95 Tenn. 678 | Tenn. | 1895
This is an action for libel. It was tried in the Court below before the Judge and a jury, and a verdict and judgment were rendered for tbe plaintiff for $400 and costs, and defendants have appealed and assigned errors.
In support of the action, it is alleged that four letters were sent to plaintiff, through the mails, in unsealed envelopes, by the Merchants’ Retail Commercial Agency, of Atlanta, Ga., and Chicago, Ill., Atlanta being a branch office. After the last letter was sent to the plaintiff, it is alleged that, in pursuance of a threat contained in it, plaintiff’s name was caused to be published in a certain book or pamphlet. Upon the title page of this pamphlet
It is averred that this publication is libelous per fie; that it was intended to be circulated among the members of the association throughout the county of Giles, where plaintiff lives, and elsewhere, and that its meaning was that plaintiff was indebted, by account, in the sum of $69.75, and was evading payment of the same; that he was lacking in integrity, and unworthy of credit; that' he was a “dead beat,” a swindler, a common cheat, and a man who made debts not intending to pay them, and that fit was so understood among the members of the association.
The declaration, as thus amended, was demurred to, and the demurrer overruled, when defendant plead “not guilty,” and also a special plea of justification, admitting the publication of the words in the pamphlet, but denying the defamatory meaning so\ight to be attached to them, and denying all responsibility or authority for the letters. While the letters are alleged to have been sent by mail, in open envelopes, to plaintiff, it is not averred that they were ever read by anyone but plaintiff.
It is insisted that the publication must be read in connection with the letters, and that they form parts of the same scheme, and, taken together, are libelous and actionable. On the other hand, it is insisted that the pamphlet is the only publication, .and that the letters were never published, but can only be used to interpret the meaning of the pamphlet, if authorized at all.
We do not think there was any error in allowing the fifth count in the declaration to be filed. It was in ample time before the trial not to operate as a surprise or to prejudice the defendants,
The first important question that arises is, Are the words, as published, libelous per se? This is a question- for the Court to determine, and is properly-raised by demurrer when the language is unambiguous in itself. Bank v. Bowdre, 8 Pick., 740; Banner v. The State, 16 Lea, 176.
It has been held that, in order to constitute language libelous per se, it must be 1‘ either such as necessarily, in fact or by presumption of evidence, occasions damage to him of ,whom or whose affairs it is spoken.” Townshend on Slander and Libel (4th Ed.), Sec. 146; Newell on Defamation, p. 181, Sec. 14. £ ‘ Such language confers a prima facie right of action, and is prima -facie wrong and injurious per se, and the . law will presume damage without proof, merely from implication or presumption from the publication.” Townshend on Slander and Libel (4th Ed.), p. 147. “ Language which, however, does not, as a necessary consequence, occasion damage to the party published is not, per se, libelous, and, in such cases, a right of action exists only when, as a necessary and proximate consequence of the publication, special damage ensues to the party published.” Townshend on Slander and Libel (4th Ed.), Secs. 146—148; Bank v. Bowdre, 8 Pick., 736.
We think a statement* in substance and effect the same, but in different language is, that words which, upon their face and without the aid of extrinsic
If the words published are libelous per se, damages follow as a matter of law in some amount, and the jury must fix that amount in view of all the surrounding circumstances. If not libelous per se, then they are not actionable in the absence of an allegation of special damages, and the suit must be dismissed.
Looking alone to the words contained in the pamphlet, we are of opinion that, taken in their ordinary and usual and natural sense and meaning, they are not libelous or injurious on their face or per se. We are also unable to see anything libelous in the special notice clause of the publication in the pamphlet, or in the instructions, unaided by extrinsic proof. The striking out of the name of a party who had paid his debt could not be injurious. It has been repeatedly held that information as to the standing of merchants, business men, and other individuals can properly be furnished by a
This holding is not in conflict, but in accord, with the case of The Bank v. Bowdre, 8 Pickle, 723, where the injurious' and libelous character of the publication clearly appeared from the words on the postal card, and were published of merchants in active business; nor is it in conflict with the other cases cited by plaintiff’s counsel as illustrations of' language actionable and libelous 2)er se-
The next important question then arising is whether there is any allegation of special damage made in the declaration. It is not alleged that plaintiff was a merchant or engaged in trade or business at the time of the publication and that damage was done him in business or trade when the words were pub
The second and fifth counts allege that plaintiff is greatly injured in his good name and credit, brought into public scandal, infamy, and disgrace, and that he was prevented from procuring any of the necessaries of life — goods, wares, and merchandise — from the vendors thereof, and that he has suffered great anxiety and pain of mind, and become incapacitated for business, and hence is damaged $5,000; but there is no statement of any instance in which his credit was impaired or credit was refused him or in which he failed to procure the necessaries of life, or any other particulars, nor any names qf any persons given, nor any reason given for the failure to give names or identify persons. These general allegations of damage would be sufficient if the words were libelous yw ■SYb hut, if the words are not actionable j)e-v se, are they sufficiently definite as allegations of special damage ?
