67 How. Pr. 88 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1884
The plaintiff claims to have been one of the starters and the publisher of the newspaper called “ Truth.” His true relation to the paper appears by the evidence. His complaint against the defendant is that the defendant wrote and published concerning him and the newspaper “ Truth ” the fol
You are carefully to consider the quality of these articles which have been read in your hearing from the newspaper “ Truth,” and you are to determine whether they establish the defense that this paper was started for the purposes of plunder. Yon should also determine whether or not the evidence of the dealings and transactions of the persons in charge of this paper with individuals or organizations, private or political, show such to have been the purposes of this.paper. Much attention has been given in this connection, by the counsel, to the so-called “ Morey letter,” admitted upon this trial by all to have been a forgery. The manner in which this letter was received, its publication by the newspaper “Truth,” the denial of its genuineness by General Garfield, and the after-conduct of the proprietors of the paper upon the subject are all before you. I shall not allude to the various steps taken, nor to the action of these parties, in detail, in respect to this letter and its treatment hy the newspaper in question. The evidence is all before you. You will, doubtless, recall and judge it; will determine its true character and what it establishes. You will decide what bearing this subject has upon the issue before you. Whether, on the one hand, the publi
I have already said to you, and I now repeat it, that if the words published by the defendant are true under the evidence, then the defendant’s justification is established; otherwise, not; and you may consider the whole article of the 12th of November, 1880, in determining both the mind of the defendant in writing it, and the defense interposed by him, which we have just been considering. But in the event that you shall find that these words were not true, then it will be your duty to consider another defense interposed by this defendant, which is in substance that the communication to the public, made by the defendant, of which the matter complained of formed a part, was qualifiedly privileged. That is substantially another defense. Under this head, and I beg to call your particular attention to these suggestions, it appears that the defendant is by profession an author and a writer for periodicals and newspapers. He was the regular correspondent of a newspaper published in the city of Cincinnati called the “ Cincinnati Enquirer,” and. his employment, in part, was to write of events transpiring in New York city, and to give information concerning them through its columns by letter or telegraph. A communication made by the defendant to the paper on the 12th day of November, 1880, in the way of his employment and duty, contains the matter of which complaint is made in this action. The Cincinnati paper published it on the following day, the thirteenth of November. If the work of this defendant in preparing and publishing this communica
The only remaining subject is one of damages, but that subject need only be considered in the event that the previous issues are decided in the plaintiff’s favor. The amount of damages in actions of this- character is within the control of the jury under all the facts and circumstances in evidence. But this is not an action by the proprietors of “ Truth ” itself for an injury to it, or for damages it has sustained, but by a plaintiff who claims to have been the starter, or one of the starters, of the paper, and one of the owners and the publisher thereof, and that he has sustained damages by the publication of the article. The damages, if any, sustained by the paper itself as such cannot be recovered by him, but only such as he has personally sustained by reason of his connection with the paper in the relations above mentioned. As a matter of course the character of the paper itself may be taken into consideration in this connection. The true character of a newspaper is well shown by the matter which it publishes from day to day.
The jury brought in a verdict for fifty dollars damages.