52 N.Y.S. 515 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1898
The substance of the defamatory publication is that the “ language and actions ” of the plaintiff, a layman, in
■The defendants pleaded the truth in defense; but suffice it to say that they failed to produce any evidence whatever of its truth and that there was not even a scintilla of truth in it. It was an invention. Nevertheless for. this mortifying and gross outrage upon him the jury gave the plaintiff a verdict of only six cents. That it was the result of prejudice or else of a disregard of law and order by the jury is manifest. The verdict practically outlaws the plaintiff for no reason which appeared upon the trial. If such verdicts -should be allowed to stand they would furnish some excuse for persons who are the victims of them to take the law into their own hands.
The suggestion that the verdict was caused and is justified because the plaintiff did not go upon the witness stand has no merit or foundation. There was nothing for the plaintiff to go on the stand for. His counsel tried the case properly. He put the libel in evidence and rested. That is all he could do. It was not for the plaintiff to become a witness to prove it was false. On the contrary, the law presumed it to be false and it was for the defendant to prove it true. It is never for the plaintiff to give evidence in chief of the falsity of a slander or libel except in the rare case of qualifiedly privileged utterances or publications. There malice in the defendant is an essential ingredient of the cause of action, and the falsity of the defamatory matter may be proved by the plaintiff in order to show such malice and thereby defeat the privilege. I am aware that it has been inadvertently said in an action where there was no privilege that “ the plaintiff in an action for libel gives' evidence of malice whenever he proves the falsity of the libel ” (Samuels v. Evening Mail Ass’n, 75 N. Y. 604), and that this has been quite often .inadvertently repeated as though it was for the plaintiff to do so (McFadden v. Morning Jour. Ass’n, 28 App. Div. p. 517). In the case of an unprivileged utterance or publication of defamatory matter, the law presumes it to be false, and unless the defendant pleads and proves the truth as a defense such presumption stands absolute. What a strange thing then it
If I were to. go- away from this term of court allowing this verdict to stand I should feel that I was not only a party to a gross wrong to the plaintiff, but to a violation of the law and order of the county. The plaintiff is entitled to the protection of the laws. That he. is a preaching layman should not 'excite prejudice against him. Jesus whom he follows and teaches was also .only a layman, and taught and exhorted the poor and the humble by the wayside- and in the fields. Neither .would the courts of His day give Him a fair trial from prejudice. In that respect the world seems not to have advanced much since.
The motion for a new trial is granted.
Motion granted.