As to pleadings, it is held: “When a publication is not libelous per se, special damages must be alleged and proven in order to sustain the action.” Bank v. Bowdre Bros., 8 Pick., 734, 735; Townshend on Libel and Slander, p. 580, Sec. 345; Newell on Defamation, p. 856, Secs. 28, 29, p. 866, Sec. 39; 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., p. 435; Sutherland on Damages, Sec. 1215. “An allegation stating generally that, in consequence of the defendant’s words, plaintiff has lost a large sum of money, or that his practice or business has declined, is not sufficiently precise.” Newell on Defamation, etc., p.
The whole subject is fully reviewed in the case of Terwilliger v. Wands, 17 New York, 54, reported in 72 Am. Dec., page 420, and the notes thereto, pages 426 to 436. In this case, if special damage had been alleged, the letters sent to plaintiff, if authorized, as well as the parol proof as to the meaning of the words and the circumstances surrounding their publication, could all be taken into consideration to show the meaning of the words published, but as no publication of the letters is alleged, and no special damages averred, we can only look, as we have done, to the words in the pamphlet, to determine whether they are libelous per se or not. The reason and sound policy of this rule of pleading is well illustrated by the facts- developed in this record, for. there is no proof whatever that plaintiff was damaged in his credit by the publication. His credit had been impaired for several years, and gradually grew worse, and, some year or more before the publication, he failed, and after that, as well as after the publication, his credit continued to grow worse, but he states himself that he does not know whether the continued and increasing decline in his credit was caused by the publication or by the fact, which became generally known, that he had failed, and there is an utter want of proof of any single instance in which credit was denied him or that he was denied any of the necessaries or
It is proper to state that there is a marked difference between civil and criminal actions for libel, so far, at least, as the question of publication is concerned. In the former, publication must be made to some third person or in such public manner as to reach third persons, but in criminal proceedings, publication may be made by communicating the printed matter alone to the party libeled. Code (M. & V.), § 5552; Hodges v. The State, 5 Hum., 112; Swindle v. The State, 2 Yer., 581; The State v. Hollon, 12 Lea, 482; Newell on Defamation, p. 236, Sec. 6; Townshend on Slander and Libel, Sec. 198, note 4. The reason for this difference is that, in a civil action of libel, the gravamen of the action is the pecuniary damage to the character or credit of the party libeled, but in a criminal action the ground of the offense is. the liability of the words written to provoke a breach of the peace. In the civil action' the only publication that could injuriously affect the credit and character is that made to third persons, as no damage to credit or character could result. from a letter or writing known only to the party to whom it is sent and not communicated to others. State v. Avery, 18 Am. Dec., 105. In criminal actions, however, it is evident that the liability to provoke a breach of the peace is as great when the letter is seen only by the party to whom it is sent as it is when communicated to others.
Again, as to the mode of publication, it has been held that sending a libel on a postal card is a publication, inasmuch as the writing is open - to the inspection of others besides the party to whom it is addressed. Newell on Defamation, p. 246, Sec. 26; Townshend on Slander and Libel, p. 418. But we have been cited to no authority holding that the sending of a writing in an unsealed envelope, to the party himself, stands upon the same ground, and becomes a libel in a civil sense, in the absence of averment and proof that it was read or heard read by others, and we are of opinion, in the absence of such averment and proof, such letter is not a publication upon which a civil action can be based. Newell on Defamation, p. 238, Sec. 10; Townshend on Slander and Libel, Secs. 96, 101, 108. The cases of Meutze v. Tauter, 20 Am. St. R., 120, and Masters v. Lee, 39 Neb., 574, are cited and strongly relied on by plaintiffs. The latter case appears not to have been decided upon the ground of the libelous character of the publication, but rather ' upon the idea that the defendants had entered into an illegal conspiracy, by which they obligated themselves not to credit persons listed in the publication, under penalty of a fine of twenty dol
We think it proper, also, to notice some statements made in the text of Newell on Defamation, p. 856, Sec. 28, and p. 867, Sec. 42. It is there stated, in general language, that it is not necessary to prove special damages in any action of libel, and that no averment of actual damages of any kind is essential, inasmuch as the law infers it to have occurred in such cases. The language found in the first of these references is copied, literally, from Odgers on Libel and Slander, star page, 297. If it is intended to hold, by this general language, that in no case of libel is it necessary to allege special damages, it is opposed to the entire text of both writers, and is not sustained by any authority whatever in the way of adjudicated cases. The only case cited in support of the text is in Newell on Defamation, 867, Sec. 42, being the case of Ingram v. Lawson, reported in 6 Bing. (N. C.), 212. Upon an examination of, that case, it will be found that it is in no sense an authority for the general statement made that in no case of libel is it necessary to allege special damages. In that case the publication was made of a ship merchant and owner actively engaged in trade, and touched his business as such merchant and trader injuriously. In all such cases it is universally held that the language is libelous
It follows that the publication in this case, being-only of the matter in the pamphlet, and the plaintiff not being averred to be a merchant or trader, and the words not being libelous per se, and no special damages having been alleged to. justify proof of extrinsic circumstances, there was no proper cause of action stated in the declaration, and the demurrer should have been sustained, and suit dismissed in the Court below.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will therefore be reversed, and suit dismissed at plaintiff’s cost.