102 Ky. 317 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from the Hancock Circuit -Court from a judgment rendered in the suit of the appellants against the appellee. It seems to be conceded that the original petition! was defective, and the question for decision is- as to the sufficiency of the amended petition, to which a demurrer was sustained and the action dismissed, from which judgment appellants prosecute this appeal.
Said amended petition reads as follows: The said plaintiff, Laura Lyons, amends! her petition herein and states, that she is an unmarried female sixteen years of age, and was up until the grievances hereinafter complained of a person of good repute for chastity in the neighborhood where she resides. That in said neighborhood to speak of and concerning an unmarried female the words, “She is set up?
Said plaintiff for further cause of action against said defendant states that she is an unmarried female sixteen years of age, and up until the happening of the grievances hereinafter (complained of she was of good repute for chastity in the neighborhood where she resides. That in +bat.
Further complaining said plaintiff states that she is an unmarried female sixteen years of age. That in the neighborhood where she resides and where the words were spoken as set out hereinafter the words “got her belly up,” when spoken of an unmarried female have a provincial and local meaning and mean that the person thus spoken of is in a family way with child and by reason thereof had committed
Whereby the said plaintiff has been injured in her good name and reputation and by reason of said injuries has been
It is said in section 133 of Townsend on Slander: “Language is always to be regarded with reference to what has been its effect actual or presumed, and the sense to be arrived at with the help of the cause and occasion of its publication. The court or the jury is to place itself in the situation of the hearer or reader and determine the sense or: meaning of the language in question according to its natural and popular construction. . . . The law can not be evaded by any of the artful and disguised modes in which men attempt to conceal the libelous or slanderous meaning, and the fact of language being ungrammatical, or such as is not usually found in any dictionary, will not suffice to* prevent the law taking cognizance of such language off-meaning it properly conveys.”
In note 3 on page 178 it is said: “Words calculated to induce the hearers to suspect that plaintiff was- guilty of the Grimes alleged are actionable. It is not necessary that the words in terms should charge- a crime. If such is the necessary inference, taking the words altogether and in their popular meaning, they are actionable.”
In note 1, page 179, in Commonwealth v. Childs, 13 Pick., 198, it is said by Shaw, Chief Justice: “The court will regard the use of fictitious names and disguises in a libel in the sense, that they are commonly understood. If therefore obscure and ambiguous language is used, or language which is figurative or ironical, courts and juries will understand-it according to its true meaning and; import; and the sense ini
It seems to us that upon authority, as well as the known meaning of the1 words charged in the amended petition .to have been spoken by the appellee, that the reasonable and well understood effect of the words alleged to have been spoken clearly amounted to the statement that the plaintiff had been guilty of the offense of fornication, and that the same are actionable per se, and especially so as explained by the colloquium in the pleading. The words charged to< have been .spoken by the appellee, it seems to us could have no reasonable meaning except the intent to charge that the plaintiff was unchaste. Tt therefore results that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended petition.
The judgment appealed from is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for proceedings consistent with this opinion.