185 Mo. 603 | Mo. | 1904
This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Andrew county. The judgment was against Edward W. Hamilton, but since this appeal was filed in this court his death has been suggested, and the cause revived in the name of Mrs. Hamilton, his administratrix. A motion to dismiss the appeal was filed on the ground of the insufficiency of the abstract. We have carefully considered the motion, and while the abstract is not by any means to be commended as a precedent, we are constrained to hold it sufficient. The cause comes to this court by the short method. The cases relied on to show the insufficiency of the abstract were all cases upon full transcripts and do not apply. The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.
II. It will be observed that the judgment in this •case was for $800, but the jurisdiction of this appeal vests in this court because of the constitutional question raised in the trial court, which was that the verdict was concurred in by eleven jurors only, and the point was made and urged that the amendment to the Constitution of this State, adopted' at the general election'in 1900, authorizing three-fourths of a jury to render a verdict in courts of record, had never been duly submitted to the people of this State and adopted by them as required by the Constitution of 1875.
This point was decided by this court In Banc adversely to this contention in Gabbert v. Railroad, 171 Mo. 84, December 24, 1902, and that decision has since •been uniformly followed, but where it has appeared that the point was made in good faith prior to the ■decision of this court in' the Gabbert case, we have retained jurisdiction. Inasmuch as this appeal was taken at the February term, 1902, of the Andrew circuit
III. The action is for slander. The petition contains two counts, but as plaintiff dismissed the first ' count and the instructions restricted the jury to the slander alleged in the second count, it is unnecessary to notice the first count for the purposes of this appeal. The second count is based upon, the following alleged slanderous words, uttered by defendant’s intestate to plaintiff, in the presence of a number of persons on a public street in St. Joseph: “Come here John, you bring
Stripped of immaterial and unnecessary verbiage this count alleged that defendant charged plaintiff in the presence of divers persons on a public thoroughfare in the city of St. Joseph with stealing certain material, the property of defendant.
The time of the utterance of the - alleged slander was laid on July 28, 1900. The action was commenced on the first day of September, 1900, inBuchanancounty. The answer was a general denial. The venue was changed to Andrew county. A verdict for $300 actual damages and $500 punitive damages was rendered. The evidence on the part of plaintiff tended to prove the allegation of the petition, to-wit, that on said 28th day of July, 1900, on the northeast corner of Fourth and Edmond streets in the city of St. Joseph, near noon, the defendant accosted plaintiff, who was and is a painter by trade, in the presence of Elmer Fetters, Henry Swagers and Frank Mallet, and divers other persons who were at the time passing along said streets, and said, “Come here, John,” and when plaintiff went up to defendant, the latter said to plaintiff, • “You bring back that material of mine.’,’ Plaintiff asked, “What material!” And defendant said, “You know what material, and if you don’t return it, I will make you smoke for it.” Flaintiff replied, “I did not get any material of yours.” Thereupon defendant said, “Yes, you have. You have used it on somebody else’s work, and that material you stole from me, if you don’t return it, I will make it hot for you. ’ ’
On the part of defendant, his own testimony of
“Mr. Miller, who had a desk at my office, and myself, left the office to go home. It was twelve o’clock; We walked up Edmond street together, and I saw Mr. Carpenter (the plaintiff) on the corner there. He had promised to do some work for me for three or four weeks and I asked him — I called him to me, ‘ Come here, John.’ He came up and I said, ‘I want you to return that paint that you took from Pimbley’s.’ He denied having any paint. Then I — that is all of the conversation. I told him to come with me and we would go to Pimbley’s. We left and went on up to Pimbley’s, and I went in and Mr. Pimbley told me to go 'and see the bookkeeper. I went up to the bookkeeper to find the order. The order was not there; he (plaintiff) had not delivered it. I came on out, was about all. I passed out and went to dinner.” He denied that Mallet was there. Denied that he said plaintiff stole the material. He had always had perfect confidence in John Carpenter’s honesty. The evidence further tended to prove that Mr. Hamilton, the defendant, was' a prominent citizen of St. Joseph, a man of wealth, worth $75,000.
Mr. Miller, who accompanied defendant, detailed the conversation in this manner: “Mr. Carpenter and several ‘other gentlemen were standing around some little stand of some kind on Gloodlive’s corner there, and as we passed Mr. Hamilton saw Mr. Carpenter and said to him, ‘See here, John, I want you to bring that paint back.’ Carpenter said, ‘What paint?’ Defendant said, ‘That paint you got at Pimbley’s.’ Carpenter said he didn’t get any paint, and Hamilton said he knew better; that he did; that Pimbley’s man said so.” They argued several minutes. He didn’t hear Hamilton say Carpenter stole the paint.
At the close of the evidence the court gave the following, instructions at the request of • plaintiff:
“1. The jury are instructed that in making up
“2. The court instructs the jury that if in this case the jury finds that the defendant spoke the slanderous words as charged in the second .count of plaintiff’s petition, then the Jaw presumes they were spoken maliciously and it is not necessary to prove any express malice in order to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff. ;
“3. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the defendant did on the 28th day of July, 1900, at the corner of Fourth and Edmond streets, in the city of St. Joseph, use the slanderous words charged in the second count of plaintiff’s petition, .alleging that the plaintiff was a thief, that he had stolen material, and if the jury further believe that said language was false and untrue, then the jury shall find for the plaintiff.
“4. The court instructs the jury that you may not only allow damages, but also such damages as will afford a wholesome example to others in like cases in the way of smart money or exemplary damages, and in arriving at this amount you are at liberty to take into consideration the amount of money that the defendant is worth.
