278 Mass. 149 | Mass. | 1932
This is an action for libel brought to this court by appeal of the plaintiff from an order of the Superior Court sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the declaration on the ground (1) that the pleadings do not set out any sufficient legal cause of action and (2) that the written statement alleged to have been made by the defendant and set out in the declaration is not as matter of law sufficient to constitute a libel of the plaintiff by the defendant.
The declaration alleges that the defendant falsely and maliciously wrote and published at Boston of and concerning the plaintiff in a letter and report the words following: “UNION INDEMNITY COMPANY Cash Capital $2,500,000 Surety Division of Insurance Securities Company, Inc. Casualty To New York Att. Mr. Hawley, Surety Claim Division From Boston March 2nd, 1931 Kansas City Surety Claim Division, C. L. Barr, Manager, Title & Trust Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. c/o FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES, Converse Building, Kansas City, Mo. RE: Max Beckerman To FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES Principal Statement Mr. Glixman of 54 Summer Street, Revere, and Mr. Max Beckerman of 730 Winthrop Avenue along with Attorney
The demurrer admits publication in Boston by the defendant. The defendant contends that the declaration does not set out any sufficient publication of the alleged libel. The letterhead of the defendant would seem to indicate that it is engaged in the writing of surety insurance, and the letter appears to have been addressed to the surety claim division of the defendant in New York and to its surety claim division in Kansas City. It purported to state facts presented by the persons speaking “relating to their end of the case.” If it be assumed that the letter if sent only to these divisions of the defendant in New York and Kansas City would not be a publication of the alleged libel to a third person, Economopoulos v. A. G. Pollard Co. 218 Mass. 294, still that would
It does not seem to be contended that the plaintiff could not maintain an action for libel if he was charged in the letter with running a bootlegging enterprise or with making a "straw” lease of two rooms, paying rent to the club and paying a man to maintain a room to run a "bootlegging racket and these slot machines,” paying him from the proceeds of the sale of beer, but the contention is made that no defamatory statement concerning the plaintiff is made in the letter and that its meaning cannot be enlarged by the allegation that the words were written of and concerning the plaintiff. If the language of the communication in question, taking the words in their natural sense, fairly may bear the meaning that the plaintiff was engaged in or connected with the illegal enterprise to which reference is therein made, the demurrer should have been overruled. "It is only when the court can say that the publication is not reasonably capable of any defamatory meaning, and cannot reasonably be understood in any defamatory sense, that the court can rule, as matter of law, that the publication is not libellous.” Robinson v. Coulter, 215 Mass. 566, 570. Twombly v. Monroe, 136 Mass. 464, 469.
We are of opinion that the language used taken in its natural and ordinary meaning is capable of being understood by the average man as a personal reflection on the plaintiff’s
We are of opinion that a jury could infer that the plaintiff, an attorney, was charged with participating in or being connected with what is described in the letter as a “bootlegging racket” and with the other activities therein alleged, and that it could not be ruled as matter of law that the article was not libellous toward the plaintiff.
Order sustaining demurrer reversed.
Order entered overruling demurrer.