97 Mich. 136 | Mich. | 1893
The libelous article upon which this suit is founded is given in full in 79 Mich. 266. The case was then brought to this Court upon demurrer to the declaration. After that decision, which held that the article was libelous, defendant pleaded the general issue, with notice in justification that the article, in its fair and ordinary.
“This difficulty in the application of the rule ought to give very satisfactory evidence of its unsoundness; for the rule, if founded in justice and reason, ought to be, and would be, as applicable in one case as another. The plaintiff’s injury is no greater and no less because two persons united in committing it, and the measure of his redress ought not to depend on a circumstance unimportant to the injury..”
“ The defendant in this case is a corporation. It has no soul, it has no body, It is simply a money-making machine, to distribute money at the rate of $100,000 a year to James. E. Scripps and his associates. But there are souls behind it, and the law says that it must pay for their malice and their hate.”
“ Mr. Bandall asks you to vindicate him, not by a mere verdict of guilty; you must speak in thunder tones; you should speak emphatically; you should give such damages that your verdict will resound from one end of the State to the other, that those who have drunk in the poison emanating from this koproptutrometer against Mr. Bandall may know that a jury of his fellow-citizens have said that James A. Bandall has been unjustly accused. You talk about $10,000, $15,000, or $85,000 ? That ivould not equal three months of the earnings of this sheet. Wont you make' it $50,000, $75,000, or .$100,000? The News can afford to have a libel suit every month for $85,000, for the sake of the advertising in it. This jury must strike it- a fatal blow; and, if you want to make these gentlemen feel the sting of your judgment, touch their money bag.”
It needs no argument to show that this was an appeal to the jury to measure their verdict, not by the actual damages the plaintiff had sustained, but by the ability of the defendant to pay. .The court neither checked this language, nor expressly instructed the- jury as to the purpose for which the evidence was admitted and the consideration they should give it. Had the defendant been an individual, the judgment should be set aside for this error alone.
But the important question is whether the evidence was competent at all in this case. We are cited to no authority,. nor have we been able to find any, which holds that in a libel suit the actual or reputed wealth of the corporation defendant is admissible. An individual is a real entity,
The only testimony which, by any possibility, can be construed into such an instruction, is that of Mr. May and Mr. McLeod, the former a witness for plaintiff, the latter a witness for defendant. But there is no testimony tending to show that either of the conversations which these witnesses say they had with Mr. Scripps ivas communicated to Mr. Dee, the manager of the paper at the time the alleged libelous article was published. Mr. May says that his conversation took place several years prior to 1886, at which time he left the paper. May was an intimate friend of plaintiff. He testified:
“ Mr. Scripps called my attention to an item in the paper which was complimentary in some way to Mr. Randall. * * * Said he did not care to have any more such articles, praising or puffing Mr. Randall, used. That is as far as I can recollect the conversation. I cannot remember the exact language, but I received the impression from the interview, whether diréctly or indirectly I can hardly say, that, if any articles should be written, they should only be such as were adverse or uncomplimentary to Mr. Randall.”
“He gave me no direct, explicit instructions to publish anything uncomplimentary to Mr. Eandall, or to attack him; but I could, not avoid receiving the impression that he regarded Mr. Eandall as an enemy, from what he said and his manner of saying it.”
Mr. McLeod testified that he went on the paper as city, editor in January, 1887, and that, as near as he could remember, Mr. Scripps told him there were two men in the city whom he would -not like to'see boomed through the medium of his property, one of whom rvás Mr. Eandall; but that he received no instructions to treat him unfairly.
It is, in my judgment, contrary to reason and justice, and therefore contrary to law, to hold that these conversations, one of which happened at least five years, and the other about two and a half years, before the date of the publication complained of, and uncommunicated to the agent of defendant who wrote the article, are evidence that it was instigated by Mr. Scripps, or that he was in any measure responsible for it. Under these circumstances, the previous relations between Mr. Scripps and plaintiff, and the quarrels they might have had, were immaterial to the issue in this case. However great may have been his malice towards the plaintiff, the defendant cannot be held responsible for it, because he had nothing whatever to do with inspiring the article. A corporation cannot be held liable for the malice of one of its stockholders towards a person, unless it be shown that such stockholder inspired or counseled the corporate action complained of. This ruling applies to all the evidence of the relations between Mr. Scripps and Mr. Eandall, and to Mr. Scripps' connection with the Evening News, both before and after the' organization of the defendant corporation.
“ James A. Hand all has rented a furnished house at Lansing for entertaining purposes during his stay there to work the boulevard scheme.”
We think this material,. in that- it tends to show the animus of the article sued upon. The same reasoning applies to the articles of October 22. These articles are, with others, made the basis of another libel suit. Quaere, whether they are admissible for that reason in this suit;
“These charges, such as you have heard against Mr. Randall, are common against our prominent politicians,— that they have bought delegates or bought conventions,— are they not?”
The question should have been excluded. It is monstrous to contend that, because other politicians are or are reputed to be guilty of corrupt practices, which tend to thwart the will of the people and are dangerous to good government, this will excuse Mr. Randall, if he be guilty of the same misconduct. The inquiry was wholly incompetent and immaterial, and could have had no other effect than to divert the attention of the jury from the real issue upon this branch of the defense.; viz., the reputation of plaintiff, in respect to the corrupt use of money in }Dolitical connections, — an issue tendered by the offer of the testimony in chief, and accepted by the plaintiff, since no objection was made by his counsel to its introduction.
“ If there be anything that is accepted and known of all men in the city of Detroit, it is that the Evening News has-been prosecuted for libel as no paper that was ever published in the city of Detroit has been. The records of our criminal courts show that James E. Scripps, as the editor-*147 and publisher of this paper, was bound over to the recorder’s court to answer for a criminal libel against the judge of this court."
Other language of like character, referring to things that were not in the record, was used. The only justification urged on behalf of the plaintiff for the use of this language is that it was in reply to certain language used by the defendant’s counsel in praise of Mr. Scripps and the Evening News. But the reference to facts of which there is no evidence in the record is improper. Were this .the only error in the case, perhaps the .judgment should not be set aside for that alone, in view of the argument made by defendant’s counsel; but we deem it proper to mention it, in view of another trial.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.