The statute of 18(58, Rev. Stat. c. 110, gives to a woman an action for words “which amount to_a *138 charge of incontinency;” which imports, we think, not mere-imputation of impure desires or a lascivious disposition, but the criminal fact oí adultery or fornication. It has not pleased the Legislature to go farther, and, perhaps, it could not be safely done; though often the accusation of a propensity, or the imputation of such conduct as only evinces propensity, and'nothing more, may be as destructive to the reputation of a woman, as the most explicit charge of personal prostitution. In the case before us, with every inclination to receive the words in the sense in which they were meant by the speaker, and were or would reasonably be understood byhearers, we cannot say, that, as stated by the two first witnesses, they import a charge of the very act of adultery, but only evil thoughts in the heart, which, perhaps, only waited for opportunity to break out into open lewdness. .
But one cannot be at a loss as to the sense in which the words' proved by the last witness are to be received. It is to be-remarked in- the beginning, that the defendant isdiable upon these words, as if he had directly affirmed the fact to be as he says it was reported, inasmuch as he states the report or impression about the plaintiff’s character as a gene-mi impression, without disclosing the name of any person from whom he received it.
Lord, Northampton’s
case, 12 Rep.
32.
And, indeed, if he had given the author, the repetition of this slander was so obviously malicious and for evil ends, that, upon the averment of those facts, it might have been left to the jury to find for the plaintiff, unless the defendant proved the fact of her guilt with him.
Hampton v Wilson,
Per Curiam, J udgment reversed and venire d& novo awarded.
