109 N.Y.S. 30 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1907
On a demurrer to the complaint for insufficiency the defendant claims that the article published was not necessarily libelous per se, and that, therefore, the plaintiff should have alleged special damage. The article of which the plaintiff complains referred to the arrest of her husband, Gyula de Festetics, on a charge of kidnapping, and contains this statement: “At one time he brought suit against his wife’s attorney for alienating her affections, and last October he brought a divorce suit, which has not been decided.” I do not find any ambiguity in this statement. The question is not whether, after a keen and discriminating analysis, it can be said to charge nothing, or to be of doubtful meaning, but whether its natural import to the mind of the average reader is libelous. Or, as was said in Turton v. New York Recorder Co., 144 N. Y. 144, 148, “it is to be construed as it would ordinarily be understood by people generally.” A person of ordinary intelligence reading the article com-, plained of could scarcely fail to understand it to charge that the plaintiff had not only been guilty of some act of moral turpitude in connection with her attorney, but that she had
Demurrer overruled, with leave to defendant to plead over upon payment of costs within twenty days.