14 N.Y.S. 848 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
At the trial of this case, which is an action for libel, a verdict of a jury was rendered for the defendant. The alleged libel consisted of an article printed in a newspaper known as the “Rochester Democrat and Chronicle,” of which the defendant is the proprietor, on the 2d day of April, 1888, as follows;
“Under False Pretenses.
“Detectives Furtherer and Kavanaugh yesterday arrested Ferdinand Griebel, on the charge of obtaining goods under false pretenses. Bartholomew Connors, of Favor street, who swore out the warrant, claims that Griebel went to his house while he was away one day last week, and represented to. his wife that he had been sent after her husband’s watch. On these representations she handed over the time-piece, and this is what leads to the difficulty.”
The complaint alleges that the person in such article called Ferdinand Griebel is the plaintiff, who is well known to many readers of that newspaper. The defense is, in substance, that the, publication was a mistake caused by the error of the newspaper reporter, who by inadvertence had charged Griebel with the crime under a complaint of Bartholomew Connors, while in fact Bartholomew Connors was the accused person and Ferdinand Griebel the complainant. Upon the trial a point was made that the plaintiff was not the' same person as the one mentioned in the newspaper article. But it seems to us that there was no merit in that claim, because, under the evidence, all of the plaintiff’s acquaintances would necessarily understand from the acticle that he was the person referred to. If it be true, as is claimed by the learned