33 N.Y.S. 332 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This action was brought against the defendants, as the proprietors and publishers of the Buffalo Morning Express, to recover damages for a libelous article published therein concerning the plaintiff. Plaintiff moved the court for an order requiring the defendants to serve an amended answer, and separate, state, and number separately the matter set up as a second defense, and make
The defendant Matthews was interviewed by a reporter of the Buffalo Enquirer, in which paper the interview was first published. It was thereafter reprinted in the Express. The particular matter complained of consists in this statement:
“The reason for the malice that Judge Hatch has shown in his personal and judicial functions towards the Express is generally attributed to the fact that the Express prevented him from turning over the superior court to the Democratic party in order to gratify his personal ambition to become a judge of the supreme court.”
It is evident from the balance of the article that this had refer' ence to a libel action which had theretofore been tried in the superior court of Buffalo, in which one Juliette C. Smith was plaintiff against these defendants. The plaintiff presided at the trial. The article contained an imputation that the plaintiff was actuated by malice towards the defendants upon the said trial. The way or manner in which such malice was manifested was not stated. If actual malice was manifested, the inference would be that it was intentional or willful. Malice is defined: “A propensity to inflict injury or suffering; active ill will.” If the word “malice,” therefore, be taken in its ordinary, popular sense, the inference would be that the plaintiff was charged with having acted in a malicious manner, with willful disregard of his duty, and that the defendants used the word in that sense in the article. It was charged in the complaint that the defendants caused these publications to be made through malice conceived, harbored, and manifested by them against the plaintiff, and that they wickedly and maliciously, with intent to injure the plaintiff, caused the publications to be made. Malice in law would be implied, and the want of actual express malice, or malice in fact, would be no justification or excuse, though the absence of it might be used' in mitigation of damages.
It is alleged in the defendants’ answer, in mitigation of damages, in substance, that prior to these publications Charles S. Hatch, a brother of the plaintiff, and who was at the time clerk of the court of which the plaintiff was one of the judges, had publicly stated and declared to a reporter upon, and one of the writers for, the Buffalo Enquirer, a daily newspaper published and having a large circulation in the city of Buffalo, in substance, that:
“Everybody in the city understands why Mr. George E. Matthews and the Express are so bitter against my brother, myself, the superior court, and the office of clerk of the superior court. Every chance which the Express has, it assails this court and this office. In this it is traitorous to the Republican party, for the devotion of myself and my brother to the party can be questioned by no one. There is not a true Republican newspaper in this city, and when the project was first mooted to start a new Republican paper in this city I said that I would subscribe to it. The reason why Mr. George*334 E. Matthews and the Express are dead set against my brother and myself is because there is a heavy judgment in this court against the Express in the case of Smith v. Matthews. Mr. Matthews thought that the case of Smith v. Matthews should be arranged in such a manner as not to cause any particular trouble, and only a small or nominal amount of expenses to the Express. Justice did not move that way, however, and a substantial verdict was obtained by the plaintiff against the Express for libel. My brother tried the case, and the Express apparently wanted him to disgrace the dignity of the bench by favoring the Express on the trial. The court did not show favor to the Express; consequently the Express and Mr. Matthews are sore, and ■cannot say things too harsh against this office.”
It is stated in the answer that the said Charles S. Hatch intended by said statements to charge the defendants, and especially Matthews, with the corrupt and unlawful attempt to improperly influence the plaintiff in the discharge of his official duties as one ■of the judges of the court in the conduct and trial of the case of Smith against the defendants; and that said statements and charges were absolutely false and untrue in every particular, and without any foundation in fact, and were designed to greatly injure and prejudice these defendants in their good name and reputation, and to greatly prejudice the interests and rights of the defendants in the disposition of the case of Smith against them on appeal; and that the statements so made by Charles S. Hatch were made for the purpose and with the intention of having them published in the Buffalo Enquirer; and that the defendant Matthews was requested to answer said statements and charges, and, for the purpose of defending his own honor from what he believed to be an unwarranted and malicious attack upon his integrity, good name, and reputation, he made to the reporter of the Buffalo Enquirer the statement, in substance, which was published in that paper and afterwards in the Buffalo Morning Express.
