115 So. 88 | Ala. | 1927
The following principles in the law of libel are well settled by the authorities:
1. "The article or conversation need not be set out in full; it being sufficient if the petition contains the material part or only so much as is necessary to show an actionable imputation." 37 Corp. Jur. 28, § 337.
In Weir v. Hoss and wife,
"It was not necessary to set out the entire publication, but it was sufficient to set out such parts as the plaintiff complained of as libelous, if the plaintiff does not, by omitting some portions, produce a new arrangement, and thereby alter the sense. * * * The proper mode is to show [in defense] that the selected parts are extracts, and, if the omitted parts explain, or render innocuous, the parts selected, the defendant may have the advantage of it on the general issue. Such was the mode adopted in this case in strict conformity with the precedents."
The text of 17 R. C. L. 390, § 142, relied on by the Court of Appeals, does not contradict the other authorities above cited, but is applicable only when the excerpt stated is on its face incomplete, and shows an omission of a part of the complete statement.
2. If the matter complained of is libelous per se, no innuendo is necessary, and, if laid, may be disregarded as surplusage. 37 Corp. Jur. 25, § 332; Penry v. Dozier,
3. "If a count sets out words not actionable and words spoken at the same time which are actionable, the count is good." 37 Corp. Jur. 21, § 327; Bash v. Sommer,
4. "It is not necessary, to entitle the plaintiff to recover, that he should prove the speaking of all the words alleged; if he proves some of them which are actionable without reference to the others, it is quite sufficient." Scott v. McKinnish and wife,
5. It is well settled that "a communication concerning a public official, made to his superior or [to a] person with power to redress a wrong, is qualifiedly privileged"; but "to come within this rule the officer or board addressed must have some interest or duty in the matter." 36 Corp. Jur. 1263, 1264, § 246; Odgers, Libel and Slander (1911) *14
276; Cooley on Torts (1906) 434; Glisson v. Biggio,
Conceding that the charges filed by defendant before the city council of Cullman, as shown by the second count of the complaint, were qualifiedly privileged, it does not appear that their subsequent publication by a circular addressed "To the Citizens of Cullman County," after plaintiff had ceased to be a public officer, was a matter even of qualified privilege. By setting out the circular containing a recital that the alleged libelous matters had been "presented to the city council," plaintiff did not admit the truth of that recital; nor does that recital itself show that, when the circular was published, there was a public document containing the libelous charges on file in any place accessible to the public. Where the complaint does not affirmatively show that the publication was privileged, the privilege relied on must be specially pleaded with appropriate denial of actual malice. Ferdon v. Dickens,
But, even conceding that the publication of the document might have been qualifiedly privileged, if it had been published merely as a public document of interest to the community, the prefatory statement of the circular shows that it was not so published, but that, on the contrary, the publisher declared and reaffirmed the truth of the charges as showing plaintiff "has been sailing under false colors," and as showing him "in his true standing as a depraved piece of humanity before God and his country." This far exceeded and grossly abused the privilege, if any there was, and worked a forfeiture of the privilege. Age Herald Pub. Co. v. Waterman,
Both counts of the complaint exhibit, as alleged, a false and malicious charge that plaintiff had been guilty of murder, and also that he clandestinely associated at night with "a woman about town," and that he rode a traveling woman around in his motorcycle while he was in a drunken condition. The murder charge is libelous per se, because murder is a felony; and the other charges are libelous per se, because they expose plaintiff to public ridicule or contempt.
Under the authorities noted above the sufficiency of the innuendo is wholly immaterial, and the demurrers to each count were properly overruled by the trial court.
The writ of certiorari will be granted, the judgment of the Court of Appeals will be reversed, and the cause will be remanded to that court for further proceedings in accordance herewith.
Writ granted.
All the Justices concur, except BROWN, J., not sitting.