delivered the opinion of the court.
Action for damages for the publication of a libel. In the court, below, the plaintiff had verdict and judgment. The defendant has appealed from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial. The cause of action alleged is the publication by defendant, in the “Helena Daily Independent,” on the morning of February 21, 1907, of and concerning the plaintiff the following article:
“Mother Accused by Her Children.
“Mrs. F. E. Miller, of Butte, is arrested on charge of assault, at the instance of Otto Schoenfeld, executive officer of the state bureau of child and animal protection, who was hurriedly summoned to Butte Tuesday night by W. H. Orr, of the Silver Bow County Humane Society. Mrs. F. E. Miller was arrested and placed in the county jail this afternoon on the charge of assault upon her fifteen year old daughter. The charge is but nominal and behind is a story of horrible brutality and a peculiar condition of domestic affairs, according to the three children of the woman. It is alleged by the older daughter who goes by the name of Ruth Harris, the latter the name of the woman’s second husband, that the younger daughter, Helen, eleven years of age, has been compelled, at the command of the mother, to submit to unspeakable indignities forced upon her by men who have been repeatedly invited to their home at 1121 South Wyoming street, where the most indecent orgies are alleged to have been continued through the night.
*132 “Threatened Their Lives.
“The mother, Mrs. Miller, is said to be a confirmed drunkard. It is alleged that on several occasions she has thrown a huge butcher knife at the children and has threatened to kill them if they were taken from her. The two girls were taken from school this afternoon by Mr. Schoenfeld, and they have been placed temporarily in the Paul Clark Home. The matter will be taken up before Judge Donlam to-morrow morning and the girls will probably be sent to the Orphans’ Home in Helena. There is also a boy twelve years of age, and what disposition will be made of him has not yet been decided.’’
Among other defenses, the defendant pleaded the statute of limitations. Plaintiff interposed a denial. At the commencement of the trial, the defendant objected to the introduction of evidence, on the ground that, it appearing from the complaint that the publication was made on February 21, 1907, and that the complaint was not filed until February 23, 1909, the action was barred by the provision of the statute. The objection was overruled. At the close of the evidence, the defendant requested the court to direct a verdict in its favor. The request was denied. The contentions made in this court are based upon these two rulings. Some technical questions arising upon the form of the plea of the statute and the reply thereto are argued in the brief. We shall not notice these, because they do not affect the merits of these appeals.
It was admitted in the district court, and also at the argument in this court, that the article in question was published on the morning of February 21, 1907, and that this action was commenced on February 23, 1909. February 21, 1909, fell on Sunday, a holiday. The following day was also a holiday. The position of counsel for defendant is that in computing the two year period of limitation prescribed by the statute for actions for libel (Eev. Codes, sec. 6448) the day of publication must be included, because the right of action accrues on that day. Hence that the district court should have sustained the objection and held the action barred. • If counsel’s assumption is correct, their
For most purposes, the law regards the day as an indivisible unit. It is only when it becomes necessary to inquire into the
There is some confusion in the decisions of the courts upon the subject. In the case cited the conclusion was reached that no general rule can be laid down, because cases would occur the reason of which would require exceptions to be made. The result of this decision, however, was that earlier oases (Norris v. Gawtry, Hob. 139; Bellasis v. Hester, 1 Ld. Raym. 280; Rex v. Adderley, 2 Doug. 463; Castle v. Burditt, 3 T. E. 623, 100 Eng. Reprint, 768), which held that the computation was to be made from the act done and that the day on which the act was done should be included, were overruled. The rule applied in the oases last mentioned has been adopted by some of the courts in this country, as is shown by the following eases: Geneva Coop
Most of the foregoing cases are founded upon contract. But, if the day is to be regarded as a unit, there is no reason why the rule, as applied to actions ex contractu, should not apply to actions ex delicto also; otherwise there is a lack of uniformity in its application, and the result is that in the latter class of eases the period of limitation is shortened by the portion of the day which has expired before the doing of the wrong out of whi.ch the cause of action arises. There is no sound reason why the distinction should be made. The statute provides: “The time in which any act provided by law is to be done is computed by excluding the first day and including the last, unless the last day
The rule of exclusion of the last day of the limitation when it falls on a holiday was recognized in this jurisdiction prior to the enactment of any legislation on the subject. (Schnepel v. Mellen, 3 Mont. 118.) We think the purpose of the legislation was also to settle the rule in this behalf, so that a person having a right to bring an action, or to do any other act in the course of legal proceedings, might have the whole of a legal day at the end of the prescribed period in which to exercise his option. In any event, it settles the rule of computation in both respects. The district court properly applied it to the exclusion of the day of publication, and also the two holidays appearing in succession on the 21st and 22d of February, 1909.