The foregoing is a part of the allegations of the answer which the plaintiff asked to have stricken out, and, if these were all of the allegations in the answer, they were probably not relevant to any issue in the case, and could not be proven on the trial for any purpose; for there is nothing thus far that tends to show that the plaintiff in any way authorized or directed the publication, or was in any way responsible for it. The publication of a libel by a third party upon a defendant is no provocation in law for the commission ■of a libel upon another, unless it can be shown that the latter was responsible for the publication; but the answer proceeds to state upon information and belief:
“That the defendants had good and sufficient reason for believing, and did believe, that the said statements made by Charles S. Hatch were the result and outcome of statements made by the plaintiff to his said brother, and were the result of unfriendly and hostile feelings on the part of the plaintiff and his brother towards these defendants and their newspapers; that the reason the defendants had for believing that the said statements so made by the said Charles S. Hatch were the result and outcome of statements made to him by the plaintiff, and of unfriendly and hostile feelings on the part of the plaintiff towards the defendants and their newspaper, are that these defendants were credibly informed and believed that they were in fact so made; that said Charles S. Hatch, owing to his official relations to the plaintiff as clerk of the superior court of Buffalo, and by reason of his kin■ship to the plaintiff as his brother, sustained intimate relations of friendship*335 with the plaintiff, and had peculiar means and opportunities of knowing the views, sentiments, and feelings of his brother towards the defendants; that they had aided each other in times past in procuring each for the other personal and political advancement in position, all of which were generally known; and that the defendants believed, and had sufficient reason to believe, that plaintiff’s brother would not have made such statements unless some such statements had been made to him by the plaintiff, and that defendants know of no source from which the brother could have derived any information touching the subject-matter of such statements, saving and excepting from the plaintiff in this action.”
It is further alleged that the Buffalo Express had theretofore urged the abolishment of the superior court, and had opposed the candidacy of the plaintiff for a certain office, and that the plaintiff and his brother were endeavoring to establish a rival newspaper to the Express, and that from all the circumstances of the case they had reason to believe, and did believe, that th.e libel published by Charles S. Hatch was not only the result and outcome of statements made by the plaintiff to him, but also the result of unfriendly feelings as aforesaid.
It is true, as argued by the appellant’s counsel, that, after all, these allegations are largely matters of inference; but, in determining the question whether the defendants had good reason to believe that the statements made by the brother were the outcome of information he had derived from the plaintiff, the peculiar character of the facts can with propriety be considered. The defendants were charged in the interview with having improperly attempted to influence the plaintiff in the discharge of his judicial duties. Such an attempt, the jury would have the right to assume, would have been made secretly. When no one was present but the plaintiff and the defendants, and when Charles S. Hatch assumed to state that such an attempt had been made, the natural inference would be that his information came from the plaintiff. The question, then, is whether the facts thus pleaded can be used upon the trial for the purpose of mitigating the damages on the ground of provocation induced by belief that the plaintiff had previously uttered these slanderous words, and to that extent rebutting the inference of actual malice, or reducing the degree of malice, with the view of preventing punitive damages. The general rule is to admit proof of any fact that might possibly bear on the question of malice; and, if there is the slightest doubt in the mind of the court whether the facts proposed to be proved tend to disprove malice, the evidence should be admitted and submitted to the jury under proper instructions. Dolevin v. Wilder, 34 How. Pr. 488; Gorton v. Keeler, 51 Barb. 475; Townsend, Sland. & L. § 361. Where there is a semblance of a cause of action or a defense set up in a pleading, its sufficiency cannot be determined on motion to strike out as redundant or irrelevant. Walter v. Fowler, 85 N. Y. 621; Hagerty v. Andrews, 94 N. Y. 195. Such a motion should be granted only where no doubt exists of the irrelevancy charged, and where there is evidence that its retention would embarrass the opposite party in the prosecution of his defense. Williams v. Folsom, 10 N. Y.
The plaintiff also asked that the defendants be required to furnish to the plaintiff a bill of particulars which should state by what speech or conduct, or in what manner and respect, the prejudice and bias alleged to have been shown by the plaintiff were shown or manifested in the discharge of his judicial functions, and in his actions, in the trial of the case of Smith v. Matthews and the proceedings connected therewith, as alleged in said answer. The nature of the allegation is such that it would be exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to specify the particular acts of" the plaintiff upon which it was based. Such prejudice and bias may have been manifested by a look, by the tone of the voice in making the charge to the jury, by an expression or appearance which it would be difficult to specify in a bill of particulars. A doubt is suggested in Newell v. Butler, 38 Hun, 106, whether a bill of particulars should be directed of matter pleaded in mitigation of damages (Holmes v. Jones, 13 N. Y. St. Rep. 57), especially in a case where the plaintiff was himself familiar with the facts.
The court, we think, properly disposed of that part of the plaintiff’s motion requiring the defendants to separately state and number the facts and matters set forth in their second defense. That part of their answer consisted of facts and circumstances which naturally and properly belonged together, and which were pleaded in mitigation of damages. The part of the second answer which denied that the defendants intended to charge the plaintiff with intentional or willful misconduct legitimately and'properly belongs with the clause following, which alleges that the plaintiff in fact was personally prejudiced and biased against the defendants and their newspaper, and that said prejudice and bias influenced his mind and judgment in the discharge of his judicial duties upon the trial of said action of Smith v. Matthews. The plaintiff’s contention involves the separation of these parts of the answer.