185 Iowa 1092 | Iowa | 1919
The slanderous words charged against the defendant were, in substance, that the defendant said to the plaintiff, during an altercation, “You are a thief.” The utterance of these slanderous words was admitted by the defendant. The defendant pleaded the truth of the statement in justification. The facts pleaded in justification were that the plaintiff had stolen certain of defendant’s fence posts from his field. In mitigation, he pleaded, also, that he had
The words complained of were spoken by the defendant to the plaintiff himself, during an altercation which amounted to an assault on the part of one or the other, and wherein the plaintiff denounced the defendant as a “liar,” and the defendant denounced him as a “thief.” The altercation occurred in the presence of Moore, son-in-law of the plaintiff.
Upon the trial, the plaintiff offered to prove that he suffered mental pain because of the “accusation” made by the defendant. The evidence was’not permitted. The plaintiff also requested an instruction to the jury that it should take into consideration the mental suffering “that such accusation would be likely to cause one not guilty of theft, and being accused of being a thief, and mental anguish.” This instruction was refused. The one point argued by appellant is that the trial court erred in sustaining objection to certain questions put to the plaintiff as a witness, for the purpose of proving mental suffering.
I. Counsel put to plaintiff, as a witness, the following question :
The trial court sustained an objection to the foregoing question, as being incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant.
That mental suffering may be shown as an element of damage in a slander case was held by us. in Davis v. Mohn, 145 Iowa 417, and in Mills v. Flynn, 157 Iowa 477. In the first of the cited cases, we overruled Prime v. Eastwood, 45 Iowa 640, wherein the converse had been held. In Mills v. Flynn, supra, we said that mental suffering resulting from injury to reputation may be shown “under proper allegations.” One of the specific objections made to the offered testimony in the trial court was that the petition contained no allegation of mental suffering. Whether this was’ a good objection or not, we do not find it necessary to consider, in view of the state of the record. The burden is upon the appellant, as such, to show that the interrogatory put' to himself as a witness was not only proper in purpose, but that it was properly framed for such proper purpose.