74 Pa. 65 | Pa. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered, July 2d 1873, by
But one assignment of error in this case requires notice, the answer of the court to the plaintiff’s ninth point. The court was asked to instruct the jury, that in order to sustain an action for libel it is not necessary to prove a joint engagement in making and publishing it; that all that is required is to know that each or any one of the defendants is guilty, and the jury can bring in a verdict against all or any one, or separate verdicts against any two or more of them. The court negatived this point, but said the jury might find a verdict against one of the defendants, but not separate damages against both. The easiest disposition of this assignment of error would be to say that the court having informed the jury they could find against either one of the. defendants, and they having returned a verdict in favor of both, no injury was done even if there was error in the answer; for the verdict proves that neither was guilty. But as the question involved is not clear according to English authorities, it is proper we should dispose of it for ourselves. And we think it is substantially settled on authority in this state. In Bard & Wenrich v. Yohn, 2 Casey 482, it was held that a proof of separate acts not committed with a common design or for a common purpose, and without concert, will not authorize a joint recovery. “ To entitle a plaintiff to a verdict against several defendants as joint trespassers, it must appear that they acted in concert in committing the trespass complained of.” And in Little Schuylkill Nav. Co. v. Richards, 7 P. F. Smith 142, it was held, that when several coal operators, separately and without concert of action, cast their coal dirt into the Little Schuylkill, at their respective mines, and this dirt lodged in the dam of the plaintiff, filling it by accumulation, these operators were not jointly liable for the tort, nor was each liable beyond his own deposit in the stream. The same principle is asserted by the present Chief Justice in Laverty v. Vanarsdale, 15 P. F. Smith 509. Quoting the language of another case, he says, “Where the action is brought against two or more as concerned in the wrong done, it is necessary, in order to recover against all of them, to prove combination or a joint act of all. For