99 N.Y.S. 457 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
It seems to me that a statement of the facts shows that this judgment should be reversed.
The plaintiff was the clerk of the board of trustees of the village of Wáppingers Falls. He prepared all bills against the village for presentation to the trustees for audit. He attached a uniform wrapper or back to each, on the outside fold of which he indorsed in typewriting all the particulars of the-claim, viz., the name of the claimant, the amount of the claim, what it was for, the department that incurred it, and also the word “ Audited,” with a space under it for the president and clerk to sign. He left home on January 6, 1905, to be gone until March on a, vacation. Several days before leaving he made out a number of claims in the way above described, to be presented to the trustees at their meeting to be held on January 3rd, but as that meeting was not held because of a storm, he gave them in a file or bundle to a person whom he appointed to do his work in his absence, to be presented.to the" trustees at their next meeting on January 9tli. She presented them at the said meeting folded and in the bundle just as she had received them- and without examining them. Among them was a claim by the Millard Lumber Company for a total of $112.13 for lumber. This all appeared on the outside of the cover in the manner already specified, but on the inside the claim was made up of three bills of the said company, one of which, however, was made out against the plaintiff individually. Instead of its slipping through, as sometimes happens in like cases, Trustee Hunter examined it and it was not audited. Of course people dealing with a village may sometimes
Where is the slander ? Did the defendant do or say anything lie or any citizen had not. a right to do and say ? If so, what ? The defendant had reasonable ground to believe that the plaintiff had
It is enough to say that the plaintiff was in the wrong, either by design or official negligence, in presenting the claim to the trustees, and that it was the right of the defendant to show the matter to the president of the village, or to any citizen, and discuss it fully, and call in question whether the plaintiff had an honest intent in including a false item in the claim. And he was by no means obliged to take the plaintiff’s word for it, or that of the claimant.
The plaintiff’s whole official conduct in the matter was open to the fullest criticism, and the defendant and all other persons had the right to draw from it and express any opinions of inferences that could be drawn from it,' although contrary, and it .may be, more reasonable ones,, could be drawn from it. That such opinions or inferences are far-fetched, high strung, or severely moral, or contrary to otheropinions or inferences that seem more reasonable, does not matter so long as there be a basis for them in the acts or ■ words of the person who is the- subject of such criticism. The majority or prevailing opinion is not the test of whether such opinions or inferences be permissible. The prevailing or majority opinion is often the wrong one, and for that reason the law gives full latitude to the expression of any and all opinions on things of
The people are not -obliged to speak of the conduct of their officials in whispers or with bated breath in a free government, but only in a. despotism. On the contrary, they have a right to Speak out in open discussion and criticism thereof, the only test being that they make no false statement;' and this is the great .safeguard of free government, and of pure government. This is fun- " damental among us. The defendant made no false statement, and had the right 'to question the intent of the plaintiff from his concededly unlawful act, and the ease with which it -could be made the means of spoliating the public funds. The. plaintiff’s act was susceptible of an inference of wrong intent.
The plaintiff denies, or makes some question in his testimony, that he made out the.claim for audit, arguing that he always used a comma instead^ of a period between dollars and cents, whereas the latter is the decimal mark used on the back of this claim’. It was shown however by other claims made out by him that he sometimes used the period as such mark:. But it is enough that if the case turned on the question of fact whether he made out the claim, the verdict would have to be set aside as against the plain weight of evidence.
Moreover, the occasion of tlie .communication of the defendant to the president of the village was qualifiedly privileged, which was pleaded as a defense, and the jury should have been charged (if the case be one for’ the jury) that unless- the plaintiff proved by a preponderance of evidence that the words of the defendant were spoken maliciously, such privilege shielded the defendant, and the -verdict had to be in his favor; that it would not be enoügh for the jury to find that the intent attributed to the plaintiff by the defendant was false, but that they must find in addition that the defendant- was actuated by a malicious motive in expressing it in order to render a
The charge of,the trial judge as a whole and in particular fell altogether short of this, and the exception to his charge “ that, if the jury find from the evidence that the words uttered were such as imputed crime or tended to injure him in his business that the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict,” is good. That is not the law for a case of qualified privilege.
The judgment should be reversed.
Jenks, Hooker, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order of the County Court of Dutchess county reversed, and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.