133 Ky. 392 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the court by
Affirming.
This action in slander was instituted by the appellant, who was plaintiff below, against the appellee, defendant below. The actionable words, which were charged to have been spoken during a fire that destroyed a building owned by appellee, are these: “I reckon Ed Edwards is satisfied now, he burned this out. I received word some time ago that he intended to burn them.” When asked what he meant by this language, he replied: “Well, I heard that he (Edwards) was going to burn them.”
In the first paragraph of his answer, the appellee denied speaking the words charged; and, in the second paragraph, set up that the appellant, previous to the fire, had threatened frequently to burn the building, and during the fire he (appellee), in a conversation with G- C. Dollar, the owner of a building that was injured by the fire, communicated to Dollar in confidence, and for the purpose of aiding him and securing his assistance and co-operation in investigating the origin of the fire, the information he had received concerning the threats of appellant, and, in
The rule is that, when the defendant, in ah action for slander justifies, or when he pleads that the words spoken were a priveleged communication, he must admit that he spoke the words charged, or words of similar import that would in themselves be actionable. It is not necessary that the defendant should admit speaking the precise words charged in the petition. It will be sufficient if he admits the substance of the words, or so much of them a,? would sustain an action for slander. Thus in Shipp v. Patton, 93 S. W. 1033, 29 R. 480, the words upon which the action was based were these: “Miss Nellie, when she was employed as a clerk in my store, dishonestly took away goods from the store that did not belong to her. I found in her grip a lot of goods that she had dishonestly taken from my store and put in the grip, and I accused her of dishonestly taking these goods, and she broke down and cried and begged me not to discharge her because it would disgrace her, and I kept her a few days longer in the store, and then discharged her. I
Nor is there any doubt that, if the words were spoken under the circumstances described by appellee in his answer and evidence, they were privileged in the sense that appellee had the right to show the facts surrounding their publication as an excuse or justification for the utterance. A person whose property is destroyed by fire may in a confidential way confide to his neighbors and friends whom he suspects as the incendiary, if his suspicions are based upon reasonable information or grounds, and his declarations are made in good faith. Faris v. Starke, 9 Dana, 128, 33 Am. Dec. 536; Grimes v. Coyle, 6 B. Mon. 301; Harper v. Harper, 10 Bush, 447; Campbell v. Bannister, 79 Ky. 205, 2 R. 72; Nix v. Caldwell, 81 Ky. 293, 5 R. 275, 50 Am. Rep. 163; Townsend on Slander & Libel, p. 440. There was sharp conflict in the evidence as to the circumstances under which the words were spoken. According to the evidence for appellant, they were not spoken confidentially, or in good faith, or in an effort in advising or consulting with friends concerning the origin of the fire. On the other hand, the appellee testified that, in confiding his suspicions to a fellow sufferer at the fire, he believed that the information previously conveyed to him that appellant was the incendiary was true, and used the language imputed to him in an effort to get 'advice and assistance from his friend, whose property was also injured. It is,
On the trial of the case the appellee introduced several witnesses, who testified that previous to the fire they heard appellant make remarks that indicated an intention or desire upon his part to burn or have burned the building 'of appellee, and that previous to the fire they communicated to appellee these threats. After this evidence was introduced, the appellant- offered to show by his own testimony that he had not made any of the statements attributed to him by the witnesses; but the trial judge refused to permit him to deny that he had made these statements, putting his ruling upon the ground that it was immaterial, so far as the question of privilege was concerned, whether he in fact made the statements or not, if the statements previous to the fire had been communicated to 'appellee as coming from him. Of this ruling serious complaint is made. In our opinion the decision of the trial court upon this point was correct. For the purposes of appellee’s defense, it was not material whether or not appellant used the language attributed to him by the informants of appellee. If the appellee in good faith believed what was communicated to him, and it was such as a man of reasonable prudence would believe, he had the right to act upon the assumption that it was true, although as a matter of fact it may have been false. Shipp v. Commonwealth, 124 Ky. 643, 99 S. W. 945,
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.