5 Watts 439 | Pa. | 1836
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The evidence contained in the first bill of exceptions, was clearly incompetent. It is perhaps still unsettled how far a defendant may show, on the general issue, circumstances tending to a conclusion of guilt, though short of an actual justification; but it has never been supposed that he may prove the perpetration of a distinct crime belonging to the same class, in mitigation of damages. It seems to be affirmatively settled that he cannot, by Smithies v. Harrison, 1 Ld. Raym. 727; Helsden v. Mercer, Cro. Jac. 677; Andrews v. Vanduser, 11 Johns. 38; and Matthews v. Davis, 4 Bibb. 173. The only thing that could be suggested in its favour, is that, as every plaintiff in slander comes into court with his character in his hand, all evidence that would test it might seem proper to ascertain the extent of the injury done to it. But the same license
The evidence, contained in the second bill also was inadmissible. The prevalence of suspicions years before, might go in extenuation of malice, if haply that could avail the defendant, though its effect with the jury would be comparatively small. Here, however, there was not only a wide interval of time, but the compromise of a previous suit which implied no reservation of the question of guilt.— The paper signed on the occasion shows that the defendant spoke the words laid; and it concludes with an agreement to pay a small sum in damages. It is certainly an implied admission that the imputation was groundless. Having thus admitted himself to be apprised of the injustice of his suspicions, there is no plausible reason why the defendant should recur to them as an apology for his reiteration of the slander. If the existence of suspicions be admissible in any case, and it seems to be so by the force of authority, it must be to show the previous plight of the plaintiff’s character, Starkie on Slander 410, in order to estimate the injury to it; for it is agreed, Id., that as inducement to a belief of actual guilt, it is not competent to detract from the malignity of the defendant’s purpose, since any thing short of justification, must leave a residuum of malice sufficient to support the action, and damages it seems are given, Id. 162, not to punish but to compensate. This last, however, is not so clear. But it surely does not lessen the injury that the plaintiffs character, bleeding from a thousand wounds, has received only the finishing blow from the defendant. Who can say that it would not have weathered the storm had it not sunk at last under the accumulated weight of the defendant’s wrongs? I am unable to see the justice of estimating character by its fragments, or of treating as matter of extenuation, the fact that the injured party had suffered the same prejudice from another. The blow may fall the heavier on sensibilities morbid from the repetition of injury. The principal has no analogue in any other part of the law; for in the pursuit of reparation for a trespass to my person, I am not to be told that my battered carcass was of little worth to me by reason of a previous beating. All that could be done would be to protect the defendant from liability for specific in juries done by another. In that predicament the condition of the sufferer is an aggravation of the wrong, inasmuch as the residue of a man’s soundness, whether of body or character, is the more
■ Judgment affirmed.