182 Misc. 579 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1943
The plaintiffs bring this action against the New York Times Company because of the publication by it at the
The plaintiffs claim that “ by the said article the defendants meant and intended and were understood to mean that the plaintiffs had deliberately engaged in and were guilty of fraudulent trade practices and pretenses and of bad taste, that plaintiffs had no right to use the name Ruby Foo as they had as aforementioned, and that their said enterprises were spurious and encroachments upon unconsenting others.”
The advertisement must be taken as a whole and considered in its ordinary meaning in order to determine whether it is actionable per se or even defamatory. “ It was not in and of itself libelous unless the language as a whole, considered in its ordinary meaning, naturally and proximately was so injurious to the plaintiff that the court will presume, without any proof, that his [its] reputation or credit has been thereby impaired ” (O’Connell v. Press Pub. Co., 214 N. Y. 352, 358). The advertisement, when fairly read, does not in fact charge the plaintiffs with the things set forth in the innuendo; nor can its meaning be extended by the innuendo to make it constitute a charge of the things set forth in the innuendo.
The question here limits itself to the words actually used. No special damages have been alleged, nor do the plaintiffs claim that the publication of the advertisement produced special damage.
The advertisement is not on its face disparaging, nor is it ambiguous and reasonably susceptible of the meaning read into it by the plaintiffs. It contains no explicit charge of any unfair business practices, nor can it reasonably be said that an unwary public could draw such an inference or that they could reasonably imply that the plaintiffs were impostors or that they had no right to use the name “ Ruby Foo ” and were imposing upon the public when they operated a restaurant under that name.
“ Where a plaintiff in an action for libel must rely on extrinsic facts in order to establish the libel, special damage must be pleaded ” (Kuhn v. Veloz, 252 App. Div. 515).
The motion of the defendants for a direction of a verdict in favor of the defendants dismissing the complaint on the merits is granted. Exception to plaintiffs.