8 N.Y.S. 276 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action is for damages resulting from an alleged “boycott” of the plaintiff’s business. The complaint charges that the defendants and several other persons, acting together, and calling themselves the “Central Labor Union,” did agree to place the plaintiff under a boycott, and, in pursuance of such agreement, did circulate, and cause to be circulated, among the inhabitants of the city of Boehester, a great number of printed circulars, of which a copy is set out in the complaint, which, among other things, cautioned or advised the-friends of street-car drivers not to buy the Post Express; that they also, in pursuance of such agreement, sent, and caused to be sent, to the patrons of the plaintiff, who were advertising in its newspaper, (the Post Express,) another printed circular, of which a copy is set out in the complaint, requesting such patrons to discontinue advertising through the columns of-that paper; that, they did also, in pursuance of such agreement, orally solicit, and cause others to solicit, the business patrons of the plaintiff, and subscribers of its paper, to discontinue business relations with the plaintiff, under the threat of pecun
1. If the plaintiff or its officers know of their own knowledge, or are informed, as they state and verify in their complaint, that business patrons of the plaintiff have been personally solicited and threatened by the defendants .in the manner charged, they must be supposed to know who those patrons are; and it is a reasonable demand of the defendants to be informed of the names of persons whom the allegation is intended to embrace. It is to be observed that no demand is made for particulars of the publication or circulation •of the first circular mentioned, nor of the persons to whom the second circular was sent, but only of the business patrons of the plaintiff orally and personally solicited and threatened by the defendants, and others employed by them. If the plaintiff’s officers know of such persons, who have been thus approached, they can probably give their names; if they do not know of them, it is difficult to account for the verified allegations of the complaint in that respect.
2. Counsel for the respondent here object that the order asked for would require the plaintiff to give the names of all the persons associated with the defendants in the “Central Labor Union.” Such a requirement, it will be seen, is not ■embraced in the motion. The “others” whom the plaintiff is asked to name are those only whom, it is alleged, the defendants caused to solicit and threaten patrons of the plaintiff, to its injury. The act, in this respect, charged upon the defendants in the general allegation of the complaint is described as that of causing other persons to do unlawful acts, to the injury of the plaintiff. It is certainly not unreasonable that the plaintiff should inform the defendants who the persons are whom it is intended to allege they have caused to do the wrong complained of. Childs v. Tuttle, 48 Hun, 228.
3. Whether the defendants are entitled to a bill of particulars of the plaintiff’s damages depends upon whether or not the plaintiff’s allegation in that respect is to be regarded as setting up a claim for special damages. If the plaintiff proposes to claim special damages,—that is, loss of patronage in particular instances, either in advertising or in its subscription list,—it must, of ■course, give a bill of particulars of such loss. If the intention was only to allege general damages, as where, in actions of slander or of libel, injury is alleged to reputation and to feelings, then no more particular specification of the injury is required. In other words, if the plaintiff intends to give evidence of particular instances of loss occasioned by the wrongful acts of the defendants, those instances must be specified by a bill of particulars; the alternative being that the plaintiff will not be permitted to give evidence of any such particular instances which have not been so specified. The allegations