91 Pa. Super. 117 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued March 18, 1927.
Plaintiff has appealed in an action for slander which resulted in a verdict for him for six cents. The statement of claim averred that he was engaged in the automobile repair business in the City of Lancaster; that defendant came into his place of business and said to him in the presence and hearing of others: "You stole a battery out of my car and put an old worn-out battery in," and that as a result thereof plaintiff not *119
only suffered general damages but that he lost the trade of "divers persons who used to have dealing and business with him in his lawful trade." The latter averment constituted a sufficient averment of special damages (Leitz v. Hohman,
Plaintiff testified that defendant uttered the slanderous words in the presence of a customer who was considering the matter of having the motor of his car "overhauled," but did not do so. He was asked by his counsel: "What would you have received if he had had that work done?" Defendant's objection was sustained. When one of plaintiff's witnesses, an automobile mechanic in his employ who was present at the same time and testified that when the slanderous remark was made there were customers in the garage who heard it, was asked: "Do you know what they wanted done?," defendant's objection to the question was sustained. These rulings are the basis of the second assignment of error. It is urged that the answers attempted to be secured by these questions were relevant and competent as tending to establish special damages. There is no merit in the contention, because there was no offer to prove that the prospective customers intended to have any work done by plaintiff and that the slanderous words of defendant were the cause of their failure to have him do it. Hence the ruling was not erroneous.
Plaintiff offered to prove by certain witnesses that his reputation for honesty had always been the best and that their business relations with him were satisfactory. The sustaining of defendant's objections to these offers is the subject of the third assignment of error. It is well settled in this jurisdiction that where at the trial of an action for libel or slander there has been no attack of any kind, open or covert, on plaintiff's *120
reputation, evidence of his good character is not admissible: Burkhardt v. North American Co.,
The fourth, fifth and sixth assignments of error complain of the charge in respect to damages. The learned trial judge correctly instructed the jury that as the words alleged to have been used charged plaintiff with an offense involving moral turpitude and subjecting him to infamous punishment, he need offer no other evidence of actual damage, and that if the language testified to by plaintiff was uttered in the presence of others, he would be entitled to some damage at the hands of the jury. Then followed this: "It, however, must be only such sum as would vindicate the plaintiff, to show that he was not guilty of the offense charged by the defendant. They must not be so large as to materially injure the defendant. In cases of this kind damages for vindication are usually some nominal sum, but that is a matter for you. If you find that the defendant used the language ascribed to him by the plaintiff, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff in such sum as you think would vindicate the plaintiff." It is urged upon us that this instruction amounted to reversible error. After the fullest consideration, we are of one mind that this is true. Plaintiff's proof of the utterance of the slander charged entitled him to general damages, which are, "such as the law will presume to be the natural or probable consequences of the defandant's conduct. Such *121
general damages will be presumed where the words are actionable per se." Leitz v. Hohman, supra, citing Odgers on Libel and Slander (Bl. ed., *239). Words charging one with a criminal offense impair his reputation, if any he has, although no actual pecuniary loss has resulted. For that impairment and for his lacerated feelings he is entitled to compensation: Palmer v. Pittsburgh Leader,
The suggestion in the charge that in cases "of this kind damages for vindication are usually some nominal sum" was especially prejudicial to plaintiff because of the peculiar status of actions of slander in respect to the recovery of costs, fixed by the Act of March 27, 1713, Sec. 3 (1 Smith's Laws, 76; 4 Purdon, 4403), which reads: "In all actions upon the case for slanderous words, to be sued or prosecuted, by any person or persons, in any court within this province, if the jury, upon the trial of the issue in such action, or the jury that shall inquire of the damages, do assess or find the damages under forty shillings, then the plaintiff or plaintiffs in such action shall have and recover only so much costs as the damages so given or assessed do amount unto, without any further increase of the same." In Moon v. Long,
The first assignment of error, complaining of the refusal to grant a new trial, and the fourth, fifth and *123 sixth assignments of error are sustained. The others are overruled.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted.