conspicuous manner by a powerful and influential journal widely circulated that he had been officially rebuked by the very court which his duties required him to serve, and when that statement was followed by the charge that that court had hinted at `corruption' in `official circles of Annapolis and Anne Arundel,' of which `circles' he was a part, and by the further charge that the `increase of bootlegging was a disgrace to the county, and that the court had blamed him for permitting a State's witness used in such cases to be tampered with, the natural and likely impression which it would convey to the average and ordinary reader would be that the court had rebuked Bowie because his conduct had shown him unfit to perform the duties of his office, and it was, assuming that the charge was false and malicious, and that no such statement was made by the court, libelous per se." *Page 292
The intimations of corruption in official circles of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County, and of delinquency in checking the increase of bootlegging, were certainly not specific accusations. As already construed by this Court, they were merely general imputations of unfitness of the plaintiff for his office as sheriff, and of "some dereliction" of duty "which was connected in some way with the increase of bootlegging." The statement in the report of the judge's charge that he blamed the plaintiff for permitting attempts to tamper with a "stool pigeon" employed by the sheriff's office in detecting bootleggers, and to make him useless as a State's witness, was held in the former opinion not to impute dishonesty to the plaintiff, as averred by innuendo in the declaration, since there was "nothing in the article or elsewhere to indicate how he could have prevented the attempts."
We have not found any cases in which pleas asserting generally the truth of such general publications as those here under discussion were held to be adequate for the purposes of a defense of justification. To sustain such pleas in this case would be to oppose the uniform trend of the decisions in relation to a reasonable rule of pleading designed to serve the practical ends of justice. In our opinion the demurrer to the special pleas should have been sustained.
The first exception was taken in the course of the testimony of Mr. John E. Cullen, vice-president of the defendant corporation, who was called by the plaintiff as a witness to prove the publication in controversy. On cross-examination he was asked whether the defendant in making the publication was animated by actual malice. As Mr. Cullen was not then in charge of the Baltimore News, he confined his answer to the statement: "Apparently the story was not handled in a way that would indicate any malice." The objection was that Mr. Cullen had disqualified himself to answer the question by admitting that he had no personal knowledge on the subject. In his previous testimony he explained that the prominence given the article in the newspaper was in conformity with the defendant's custom of displaying news reports according to their relative importance. This was evidently *Page 293 the basis and meaning of the answer to the question involved in the first exception. There is no ground of reversal in this ruling.
The bills of exceptions numbered two to eight inclusive were refused signature by the trial judge because at the time of the rulings therein mentioned no exceptions were reserved. That refusal was the occasion of the fifteenth exception. The appellant's brief states that it was understood to be the practice of the judge presiding at the trial to allow exceptions in every instance to the party against whom he ruled. The record does not support that theory, and as the exceptions were not in fact reserved when the rulings were made, they are not properly before us for consideration. Mitchell v. State,
The ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth exceptions refer to the exclusion of testimony offered by the plaintiff in rebuttal to prove that prior to the publication in question he enjoyed a good reputation for fidelity to the official duty with respect to which he claims to have been maligned. The effort of the defendant to justify the defamatory statement entitled the plaintiff to prove his previous good reputation in regard to the element of his character thus traduced. Bavington v. Robinson,
The plaintiff offered ten prayers, one of which only, marked "A," was granted. The prayer of the plaintiff designated "B" involved the theory of actual malice in the publication which occasioned the suit. There was no reference in the prayer to the plea of justification, and apart from the possible effect of that plea, if found to be unsustained (Coffin v. Brown,
The refusal of the plaintiff's "B" prayer was proper for the reasons we have indicated, and also because it omitted to make any reference to the issue as to whether the published report of the charge to the grand jury was substantially correct. The latter objection also applies to the plaintiff's prayers marked first, second, third, and eighth. The fourth prayer of the plaintiff improperly assumes the "libelous" character of the publication. The granting of the fifth prayer would have submitted a question of law to the jury. In its abstract form, and under the circumstances of the case, the plaintiff's sixth prayer would not have been a proper instruction. The purpose of the plaintiff's seventh prayer was served by his "A" prayer which was granted, and in the refusal of the additional prayer to the same effect there was no error.
Of the sixteen prayers offered by the defendant the court below granted the ninth, eleventh, fifteenth, and sixteenth. The ninth prayer was as follows: "The court instructs the jury that if they shall find from the evidence that the statements contained in the article complained of, in so far as they refer to the plaintiff, are substantially true, then their verdict must be for the defendant, even though the jury shall find that the said statements were not a fair or impartial report of and comment on the remarks made by his *Page 296 Honor, Judge Robert Moss, in his charge to the grand jury of Anne Arundel County on October 20, 1924."
The general rule on the subject is that if the truth of the statement alleged to have been defamatory is pleaded in justification and is established by proof, it is a complete and effectual defense to the action. McBee v. Fulton, supra. In this case the plaintiff's asserted grievance is that he was defamed by the publication of a false report that he had been subjected to censure for official neglect in a charge to the grand jury delivered by a judge of the court under whose jurisdiction the plaintiff's service as sheriff was required to be rendered. The question raised by the prayer quoted is whether the defendant would be exempted from liability for erroneously attributing to the judge such a reflection upon the plaintiff, if the evidence in the case proved that the censure, though not pronounced, was really deserved. It seems to us that with respect to such a defamation as the one now being considered, and in a suit of this nature, it is a material and distinguishing fact that the authorship of the condemnatory statement was ascribed to a judicial officer whose rebuke of the plaintiff would be particularly discrediting. No case has been cited in which the general rule referred to has been applied to such conditions as those with which we are now concerned. It was not for specific acts of malfeasance, but with laxity in the administration of his office, that the plaintiff was reported to have been rebuked. In our judgment, the actual existence of such laxity would not justify an unfounded newspaper report that the plaintiff had been formally and publicly censured for official delinquency by the court with which he was officially connected. The stigma thus untruthfully placed upon him would constitute a distinct wrong. We are, therefore, unable to approve the theory of the defendant's ninth prayer as applied to the special circumstances of this case.
The defense that the publication was substantially correct, as presented by the defendant's eleventh and sixteenth *Page 297 prayers, was properly submitted to the jury for consideration.
In view of the conflict of theories at the trial upon the question as to the relative responsibility of the sheriff and the warden for the custody of the prisoners in the jail of Anne Arundel County, we think the lower court properly granted an instruction, as requested by the defendant's fifteenth prayer, that the sheriff was the legal custodian of prisoners lodged in the jail and committed to his custody by lawful authority. The common law functions of the Sheriff of Anne Arundel County as a constitutional officer undoubtedly included the care and control of prisoners committed to the county jail, and while it is competent for the Legislature to relieve him of that duty (Beasley v. Ridout,
All of the rulings excepted to have now been reviewed, and because of our inability to affirm the ruling on the demurrer to the special pleas and the granting of the defendant's ninth prayer, the judgment will be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed with costs, and new trial awarded.
ADKINS, J., dissents. *Page 298