33 Ind. App. 184 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
The appellant, Ida M. Hamilton, brought her action against the appellee, and the court below held each of the three paragraphs of complaint insufficient on demurrer. In the first paragraph it was alleged that, before the committing of the grievances thereinafter mentioned, the appellant was a married woman, and the wife of one W. L. Hamilton, and that she resided in Banco, Huntington county, and bore a good reputation and name, in the neighborhood in which she lived, for virtue and chastity, and had the respect of her neighbors and relatives; that the appellee, on, etc., “knowing the premises aforesaid, falsely and maliciously, with the intention of injuring plaintiff in her good name and reputation, and to disgrace her in the eyes of her acquaintances, composed and published, and caused to be published, a certain letter concerning this plaintiff, in the words and figures following, to wit: Ask your wife wht she Put the light after midnigt Wednesday night for and lets it burn when you are Here. We are wathing them you are a fool. What do you think of them childr.’ Plaintiff avers that defendant meant and wanted to be understood jry said publication, and was so understood, that plaintiff, the said Ida M. Hamilton, was guilty of adultery with Emmett Hamilton, who was her brother-in-law and a boarder in her family, and that she was guilty of having illicit intercourse with the said Emmett Hamilton. Wherefore plaintiff, by reason of the foregoing premises, had been injured in her good name and reputation, and
Our statute dispensing with the necessity of showing, by the statement of extrinsic facts, the application of the alleged defamatory words to the plaintiff, does not dispense with the allegation of such facts to show the meaning or application of ambiguous language or language not actionable per se. “Innuendoes are mere corollaries from antecedent allegations. They can not supply averments of facts or extend the meaning of words. They can not raise questions of fact. An innuendo is explanatory of a subject-matter sufficiently expressed before.” Emig v. Daum, 1 Ind. App. 146, and cases there cited; Bidwell v. Rademacher, 11 Ind. App. 218. “Where an inducement or colloquium and innuendo were required by the common law in a declaration, they are required under the code in a complaint, so far as relates to the subject-matter.” Emmerson v. Marvel, 55 Ind. 265; Hart v. Coy, 40 Ind. 553; Ward v. Colyhan, 30 Ind. 395. “Where words are used, not actionable within themselves there should be some prefa
In Watts v. Greenlee, supra, it Was said by the court: “The words are, ‘all Watt’s girls are big.’ There is no colloquium charged, by which any other than the ordinary meaning of the words can be given to them. They are to be taken abstracted from any context, for none appears. The innuendo is, ‘thereby meaning, big with child to his negro Ben.’ It is going far enough, and perhaps too far, without a colloquium, or introduction, to say that big means big with child; but there can not be the least pretense for saying it means big with child by negro Ben.”
In Hart v. Coy, supra, the complaint alleged that the defendant, in a conversation, had while plaintiff, with other ladies, was standing in front of defendant’s store, to and of the plaintiff, and of and concerning plaintiff’s character,
It is true that there is an important distinction between libel and oral slander, and that in cases of libel any words will be presumed to be defamatory which expose the plaintiff to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy, or which tend to injure him in his profession or trade, or cause him to be shunned or avoided by his neighbors. Johnston v. Stebbins, 5 Ind. 364; Prosser v. Callis, 117 Ind. 105; Patchell v. Jaqua, 6 Ind. App. 70. But if the plaintiff, by innuendo, ascribes a particular meaning to the words complained of, he must abide by it; he can not at the trial reject that meaning and resort to another. Eolkard’s Starkie, Slander and Libel (Wood’s Notes), §446. The meaning of the. defendant, as averred by an innuendo, is a question of fact, to be decided by the jury. But it is for the judge to decide, as matter of law, whether the matter complained of will bear the meaning ascribed to it by innuendo. Id. §561. Before the modern legislation relative to procedure, it was .necessary in England, “to state, by way of inducement, in the introductory part of the declaration, a prefatory averment as to the meaning of the alleged slander or libel; and then, in another part of the declaration, to allege, by innuendo, that the words were used in that sense, or to convey that meaning.” Id.
The complaint in the case at bar may be said sufficiently to show' a publication. The word published in a complaint for slander, ex vi termini, imports an uttering of the words in the presence and hearing of others. Duel v. Agan, 1
The basis of the action for libel is damages for injury to the character of the plaintiff in the opinion of others, and that can only arise from a publication to third persons, so that a complaint showing that the defendant composed, wrote, and delivered to the plaintiff a certain libel, addressed and directed to the plaintiff, would not show a publication; while a complaint that the defendant published, and caused and procured to be published, a certain libel addressed to the plaintiff, would sufficiently show a publication. Waistel v. Holman, 2 Hall (N. Y.) 172.
Any words that denote a publication are sufficient. “To publish means to make publicly known, to proclaim to the public, etc. It was not necessary that the complaint should aver in detail the manner or extent of publication. It was necessary that it should aver that the libel Was published. It would depend upon the evidence whether the averment was true in fact.” Indianapolis Sun Co. v. Horrell, 53 Ind. 527.
The complaint before us is very loosely drawn. It is lacking in proper innuendoes for the explanation of words in writings set forth. It is said that the appellee meant and wanted to be understood by the publication, “and was so understood,” that the appellant was guilty of adultery with a certain person named, who was her brother-in-law and a boarder in her family, and that she was guilty of having illicit intercourse with that person. It is not stated by whom the appellee was so understood, or that he was so understood by any third person. It can not be urged that either of the publications should be regarded as libelous in any other sense than as charges of adultery or illicit intercourse of the appellant with the particular person named, or that she was injured except by and through such a charge. She can not be permitted to resort to any other
Judgment affirmed.
Robinson, J., concurs in the conclusion.