Riddell v. Thayer

127 Mass. 487 | Mass. | 1879

Lord, J.

Two questions only are presented by this bill of exceptions for our consideration: 1. Was the testimony of Alvord at the time, and under the circumstances in which it was admitted, competent ? 2. Was the instruction of the court in relation to the phrase “ bad woman ” correct ?

None of the many nice and difficult questions which frequently arise in trials for slander, as to whether the words offered to show malice are merely substantial repetitions of the slanderous words relied on, and whether they import different offences which are different causes of action, arise in this case.

In relation to the first point presented, the only question is whether the testimony of the defendant was material to the issue; for, if material to the issue, there can be no doubt of the right of the plaintiff to contradict it. The defendant offered himself as a witness, and in his testimony in chief denied that he used the words charged against him in the declaration, and denied that he knew the plaintiff before her marriage. It is certain that his denial of having used the words was material. The further facts to which he testified, that he did not mention her name at the time, and that he did not know her before her marriage, were competent, and were material as tending to support the other part of his testimony, that he did not utter the words; and, being material, were subject to contradiction. The distance in time was not so remote as to render the testimony incompetent, but simply to impair its weight. How far it was calculated to impeach his credit was purely a question for the jury.

Under our system of pleading in actions of slander, the declaration need only allege the words relied upon as proof of a criminal charge; no innuendoes are necessary. “ If the natural import of the words is not intelligible without further explanation, or reference to facts understood but not mentioned, or parts of the conversation not stated, in either of those caséis, after set*490ting forth the words, the declaration should contain a concise and clear statement of such things as are necessary to make the words relied on intelligible to the court and jury in the same sense in which they were spoken.” Gen. Sts. p. 666.

It does not appear either that there was anything said other than that charged in the declaration, or that there was anything understood between the parties which was not expressed, making any explanation necessary. In itself, the word “ bad ” imports no crime, and is not actionable. But the moral and legal quality of the word “ bad ” may be made entirely clear by its context and the connection in which it is used. If one speaks of a prostitute, and calls her such, and therefore pronounces her a bad woman, or if he says, “ She is a bad woman because she is a prostitute,” there can be no doubt of the sense in which the word “ bad ” is used, any more than there can be a doubt of the sense in which it is used if a party says of another, “ She is a bad woman, she does not go to church,” or, “ She is a bad woman because she does not go to church.” Thé party is responsible for the ordinary and natural meaning of language as it would commonly be understood. If the subject of discourse in relation to a female is chastity, the use of the word “ bad ” might import the want of conjugal fidelity, if the woman were a married woman; and when the charge against a married woman is that she is a bad woman, a bitch, and a whore, the court cannot say, as matter of law, that the word bad does not import a want of chastity, but it is for the jury to determine the sense in which the word was used. And we see no objection to the instruction as given by the presiding judge; when he uses the phrase, “ the jury may take into account the accompanying words, and the surrounding facts,” he is not to be understood as referring to those unexpressed but understood circumstances which give character to the language used, but simply to those facts and circumstances which attend the uttering, such as time, place, and words uttered. In setting out the words uttered as “ bad woman,” “ bitch,” and “ whore,” there is no necessity for introducing any colloquium that these words were used in reference to her chastity, because the jury might be warranted without such colloquium in finding that the words used, in the connection in which they were used, did of their own force import to *491the ordinary hearer the charge of want of chastity, or of the crime of adultery.

We see, therefore, no objection to the instruction of the presiding judge, or to the admission of the testimony of Alvord.

Exceptions overruled.