81 N.Y. 246 | NY | 1880
The court was right in charging that the facts which the defendant proved to mitigate the damages must, to have that effect, have been known to him and believed by him before he uttered the slanderous words. How do such facts operate to mitigate the damages? Not by showing thereby that the reputation of the plaintiff is so bad as that the words spoken by the defendant cannot make it worse. "It has long been settled in this State * * * that although evidence is admissible to prove the general character of the *249
plaintiff to be bad, yet that no mere reports or rumors, not amounting to proof of general character, nor information obtained by the defendant from others as to the truth of the charge, unless accompanied by proof that such information is true, can be received for the purpose of rebutting the presumption of malice. This necessarily reduces the defendant to the proof of facts and circumstances known to him at the time of making the charge, having a tendency to induce a belief of its truth, as the only means of showing a want of malice." (Per SELDEN, J., Bush v.Prosser,
It was clearly irrelevant to the issues to make proof that Whitbeck was affected in a way in which the defendant charged that the plaintiff was. It did not tend to prove that the charge was true; nor did it tend to prove that defendant had information, or had heard reports which should have, per se, led him to believe that it was true. To connect the statement that *251 Whitbeck was thus affected with the charge that the plaintiff was thus affected, and that a belief in the statement led to the making of the charge, there must have also been proof of statements of the illicit intercourse of Whitbeck with the plaintiff, and of the belief of the defendant in them. It was not so shown, nor offered to be. That the evidence was pertinent upon the question for the jury, to whom the defendant addressed certain language in the highway, was not presented to the trial court as a reason that it should have been received, and cannot now be urged as showing error in the rejection of it.
The other exceptions brought to our notice by the points do not show error.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.