259 N.E.2d 160 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1970
This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Hardin County entered pursuant to the sustaining of a demurrer to an amended petition in a libel action, the stated grounds of the demurrer being that the amended petition does not state a cause of action and that there is a defect of parties defendant. *142
Among other things not pertinent to this decision, the amended petition alleges that the defendant Margaret Hull owns and the defendant Edwin Hull is her agent for maintaining a certain building upon the exterior of which, at some time prior to October 1968, a person unknown to plaintiff enscribed graffiti defamatory to the plaintiff, which inscriptions, in ten inch letters, were so situated as to be seen daily by a large number of persons; that on November 23, 1968, each of the defendants received a certified mail notice of the existence of the inscriptions and demand that they be removed within twenty four hours; and that on February 20, 1969, the date of filing of the amended petition, the inscriptions still remained on the side of the building.
There were no other allegations asserting any other responsibility of the defendants, or either of them, for the graffiti, and the sole issue which we find dispositive of this appeal is whether a building owner, or his agent who has control of the maintenance of the building, must respond in damages for libel to a person defamed by graffiti enscribed by an unknown person on an exterior wall of the building exposed to public view by a large number of persons, merely because, after being given notice of the existence of the graffiti and a demand for their removal, such owner, or his agent, has not taken any action to do so.
The plaintiff would have us find liability on the part of the defendants on the authority of cases from other jurisdictions annotated in 28 A. L. R. 1454, this being a case of first impression in Ohio. However, we find that these cases are not parallel, may be, and should be distinguished. In Hellar v.Bianco,
The general rules relating to the responsibility of a defendant to respond in damages for the publication of defamatory matter are entirely consistent with the aforementioned cases.
In 53 Corpus Juris Secundum 231, Libel and Slander, Section 148, it is said, "As a general rule, all persons who cause orparticipate in the publication of libelous or slanderous matter are responsible for such publication * * *. Hence, one who requests, procures, or aids or abets, another to publish defamatory matter is liable as well as the publisher. * * *" (Emphasis added.)
In 3 Restatement of the Law, Torts, 192, Section 577, it is said, "Publication of defamatory matter is its communicationintentionally or by a negligent act to one other than the person defamed." (Emphasis added.) And at page 196 it is said, "There is an intent to publish defamatory matter when the actor does anact for the purpose of communicating it to a third person or with knowledge that it is substantially certain to be so communicated." (Emphasis added.) At page 198, the following appears, "Negligent publication. An act which a reasonable man should recognize as likely to communicate defamatory matter about another to a third person and which does so communicate it, is sufficient to constitute a publication thereof." (Emphasis added.)
From these authorities, as well as all others which we have examined, we conclude that, in all events, liability to respond in damages for the publication of a libel must be predicated on a positive act, on something done by the person sought to be charged, malfeasance in the case of an intentional defamatory publication and misfeasance in the case of a negligent defamatory publication. Nonfeasance, on the other hand, is not a predicate for liability.
The only claim against the defendants here, at best, is nonfeasance, not that they published the graffiti by some positive act on their part, but that they published the graffiti merely by failing to remove same after its existence was *145 called to their attention and demand made upon them to do so. The viewing by the public was not at their invitation or a result of any positive act on their part. Such claim is not actionable, and the Common Pleas Court did not commit error by sustaining the demurrer to the amended petition and entering judgment thereon.
Judgment affirmed.
COLE, P. J., concurs.
YOUNGER, J., dissents.