8 Wend. 573 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1832
There are two questions presented in this case: 1. Whether the words proved are actionable in themselves; 2. Whether the evidence offered in mitigation should have been received.
The next inquiry is, whether the judge was right in rejecting the evidence offered in mitigation. What facts and circumstances shall be given in evidence under the general issue in mitigation of damages, is a question not free from difficulty. The subject was considered by this court in the case of Root v. King, 7 Cowen, 613. The action is founded in supposed damage to the plaintiff, arising from the malice of the defendant. Where words are actionable in themselves, neither the damage nor the malice are. required to be proved; the speaking of the slanderous words is all the proof necessary ; the damage on the one hand, and the malice on the other, are both necessary consequences, and the action is therefore sustained ; but in estimating the damages which the one has received, and the other should pay, various circumstances are legitimate subjects of consideration. If the plaintiff is a person of tarnished reputation, he cannot have received much damage ; and the defendant should be punished according to the degree of malice by which he was actuated ; the general character of the plaintiff is therefore a proper subject of investigation, in ascertaining the amount which the plaintiff is entitled to recover; and generally speaking, the defendant should pay in proportion to the quantum of malice by which he has been actuated. These remarks are not applicable to a plea of justification, because, if the defendant can prove the truth of the words spoken, no action lies, however malicious his motives may have been.
In Larned v. Buffinton, the case last cited, Chief Justice Parsons says, ‘ Where, through the fault of the plaintiff, the defendant, as well at the time of speaking the words, as when he pleaded his justification, had good cause to believe they Were true, it appears reasonable that the jury should take into consideration this misconduct of the plaintiff, to mitigate the damages.” In Alderman v. French, 1 Pick. 19, this dictum is denied, unless the defendant admits he was mistaken, and thus afford all the relief he can against the calumny which he has published. In Bodwell v. Levan, 3 Pick. 377, evidence was rejected which had a tendency to prove the truth of the words; and in Wormouth v. Cramer, 3 Wendell, 396, it was held, that particular facts which might form links in the chain of circumstantial evidence against the plaintiff, cannot be received under the general issue, in mitigation of damages. In that case there was a charge of theft, and the defendant offered to prove, that after a prosecution against another person, the plaintiff sent home the stolen property; the possession of
It will be found that in all the American courts, where facts and circumstances of suspicion are permitted in mitigation, they are admitted on the strength of the English nisi prius cases above referred to, in one of which Chief Justice Mansfield frankly admits that he could not answer the arguments against it. Chief Justice Hosmer virtually says it is inadmisble upon principle, but upon authority it is. Mr. Starkie, in his Treatise on Slander, 408, 9, 10, in commenting on these cases» thinks the rule that any matters short of actual proof are admissible in mitigation, is inconsistent with the rule in Underwood v. Parks, that the truth should not be given in evidence without a special plea. General evidence as to the plaintiff’s suspicious character, he thinks proper; but not facts tending to shew actual guilt. These cases shew that learned jurists in this country and in England, who have admitted evidence of reports and of suspicious circumstances, have done so upon what they considered authority, and not because they are admissible upon principle. The more I have considered this subject, the more I am convinced that the supreme court of Massachusetts and this court have proceeded upon the only correct rule, in excluding under the general issue, all mitigating circumstances which have a tendency to prove, what cannot be proved under such a plea, the truth of the words ; but that any circumstances of mitigation which disprove malice, but do not tend to prove the truth of the charge, are ad
These remarks are rather a discussion of the general question of mitigation (into which I have been led by the ingenious arguments of counsel) than of the precise question in this case ; that question, in my apprehension is, whether the facts offered to be shewn would disprove malice, and would not tend to prove the truth of the charge of false swearing. The words were that the plaintiff had sworn falsely, that he had. sworn before Lynde to that which defendant could not find on record, and that he would attend to the grand jury respecting it. The defendant in his notice disclaimed all intention tó prove the truth, and admits that what the plaintiff swore was true, but to shew that what he said was not spoken through wantonness and malice, he offers to prove that he made search in the clerk’s office, and no such deed could be found, owing to a mistake of the clerk in indexing the records; what was offered to be shewn certainly could not tend to prove the truth, when the defendant admits in his notice, that the words were untrue; and it seems to me they go far to diminish the quantum of malice; perhaps they shew as far as can be done, the absence of malice. The plaintiff, however, must recover, for the speaking actionable words is sufficient evidence of malice to sustain the action; but the facts offered to be proved shew that the defendant really believed that he had been deceived by the plaintiff, and was in danger of losing his debt, and that he did not make the charge until more than one search had been made at the clerk’s office; and when this is taken in connection with the proof in the cause, that on one occasion the language was drawn from the defendant by the provocation of the plaintiff, who went to defendant’s store with a witness with intent to draw from him words upon which he might prosecute, I think the evidence peculiarly proper. I am of opinion that a new trial be granted, costs to abide the event.
Where the words were, “Thou art a forsworn man; I will teach thee the price of an oath, and will set thee on the pillory,” they were held actionable, because the defendant shewed that he meant to impute a peijury, for which the plaintiff ought to stand in the pillory. 1 Viner’s Abr. 407, pl. 11. So, to say of another, “You swore to a lie, for which you now stand indicted,” was held to be actionable. Pelton v. Ward, 3 Caines, 73.