Jacksonville Journal Co. v. Beymer

42 Ill. App. 443 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1891

Wall, J.

This was an action on the case by appellee against appellant for the publishing of the following article in the columns of the Journal, a daily newspaper.

“ Desebted by his Wife.”
“Florence Beymer, the "well known deaf barber, is playing in hard luck. His wife has run off with another fellow, and yesterday he Avas fined $10 and costs for an assault on the woman’s mother. He is in a terrible stew about it all, of course. For the past year his wife has been playing high jack whenever she chose, and her continued escapades with other men have made her husband as jealous as a dozen ordinary men, but he has grinned and borne all his troubles Avith the grace of a saint and the imperturbability of an Indian. How, however, he is in tureen deep. Beymer insists that he did not commit the assault for which he was fined, but the court seems to have thought differently.”

Upon a trial by jury the plaintiff obtained a verdict for $1,300. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendéred on the verdict, from which an appeal Avas prosecuted by the defendant.

It is first urged by the appellant that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the special pleas. There seems to have been some irregularity and confusion in the pleadings. The defendant evidently did not regard the special pleas as being good, but desired to carry the demurrer back to the declaration, and for this purpose withdrew the general issue. When the demurrer to the special pleas was sustained, leave was obtained to tile additional special pleas, which were also held bad on demurrer, and then the general issue was again filed upon which the case was tried.

We do not understand the appelant to contend very seriously that the pleas were good; at least, the brief does not so insist, but the real position is that the declaration was bad.

The objection to the declaration now presented is, that by innuendo the pleader seeks to give additional force and meaning to the language-employed; that instead of merely explaining, the object and effect is to enlarge and change the meaning. The proposition, in other words, is, that while the article merely charges indiscreet and improper conduct, and nothing more, yet the pleading distorts and magnifies it to signify and charge the greatest offense that a wife can commit as against her husband.

Both parties seem to have considered the case as though governed and affected by Sec. 1 of Chap. 126, It. S., which provides that “if any person shall falsely use, utter or publish words which, in their common acceptation, shall amount to charge any person with having been guilty of fornication or adultery, such words so spoken shall be deemed actionable, and he shall be deemed guilty of slander.”

The plaintiff was permitted to prove by witnesses that they read the article and understood it to import a charge of adultery. The defendant was permitted to prove by witnesses that in their opinion no such meaning should be attached to the article.

At the instance of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury that if the article did amount to such a charge it was actionable; and at the instance of the defendant, the jury were instructed that unless it did import such conduct it was not actionable.

We regard this provision of the statute as applicable to verbal slander only. At the common law such a charge when orally made was not actionable per se, because the misconduct charged was not indictable. After the Restoration in England, as Blackstone says, Vol. 4, page 65, “ The temporal courts took no cognizance of adultery otherwise than as a private injury.” So in some of the States it was held not indictable at common law (Wharton’s Crim. Law, Sec. 2648), nor _ was it in this State. But without the statutory provision in question, it was actionable to print such a charge.

The definition of libel as found in our criminal code is substantially that found in the text books, and is as follows:

“A libel is a malicious defamation expressed by printing or by signs or pictures or the like, tending to blacken the memory of one who is dead, or to impeach the honesty, integrity, virtue or reputation, or to publish the natural defects of one who is alive, and thereby to expose him to public hatred, contempt, ridicule or financial injury.”

For such offense the public may proceed criminally, and the person injured may bring an action. It is not necessary now to discuss the difference between libel and slander, or the considerations upon which it has been adjudged that matter which is not actionable per se when published orally, may be when published by printing, signs and pictures. The legislature saw fit to make actionable the speaking of words importing unchastity; but when the defamation is verbal merely, the words must, in their common acceptation, amount to such a charge in order to render them actionable per se. Hot so, however, in libel; for if the publication tends to impeaoh the virtue or reputation the cause of action iscomplete. It would hardly be urged that this publication was not libelous. The most unsophisticated person would at once infer that the woman mentioned was guilty of a gross breach of propriety, tending to cloud the reputation and to impeach the virtue. The very innocent construction placed upon the language by the publishers of the paper in their testimony would make it signify enough for this.

But we think the article would be commonly construed to mean that she was guilty of adultery. To say that a married woman “has run off with another fellow” is sufficient to convey that impression; and this in connection with the other expressions there found would leave no doubt that such was the writer’s meaning.

But if the language is ambiguous only, capable of being understood in a double sense, one very damaging, the other comparatively harmless, the publisher can not object that his readers gave it the sinister meaning. Nelson v. Borchenius, 52 Ill. 236. As the article was libelous on its face, the declaration would have been sufficient in this respect if it had simply set it out in haee verba. The effort to explain or enlarge the meaning by innuendo, does not in any event render the pleading substantially defective.

The objection urged with great force, that there was error in permitting witnesses to state what they understood the article to mean, must be overruled, unless we can say that the meaning is obviously innocent, and that the sinister construction given it by those witnesses is unreasonable and intolerable. As already stated, we can not say it is so, but are so strongly impressed with the view that it imported adultery according to the common acceptation of the language, that we think such testimony might well have heen excluded for the reason that no other construction was admissible. But the testimony did no harm, for it only tended to show what was clear enough without it.

The view we have thus taken will also dispose of the objection to instructions given at the instance of the plaintiff.

As to the amount of damages allowed, it may be said in answer to the objection in that behalf, that it is a matter so largely within the discretion of the jury as to forbid our interference in this instance. Very much larger verdicts have often been sustained in cases of oral slander. Where the defamation is through the columns of a newspaper the injury is greater—at least it is so presumably.

The defendant company sought to mitigate the damages by showing that the reputation of the plaintiff was had. Evidence was heard as to this point on both sides. The jury no doubt gave proper weight to the testimony of the various-witnesses, and the presiding judge who also heard the testimony was satisfied - with the verdict. There is nothing . to indicate passion, partiality or prejudice in the sum. awarded.

Finding no error of which appellant may be heard to complain, we must affirm the judgment.

Judgment affirmed.

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