58 A.D. 362 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action is for libel. ' The defendant, publisher of a newspaper in the city of New York, published an account of the marriage of one Louise Cleary with Eugene Cowles. As part of' this publication there was published a picture of a woman who was said to be “ Mrs. Louise Cleary Cowles.” It is alleged that this is a picture of the plaintiff and that the libel consists of publishing her picture as that of the woman who was married to Cowles. It is not disputed but that a Miss Louise Cleary married Cowles upon the day named; but the defendant denies that the picture published was the picture of the plaintiff or represented her as the person who was married to Cowles, the only libel claimed being that by this publication of her picture the plaintiff was alleged to be in fact the person who married Cowles. The court left it to the jury to say whether this picture that was published was a portrait of the plaintiff, charging the jury that if they should find “ that this was a portrait of the plaintiff in this ease, and that by the unhappy conjunction of the letter press regarding this other Louise Cleary and the portrait of this lady there was spread abroad to the world a statement which was calculated and likely to bring ill-repute upon her and to persuade and-lead a number of persons to believe that she had been guilty of the misconduct charged in the article, then the defendant has been guilty, whether unwittingly or not, of spreading broadcast a libel upon the plaintiff.” The jury found a verdict for the defendant and the evidence justified that verdict.
There were several of the plaintiff’s pictures introduced in evidence and also a picture of the woman who was married to Cowles at the time named. So far as we can see from an inspection of the
The only real question presented is as-to some rulings upon questions of evidence. The plaintiff having introduced in evidence several pictures of herself, which had been published and circulated through the country, and also a copy of the libel published, she was asked: “ State what, if anything, was said to you in reference to-this particular article, Exhibit ‘ N,’ by any person at the time you received it ? ” This was objected to, the objection was sustained and, the plaintiff excepted. A witness was also called who had sung in concerts and church choirs.. She testified that she was slightly acquainted with the plaintiff; that prior to the publication of the libel she had seen Jhe plaintiff’s picture on her literature, and was. then asked to look at the article and state whether or not she recognized any person in it. This was objected’to, the objection was sustained, and, the plaintiff excepted.' The witness was next asked whether “that is a fair picture of the plaintiff of not ? ” This was also excluded, and the plaintiff excepted. As before mentioned, the-publication stated, not that the picture represented the plaintiff, but that it was a picture of another woman of a different name, and. it was not disputed but that the other woman was married to Cowles and the one question of fact- which the jury had to determine was, whether this was a picture of the plaintiff, so that it could be said that the article as published, picture and all, charged her with ’being the woman who was married to CoWles.' The defendant is not liable, because it stated the fact that a woman named “ Louise Cleary ” had been married to Cowles; nor did it become liable to the plaintiff for a libel by publishing a picture of what purported' to be that
Nor do I think it was error to refuse to admit the photograph of the plaintiff in evidence. The court admitted - all the pictures of her that had been published. The jury having found a verdict for the defendant, the exceptions to the ruling upon this evidence, upon the ground that it was competent upon the question of damages which the plaintiff sustained because of the publication, are not material. If the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, all rulings-that relate to the amount of the verdict to which she would have been entitled if she had recovered become clearly immaterial. So the charge of the court as to punitive damages is not reviewable as, the jury having found for • the defendant, tlie question óf damages became immaterial. There was no exception taken to the charge, except upon the question as to the right of the plaintiff to recover punitive, damages, and none of the exceptions taken to the charge are material upon this appeal. None of the exceptions taken justify a reversal of the judgment, and the jury having found upon conflicting evidence that, the article was not. published about the plaintiff, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed, with costs.
O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., and Patterson, J., dissented.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.