62 N.H. 594 | N.H. | 1883
At common law an action on the case might be had, without alleging or proving special damages, for scandalous words that might endanger a person by subjecting him to the penalties of the law. It was sufficient that there was a probability that damage might happen. Charging a person with being an adulterer was not of itself actionable, any more than calling him a heretic. Such acts were considered scandals concerning matters merely spiritual, and were cognizable only in the ecclesiastical court. Hence no action at law would lie unless temporal damage ensued, when the injured person might bring his action laid with a per quod. 3 Bl. Com. 124, 125.
Woodbury v. Thompson,
Exceptions overruled.
STANLEY J., did not sit: the others concurred. *596