20 Miss. 704 | Miss. | 1849
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of slander, in which the jury found for Rob-ison, the plaintiff below, one thousand dollars damages.
The competency of certain grand jurors to testify to the uttering of the supposed slanderous words before them, while officiating as grand jurors, was objected to upon the trial.
In this state, no oath of secrecy is required from grand jurors, as to what transpires among them in the discharge of their office. The question then is whether, by the policy of the law, communications to them, &c. are to be deemed privileged.
It would certainly be a great breach of duty for a grand juror, while the inquest was in session, to disclose the business of that body, by means whereof persons accused and not yet arrested,
The principle by which the finding in this instance may be safely tested is laid down by Chief Justice Shaw, of Massachusetts, in Bradley v. Heath, 12 Pick. R. 163. He says, “ Where words, imputing misconduct to another, are spoken by one having a duty to perform, and the words are spoken in good faith, and in the belief that it comes within the discharge of that duty, or where they are spoken in good faith to those who have an interest in the communication, and a right to know and act upon
The defendant below was a justice of the peace of the county, and he stated the charge against the plaintiff, as having repeat■edly come to him as a rumor. This he stated voluntarily to the grand jury. No prosecution ensued for the want of evidence, or other reasons which do not appear.
It is .the duty of every citizen, and more especially of justices of the peace, even without the statutes requiring them so to do, to prosecute, in every legal mode, persons who have within their knowledge been guilty of crimes or misdemeanors. The occasion, therefore, on which the words were spoken furnishes a prima facie excuse for their having been spoken. It fell, then, upon the plaintiff below to show that the occasion was only used as a colorable pretence, and to have established express malice in the defendant. The. only ground for proof of this, was that, on some previous occasion, the plaintiff had exacted specie from the defendant in the payment of a debt. The present record does not disclose enough, in our opinion, to justify the finding of the jury.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial awarded.