187 A.D. 593 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
A judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon the first trial of this action was reversed because of certain errors in the admission of testimony and in the charge to the jury. (170 App. Div. 725.) These errors are not present in this record. After the decision of the former appeal the plaintiff, by leave of court, served a second amended complaint. The first amended complaint alleged the same libel and that the plaintiff was by occupation an editor and that the alleged libel was maliciously published by-the defendant of and concerning the plaintiff with the defamatory intent and purpose of injuring the plaintiff in his business and occupation, and that defendant thereby injured the plaintiff in his business, occupation, reputation and name. The present complaint adds that plaintiff was such editor at the time of the publication, and that the alleged libel was published concerning the plaintiff in bis said occupation. The defendant argues that the present
The fact that words were alleged to have been published of a man in.his occupation does not affect the capacity in which he sues. He sues as an individual who has been damaged in his occupation. The learned justices at Trial and Special Terms were right in their rulings that no new cause of action was set up in the complaint and that the Statute of Limitations did not apply.
The defendant claims that the publication in this action was qualifiedly privileged, it having been published in the course of a newspaper warfare which had been commenced
In support of its plea of privilege the defendant relies on two recent cases, Fowler v. N. Y. Herald Co. (184 App. Div. 608) and Andrews v. Gardiner (224 N. Y. 440). In the first case the alleged libel was concededly a reply to the previous attack on a man for whom the defendant was sponsor, who had been denounced by the plaintiff as an impostor and a fake. This court held that the article was privileged and that the question of. malice was for the jury. This was not a holding that any libel thereafter by the defendant of the plaintiff would be privileged, but merely that alleged libel was relevant and a proper reply to a previous attack and hence privileged. The case of Andrews v. Gardiner (supra) holds that most anything that a person may write in proceedings for executive clemency to a convict is relevant. “At such a time,” says the court,.. “ anything is pertinent that may. move the. mind
The appellant’s counsel argues that the trial court erred in refusing to admit in evidence the charges made by the Chicago advertisers and the affidavits filed in connection therewith. The alleged libelous article stated: “ The Eye Opener states further that Guenther was prosecuted by a number of Chicago advertisers and that twenty-three affidavits stating that Guenther had endeavored to ' hold up ’ different companies for advertising were lodged with the authorities in Chicago. These affidavits, the Eye Opener says, stated that the amount of money demanded by Guenther in order to render the companies immune from the attacks in his publication ranged from $1,000 to $5,000 each.”
Briefly stated the evidence offered was (1) a letter dated April 13, 1905, from the Union Security Company to the Third Assistant Postmaster-General in Washington complaining that the Financial World was being used as a club to force financial advertisers to place advertising through the Guenther-Bradford Advertising Agency. (2) A letter from the Nutrióla Company dated April 8, 1905. (3) A letter dated April third, from Makeever Brothers to the Third Assistant Postmaster-General at Washington, to the effect that Louis Guenther and his father, Otto Guenther, were being prosecuted for criminal libel, inclosing newspaper clippings and requesting the Post Office Department to proceed against them. The first letter was properly excluded. The only proceeding which was instituted by any authority was an investigation by the Post Office officials, based on the second letter. The first letter was merely hearsay and had no probative value. The material portions of the second letter were admitted in evidence. The third letter was in no way shown to have been
There were eight affidavits obtained by the Post Office inspectors in the course of their investigation, which the defendant offered in evidence and the court excluded. This investigation was based on section 1617 of the postal regulations, and if it had been found that the regulations were violated a fraud order excluding the papers published by plaintiff from the mails would have been issued; the inspector in charge of the investigation testified that no fraud order was issued.
The appellant claims that these affidavits were admissible in evidence from four different viewpoints:
I. To prove that the matter published by it was wholly true. The affidavits, however, on the contrary did not establish the truth of a single statement of the article. It did not prove that Guenther was prosecuted by anybody. It did not prove that twenty-three affidavits had been lodged with the Chicago authorities. None of the eight affidavits stated that Louis Guenther had endeavored to hold up different companies for advertising, nor did any of them state that Louis Guenther had demanded money from any one. Such charges as were made in the affidavits were against the father and brother of Louis Guenther.
II. To prove that some part of the matter published was true. As stated above the affidavits did not prove any part of the matter was true.
III. To mitigate punitive damages in case the jury decided to punish the defendant. The verdict of the jury was “ $5,000 compensatory damages.”
IV. “ To show that the character of the plaintiff was such as not to entitle him to any substantial amount as compensatory damages.” The defendant’s attorney stated several
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.