Potter v. Troy

175 F. 128 | S.D.N.Y. | 1909

WARD, Circuit Judge.

Tlie defendant personally verified the answer of a railroad company, of which he was president, in an action pending in the United States Circuit Court for the Western District of Virginia to foreclose a lien, and insisted, against the protest of the plaintiffs, upon inserting therein the following statement:

‘•Tlie executive officers of your respondent’s company were long since forced to tlie conclusion that the methods adopted throughout, were for the purpose of embarrassing respondent and forcing them to a position whore more money would have to be paid to complainant, and that in this enterprise complainant was only the agent and representative of certain manipulators in Tew York City, who by the methods adopted, and by unreliable and untrue advance expert estimates, had planned to bring about the conditions now existing, in an effort unlawfully to take away from certain stockholders of this corporation their interest in this property.”

The plaintiffs, who are bankers doing business in the city of New York, charge that this statement was made of them, was made maliciously, was false, and was irrelevant to the issues in the foreclosure suit. They were not parties to the foreclosure action, and the description contained in the complaint of the issues in that action shows that the statement was entirely irrelevant. I think that the words are libelous per se. They describe the plaintiffs as manipulators of a fraudulent plan to deprive others of their interest in the railroad property. A direct charge of dishonesty is deliberately made.

The defendant, however, claims that because the statement is contained in a pleading it is privileged. It is safe to say that both under the federal law and the law of New York, because malicious and irrelevant, it ceases to be privileged. White v. Nichols, 3 How. 266, 11 L. Ed. 591; Union Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Thomas, 83 Fed. 803, 28 C. C. A. 96; Moore v. Manufacturers’ Bank, 123 N. Y. 420, 25 N. E. 1048, 11 L. R. A. 753. The complaint is good enough on a demurrer to withstand other criticisms. In the case of Sage v. Culver, 147 N. Y. 241, 245, 41 N. E. 513, Judge O’Brien said:

‘'While the complaint in this action is open to criticism as lacking in that clearness and fullness of statement essential to good pleading, yet we think that the decision of the General Term overruling (he defendant's demurrer was correct. When a complaint is met by a demurrer on ilie ground of insufficiency, the question always is whether, assuming every fact alleged to be true, enough has been well stated to constitute any cause of action whatever. The complaint will be deemed to be sufficient whenever the requisite allegations can be fairly gathered from all the averments, though the statement of them may be argumentative and the pleading deficient in logical order and in technical language. The pleading will be held to state all facts that can be implied from the allegations b,v reasonable and fair intendment, and facts so impliedly averred and traversable in the same manner as though directly stated. Zabriskie v. Smith, 13 N. Y. 330 [64 Am. Dec. 551]; Marie v. Garrison. 83 N. Y. 14. 23; Sanders v. Soutter, 126 N. Y. 193 [27 N. E. 263], The complaint in this case was not, we think, so deficient in the statement of facts as to warrant tlie defendants in assailing it by demurrer.”

The demurrer is overruled, with costs.