“5. The court instructs the jury that-malice does not consist alone'in personal spite or ill-will, but exists
“6. The court instructs the jury that if the jury believe that the defendant spoke the slanderous words charged in the second count of the petition or enough of them to constitute the charge that plaintiff was a thief, the law presumes malice in the speaking, and the jury; without proof of malice or special damages, are at liberty to give exemplary damages.
“7. The jury are the judges of the evidence and credibility of the witnesses, and may give to the testimony of any witness such weight as they deem it entitled to under all the facts and circumstances in proof, and if the jury believe that any witness has willfully sworn falsely to any material fact in the case, they are at liberty to disregard the whole of the testimony of such witness.
“8. The court instructs the jury that under the law if three-fourths of the members of the jury concur, they may render a verdict. • ' •
“9. The court instructs the jury that if you find for the plaintiff on the second count in the petition, your verdict will be in the following form:
“ ‘We, the jury, find for the plaintiff on the second count in said petition, and assess his actual damages at---dollars, and we further find for the plaintiff in exemplary damages in the sum of----dollars. ’ ’ ’
To the giving of which defendant at the time duly excepted. The defendant then asked the following in structions:
“1. The court instructs the jury that under the pleadings and the evidence their verdict must be for the defendant and they will so find.
“2. On the part of defendant the court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the material mentioned in the evidence, and referred to in the conversations between plaintiff and defendant, was material which defendant had intrusted to
“3. The court instructs the jury that the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff and it devolves upon him to make his ease by a preponderance of the evidence. A preponderance of the evidence as used in'this instruction does not mean any number of witnesses, but it means a greater weight and credibility to be given to the evidence of the witnesses.
“4. If the jury believe from the evidence that any witness has-willfully sworn falsely to any material fact in this case they are at liberty to disregard the whole of such witness’s testimony.”
Which said instructions numbered one and two, upon the part of defendant,- the court refused, and to this action defendant excepted at the time.
Eleven.of the jurors concurred in a verdict for $300 actual and $500 punitive damages. One juror refused to agree to the verdict.
The first assignment of error is that the second count states no cause of action and defendant’s objection to any testimony in support thereof was erroneously overruled. The basis of this point is that conceding the truth of all that the plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove, it did hot impute a crime to plaintiff, but at most a mere breach of trust.
The argument is, that because, in the same connection in which defendant charged plaintiff with stealing his material, he added, “Ton have used it on somebody else’s work,” he thus gave an antidote along with the poison and shows that defendant was merely mistaken in the law rather'than guilty of a malicious purpose. Hall v. Adkins, 59 Mo. 144, is cited to sustain this contention, but the distinction between the facts of that case and ■' the case at bar is apparent. In that case a landlord charged his tenant with stealing his corn. - The defense was that defendant, at the time of speaking the actionable words, detailed to every person who heard the .
Christal v. Craig, 80 Mo. 367, has no application to the facts of this case. In that case the words in the petition were, “You have took my pocket-book and money, and have got it there in your pocket,” and it was properly ruled that these words were not actionable per se without some explanatory averment showing their application. “If they were intended and
But when one says to another in the presence of others, “You bring back that material.that you took of mine, ” and when the person addressed denies having any of his material, he follows it up by, “You have used it on somebody else’s work; that material you stole from me, if you don’t return it, I will make it hot for you, ’ ’ there is and can be but one inference drawn, and that is a charge of larceny and a threat of prosecution if the stolen material is not brought back.
Powell v. Crawford, 107 Mo. 595, only holds that where the words charged are not slanderous per se the colloquium must show they were slanderously used to make them actionable. Here the words were actionable per se.
We think there was ample evidence to take the case to the jury.
IY. As to the proposition that when both counts in a petition are bad a motion in arrest should be sustained, there can be no controversy. But in this case, the first count was dismissed and the second, while in-artificially drawn, sufficiently charged a slander — the utterance of words, actionable per se in the presence and hearing of divers persons — and the motion in arrest was properly overruled. ■
Y. Instruction numbered 1 given on behalf of plaintiff is challenged because the court permitted the jury thereby “to take into consideration all the facts and circumstances as detailed by the witnesses” which counsel for appellant insists authorized the jury to consider the evidence offered to sustain the first count,
Again and again we have ruled that instructions must he read together, and when those given in this case are so read, we think it is obvious the jury were confined to the slander alleged in the second count, and instruction numbered 1 read in the light of the second instruction must have been understood to have reference to the facts and circumstances offered in support of the charge in the second count alone. The plaintiff in the presence of the jury had dismissed the first count and the court confined the jury in its 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 9th instructions specifically to the alleged slander charged in the second count. -
In the light of these facts we do not think it reasonable to infer that the jury considered the oil transaction in making up their verdict.
It is further urged against this instruction that it fails to say anything about the injury to plaintiff’s character, reputation, etc., but admonishes the jury that they ‘ ‘may take into consideration and allow plaintiff for mortification of his feelings.”
Obviously defendant mistakes the purpose of this instruction. It was to advise the jury that they might award punitive damages. This identical instruction was approved in Callahan v. Ingram, 122 Mo. 369. Besides, if defendant desired the elements of actual damages made more specific, he should have asked an instruction setting -out such elements. This is a civil action and the circuit court was not required as in a criminal prosecution to instruct upon all propositions of law involved whether suggested or not. [Browning v. Railroad, 124 Mo. l. c. 71.]
Without reproducing the other instructions for plaintiff to which defendant objects it must suffice to say they but announce principles of law long settled in this State.
As to the damages, we see nothing in the amount assessed by the jury which smacks in the slightest degree of passion or prejudice. The words being actionable per se it was the province of the jury to assess the damages and we see no reason for interfering with their verdict. It results from what has been said that the judgment must be and is affirmed.