41 Cal. 472 | Cal. | 1871
The action is for libel; and the jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiff for six thousand dollars. There was no motion for a new trial; and the appeal by the defendants is from the judgment.
So much of the 'evidence as is necessary to explain the exceptions taken to the rulings of the Court, in the progress of the trial, is brought up by a statement on appeal.
In the absence of a motion for a new trial, the question whether the damages are excessive does not arise on this appeal. If the defendants intended to assail the verdict on this ground, they should have moved for a new trial, assigning this as one of the reasons why it should be granted, and should have supported the motion by a proper statement. Having failed to do this, they have waived all objection to the verdict on this ground.
One of the alleged libels contains a sentence in these words, to wit: “ Clark is a carpenter by trade, is interested in the Moore title, and has figured quite prominently in some of the squatter riots, which have occurred in the Western Addition.”
The Court charged the jury that this portion of the publication “ is libelous in and of itself; and it is a comment by the writer uncalled for by anything which appears in the affidavit published in the same article; and the defendant has given no evidence whatever, even tending to establish its truth, or that they had reason to believe it was true. It must, therefore, be considered by you to have been malici©usly published, provided you find that it refers to the plaintiff in this cause, it having been published as a fact within the defendant’s own personal knowledge.'” This charge was
There being no colloquium in this case to explain in what kind of “ squatter riots ” nor on which side of them it was intended in the libel to charge the plaintiff with having “ figured prominently,” the Court erred in charging the jury that the words are libelous per se. Ror is there anything in the other portions of the alleged libel to show that these words were used in the injurious sense here claimed for them by the plaintiff. The more rational inference is that they were used to identify the plaintiff: first, as a carpenter by trade; second, as being one of those interested in the Moore title; and, third, as the same Clark who had figured prominently in some of the squatter riots in the Westera Addition.
I think the Court obviously erred in this portion of the charge.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
Mr. Justice Wallace did not express an opinion.