45 So. 622 | Ala. | 1908
It appears from the record that this case was appealed from the county court to the circuit court. In the latter court it was tried on a complaint filed by the solicitor under section 4627 of the Criminal Code of 1896. In the circuit court a demurrer was interposed to the complaint, which the court overruled. The complaint charges as follows: “The.State of Alabama, by its solicitor, complains of Hadley Y. Brooke-that within 12 months before the commencement of this prosecution he, the said Hadley Y. Brooke, being the publisher of a newspaper in said county, did unlawfully and maliciously publish of and concerning Clifford K. Sharp, the superintendent of education of said county, the following libelous matter, to wit.” Then follows the libelous matter published, and the complaint then concludes as follows: “Said libelous matter having been published by said Hadley Y. Brooke in Crenshaw county, Alabama, on, to-wit, January 24, 1907, which said libelous matter had a tendency to provoke a breach of the peace, against the peace and dignity of the state of Alabama.” It is obvious from a reading of the complaint that many of the grounds of the demurrer are answered by the complaint, and no further consideration of these grounds is required than this statement. It was not essential that the entire article in which the alleged libelous matter occurred should be set out in the
The question is raised by several of the grounds of the demurrer of a failure to charge the falsity of the alleged libelous matter. This is the material and important question in the case. The statute (section 5063 of the Criminal Code of 1896) under which the defendant is prosecuted reads as follows: “Any person, who publishes a libel of another which may tend to provoke a breach of the peace, must be punished on conviction by fine,” etc. Section 5064 of the same Code, relative to the indictment, is as follows: “An indictment for a libel need not set forth any extrinsic facts for the purpose of showing the application to the party libeled of the defamatory matter on which the indictment is founded; it is sufficient to state generally that the same was published concerning him, and the fact that it was so published must be proved on the trial.” No form is prescribed in the Code for the indictment; but it. is manifest from the statute that the technicalities of the common law in the frame of an indictment for libel are not required. Indeed, it has been the policy of the Legislature to depart' from all common-law technicalities, and to simplify pleading in indictments as much as possible consistent with the due administration of justice. The statute punishing libel does not define what libel is, as do statutes of some of the other states. We are therefore remitted to the common law to ascertain what is libel, and whatever at the common law amounted to a libel was subject to criminal prosecution. The only difference made by our statute is that the libel must be such as to have a tendency to provoke a breach of the peace. In 2 Wharton’s Criminal Law (9th Ed.) 1598, it is stated: “Whatever, if made the subject of civil action, would be considered libelous without laying spe
In indictments at the common law the rule was that the truth of the libel could not be shown in defense of the prosecution, notwithstanding the indictment alleged that thé libel was false. The truth or falsity of the libel, notwithstanding the allegation in the indictment of its falsity, was regarded as as immaterial issue. In the case of Reid v. State, 53 Ala. 407, 25 Am. Rep. 627, cited by counsel for the defendant, the indictment charged that the libel was false; but the question was not raised in that case as to whether it was a necessary averment, and hence not decided. In Rex. v. Burks, Durnford & E. 4, it was decided by the court of King’s Bench that such -an averment was unnecessary. It was there said, in ruling on this quastion, that “the great number of precedents in late times was without the epithet ‘false,’ and that the reason of the thing, also, was against the insertion of the word ‘false,’ because it is not necessary to prove the libel'to be false.” Onr views are in accord with this statement of the law. It is true that the rule at common law as to the defendant offering.evidence of the truth of the libel has been changed by constitutional provision in this state (section 12, art. 1, Const. 1901), which authorizes evidence of the truth of the libel; but this does not affect the question under consideration. The constitutional provision is silent as for what purpose or to what extent the evidence is admissible, whether in justification or mitigation. The constitutional provision does not imply that the libel must be shown to be false. Our conclusion is that the trial court properly overruled the demurrers to the complaint.
What purports to he a. hill of exceptions in the transcript was signed after the adjournment of court. The record proper fails to■ disclose any order by the court allowing this to he done. True, there is a recital, in what purports to he the hill, that such an order was made; but this is nothing more nor less than a mere statement by the judge, and cannot supply the omission of an order of the court from the record. The precise question we have here was decided at the present term on the case of McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Clayton, 152 Ala. 539, 44 South. 552, where other cases are also cited. The hill of exceptions must he stricken, and, no error appearing otherwise of record, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
Affirmed.