90 Cal. 532 | Cal. | 1891
— The plaintiff brought this action against the defendant to recover the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars damages, caused by certain false and malicious statements alleged to have been made by him concerning certain property of the plaintiff. The defendant demurred to the complaint upon the grounds of insufficiency and uncertainty; and from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining the demurrer, the plaintiff has appealed.
Although the term “slander” is more appropriate to
It is alleged in the complaint that in August, 1888, the plaintiff was the owner of a certain leasehold interest with option and privilege of purchasing two certain tracts of land in Los Angeles County, and that one Arthur Sketchley was then negotiating and treating with him for the purchase of, and offered to purchase from him, an undivided one half of the same for the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, “and that the plaintiff accepted said offer”; that the defendant, well knowing the premises, did willfully, maliciously, and without probable cause, during the period that the said Sketchley was so negotiating and making the offer aforesaid, and prior and subsequent thereto, publicly state to divers persons (naming them), and to the plaintiff, “ that the plaintiff had broken the covenants of his said leases, and had forfeited all rights thereunder and by virtue thereof,” and that the defendant would not sell to the plaintiff, or to any person purchasing from him, the lands described in said leases, or execute a deed therefor on the tender of said purchase price; that the said statement and declarations were false, and were made by the defendant for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from disposing of said leasehold interests and option, and that said Sketchley was informed of the said statements, and was intimidated, dissuaded, and deterred from carrying out his agreement with plaintiff, and
1. The averment in the complaint that Sketchley offered to make the purchase from the plaintiff, and to pay therefor the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and that “the plaintiff accepted said offer,” must, for the purposes of the demurrer, under the familiar rule that the pleading is to be construed contra proferentem, be regarded as an allegation of a valid and efficient offer and acceptance, and that by virtue thereof a complete and executed contract of purchase and sale was entered into between them. This construction is corroborated by the subsequent averment that after Sketchley was informed of the statements of the defendant, he was “ intimidated, dissuaded, and deterred from carrying out his agreement with plaintiff,” and shows that it was the intention of the pleader to allege such contract.
This acceptance by the plaintiff of Sketchley’s offer, and the agreement between them for the purchase and sale of the property, terminated the “ treaty, ” and gave to the plaintiff a contract capable of being enforced against Sketchley, and on which he can recover any damages he may have sustained from its violation. The subsequent refusal by Sketchley to carry out his agreement did not give the plaintiff the right to recover in this action the damages thus sustained. In an action like the present, the plaintiff can recover only such damage as he may have sustained by reason of an intending purchaser bring prevented from making the contract; but the complaint herein shows that whatever statements or declarations were made by the defendant prior to the making of the contract did not have the effect to prevent
It is not shown by the complaint whether the plaintiff accepted the refusal of Sketchley to complete his purchase as a termination of the contract, or whether he still holds his right of action to enforce the contract. From the averment that “ the said Sketchley was then and there, and at all times since has been, able and willing to purchase ” the property contracted for, it would seem that Sketchley is still bound by the contract, and if so, the complaint fails to show that the plaintiff has sustained any damage. In any action against Sketchley' founded upon the contract, it would be no defense that he had been induced to refuse to complete his purchase by reason of the statements of the defendant alleged herein; and as in such action the plaintiff can recover all the damages he has sustained, he has no right of
2. The complaint fails to show that the statements and declarations alleged to have been made by the defendant could have caused any damage to the plaintiff. It was necessary for the plaintiff to set forth and describe in his complaint the property respecting which the defamatory statements had been made, as well as to aver his title thereto, so that it might be shown wherein the defendant had done him any injury. The defamatory statements alleged to have been made by the defendant are, “ that this plaintiff had broken the covenants of his said leases, and that plaintiff had forfeited all rights thereunder and by virtue thereof.” The only leases referred to in the complaint are those which are annexed to it as exhibits for the purpose of identifying the lands in which the plaintiff had a “leasehold interest with option and privilege of purchasing.” The plaintiff has not alleged the nature or extent of his leasehold interest, or the terms of his option, or what were the covenants of his leases, or the nature of his rights thereunder, nor has he alleged that the covenants or the option are those which are contained in the exhibits. As the statements alleged to have been made by the defendant referred to the “ covenants of his said leases and his rights thereunder,” it was necessary to aver facts sufficient to show whether he had any rights, or whether there were any covenants to be violated or broken. The exhibits attached to the complaint are made a part thereof only for the purpose of identifying the lands referred to, and do not satisfy this requirement of pleading. Argumentative pleading is no more permissible under the code than it was at common law. Matters of substance must
The only properly to which the plaintiff alleges that he had any title is the leasehold interest and option to purchase. He does not allege that the defendant denied his title to this property, but charges him only with disparaging certain rights which the complaint does not allege that he possessed. The allegation that the defendant had stated that he would not sell the lands described in the leases cannot be regarded as any slander of his title, even if the complaint had shown any right to make a purchase from the defendant. The plaintiff, moreover, does not allege that Sketchley was informed of this declaration of the defendant.
3. The complaint also fails to show that the special damage alleged to have been sustained by the plain!iff is the natural and direct result of the statements and declarations made by the defendant. This action is governed by the same rule that obtains in the ordinary action of slander; viz., that if the words are not actionable in themselves, the originator of the slander is only liable for such damage as is the direct and natural result of his act, and that he is not liable for the subsequent repetition of those words by another, without his direction or authority. (Folkard’s Starkie on Slander and Libel, sec. 642; Addison on Torts, 795; Parkin v. Scott, 1 Hurl. & N. 153; Ward v. Weeks, 7 Bing. 211; Terwilliger v. Wands, 17 N. Y. 54; 12 Am. Dec. 420; Gough v. Goldsmith, 44 Wis. 262; 28 Am. Rep. 579; Hastings v. Stetson, 126 Mass. 329; 30 Am. Rep. 683.) This is but the application of the general rule that when special damages are to be recovered, they must be the legal and natural consequence
We are of the opinion that the complaint fails to state a cause of action, and that the demurrer was properly sustained, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Paterson, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.