75 Mo. App. 45 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
There were averments of special and punitive damages and a separate prayer for both compensatory and punitive damages. The answer was a general denial, except as to specific admissions. The answer averred the truth of the fact that the plaintiff had borrowed the book of the defendant, and admitted that he had stated to some persons (the names not remembered) that plaintiff had borrowed the book, but averred that such statements were not made in malice or with the purpose or design to injure the plaintiff in her good name. A reply was filed. The issues were tried by a jury, who found a verdict for the plaintiff and assessed her compensatory damages at $500. No punitive damages were given. Within four days after the return of the verdict the defendant filed his motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were by the court overruled and defendant duly appealed.
Lee Davis, another witness mentioned in the petition testified that the defendant remarked to him (producing the book) “that is one of the books Miss Eidith had of mine for some time, but he had at length succeeded in getting it; that witness took the book and casually looked at it; that defendant made no remarks abqut plaintiff further than that he had got his books back.
Joseph Sams, another witness named in the petition as a person in whose presence slanderous words are alleged to have been spoken, testified that defendant told him that the plaintiff had borrowed the book in the fall of 1894;' that witness told defendant he had heard so much about the book in the neighborhood that if defendant would bring it and show it to him he might change his opinion; that defendant brought the book and showed it to him and left it with him and told him he could show it to whom he pleased; that defendant afterward wrote the witness the following letter concerning the circulation of said book, to wit :
June 27, ’95, Indian Creek, Mo.
Mr. Joseph Sams, Warren, Mo.:
After considering the matter I’ve thought it best not to make too much of a display of that book. You may show it to,some of those that are so much concerned in our affairs. I hear she has our school and I would not like to do anything that would defeat her. I was in Monroe yesterday and last night and I saw Mr. McAtee and I was not shot at either. It will only take time for some of her crew to be convinced of a few things. So you may keep the book and show it to those concerned.”
At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence; this the court refused to give.
Defendant offered no evidence. The court of its own motion gave the following instruction for the plaintiff:
*52 instruction *51 “If the jury findfrom the evidence that the defendant spoke of and concerning the plaintiff in the presence and hearing of one or more persons the following words, to wit: ‘This is one of the books she got of me last October. She has had it over in her school and I just got it back to-day. She took it directly from my hand. I never sent it to her. She borrowed this book of me the latter part of last October, and has had it over there at her school in her possession until I got it a week or two ago. I brought it over to show yon, and I want you to show it to the other patrons of the district. I want them to know what kind of a woman they have got for a teacher.’ Or that he spoke*52 enough of the above words and in such a manner and under such circumstances as to cause the person or persons so hearing said words to understand that the defendant thereby intended to charge and did charge that the plaintiff was unchaste or lewd and that by the word ‘book’ as above mentioned the defendant meant the book which was given in evidence, then you will find for the plaintiff.”
The court refused to give the following instruction asked by defendant:
*53 ixstructions c a ted ^ n 6p íead in gs and evidence. *52 “The court instructs the jury that if they belie re from the evidence in this cause that the plaintiff at any time received the book offered in evidence, to wit, “Dr. Bate’s Marriage Gruide,” from the defendant or had the same in her possession their verdict must be for the defendant.” To the giving of one and the refusal to give the other of these instructions, defendant saved his exceptions. In view of the contents of the book, the exhibition of it to the witness by the defendant for their examination, coupled with the statements that he had loaned it to the plaintiff, and that she had it in her possession for a number of months, was calculated to bring her into disrepute, to show that she was morally impure, disqualified by reason of moral degeneracy to follow her vocation, and unworthy of her employment as teacher of a public school. If these things were done and the words were spoken with reference to her as a school teacher, the slander is actionable per se and damages are inferable. Rummell v. Otis, 60 Mo. 365. The instruction given by the court undertakes to cover the whole case and incorporates the slanderous words alleged in the petition; the fault of the instruction is that it tells the jury, among other things, “that if they shall find that the defendant used this language, to wit, ‘I brought it over to show you, and I want you to*53 show it to the other patrons of the district. I want them to know what kind of a woman they have got for teacher,’ etc.,” when there is no evidence whatever that the defendant used this language or any of the words used in this clause. Instructions should be predicated upon both the pleadings and evideuce, and not upon the pleadings alone. Bergeman v. R. R., 104 Mo 77; Tyler v. Hall, 106 Mo. 313; R'y v. R. R., 118 Mo. 599. An instruction should not be given where there is no evidence to base it on, nor should an instruction be hypothecated on any fact of which there is no evidence. State v. McKinzie, 102 Mo. 620; Campbell v. Houten, 44 Mo. App. 231; McCarthy v. Fagin, 42 Mo. App. 619. The gravamen of the charge of slander is the statement made by defendant that plaintiff borrowed the book of him and kept it for months, the imputation of immorality arises from the fact that she borrowed and kept the book for such a length of time as to have enabled her to ascertain the nature of its contents, and after learning of its immoral character continued to hold on to it.