197 N.W. 576 | Mich. | 1924
Plaintiff and his cousin Gigo were running a store at Albion. It was partially destroyed by fire on November 21st. There was much evidence that the fire was of incendiary origin and plaintiff in his testimony expressed the belief that it was set on fire. The first group of assignments of error we shall consider deal with the admission of statements and acts of Gigo. They were admitted upon the theory that a conspiracy between plaintiff and Gigo had been established, at least sufficiently so to take that question to the jury. There was considerable testimony tending to show that Gigo set the fire. The testimony implicating plaintiff with Gigo is meager, but we can not say upon the whole record that there was no testimony on that subject. Outside the testimony of the witness Vassileff, it was made up of circumstances of more or less importance which justified the court in submitting to the jury the question of whether there was concert of action between plaintiff and Gigo to burn the store and collect the insurance. If there was a conspiracy between them the rule is well recognized that the acts *237 of each done in the furtherance of the common design are the acts of both, and the declarations of each in the furtherance of the common design admissible against either or both. The court properly instructed the jury, in substance, that they could not consider the acts or statements of Gigo, unless defendant had established, by the weight of the evidence, that a conspiracy existed.
We are persuaded that the trial judge unduly restricted plaintiff in his proof of damage to his business occasioned by the publication of the articles. But even with such restriction there was sufficient in the testimony to take that question to the jury. The trial judge erred in withdrawing it from the jury. Because defendant assigned and gave proof tending to show some other cause for the falling off of plaintiff's business did not carry the question into the realm of conjecture so as to prevent the jury from considering it.
The record discloses that plaintiff's brother Mladin and his wife Maricka appeared at the police station and made a complaint against plaintiff charging him with larceny. A reporter of defendant named Hartt was present. Over the objection of plaintiff's counsel he was permitted to testify to statements then made by them through an interpreter, and which statements were the basis of the first article written by him and set up in the statement of facts. Defendant's counsel expressly disaffirmed that this would justify, but claimed it was admissible for the purpose of showing good faith, in mitigation of plaintiff's claim for added damages. The principal objection to this testimony was that it was not established that the interpreter correctly interpreted their statement into English. We think for the purpose it was offered it was admissible. It did not justify nor was it claimed that it did. It is possible defendant's reporter should have *238 made more certain that the interpretation was correct, but, as bearing on his good faith, it was admissible and its force and effect was for the jury.
We have already stated that plaintiff's connection with the fire was made a question for the jury; there was testimony that insurance money was deposited in an Albion bank and $1,100 drawn out through a friend of plaintiff; there was testimony that a complaint was made against him for larceny, but the complaint was dismissed; there was testimony that he left Albion in the night and went to Battle Creek driving his Reo car which had not been fully paid for, the balance not being due, but there is not a scintilla of testimony that he "whipped out an automatic revolver and tried to kill her (Maricka)," that he made an assault on her or that she accused him of setting the store on fire and that he admitted it, or that he took $50 belonging to her. The testimony shows that there was some trouble between plaintiff on the one hand and Mladin and Maricka on the other, in which Maricka claimed a certain dress was hers and claimed plaintiff had taken it. The men engaged in a scuffle, but plaintiff had no revolver in his possession, made no attempt to kill Maricka or assault her. Plaintiff's counsel requested the court to direct a verdict for plaintiff. This request should have been granted. By the article plaintiff was charged with attempting to murder his sister-in-law. Indeed this was the main feature of the article and was played up in the headline. Not only was there no testimony sustaining this charge but all the testimony showed that it was without any foundation in fact. While defendant made the question of justification of some of the other charges questions for the jury, it utterly failed in justifying this, the main and most serious charge, in the article. Justification to be available must be justification of the crime charged and proof tending to justify the *239 charge of the crime of arson does not justify a charge of attempted murder.
The judgment will be reversed with a new trial. Plaintiff will recover costs of this court.
CLARK, C.J., and McDONALD, BIRD, SHARPE, MOORE, STEERE, and WIEST, JJ., concurred.