153 N.Y.S. 450 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The action is for damages for libel. The defendant is the publisher of a daily newspaper. The plaintiff professes to be an interpreter of the Bible, and is an unordained preacher. The libel alleged was published in a cartoon. The headline of the cartoon is “ Easy Money Puzzle.” In the cartoon is shown a building on which is printed “ Onion Bank.” The figure of a man appears at the door of the building. He is represented
Contemporaneously with the publication, the Union Bank had defaulted in payment of deposits. Its failure was by the press attributed to the infidelity, inefficiency and unlawful acts of several of its officers. They were charged with purchasing with the depositors’ money bogus securities at fictitious prices from co-conspirators. A violent denunciatory newspaper campaign, in which the defendant prominently participated, was being waged against the officers. The plain-. tiff’s plea was that the defendant’s purpose was falsely to charge him with dishonest and fraudulent practices in disposing to his disciples, to their loss, of a grade of wheat, known as Miracle wheat, at one dollar per pound. The defendant pleaded the truth in justification. The learned trial court charged the jury that the publication was libelous, and left it to them to say whether the defense was established. The jury rendered a verdict for the defendant. The charge contained a correct exposition of the law governing the defense. The court properly left it to the jury to ascertain the pith and scope of the cartoon and then to determine whether defendant’s proofs were adequate to meet the charges as thus ascertained.
The appellant’s only assignment of error which we deem it necessary to discuss is the asserted inadmissibility of reports of the United States Department of Agriculture. Such reports were duly authenticated, and, when so authenticated, they are receivable as evidence for any proper purpose. (Code Civ. Proc. § 944; 25 U. S. Stat. at Large, 659, chap. 122; 1 Fed. Stat. Anno. 8.)
The plaintiff was the editor of a publication purporting to be devoted to a religious propaganda. In it he informed his sympathetic readers that one of his associates had accumulated Miracle wheat, which the associate was disposed to sell to the readers of that publication for one dollar a pound. The asso
Among the duties imposed and the powers conferred upon the Department of Agriculture are the following: To acquire and to diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word (U. S. R. S. § 520); to procure and preserve all information concerning agriculture which the Commissioner of Agriculture (now the Secretary) can obtain by means of books and correspondence, and by practical and scientific experiments, accurate records of which experiments shall be kept in his office, by the collection of statistics, and by any other appropriate means within his power; he shall collect new and valuable seeds and plants; shall test, by cultivation, the value of such of them as may require such tests; shall propagate such as may be worthy of propagation, and shall distribute them among agriculturists. (U. S. R. S. § 526. See, also, 31 U. S. Stat. at Large, 928, chap. 805.)
The question is, are those records relevant evidence of the facts therein recorded, upon the issue of justification?
In Evanston v. Gunn (99 U. S. 660, 666), speaking of records of the Weather Bureau, the court said: “They are, as we have seen, of a public character, kept for public purposes, and so immediately before the eyes of the community that inaccuracies, if they should exist, could hardly escape exposure. They come, therefore, within the rule which admits in evidence ‘official registers or records kept by persons in public office in which • they required [sic\ either by statute or by the nature of their office, to write down particular transactions occurring in the course of their public duties or under
While we appreciate that there is some difference between the official record of observations of natural conditions and the official record of observations of the operation of natural conditions, influenced by human action, the distinction is not sufficient to make the rule just quoted inapplicable.
We think the court did not err in receiving the evidence.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Carr, Stapleton and Putnam, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.