57 Mo. App. 528 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— Plaintiff instituted this action by filing a petition alleging that defendant had slandered him by charging him with being a thief. The allegation was in different forms and was accompanied with
The evidence clearly showed that defendant had uttered the words charged and had applied them to plaintiff. The evidence further tended to show that plaintiff was defendant’s tenant and that there was a difficulty between the parties arising over plaintiff’s refusal to deliver defendant’s portion of the oats which were then being threshed, the difficulty having occurred at the threshing machine; plaintiff asserting his understanding of the contract to be that he was not to deliver the oats in defendant’s bin. When plaintiff asserted this understanding of the contract on his part, •defendant at once became greatly enraged and immediately commenced an assault upon plaintiff, at and •during which time the slanderous words were used and the vile epithets applied. The men engaged in threshing were hearers of the words and witnesses to the scene.
The defendant was refused instructions directing the jury, in substance, that though he spoke of and concerning plaintiff the words, “You are nothing but a low down thief,” or., “You are a trifling low down thieving son of a bitch;” yet if the jury believed from the evidence that the words were merely used as terms of abuse and reproach and were not intended as the truth, and were understood by the hearers as mere terms of abuse and not as being intended to charge, as a fact, that plaintiff was a thief, then the jury should find for defendant. In our opinion such instruction should have been given. One may slander another in words which on their face do not imply a charge slanderous per se, but it is permissible to show from the circumstances and surrounding that it was nevertheless so intended. So, on the other hand, one may make use of words which of themselves.
To call another a “thief” is not necessarily actionable. When it is apparent from the circumstances under which the words are spoken that they are not intended or understood as charging a felony they are not actionable. Quinn v. O’Gara, 2 E. D. Smith, 388; McKee v. Ingalls, 4 Scam. 30; Haynes v. Haynes, 29 Maine, 247; Jarvis v. Hathaway, 3 Johns. 180.
In the case at bar a misunderstanding arose between these parties concerning the delivery of the oats then being threshed. This was undoubtedly the immediate provocation for the words and epithets used by defendant concerning the plaintiff. If, under those
In this case the defendant offered no evidence' in his own behalf in explanation of the words he used. But the circumstances upon which the refused instructions were asked appeared from plaintiff’s case. “If from plaintiff’s own showing, it appears that the words were not used in an actionable sense, he will be non-suited.” 2 Greenleaf on Ev., sec. 423; Haynes v. Haynes, 29 Maine, 251. If the evidence makes it doubtful whether the terms were used or applied in a felonious sense it is a question for the jury. Haynes v. Haynes, supra, 249.
We gather from the brief for defendant that mitigation of damages will be sought in this case on the ground of provocation. We have not discovered anything in the case in the way of provocation. The principle which allows proof of provocation in mitigation of damages is the same as that which is applicable in case of assault. Newell on Def. and Slander, 520. Defendant, without any thing appearing upon plaintiff’s part but the most respectful and gentlemanly conduct, began a brutal assault upon him, accompanying it with the words charged. The whole question, so far as now appears in the case, is whether a crime was intended to be charged against plaintiff; if it was,
Defendant’s instruction number 4 was properly refused since it does not include the hypothesis of defendant’s intention to charge a crime and of the understanding of the parties present as to what was meant by the words as they were used and applied. Number 5 should he given by omitting the words, “in which reproachful or abusive language was used in anger by each party against the other,” since there was no evidence of plaintiff using any abusive or reproachful language. Numbers 6 and 7, should have been given as asked.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause-remanded.