74 N.Y.S. 214 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The object of this action is the recovery of damages for a libel published in the New York Herald on 'the 24th day of October, 1897. The plaintiff had been a resident of the city of New York for about thirty years and had carried on business as a builder •during that time. At the general election in 1894 he was elected
“ Charles A. Parker, Republican candidate for alderman in the Twenty-ninth Assembly District, New York, was elected alderman in the old Twenty-fifth District in 1894. His path has been a rough one; Recently he has had some notoriety because of his alleged connection with a gaming house in Asbury Park, N. J. He was. born in 1851 in Long Branch, and was a farmer until he was nineteen' when he came to New York and learned the mason trade, in which he has since continued as a superintendent and master builder. He ran for the assembly in the year Fassett led the Republican host, but Mr. Parker was some, five thousand votes behind in the old Twenty-fifth District.
“ Annexed is a portrait of Charles'A. Parker.”
The sketch which he furnished contained all that was embodied in the article as published except the alleged libelous Words, which are, “ His path has been a rough one. Recently he has had some notoriety because of his alleged connection with a gaming house in Asbury Park, N. J.”
One Charles Parks had been a member Of the board of aldermen, for three years, representing the thirteenth district, and his term expired at the time plaintiff’s term began. The complaint alleged that the Herald and other New York dailies during the four years preceding the 7th day of December, 1897, the date of the com
The answer contained a general denial and set up, as a partial defense and in mitigation, that owing to the illegibility of plaintiff’s signature to the sketch furnished by him, the employees of the defendant mistook his name for Charles Parks, whose record they looke.d up and dictated' as published except that the stenographer by mistake changed the name from Parks to Parker, and that upon the discovery of the mistake, two days later, the Herald published a retraction and explanation under the heading, “ Justice to Charles A. Parker — Misstatement about Aldermanic candidate in Twenty-ninth District,” to the effect that the former article was published through a confusion of names and that the candidate Charles A. Parker was a well-known' master builder whose name had never been linked with the gambling house scandal at Asbury Park of with any other scandal.
Upon the trial plaintiff offered in evidence an article published in the Herald on the 17th day of November, 1894, headed, “ Parks found Guilty. The New York Alderman convicted of conducting a gambling place at Asbury Park.” The defendant’s counsel objected to this evidence as irrelevant, incompetent and tending to
It thus appears that Parks ceased to be a member of the board of aldermen before the plaintiff became a member of that body that Parks was a Democrat while plaintiff was a Republican;; that plaintiff’s name was not the same and he represented an. entirely different district from that previously represented by Parks. A fair likeness of the plaintiff was printed with the alleged! libel, and there' is no evidence that he in personal appearance resembled former Alderman Parks. It was not shown when or where Parks was born or how long he had resided in New York or whether he was a builder by trade. The alleged libel gave. the plaintiff’s, true name and made no express reference, at least, to Parks, concerning whom the article had been published nearly three years before. No evidence was given tending to show that “ connection with a gaming house in Asbury Park, N. J.,” was a crime, and we cannot take judicial notice of the statutory law of a foreign State, At common law, however, gaming houses were public-nuisances, and those keeping them were subject to indictment. (4 Black. Comm. *167, *168.) Doubtless, the article in and of itself was libelous ver se, as tending to disgrace the plaintiff and
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.