179 Wis. 543 | Wis. | 1923
It is stated that at all the times of the speaking of the alleged slanders the defendant knew the following to be true: that plaintiff was neither sick nor under a physician’s care; that the destruction of any unborn child was not necessary to save plaintiff’s life; and that no advice that any such destruction was necessary could have been given by any physician. The recital of all or any of such facts could be of value in this pleading only by way of inducement as tending to show facts outside of those stated in the language upon which each cause of action was based, and as tending to show that defendant must necessarily, knowing such facts, have intended to accuse plaintiff of a crime. But it is not alleged that the hearers knew such facts or any of them. It is the surrounding or extraneous facts known to the hearers that can be used to give a particular or different color or meaning to alleged slanderous words, not those known only h> the speaker. For the gist of the action is not the mental impressions of the speaker’ but the effect of the natural and reasonable import of the words on the hearers under the facts as then known to them. Such facts so herein recited, therefore, cannot be considered in determining whether the complaint states a cause of action. Such is the rule. Weil v. Schmidt, 28 Wis. 137, 141; Pfister v. Milwaukee F. P. Co. 139 Wis. 627, 653, 121 N. W. 938; Young v. Cook, 144 Mass. 38, 43, 10 N. E. 719.
The liberal rules of pleading are of course to be followed in construing a complaint of this nature. Downer v. Tubbs, 152 Wis. 177, 180, 139 N. W. 820. But nevertheless the mere statement by the pleader that the particular words relied upon do impute a criminal charge, as in this case by stating miscarriage or abortion, cannot merely thereby
It is the duty of the court in the first instance to determine whether the meaning ascribed by the pleader to the words is a natural and proper one, and if it is not, then the complaint must fall. If there be a possibility of such meaning being properly ascribed to them, then it may become a question for the jury. Bradley v. Cramer, 59 Wis. 309, 18 N. W. 268; Leuch v. Berger, 161 Wis. 564, 570, 155 N. W. 148; Culver v. Marx, 157 Wis. 320, 321, 147 N. W. 358.
The substance of the words used in all four of the causes of action amount to no more, in their natural and reasonable meaning, than stating that a pregnant married woman has the body of such child taken from her. Of course here there is no imputation of immorality by alleging the fact of pregnancy as would follow in a case of a similar statement concerning an unmarried woman. A miscarriage from natural causes or as a result of an accident would not impute any breach of law or morals on the part of the mother, and a "miscarriage resulting from either of such would be no more and no less than the mother thereby being rid of such child, as is the substance of the charge in the words here. That in describing by innuendo the claim of the pleader as to what defendant meant and the hearer understood by the words charged to have been spoken, using the term “abortion” and then the term “miscarriage,” does not make any difference. There is no material legal distinction between them as so used, and technically they are differentiated only by the age of the foetus. Neither of themselves imports a charge of criminal intent. Comm. v.
The words relied upon, therefore, in all these four several causes of action not of themselves necessarily or properly importing that the plaintiff of whom they were spoken had committed a crime, and there being nothing upon the face of the pleading as it must be construed, either by .inducement or innuendo, that can enlarge them to that extent, they must, therefore be held to be not actionable.
The decision of the trial court in overruling the demurrer below was based upon Filber v. Dautermann, 26 Wis. 518, the language there used of the plaintiff being: “You have administered’to your daughter pills to drive off the child.” Such words as so used against one evidently not a physician were held to impute to such plaintiff an attempt to procure an abortion.
There is a substantial difference, in our judgment, between the two. There the plaintiff was charged as being in the situation of a third person who administers drugs or medicines to another perspn, the mother of an unborn child, while here the statement is made concerning a married woman carrying a child. There the words directly conveyed the meaning that the plaintiff was actively and directly responsible by the use of a specific means, lawful only under certain conditions, for the removal of the foetus from another, and therefore necessarily unlawful in the absence of such condition. In the case at bar no specific means are alleged and nothing suggested by the words themselves that is not perfectly consistent with the losing of the foetus in a natural and lawful manner.
We think the case is controlled by what was determined as to the construction to be given to words susceptible of an innocent meaning as indicated in such cases as Benz v. Wiedenhoeft, 83 Wis. 397, 53 N. W. 686, and Pandow v. Eichsted, 90 Wis. 298, 63 N. W. 284, rather than by
The demurrers, therefore, to the several causes of action should have been sustained.
By the Court. — Order reversed.