The evidence tends to show that the plaintiff has been a resident of Butte for many years, occupying her own home; that at the time of the publication her three children — two girls, Ruth and Helen, of the ages of fourteen and eleven years, respectively, and a boy, Thomas, of the age of thirteen years — were attending the public school; that she had been divorced from a former husband, the father of the children, and was living with one Miller as his wife, but whether married to him or not does not appear; that Miller did not stay at the family home, but went from place to place as he could find work at his trade, being a painter and decorator; that the plaintiff earned the principal part of the family support by renting rooms, receiving help from Miller in the way of money, from time to time, as he was able to earn it; that the day before the publication of the article Mr. Schoenfeld, a state humane officer, in company with the divorced husband, having taken the children from school, held them in custody until the next day, when, upon a charge of vagrancy and incorrigibility, he procured their commitment as follows: Ruth to the state reform school, Thomas to the state orphans’ 'home, and Helen to the custody of the humane officers;, that plaintiff, hav
The reporter who prepared the article testified that the story contained in it was based upon information obtained at the sher
Whatever may be said as to the extent of the privilege extended to publishers of newspapers in reporting judicial or other public official proceedings, the article in question is not, and does not purport to be, such a report. In fact, it was written prior to the institution of any proceeding in court for any purpose. The information against the children was filed on February 21, after publication was made. There was nothing to justify the statement even as to an arrest of plaintiff, other than the high-handed action in the sheriff’s office, which resulted in her being thrown in jail on the preceding day. The story is no more nor less than what it purports to be — a sensational detail of charges of the inhuman and unspeakable crimes by the mother against the children, the material for which was gathered by the reporter, not from any proceeding witnessed by him, but at second-hand from the gossip heard at the sheriff’s office. It is not a fair, true story. If the evidence of the different witnesses is to be accepted as true — and for the purposes of this case it must be so accepted— the least investigation by the reporter would have disclosed to him, not only that the plaintiff was not under arrest upon a nominal charge of assault upon one of her own children, but also that the story behind it, of her horrible brutality .and unspeakable indignities to which' the other daughter had been compelled by her mother to submit at the hands of men during night-long orgies,
The right of free speech is guaranteed by the Constitution. (Art. Ill, sec. 10.) It is there declared that no law shall be enacted impairing it, and that every person shall be free to speak, write, or publish whatever he will on any subject. At the same time, it leaves the way open by which everyone who abuses his privilege may be brought to account. The court, in Gilman v. McClatchy, supra, after discussing at some length the purpose of
Counsel argue that the fact that the district court, after the publication, adjudged that the children were dependent and neglected, under the provisions of the statute applicable (Rev. Codes, secs. 7829 — 7835), is a conclusive, reason why the publication was at least a quasi-privileged one, and that the burden was upon the plaintiff, not only to show the falsity of some of the statements contained in it, but also, that they were known to be false, or, by the exercise of ordinary care, their falsity could have been ascertained by the defendant. As we have already said, the story in its essential particulars was not true. It was
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.
I agree with all that is said by the Chief Justice in the foregoing decision concerning the second question involved; but I am of opinion that the case of Geneva Cooperage Co. v. Brown, 124 Ky. 16, 124 Am. St. Rep. 388, 98 S. W. 279, was decided on correct principles of law, and that the plaintiff’s cause of action in the instant case was barred by the statute of limitations.
Rehearing denied April 1, 1912.