59 Wis. 207 | Wis. | 1884
For the purposes of the demurrer the language of the letter upon which the action is predicated must be understood in its ordinary and usual signification, and must be interpreted as men, knowing all the circumstances, would generally understand it. Weil v. Schmidt, 28 Wis., 139. Tested by this rule, we cannot doubt the letter prima fade imports a charge of embezzlement against the plaintiff in
If the defendant did not mean to impute a wrongful! taking of the tools, and to expose the plaintiff to trouble om account thereof, why did he impeach the plaintiff’s honesty,.
There is no force in the claim that the defendant merely expressed his suspicion or belief in the matter. His letter asserts as a fact that reports were in circulation that plaintiff had the tools in question in his tool-chest, and thereupon the defendant spread the reports by informing the very men who would be most likely to make the plaintiff trouble because of them, that such reports existed. Neither can it be held that the matter contained in the letter is conditionally privileged, because the complaint charges that the letter was published maliciously, and that averment is fatal on demurrer to the claim of privilege. Servatius v. Pichel, 34 Wis., 292.
We conclude that the complaint states a cause of action, and hence that the demurrer was properly overruled.
By the Court.— Order affirmed.