26 Haw. 500 | Haw. | 1922
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an action for damages for an alleged libel pub- . lished in the Pacific Commercial Advertiser, a daily newspaper printed and published by the defendant corporation. Upon an interlocutory appeal from a ruling by the circuit court upon defendant’s demurrer this court held (25 Haw. 701) that certain portions of the article complained of (the whole article is set forth at length in that opinion and need not be here repeated) were not libelous but that the statement that the plaintiff was a “loafer,” if it ivas in fact made in the article of and concerning the
It is not sought by the exceptions or by the- argument presented to obtain a review in any respect of the law laid down in the former opinion above referred to, but it is claimed that prejudicial error was committed by the trial court in various respects. The two contentions most emphasized by the plaintiff in the argument, both written and oral, are these: (1) that evidence of the actual malice of the Avriter of the article in question Avas erroneously excluded and (2) that the court erroneously refused to permit the jury to consider the term “slacker” in the sense involving an attack upon patriotism.
The Avriter of the article Avas one Withington avIio at the time was reporter of sporting news and editor of the sporting page in which the article in question appeared. He Avas not, however, an officer of the corporation. The
Whether under circumstances such as these an employer, whether a corporation or an individual, is liable to punitive damages by reason of the actual malice of the servant, is a subject upon which the authorities are in conflict. Some of them hold that such liability exists, basing their view upon the same reasons evidently, of public policy, which have led generally to the adoption of the rule that an employer is liable in compensatory damages for the acts of his servants. Others take the view that since punitive damages are, as the term implies, intended to punish an offender for his malice and are, when awarded at all, in addition to compensatory damages Avhich compensate a plaintiff for all the injury which he has in fact suffered, the employer is not liable to punitive damages unless there has been ratification and adoption of the article with knowledge of the actual malice of the • employee. The general rule is that there can be no ratification without knowledge of the material facts. See for example: Corrigan v. Bobbs-Merrill Co., 126 N. E. (N. Y.) 260, 264, 265; Beacon Trust Co. v.
“Though tbe principal is liable to make compensation for a libel published or a malicious prosecution instituted by bis agent he is not liable to be punished by exemplary*504 damages for an intent in which he did not participate. ⅞ ⅞ * The right to award them rests primarily npon the single ground—wrongful motive. It is the wrongful personal intention to injure that calls forth the penalty. To this wrongful intent knowledge is an essential prerequisite. * * No doubt, a corporation, like a natural person, may be held liable in exemplary or punitive damages for the act of an agent within the scope of his employment, provided the criminal intent necessary to warrant the imposition of such damages is brought home to the corporation. * * * The jury were thus told, in the plainest terms, that the corporation was responsible in punitive damages for the wantonness and oppression on the part of the conductor, although not actually participated in by the corporation. This ruling appears to us to be inconsistent with the principles above stated, unsupported by any decision of this court and opposed to the preponderance of well considered precedents.” Lake Shore, etc., Railway Co. v. Prentice, 147 U. S. 101, 110, 111, 112.
“Actual malice of the agent was imputed to the principals, who were held responsible for the malevolent act to the same extent as though they had themselves written and published the article. Punitory damages might he given against them under this rule, however innocent they might be of any bad motive or bad intent. Such is not the law in this state, whatever may be the rule elsewhere. •* ⅞ ⅛ We think that in justice there ought to be a difference in the rule of damages against principals for torts actually committed by agents in cases where the principal is, and in cases where the principal is not, a party to the malice of the agent. In the former class of cases the damages go upon the malice of the principal—malice common to principal and agent. In the latter class of cases the recovery is for the act of. the principal through the agent, in malice of the agent not shared by the principal, the principal being responsible for the act but not for the motive of the agent. * * ⅜ And it must be deemed the settled law of this state that .the principal is not responsible in exemplary damages for •the actual malice of the agent, unless he has participated*505 in, or ratified and confirmed, the malicious act of the agent.” Eviston v. Cramer, 57 Wis. 570, 577-579.
“Without stopping to review the history of this class of so-called damages, it is sufficient to say that the right to award them rests primarily upon the single ground—wrongful motive. The engrafting of this notion on to personal suits has resulted in an anomalous rule, the doctrine of punitive damages being a sort of hybrid between a display of ethical indignation and the imposition of a criminal fine. But whether we regard it in the one light or the other, it is the wrongful personal intention to injure that calls forth the penalty. To this wrongful intent knowledge is an essential prerequisite.” Haines v. Schultz, 50 N. J. L. 481, 484-485.
“If two be sued the motive of one must not be allowed to aggravate the damages against the other. Nor should the improper motive of an agent be matter of aggravation against his principal.” Krug v. Pitass, 162 N. Y. 154, 162.
“There is no finding that such acts were authorized or ratified by the defendant. Without this there can be no recovery as and for punitory damages. Such damages are given only by way of punishing the malice or oppression, and are usually graduated by the intent of the party committing the wrong. When the action is against the principal for the act of an agent the question of their assessment cannot properly be submitted to the jury unless there is evidence connecting the principal with such intent on the part of the agent.” Gaertner v. Bues, 109 Wis. 165, 171.
To the same effect are: Railroad v. Arms, 91 U. S. 489, 493; Railway v. Harris, 122 U. S. 597, 609; Craker v. Railway, 36 Wis. 657, 675, 676; Robinson v. Transit Co., 94 Wis. 345, 350; Vassau v. Madison Electric Co., 106 Wis. 301, 307; Craven v. Bloomingdale, 64 N. E. (N. Y.) 169, 171; Peterson v. Traction Co., 59 Atl. (N. J.) 456; Corrigan v. Bobbs-Merrill Co., supra.
Some evidence was offered and received which is claimed by the plaintiff to show not only legal malice but
Another series of exceptions, argued at length both in the briefs and orally, presents the claim that the court erred in not permitting the jury to consider the word “slacker” as having been used in the article in the sense of importing an evasion of military duty. The article in question was published on October 29, 1919. The armistice was declared on November 11, 1918. Otherwise than technically the war ended on November 11, 1918. The selective service draft was not maintained in operation in Hawaii or in any other part of the Union after November 11, 1918. The article published contains not the slightest reference, direct or indirect, to any failure on the plaintiff’s part to perform his military duty, to his-country during the war. No light is to be obtained from the article as to whether he did or did not do so. From beginning to end the article deals with the one subject of the plaintiff’s failure to enter the swimming meet. The word “slacker,” while first coming into use during the war and while then generally applied to a person who unlawfully evaded or attempted to evade his military duty, has come to have another equally well-known meaning, referring to one who evades or attempts to evade some other duty. We do not understand it to be correct
The plaintiff further complains that he was not permitted to proAre that the defendant did not at any time publish any apology or retraction of the article complained of. If there was any apology or retraction that was a matter of affirmative defense or mitigation to be proven by the defendant; and in the absence of any evidence to the contrary the jury would be justified and required to find that there was no apology and no retraction. No evidence of apology or retraction was adduced and the plaintiff in his argument to the jury had the full benefit of that fact.
Other exceptions have been argued. All have been considered by the court. We find no reversible error.
Tbe exceptions are overruled.