52 N.Y.S. 484 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The action is to recover damages for an alleged libel. The libel consisted in an article .published by the defendant, which charged the plaintiff with being insane. In substance, the publication stated that the plaintiff and two sisters were triplets, and that they had. all become insane at about the same time. The article was published on the 13th day of December,, 1893. The' answer pleaded justification, and also matter in mitigation. It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff was older than her two sisters, who were twins, by some ten years, and there was no claim by the defendant that the article . in respect of charging that three were born at the same time was true, or by plaintiff that it was libelous in this regard. It did, however, appear that the two sisters were confined in. the Bellevue Hospital as insane persons, but the plaintiff had never been determined to be a lunatic, and was never confined in any asylum for lunacy.,
Upon the trial an attempt was made by the defendant to establish, not only matter in mitigation, but also in justification of the publication., This proof consisted of matter arising subsequent to the publication. The court excluded all such testimony, upon the ground that no matter occurring subsequent to the publication, of the libel could be considered, cither as constituting-a. defense or as matter in mitigation^ and in various forms such questions were presented throughout the trial, and the court consistently ruled that the whole should' be. excluded. In many respects we think the learned ■court, in making these rulings, fell into error. It is not at .all essential that we review- in detail all of the rulings, made by the court, nor do we assert that all the rulings of the court, in the exclusion of • testimony, constituted error. ' But in the main We think that all of •' the testimony having reference to the plaintiff and her connection with her sisters, together with her conduct, declarations, and letters written to the physicians having control of the hospital where the sisters were detained, should have been received and submitted to the jury, as bearing upon the question of the actual insanity of the plaintiff,, and also, in so far as they were relevant,, upon the good faith of the defendant in making the publication, and thereby having direct relation to the question of the mitigation of damages.
The gist of the complaint lay in the fact that the article charged that the plaintiff was insane, and such testimony Avould have tended to establish such fact. It was, therefore, relevant, and its rejection was error. The same thing was true, of the limitation placed upon the cross-examination of the plaintiff herself. As the question of insanity Avas at issue, the defendant became entitled, upon cross-examination, to show the whole history of the plaintiff, both before and after the publication, and the development of such history would be relevant testimony, from which the jury might have concluded that she was insane at the time when the publication was made.
For the purpose of establishing that the plaintiff was confined in the St. John’s Hospital at a tiine when it was claimed that she was present at .the Bellevue Hospital,; Sister Mary David, who was in charge of the St. John’s Hospital, and Dr. Bumster, who was its attending physician, were called by the plaintiff. Both gave evidence in respect to the time when the plaintiff entered the hospital and the length of. time she remained, and the character of her malady ; the object being to show that hot only was she present in . the hospital, but that she was suffering from a disease which prevented her from leaving it. It is quite clear, from an examination of the testimony of both of these witnesses, that sufficient time intervened, in which neither had the immediate supervision of the person of the plaintiff, to enable her to have left the hospital and visited
We do not deem it necessary to point out further errors in this case. As to some of the matters excluded by the court, for the reason that the transaction was subsequent to the publication, the-ruling may be upheld; but in the main, as we have already observed, the history and character and mental condition of the plaintiff were in issue, and upon such questions the defendant became entitled to a considerable latitude, as insanity is established by the acts and conduct of the person, as well as by the opinion of expert witnesses .upon such subject;- and it was, therefore, not only proper but desir- . able that the jury should have laid before them all of the facts and the fullest history of the plaintiff herself to enable them to correctly determine such questions. As the plaintiff has died since the verdict., the action abates and no new trial can be had.
The judgment should, therefore^ be reversed.
All concurred, except Bartlett, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed.