22 Mo. 423 | Mo. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for slander. The petition is according to the form under the new code of practice, and it charges that Polly Garner, the wife of the other defendant, Luke Garner, in the presence and hearing of Calvin Beck and divers other persons, on the first day of January, in the year 1854, at the county of Benton, spoke and published the following false and slanderous words, of and concerning the plaintiff; that is to say: “ Go along home (speaking to plaintiff’s son John) and see your whorish mother, and tell your mother to send you down to the south, to see your father Tom (intending then and thereby to charge the plaintiff with having been guilty of the crime of adultery with negro Tom). Your mother (speaking to the plaintiff’s son John) is a whore, and I can prove it. Damn your black soul (speaking to plaintiff’s son John) ; go along home to your whorish mother; you’ll get to the south directly to your father ; any how, Tom is your father. Your mother (speaking to plaintiff’s son John) is nothing but a damned whore — G-d damn her whorish soul; she was nothing but a whore any how ;” meaning then and there and thereby, that the plaintiff was a woman of lewd character, and that plaintiff had been guilty of the crime o£ adultery with said negro Tom : and concludes by laying her damages at the sum of ten thousand dollars.
The defendants appear and answer; deny the speaking of the words, and deny all the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition. Upon the trial, the jury found the defendants guilty, and assessed the plaintiff’s damages at the sum of three thousand dollars.
The defendants file their motion for a new trial, which was overruled ; also their motion in arrest of judgment, which was likewise overruled. They excepted, and bring the case here by writ of error.
In looking into the bill of exceptions, the evidence preserved plainly establishes the speaking of the words ; nor is there any
The principal matters relied on by the plaintiffs in error for a reversal of the judgment, arise upon the plaintiff’s petition. It is alleged that the suit is brought by Ursula Ann Hudson, a single woman, and the petition, by it? inuéndoes, charges the defendant, 1st, with intending to impute, by the speaking of the words, the crime of adultery to the plaintiff; that it nowhere appears that the plaintiff had ever been married, or had ever been in a situation to commit the crime of adultery ; that, admitting the words are actionable in themselves, if spoken falsely and maliciously, whether they intended to impute either adultery or fornication, yet as the plaintiff, by inuendoes, has declared that Mrs. Garner intended, by speaking the words, to impute adultery, the plaintiff was bound to prove they were uttered in the sense thus ascribed to them. To support this view, various authors have been cited, which I will notice in proper time.
By our statute, it is actionable to publish, maliciously and falsely, in any manner whatsoever, that any person has been guilty of fornication and adultery. In this petition, the words are actionable of themselves ; and there is no necessity for any colloquium, or any inuendo, to explain, the meaning of such words.
In this petition, the plaintiff has not set forth what the pleaders call a colloquium. But, following the form which our new code of practice says may be used, she charges that Polly Garner, one of the defendants, “ spoke and published the following false and slanderous words concerning the plaintiff. ” Then, after setting forth the words actionable in themselves, the plaintiff, by inuendo, charges that the defendant meant to impute the crime of adultery to the plaintiff. Can this inuendo be rejected and stricken out as surplusage ? If it can, then the petition of the plaintiff may be considered sufficient to support the judgment, however carelessly^ and unprofessionally drawn.
The case of Smith v. Carey, reported in 3 Campb. 460, is a very meagre one. The action is for slander of plaintiff in his trade. The words were, that “ he lived by swindling and robbing the public.55 These were laid differently in different counts of the declaration ; but in each count, there was an inuendo that the defendant thereby meant “ that the plaintiff had been and was guilty of felony and robbery.55 The words were proved as laid, but appeared to allude to a transaction from which it might be inferred that the defendant only meant to
The case of Williams v. Hott, (1 Cromp. & Mees. 675,) is reported at large, and, with the law laid down there, we have no hesitation in concurring. This was an action of slander for accusing the plaintiff of felonious embezzlement. The declaration contains five counts ; at the commencement of the first there is a prefatory averment, that, before and at the time of the committing of the grievances thereinafter mentioned, he had been and was employed as the servant of certain persons, to-wit, the mayor, aldermen and burgesses of Warwick, in a certain situation, office and employment, to-wit, the situation, office and employment of one of the chamberlains of the commons and commonahle lands within the .parish of St. Mary, in the borough of Warwick ; by virtue and in exercise of which employment, it was the duty of the plaintiff to receive and take
The three first counts ascribed to the plaintiff the character of servant; they state the alleged slanderous words to have been spoken of the plaintiff as such servant, and they aver the meaning of such words to be, that the plaintiff had committed embezzlement against the form of the statute. Under the manner in which the plaintiff had charged the slanderous words to have been spoken, it was necessary that he should come within the statute relating to embezzlement. (7 and 8 Greo. IV, chap. 29, sec. 47.) The court held that the plaintiff did not come within the fair meaning of that statute; that he was not ffhe servant of another, but fills an office of his own ; that he did not receive money in the course of his employment as the mere agent of another, but was entitled, by virtue of his office, to keep the money in his hands until the end of the year for which he was appointed.
In Harvey v. French, (1 Cromp. & Mees. 11,) a count for a libel stated that defendant published a false libel of and concerning the plaintiff, containing amongst other things the false, &c. matter, of and concerning the plaintiff; .that is to say, “Threatening letters. — The Middlesex grand jury have returned a true bill against a gentleman of some property, named
In Roberts v. Camden, (9 East. 95,) Lord Ellenborough, (who afterwards tried Smith and Carey, already cited from 3 Campbell,) held, that where such new matter was not necessary to support the action, an inuendo, without any colloquium, may well be rejected as surplusage, and can have no effect in enlarging the sense of the words used.
In Beirer v. Bushfield, (1 Watts, 23,) the words laid in the declaration to have been spoken were : “ He was guilty with a woman, for he went into bed with Mrs. Kislar, and stroked her, and he could prove it; thereby meaning that the said plaintiff had committed the crime of adultery with the wife of said
Whatever may formerly have been the rule, the law is now
The cases from Pennsylvania are very similar to this p there, the court held that the inuendo might be stricken out. In looking over the various decisions referred to by the counsel, and many others which an examination somewhat extended brought before me, I conclude that an inuendo, where there has been no colloquium or inducement laid by which the inuendo. can become needful as an explanation, and when the words charged are actionable by themselves, may be rejected. The case from Watt’s Reps. of Beirer v. Bushfield, is directly in point; there, the inuendo made the act to be adultery, and yet the plaintiff was not shown to be a married man. The words charged did not need an inuendo ; there was no inducement — nothing which was necessary to be explained by the inuendo. It was rejected; Chief Justice Gibson stating “he knew no case which would forbid its rejection. ” In Walton v. Singleton, a married man was charged with committing an act of fornication ; it was held actionable.
Here, the words charged were understood to mean an unlawful sexual intercourse, and the hearers must not be considered very nice in discriminating ; they knew when a married woman
There is no force in the objection made against the plaintiffs’ withdrawing the testimony of Colvin Beck, and then introducing witnesses who knew more .about .the transaction.
When slanderous words are spoken of another falsely, the law will affix malice to them. There is no necessity of proving express malice.
The instructions given by the court to the jury were proper enough ; they explained the law of the case, and the court properly overruled those asked for by the defendants.
In looking over the whole case, we find no error for which this court should reverse. The judgment below is affirmed;