34 Minn. 521 | Minn. | 1886
This is an action for libel, the cause of action being the publication in a newspaper, on the ninth da¡y of July, 1884, of the following article: “A young man named Frank Mallory, employed as driver and collector by A. H. Gow, has disappeared with some of his employer’s funds, and the police have been notified. ” A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff. This appeal is from an order refusing a new trial. The only questions upon which our decision is invoked are those which we now proceed to consider.
1. It is said that the truth of the published statement was conclusively shown. This point suggests a brief statement of the facts in the case, and a consideration of the meaning to be attached to the language used. It was .shown that the plaintiff had been employed by Gow in selling and delivering, throughout the city of Minneapolis, a kind of beer manufactured by Gow; that the plaintiff left such service on the fifth of July, then having in his possession and retaining
2. It is claimed that the publication was privileged because made in good faith, as an item of news, and also because it was in aid of legal proceedings for the arrest of a person charged with crime. Upon neither of the grounds thus suggested can the defence of privilege be sustained. The right to publish, through the newspaper press, such
As to the point that the publication was in aid of legal proceedings against the plaintiff, it is enough to say that, not only is such a reason for the publication foreign to that alleged in the answer, where it is averred that the article was published “solely as an item of local news,” but it was not shown that any criminal proceedings against the plaintiff were ever instituted or contemplated.
3. At the trial the court overruled an objection to the question addressed to the plaintiff as a witness in his own behalf, “How many .customers did you have?” This is said to be error, because special damages were not pleaded. The evidence was admissible, within the rule which, where the defamatory words are actionable per se, so that damage is implied, allows proof, without special averment, of such general facts as the vocation and position in life of the plaintiff, such facts bearing upon the question of general damages. Klumph v. Dunn, 66 Pa. St. 141. It was not admissible for the purpose of showing special damages, nor was the examination in this direction allowed to go so far as to show any ground for the recovery of such damages. The evidence received was of no different nature than would have been the proof of the extent of the plaintiff’s acquaintance in the city.
4. Evidence was properly received of the fact that Gow was indebted to plaintiff when the latter left his service. It was important, in connection with other proofs, in its bearing upon the fact, which the evidence tended to show, that the money retained by the plaintiff, when he left his employer, was so retained by authority of the authorized agent of the latter, in payment of such indebtedness, and that the act was not therefore an embezzlement.
5. Of the only remaining point here presented, the question asked of the witness Gow upon cross-examination, as to how much money
Order affirmed.