71 A. 433 | Md. | 1908
The appellant was indicted in the Circuit Court of Allegany County for publishing a criminal libel upon Duncan R. Sloan, and being convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and costs, and to confinement in the county jail for a period of fifteen days, he has appealed from that judgment.
The alleged libel is contained in an article or letter purporting to be written by a Retired Miner, and published in the Lonaconing Star, a newspaper owned edited, and published in Allegany County, by the appellant.
In this article or letter, Mr. Sloan is characterised as "a blundering, stuttering ninny" — as having an "empty, rickety head" — as "not having sense enough to admit his universally recognized assininity" — as "playing the part of a snake in the grass" — and it declares that "his avocation politically has been constantly that of a slimy, wriggling, biting, treacherous snake in the grass," with numerous other epithets of like character. The indictment contains but one count, and that sets out the article in full which will be reproduced in full in the report of the case.
The traverser demurred to the indictment and the Court overruled the demurrer. The traverser then, without withdrawing his demurrer, pleaded over, with leave of the Court, and plead not guilty. *649
The sole ground of demurrer is that instead of pointing out and specifying some particular alleged false and defamatory matters, the entire article is set out as "a false, scandalous, malicious and defamatory libel," and the indictment then charges that the traverser well knew the same to be false. The traverser contends that if a whole letter or article may be charged as libellous, "he must defend against it in its entirety though it may have reference to many conditions, may contain many statements, and may be full of various subjects.`" but he was not able to produce any authority to sustain his demurrer other than a single Texas case, viz — Jackson v. State, 77 S.W. Rep. 223, which we are not able to accept as controlling.
The practice appears to be strongly against this contention. In 13 Enc. Pl. and Pr. p 47, it is said: "It is not necessary, in a complaint for libel, to set out the whole of the obnoxious publication in which the libel appears. It will be sufficient to set forth such parts of the libel as the plaintiff relies on," and this text is supported by decisions from numerous Courts. The author of this article in the Enc. Pl. Pr. adds, "it would seem that if any omitted parts explain those set out, the defendant may give them under the general issue."
The same is stated to be the law in 25 Cyc. 448. It was so held in Com. v. Harmon, 2 Gray, 289, citing 3 Chitty's Crim.Law, 375. In American Book Co. v. Kingdom Pub. Co.,
In State v. Dowd, 39 Kansas, 412, the whole article was set out in the information. There was a motion to quash on the ground that the charge was too indefinite and uncertain, but the motion was refused. In State v. Smith, 7 Lea (Tenn.) 249, the whole letter was set out in the indictment, which was held good on motion in arrest of judgment. The Court said "The entire publication is set out, and thus the principle and *650 letter of the rule which requires the libelous matter to be set forth verbatim is complied with."
In Evening Post Co. v. Richardson,
In Singer v. N.Y. Times Co., 74 N.Y. App. Div. 380, the complaint set out a lengthy article in full, and averred that the matter so printed and published was false, libelous and defamatory, and was maliciously and wantonly published. The defendant asked for a bill of particulars, and filed an affidavit that some of the statements of the article were true, and that it believed none were untrue; that it had a defense on the merits and was able to justify in part, and that in order to prepare and present its defense it was necessary that the plaintiff should designate what parts were libelous, and in what respect false.
It was held that a bill of particulars was not necessary to enable defendant to answer; that as the complaint set out the article in full and averred that the whole was false and defamatory, it was sufficiently definite and certain. The Court said, "We know of no rule which requires a plaintiff to inform a defendant in an action for libel, to what portion he may plead justification, and that is what the order in the present *651 case would accomplish. Nor is there any need that the plaintiff make his complaint more definite and certain, as it is already fully complete in such particulars. It sets up the whole article claimed to be libelous and avers that the whole is false and defamatory. Words could not make it more definite."
It will be observed that the indictment in the present case charges the publication of "a false, scandalous, malicious and defamatory libel in a certain newspaper called the Lonaconing Star and the Lonaconing Review in Allegany County," * * * "according to the tenor and effect following, c," thus characterising the whole article as scandalous and defamatory. Wanton and reckless malice breathes in every line of this letter, and it would be difficult to segregate a single passage which was not intended and caculated to make Sloan odious and contemptible in the eyes of the public, and to injure his reputation for honesty and truth. We are not required to say, and do not say, that under all circumstances an entire book or work of magnitude dealing with legitimate subjects of general interest, could be charged as libelous without any specifications whatever. That question will be dealt with when it arises; but we cannot hesitate to hold that the demurrer in this case was properly overruled.
Three exceptions were taken in the course of the trial. In the first the traverser offered to testify that at a public meeting in Lonaconing on December 5th, 1907, Duncan R. Sloan used violent and abusive language about him, calling him a snake in the grass and using other opprobrious terms; that some person then present wrote in his defense the article alleged to be libelous, and that the same was inadvertently published on December 26th, 1907, in his paper. To this offer the State objected, and the Court excluded that part of the offered evidence which related to what was said by Sloan at the public meeting and the offer to connect the same with the publication, but admitted the rest of the proffered evidence.
In the second exception the traverser was asked to state the opprobrious language used by Sloan about him, and upon the objection of the State, the objection was sustained and this evidence was excluded. *652
In the third exception the traverser offered in evidence a copy of his paper of January 2d 1908, containing a letter of Duncan R. Sloan to the Evening Times of Cumberland in which he stated that he intended to present to the Grand Jury of Allegany County the matter of the publication referring to him, in the Star of December 26th, 1907, and also the traversers statement in the issue of his paper of January 2nd that he had no comment to make other than to say that if an indictment was found it would be defended with vigor, and that the public knew there was no malice in the publication of which Sloan complained.
We have been referred to no authority in support of these exceptions, and we discover no error in the rulings upon them. The law, as settled by our decisions, is that nothing short of evidence tending to show the truth of the charge is admissible.Richardson v. State,
Judgment affirmed with costs above and below. *653