213 P. 351 | Idaho | 1923
This was an action by respondents to recover damages for an alleged libelous article published in the “Idaho Free Press,” a newspaper published by appellant at Nampa, Canyon county, Idaho.
The alleged defamatory words complained of are set out in the complaint haec verba. To this complaint appellant demurred generally and specially, and contended that the words used were not libelous per se and that respondents having failed to allege by way of inducement any extrinsic facts and connect such facts by proper colloquium so as to render them actionable, it fails to state a cause of action.
The demurrer was overruled and appellant answered, admitting the publication of the alleged libelous article, but denied that the statements therein contained were libelous or that they were published with any intention to injure respondents’ business or to expose them to public ridicule or contempt, or that their business was in any manner injured by such publication, and denied all the other material allegations of the complaint. By way of affirmative defense, appellant alleged that the objectionable article was composed and published by one of its employees, without the knowledge or consent of the general manager or managing editor, neither of whom saw or knew anything of said article until after the same was published. By way of a pleading termed “cross-complaint and for affirmative relief,” appellant set
The cause was tried by the court with a jury, which returned a verdict for respondents, fixing their damage at $100, and a judgment was entered for this amount, with costs taxed at $59.50. Appellant moved for a new trial upon certain of the statutory grounds enumerated in C. S., sec. 6888, and this appeal is taken from the order denying this motion for a new trial.
Appellant assigns a large number of errors, all of which are predicated upon its contention that the publication was not libelous per se, that no matters of inducement or averments of extraneous facts were alleged in the complaint which imputed to plaintiffs that they had been guilty of any crime, fraud, dishonesty or .immorality, or anything that tended to injure them in their good name, office, profession or calling, or to hold them up to ridicule, hatred or scorn, and that no special damages having been proven, the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. This appeal being taken from the order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial only, the error based upon the order overruling appellant’s demurrer to the complaint cannot be considered on this appeal, unless such complaint is so defective that it fails to tender any issue of fact, and therefore would not constitute a basis for an affirmative judgment, for the reason that in granting a new trial, courts are limited to the grounds specified in C. S., sec. 6888, and an erroneous ruling on a demurrer is not one of such grounds. On an appeal from an order denying a new trial, the sufficiency of the complaint will not be considered unless it fails in any view of the pleadings to state a cause of action. (Naylor v. Lewiston etc. Ry. Co., 14 Ida. 789, 96 Pac. 573; Maw v. Coast Lumber Co., 19 Ida. 396, 114 Pac. 9; Wright v. Stewart, 32 Ida. 490, 185 Pac. 69.)
Aside from this, the record presents but two questions for review by this court: First, is the alleged libelous matter pleaded by respondents, the publication of which is admitted
C. S., sec. 8253, defines libel to be:
“A malicious defamation, expressed either'by writing, 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 publish the natural or alleged defects, of one who is alive, and thereby expose him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule.”
Because of the length of the article complained of, it will not here be repeated, but the following are the parts which appear to have been most objectionable to respondents:
“Jenness, Hoy & Co., try to put over big coup. Meeting at City Hall to take fall out of Free Press blows up when aims are revealed. Editorial seized as pretext for joining hands with Capital City interests in an attempt to scuttle Nampa. ’ ’
The article then proceeds to say that the Boise papers and the “Leader Herald,” whose business and subscription lists have been badly cut into by appellant, had their agents at work in Nampa to stir up trouble, seizing upon an editorial in the “Free Press” as a pretext for a meeting of:
“Corporation boosters, camouflaged as patriots, with Lam-son, Jenness and Hoy at their head .... the motive being to discipline the Free Press and to acquire for Jenness the authority to write its editorials.”
The article further states that a meeting was called and resolutions were passed, and that if a sufficient number of signatures could be obtained, Jenness expected the “Free Press” to invite him to write its editorials thereafter. It then continues:
“Jenness of the Leader Herald and the loop reporter of the Capital News, galled by the inroads the Free Press has been making in their business, read the editorial to the languid spectators at Jenness’ meeting, and got themselves so stirred up over it that, begorrah, they began to yell for*702 a bomb themselves. They were going to blow up the Free Press building, bedad.”
While this article could not be called a classic in English literature, it is evident that the writer did not intend that it should be taken literally, but rather as a hyperbole of speech, and it would be so understood by the ordinary reader. It is not an unusual example of that form of ribaldry resorted to by a class of writers in describing the acts and conduct of their rivals or those they seek to criticise, where such writers have not the necessary skill or cleverness to express themselves in a more parliamentary manner. The article is an exemplification of a form of caricature that frequently appears, but in a more approved and refined form, in the current newspapers of the day, whereby they attempt to emphasize and set forth the shortcomings of men prominent in public life, or political parties or reform movements against which the writer is seeking to create an adverse public opinion. Many of these writings and cartoons appearing in the public press are often useful in creating and directing public opinion toward needed reforms or the suppression of evil. If the law should hold all this class of articles, whether by pictures or writing, actionable per se, without a showing of malice or pecuniary loss to the party alleged to have been injured, it would so effectually restrain the press and tend to prevent it from giving the needed publicity to matters of vital importance to the public welfare that it would greatly impair one of the most potent influences for good we have, for all experience shows that there is no power so great in suppressing wrong as its pitiless exposure in the public press. Furthermore, if this class of publications was actionable without the plaintiff being required to show any injury, it would result in a vast amount of unimportant litigation. De minimis non curat lex — the law does not concern itself with trifles — is an ancient maxim particularly applicable to this' class of cases.
If it appeared in the instant case that the alleged libel was published maliciously, or that it imputed to plaintiffs
We conclude that the verdict is without support in the evidence, and that the cause should be reversed, with instructions to set aside the verdict and grant appellant a new trial. It is so ordered. Costs awarded to appellant.