64 Mo. App. 466 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This is an action for slander. The plaintiff had judgment in the lower court, from which the defendant appeals.
It is alleged in the petition that the defendant spoke of and concerning the plaintiff in the presence of William Abernathy, D. G-. Browning, and A. B. Trask, and divers other persons, the following false and slanderous words, that is to say: “See here, I am going to have you [meaning plaintiff] arrested, if you [meaning plaintiff] don’t come up and pay for them rails you [meaning plaintiff] took from down there, and I am going to jug you [meaning the plaintiff] and jug you [ meaning the plaintiff] damned hard. ’ ’ Thereby meaning, and was so understood by the persons present and hearing said words, to charge the plaintiff with the crime of larceny in stealing and taking away fence rails, the property of defendant, by which plaintiff says he is damaged, etc.
The answer denies the speaking of the precise words alleged in the plaintiff’s petition, and then proceeds to allege the words that were actually spoken by him and the facts and circumstances surrounding the speaking of the same. It further alleges that “in the use of the language and conversation hereinbefore stated' in reference to said rails, he relied in good faith upon the information received from said Mantello, but did not charge, or intend to charge, the plaintiff with the crime of larceny, nor was he so understood by the persons then and there present; on the contrary, the defendant avers and charges the .fact to be that he only charged and accused, and intended to charge and accuse, the plaintiff with the commission of a trespass in taking and hauling said rails away from off defendant’s farm, and it was so understood by the persons then and there present, which defendant in good faith
The defendant assigns as error the action of the-court in permitting plaintiff and other witnesses to testify that they understood from the words alleged in the-petition .to have been uttered in their hearing by the-defendant, that he (defendant) meant to charge plaintiff with stealing rails. It appears from the defendant’s-' abstract that' the plaintiff and the witness Brownlee were permitted, without objection, to testify that they understood from the words used by the defendant that the plaintiff had stolen the rails from defendant’s place, and that he (defendant) was going to have plaintiff' arrested for the act. It is quite true that later on the. court permitted the witness just named, over the objection of defendant, with others, to testify as to what: they understood the defendant meant by the use of the alleged slanderous words. The evidence thus admitted' over defendant’s objection was but cumulative of that-which had been offered by plaintiff and admitted without challenge by defendant. The action of the court in admitting such evidence, even though improper, would of itself alone afford no ground for disturbing-the judgment.
But did the court err in permitting the witnesses to-testify their understanding of defendant’s meaning in the language used? Both the plaintiff and defendant,, in their respective pleadings, and instructions, have assumed that the words constituting the alleged slanderous charge are of the class that are not actionable per se. As to whether or not, in cases of this kind, the persons who heard the words charged to be slanderous, ought to be permitted to testify what meaning they
The rule to be deduced from the authorities to be presently cited, including those of our own state, is that, in an action where the words are not obviously slanderous, that, in order to entitle plaintiff to recover, first, he must allege and prove that the words were actually used in an actionable sense and were applied to plaintiff; second, that the hearers so understood them, and upon this latter point the testimony of the hearers as to how they understood them is admissible. Dyer v. Morris, 4 Mo. 214; Christal v. Craig, 80 Mo. 367; Unterberger v. Scharff, 51 Mo. App. 102; Walker v. Haeffner, 54 Mo. App. 554; Wagner v. Printing Co., 45 Mo. App. 6; Buford v. Young, 115 Ind. 174; Smart v. Blanchard, 42 N. H. 149; Russell v. Kelly, 44 Cal. 641; Nidever v. Hall, 67 Cal. 79; Mix v. Woodward, 12 Cam. 262; Nelson v. Borchenius, 52 Ill. 236; Briggs v. Byrd, 11 Ind. 353; Tompkins v. Wisener, 1 Smed. 458; Leonard v. Allen, 11 Cush. 271; Newell on Slander, sec. 770; Odgers on Slander, 436; Townsend on Slander, 641.
But the defendant cites, and relies on as denying the rule just stated, the recent ruling of the supreme court in Callahan v. Ingram, 122 Mo. 355. An examination of that ease will show that the ruling there made was in a case where the words upon which the action was based were actionable in themselves. The words “downright thief” were in that case applied to
The defendant further objects that the trial court erred in its action in refusing to permit the defendant, who was a witness in his own behalf, to testify as to what meaning he intended to convey by the use of the alleged slanderous words. There was no error in the refusal of the court to permit the defendant to testify as to the motive and intention of the defendant in speaking the slanderous words, so far as his testimony in that regard affected the right to recover compensatory damages. The effect would be the same, though he meant one thing and said another. He is answerable for so inadequately expressing himself. But the motive and intention with which the words were spoken lie at the foundation of malice. They are the conditions upon which exemplary damages are founded and no good reason is perceived why a defendant should not be permitted to prove what his motive and intention were. The intention and motive of the defendant
We think the court further erred in rejecting defendant’s offer to show the facts and circumstances detailed in his answer, in relation to the taking of the rails by the plaintiff from the farm purchased by defendant of Stringer; also in rejecting defendant’s offer to show that one Mantello had informed defendant that plaintiff had taken the rails from the farm purchased by defendant of Stringer, under an arrangement with the latter before the purchase of the same by defendant. Anything which tended to disprove malice was admissible in mitigation. The absence of malice may be shown by proving that defendant believed, and had some reason to believe, the charge to be true when made. This can be done either by proving that he received such information from others as induced him to believe the charge to be true, or by proving the existence of facts within his knowledge calculated to produce such belief. Townsend on Slander, 676; Bush v. Prosser, 11 N. Y. 347; Hatfield v. Lasher, 81 N. Y. 249; Jones v. Townsend, 21 Fla. 431.
Since, as we have seen, it was competent for the witnesses to testify, as they did, to their understanding of the words uttered by the defendant, and since it appears that they did testify that they understood the words in the sense ascribed to them in the innuendo, therefore, the plaintiff’s prima facie ease was properly made out and that the court did not err in overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.
The plaintiff’s first instruction, standing alone, would probably be obnoxious to the rule declared in Clarke v. Hammerle, 27 Mo. 55, and later cases, but
The further objection is made that the plaintiff’s said instruction leaves it for the jury, inter alia, to find whether or not the defendant, in uttering the words, meant to charge thereby the plaintiff with the crime of larceny in stealing defendant’s rails, and was so understood by the persons then present and hearing such words. We have already sufficiently shown, as we think, that it was necessary for the plaintiff both to allege and prove the fact submitted to the finding of the jury by the above italicized words. And besides this, the defendant’s eighth and eleventh instructions told the jury that unless they found this fact, their verdict should be for defendant. So that the defendant would be in no condition to complain, even if the instruction were erroneous, which it is not.
■ No inconsistency is perceived between the plaintiff’s fourth and the defendant’s eleventh instructions. The former told the jury, in effect, that if the defendant, in speaking the words set out in the petition meant to impute to plaintiff the crime of larceny and was so understood by the persons present and hearing the same, then the law presumes such words were spoken maliciously. The latter declared that before plaintiff could recover, it devolved upon him to show that such words were spoken with malicious intention and were so understood by the persons hearing them. And when.the two are read in connection with the plaintiff’s second, defining malice, it becomes apparent that they are all sufficiently harmonious in expression.
We have given careful attention to the various objections urged to the action of the court in the giving and refusing of instructions, but have not been able to discover any that are well taken.