108 N.Y.S. 975 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This is an.appeal from an interlocutory judgment overruling the plaintiff’s demurrers in an action for libel. The demurrers are.to the first further defense in alleged justification, the secp.nd further defense in alleged justification and to the third and separate defense.
Thp plea challenged by" the first demurrer is thus introduced, • “ Defendant, further answering' the complaint and in justification, states.” The matter thereof is in justification of the charge that ' the plaintiff was not honest in' the Hackensack transaction. While the plea may jiass as in justification, it is not broad enough to be a complete .defense ■—• indeed it does not purport to -be one. When the facts- are not expressly pleaded as a partial defense, the plaintiff and the court upon demurrer must test the plea as if given incomplete defense. (Thompson v. Halbert, 109 N. Y. 329.) Hence the -plea is bad. - For like reasons the plea attacked by the second demurrer is bad.
The third demurrer attacks a plea thus introduced: “ Defendant for a further and separate defense alleges:
“ Twenty-sixth. That heretofore and in the Municipal Court of the City of Hew York, Borough of Brooklyn, the defendant herein, and one John De la Tergo, brought an action against Isabella Jaffe and Fannie Zatulove, in which said action, the said Charles Oechler, the person to whom the letter attached to the complaint was written, appeared as attorney for this defendant and in which said action the professional obligation referred to in the complaint was incurred by defendant. ■ '
“ Twenty-seventh. That this; defendant communicated arid wrote
Referring to this plea as We may do upon demurrer (Fry v. Bennett, 5 Sandf. 72), it is quite clear that it is one of qualified privilege — “prima facie " privilege, as it is often termed.; (Odgers Lib. & Sland. [4th ed.] chap. 9; Newell Def. Sland. & Lib. chap. 19, §§ 63 et seq., §§ 92, 96, 106; Byam v. Collins, 111 N. Y. 143; Hill v. Durham House Drainage Co., 79 Hun, 335.) It falls within the condition well expressed by Baron Fitzgerald in Waring v. M'Caldin, (7 Ir. Rep. C. L. 288, cited in Newell, supra, § 106). It appears that the letter was elicited by a letter from the addressee. We cannot infer that it was directly responsive thereto, but we may infer that it was in explanation of the reason why the defendant had sent one lawyer to another, and that the reason was that the plaintiff, a lawyer, when in Mr. Oeehler’s office— associated with him or in his employ—had not treated the writer honestly in certain business dealings. Even though the occasion should be held one of qualified or prima facie privilege, the questions of bona fi des, belief and of actual malice ' survive it. (Klinck v. Colby, 46 N. Y. 427, 430.) The plaintiff’s complaint1 expressly avers that the libel was false and malicious, and I think then that the defendant should have pleaded so as to meet these specific allegations and thus put in plea of qualified privilege in proper form. (O'Donaghue v. M'Govern, 23 Wend. 26; Buddington v. Davis, 6 How. Pr. 401,) If the letter were absolutely privileged, then the plea might be sustained for the reason that the law would not permit the plaintiff’s plea of falsity and malice. (Garr v. Selden, 4 N. Y. 94.)
The interlocutory judgment is reversed, with costs, and the demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to the defendant to plead over on payment of costs.
Hooker, Gaynor, Rich and Miller, JJ\, concurred.
Interlocutory judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to the defendant to plead over on payment of costs.