Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of The complaint charged that the defendants wrongfully defamed plaintiff and brought her into contempt and by publishing in the columns of a widely circulated daily the following statement: “Eddie Peabody’s divorcing wife, ten years his senior, is also his aunt! ’ ’ The innuendo which follows the alleged libelous words sets forth that the article referred to plaintiff’s husband, Edwin Ellsworth Peabody; that by the phrase “divorcing wife” defendants intended to designate plaintiff and that by the expression “Eddie Peabody’s divorcing wife . . . also his aunt” defendants to imply that plaintiff and her husband contracted an incestuous marriage; that the article was so understood by its readers; and that such marriage was contrary to law and therefore void. Nonsuit was granted after plaintiff had her evidence.
In support of the judgment defendants submit that: (1) the publication was not libelous per se because it was of an innocent interpretation; (2) that if the language is not libelous per se no cause of action is stated because no special damages are pleaded; (3) that the court properly the evidence offered in proof of special damages.
(1) A publication is libelous per
se
when on its face and without the aid of innuendo, it exposes a person to hatred, contempt, ridicule or obloquy or causes him to be shunned or avoided or which has a tendency to injure him in his occupation. (Civ. Code, §45.) Whether the language used is libelous per
se
must be determined from the language itself. (Mortensen v.
Los Angeles Examiner,
The offensive imputations of the article complained of by plaintiff is found in the phrases “Eddie Peabody’s wife ... is also his aunt.” In order to constitute these words a libel, it is necessary so to construe their meaning as to make plaintiff and her husband guilty of a crime, to wit, an incestuous marriage. To do so would require the reader to assume that the words used could have no other than that plaintiff was the consanguineal aunt of her husband. Also it would require the denial of the strongest of disputable presumptions that a person is innocent of crime and that the law has been obeyed. (10 Cal. Jur. p. 762.)
When offending language is susceptible of an interpretation it is not actionable
per se.
Neither will language be given a libelous character unless such is its plain and obvious import.
(Dillard
v.
Shattuck,
36 N. M. 202 [
In the instant case if the offending language on its face could have meant that plaintiff was her husband’s aunt by her former marriage, then it could not have been libelous per se.
(2) Where the publication is not libelous
per se
the language used has a covert meaning, it is for the jury, under proper pleadings and instructions, to declare the true import of the words used.
(Hearne
v.
De Young,
Where the detriment suffered by plaintiff is alleged to have resulted from the estrangement of friends or in the hatred, contempt or obloquy of contemporaries, then the names of such persons so affected must be set forth in the complaint, together with the value of the losses suffered. It is a rule of ancient origin that affirmative pleadings must give the adversary party such notice of the matters to be proved as will enable him to prepare to meet them at the trial. Such matters not having been included in the complaint in the instant case, it fails to meet the requirements of the law.
The only reference in the complaint to damage is the allegation of general damage which declares that by reason of the publication of the “defamatory article . . . plaintiff has been by it injured in her good name, fame and reputation and has suffered damage thereby in the sum of $50,000.” The only other language by which plaintiff attempted to allege facts appertaining to injuries which she might have suffered is found in the following language: “that plaintiff herein has for twelve years last past been in close contact with the public throughout the state of California and neighboring states, wherein the newspaper of said defendant Hearst Publications, Incorporated, is distributed and throughout the United States; that in her said career she has acquired a wide acquaintanceship; that plaintiff has always conducted herself with propriety. . .” These allegations utterly fail to meet the requirements for alleging special damages.
*586 There is nothing in the complaint from which it may be fairly inferred that pláintiff suffered injury as a natural and proximate consequence of, the publication complained of. (Townshend on Slander and Libel (3d ed.), .§§ 146, 148.) The absence of such allegation and of the allegation of special damages renders plaintiff’s complaint utterly inadequate to warrant an inquiry into the results of the publication.
In view of our conclusions with reference to the insufficiency of the pleading, it will be unnecessary to discuss the rulings of the court in excluding the testimony sought to be adduced in proof of special damages.
Judgment is affirmed.
Wood (W.J.), J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 6, 1942. Carter, J., voted for a hearing.
