(after stating the facts as above).
In the Walker Case above cited it was held by this court, аnd we so hold in this case, that, when a libel is charged within the purview of the statute, it is not necessary for the petition to allege any special damage. We are of opinion that the effect of thе statute under consideration is to abolish the distinction which exists at common, law between libel per se and libel otherwise, in so far as the right of recovery is concerned. Of course, in a certain sensе, the class of things which are said to constitute libel per se at common law may be said to be more libelous than certain other things which constitute libel within the purview of the statute; but the latter, as well as the former, constitute libel, and this is true because the statute so declares.
In the instant case, while the first publication did not mention the name of any one, it described the plaintiff in the divorce suit as having been married before and divorсed from her former husband, and described the defendant as employed by the city of Houston as a fireman and captain of a fire station, and stated that his salary under that employment was $90 per month. The second publication stated in terms that Mrs. Leora Alice Fischer had brought suit against-her husband Chas. H. Fischer, who was described as a city fireman, and the publication stated that he had filed an interesting answer, protesting that he still loved his wife and would antagonize her efforts to secure a decree of separation, and that on the regular pay day he drew his $90, but failed to comply with the order of Judge Hamblen of the Fifty-Fifth distriсt to pay $25 of that sum to Mrs. Fischer as alimony. The second publication tends to supply what was omitted from the first, and to identify the plaintiff in that suit; and we are not prepared to say that persons acquainted with Mrs. Fischer and her mother, upon reading the two publications, might not reasonably conclude that they were the two women referred to in the first publication. At any rate, the two publications furnished a clew by which that fact could be ascertained, and therefore they tended to do that which the libel statute prohibits.
Our conclusion is that the trial court committed error in sustaining the demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition, and, for that reason, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
