37 Md. 140 | Md. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first and principal question presented upon this appeal, is one of pleading. The declaration after averring that the plaintiff is a feme sole, and a housekeeper, and has always been a virtuous, modest and chaste citizen, &c., alleges that in a certain discourse in and about the plaintiff’s character and reputation for chastity, the
The same allegations are substantially made in the other two counts in the declaration, and what is said of the first, will equally apply to them.
It is contended by the defendant, that the declaration contains no sufficient colloquium to support and warrant an innuendo, that in saying the plaintiff kept a “bad house,” the defendant meant thereby to charge, that she “kept a common bawdy house,” and in this view wo concur.
Charging a person with keeping a “bad house” is not in itself actionable. The words, however objectionable they may be, admit of other constructions, which readily suggest themselves to the mind, than that given to them by the plaintiff. To say that a person keeps a bad house may mean a disorderly house, or one that is dirty or comfortless. So indefinite is their meaning, that to render them the foundation of an action like the present, the declaration must set out such a statement of circumstances under which they were used, or of the subject matter of the conversation, as will indicate that they were applied in a sense imputing to the plaintiff the wrong complained of. But this, under a rule of pleading firmly established by all the authorities, must be done through a colloquium and not by way of innuendo, the only object of which is to point to and explain what has before been introduced in the declaration.’ Unsupported by the necessary allegations of a colloquium, the innuendo can never be taken to expand or enlarge the meaning of the words used, and give to them a particular meaning,
In the case before us, the declaration is wholly silent, in its introductory part,, as to any house of the plaintiff. There is an averment that the plaintiff was a housekeeper, but it is no where alleged, by way of colloquium, that the house in which she lived, or its character as kept by her, was the subject of conversation, or the particular object referred to by the defendant, when he used the terms “bad house” and “ornary house.” The
The rule may he a strictly technical one, and may operate harshly in its application to this case, hut it is too firmly established to he departed from. And under it we hold it to he clear, that there is no sufficient allegation in the declaration before us, requiring the defendant to answer to the charge of having said of the plaintiff that she kept a bawdy-house. We do not however mean that the declaration is wholly had. The charge that the plaintiff was unchaste is sufficiently set forth, and in this respect the declaration is a good one. But the absence of any sufficient allegation in regard to the character of the
them was properly sustained. But it follows from what we have said in regard to the declaration, that the second plea, of those secondly pleaded, is a good plea of justification, and the demurrer to it ought to have been overruled. The third instruction was also improperly granted, as it rests entirely upon the assumption that the declaration charges the defendant with saying of the plaintiff that she kept a bawdy-house. For these reasons the judgment of the Court below will be reversed.
There are other questions presented in this case, which it is unnecessary for us to examine at length. We will however add that the rulings of the Court below upon them were correct, except in so far as they are modified by what we have already said.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.