251 A.2d 415 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1968
The plaintiff in his complaint claims that he was libeled when the named defendant wrote the following article in a magazine known as "Connecticut Life." "John David Griffin is woven entirely of his own yarns. But unlike the two legendary characters who fabricated the invisible garment of gold and silver for the King, Griffin woofs on a colorful warp that is unavoidably visible, often at great distances. It is also audible."
A learned person will recognize the equation with the fraudulent tailors in the well-known fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen, "The Emperor's New Clothes." One less learned, including the writer, has difficulty not only in recalling the above-mentioned fairy tale but also in culling from the passage in "Connecticut Life" the alleged libelous material. Be that as it may, a complaint has been filed that the defendant depicted the plaintiff as a "loud mouth, name dropping, bar frequenting liar," among other things. The latter quotation is a "translation" by the plaintiff's attorneys from the Andersenesque language to the understandable language of the average juror and jurist.
The defendant interposed five special defenses to each of which the plaintiff demurred.
In Fleckenstein v. Friedman,
It is incumbent upon the defendant to prove that the "public interest" requirement is fulfilled. CharlesParker Co. v. Silver City Crystal Co.,
The demurrers filed to the special defenses are overruled.