13 Minn. 249 | Minn. | 1868
By the Court This is an action for the recovery of damages for an alleged libel. The publication charged as libelous is clearly actionable in itself. It charges distinctly an indictable offense. McCarthy vs. Barrett, 12 Minn., 496. _t is not disputed that the plaintiff is the person intended in the publication. The statement that “ the thief, is believed to be one William H. Simmons, who delivered the horse to some other parties,” is an imputation of the crime to the plaintiff as effectual as if made in positive'language. The charge need not be couched in positive terms. A positive
The witness having been duly sworn, a writing, which had been previously identified as the manuscript received by the publisher of the St. Paul Press, and from which the publication in that paper had been made, was shown to the witness, and thereupon he was asked ££ Did you write this paper ?” Thereupon the witness, defendant, objected to being compelled to answer the question, because the evidence to be given in answer to the question, would tend to convict him of a criminal offense. The objection was overruled by the Court, and such ruling excepted to by this defendant, and the witness, being required to answer, testified as follows: “ I wrote that paper, and the writing subjoined thereto. I wrote a similar one, intended for the £ Minnesota Statesman.’ I did not send that paper to the £ St. Paul Press,’ nor the other one to the
But the question asked the witness referred to the manuscript from which this libel was published, and which was already in evidence in the cause. A libel is an indictable offense ; the direct tendency., therefore, of the question, was to criminate the witness. ''When it reasonably appears that the answer will have a tendency to expose the witness to a penal liability, or to any kind, of punishment, or to a criminal ¡charge, ££ the authorities,” says Greenleaf, “ are exceedingly clear that the witness is not bound to answer,” and he may claim the protection at any stage of the inquiry, whether he has already answered the question in part, or not at all. If the fact to which ho is interrogated form but one link in the chain of testimony, which is to convict him, he is protected. And whether it may tend to criminate or expose the witness, is a point upon which the Court is bound to instruct him.” 1 Oreenl. Ev., Sec. 4:51, and authorities cited in note. In view of the facts existing at the time of the trial, therefore, the witness should not have been compelled to answer the question. Whether the testimony of ITanft in 'regard to the matter voluntarily given when called by defendant cures the error, we need not, perhaps, stop to examine, as in the view we take of the case a new trial must be granted on other grounds ; and this question is one peculiar to this trial,- and will not, in all probability, arise again.
The ££ plaintiff offered in evidence three copies of the St. Paul Daily Press,” bearing date respectively 19th, 20th, and 21st days of August, “1864, and each containing the advertisement set up in the complaint as a libel, and also three copies
The copies of the St. Paul Press offered in evidence were properly received. The witness Driscoll, who states that he was one of the publishers of that paper, testifies that each of the papers offered is a copy of the St. Paul Press, published on the day of its date ; that the daily circulation of the paper then was 2,500,.and from thirty to forty in Scott county; he identifies the manuscript produced as the one from which the advertisement claimed to be libelous was published, and states that it was inserted in the whole edition of that paper on each,, of the days on which the paper purported to be published. To prove the publication of a newspaper it is not necessary to produce a copy which has been actually published, but upon the production of a copy not actually published the witness may swear that papers of the same kind were published. 1 Phil. Ev., 553; 2 Stark, on Slander, 49; 1 Hilliard on Torts, Ch. 15, Sec. 60, p. 463; McLaughlin vs. Russel, 17 Ohio R., 475; Huff vs. Bennet, 4 Sandf. R., 120. But the publication of the libelous advertisement in the Minnesota-Statesman was a distinct and substantive cause of action, and we think there are several reasons why the copies of that paper were erroneously received in evidence.
The action is not against the publishers of the paper, but against persons having no interest in it; the mere production of the^ papers containing the advertisement, therefore, is not sufficient to connect them with the libelous publication ; there must be other proof-for this purpose; as the publications in' the respective papers are materially different, they could not be from the same or a similar manuscript; the fact, therefore, that the evidence of Driscoll connects the defendants with
The testimony of Hanft that he wrote the Press manuscript, and. that'he wrote a similar one intended for the Statesman, as we have seen, was improperly received; but if it were otherwise, there is no evidence that the manuscript intended for the Statesman was ever sent to or received by the publishers of that paper, or that it was published therein; for w;e must presume that the publication in the copies of the Statesman'offered in evidence was that described in the complaint; it must therefore have been materially different from the manuscript written by Hanft, which was, as he .states, similar to that published in the Press. Again, if the publication in the Statesman was in fact similar to that in the Press, it differed materially from the libel set up in the complaint. Put further, it does not appear at what time the copies of the Statesman received in evidence were published or purported to have been published; the- date or dates of publication are not given; the only testimony in regard to the publication of the Statesman, which appears in the paper-book, is that of the' witness Driscoll, who after stating that the notice was published in the Press on the 19th, 20th and 21st of August, 1861, says: “ I know that these were published at St. Peter, Minn., in the summer of 1864 m a weehly newspaper called the Minnesota Statesman; * * * the newspaper now shown me is a copy of that paper.” This language clearly refers to something published in the Statesman, and cannot be construed to mean that the copies of that paper in evidence were published in the summer of 1861, and the context shows that the witness referred to the notices published in the Press on the 19th, 20th and 21st oí August, 1861. One copy only of the paper is shown to the witness ; this he identifies as a copy of the Statesman, but we are left entirely in the dark as
The defendant asked the witness Hanft the following questions : “ State what the general speech of the people at Belle Plaine was between the 16th and 19th days of August, 1864, about the plaintiff having stolen said horses? ” “ State what the plaintiff’s general reputation and character was at Belle Plaine between the 16th and 19th days of August, 1864, concerning having stolen said horses?” which were each objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel as immaterial and incompetent. The objections were sustained by the Court, and the defendants excepted. It appears that the libel was written at Belle Plaine on the 16th of August, 1864, and sent by mail to the publisher of the St. Paul Press, at St. Paul, and was published
Whether the subsequent ratification by the principal of an unauthorized act of an agent, in itself unlawful, and actually
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.