190 Mo. App. 447 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is a suit for libel in which plaintiff recovered $500' actual and $250 punitive damages. The plaintiff is a physician practicing his profession at Ash Grove, Missouri. The defendant was located at Springfield, Missouri, and issued to him a policy of insurance against loss of time from sickness. The plaintiff presented a claim under this policy and same was paid. Soon thereafter plaintiff presented a second claim which defendant contested on the grounds that the sickness claimed for was a mere continuation of the previous sickness for which it had settled in full and that if a new sickness the plaintiff had not .given the defendant any notice of the same as required by the policy. This led to a lawsuit resulting in the defeat of plaintiff’s claim.
Soon after this, the defendant, desiring a local agent at Ash Grove, Missouri, wrote a letter to 3. N, Moore, a banker at that town, soliciting him to take such agency. To this letter Mr. Moore replied as follows : “Your letter at hand offering us the agency for the Mo. F. & G. Co. In.reply will say that I do not think it advisable for me to do so for the following reasons: I think it would be better for some of your
This letter was referred to W. L. Taylor, defendant’s general manager, and he wrote the following reply which is the basis of this suit: “Your letter of August 24th to Mr. McCanse has been handed to me and I think it would be an injustice to this company and its stockholders in your city, if I would permit a part of your letter to remain unanswered, and that is with reference to the claim made by Dr. O. Smith. The trouble with you people is that you don’t seem to know the facts; if you knew the facts you would see at once that we handled the matter in the proper way.
“Dr. Smith had a policy in this company; he became sick and we paid him $48 without any objections whatever, and he signed a release, releasing us in full. Dr. Smith had a relapse, which we learned was the ■continuation of the illness for which toe had paid him, ■and which he had released us in full. Quite a little while had elapsed and Dr. Smith gave us notice of the ■second illness. Remember, now, we had paid him $48 for the first illness, and he had paid into this company less than $6, but that'made no difference. His first claim was just and all right and we paid it. We denied liability under the second claim on the ground that notice was not given us in proper time, as is required in this policy, and which is one of the conditions which '
“The Missouri Fidelity and Casualty Company has taken a high standing in the insurance world. We are trying our best to treat our policyholders right. In this case we treated the doctor just as well as we possibly could. At our own expense we notified the doctor’s attorney when the claim was ready for trial.
“We had no objections to trying it without a jury. We let them have their own way about it. It was not necessary for us to use any witnesses ourselves, as we proved all we wanted to prove by the doctor himself. We. did not try to abuse the doctor when he was on the witness stand. We handled him just as nice as we knew how. I think he feels now that we were absolutely right in denying his claim and in fighting him as we did.
“I am sending a.copy of this letter to a couple of the stockholders in your city so that they may know the facts. This company is paying its claims promptly and it is not hard for any one to get what rightfully belongs to them, but we will fight a fraudulent claim to-the end.” (Italics ours.)
The plaintiff in his petition alleges the publication of the words in italics and by innuendo alleges that thereby defendant meant to charge and did charge and was understood to charge the plaintiff with the crime of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses. The-answer sets out the circumstances under which was.
So far as the evidence shows, Mr. Moore, who was a friend of plaintiff, shortly after receiving the letter and without showing it to anyone, handed it to the plaintiff. The plaintiff says that he gave it to his attorney in a few days in whose custody it remained until the trial. There is evidence that both the lawsuit of plaintiff against defendant on his sick benefit claim and this letter in reference thereto were largely discussed in the town of Ash Grove. The witnesses who testified to having seen and read the letter say it was shown to them by plaintiff or his attorney. Several witnesses were allowed to testify, over defendant’s objections, as to their understanding of the meaning of this letter. One witness said: “My understanding was from the tone of the letter he presented a fraudulent claim, and they did not propose to pay a fraudulent claim, and would fight it; I think the letter itself is plain on the construction of it.” Another witness testified: “It appeared to me they were charging him with trying to obtain money under false pretenses — an unjust claim. All I understood about it was there was an unjust claim he was trying to collect.” The court instructed the jury that the copies of the letter sent to the stockholders are privileged and afford no ground of action but refused to so declare as to the original letter to Moore.
Many errors are assigned on the sufficiency of the petition, the a'dmission of evidence, and the giving
The plaintiff stakes his whole case, both in the trial court and in this court, on the proposition that the alleged libelous words under the facts shown imputed to him the commission of the crime of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses and were so intended by the writer and understood by the readers. On this issue plaintiff wages his battle and on this issue he must win or lose* mindful of the rule of law that a plaintiff will not be allowed to start a fresh innuendo after the trial is on, but must abide by the construction placed on the words in his petition. [Newell on Slander & Libel (2 Ed.), p. 629, sec. 39; Skelley v. Railroad, 176 Mo. App. 156, 161 S. W. 877, and cases cited.]
It is equally well settled that if the words alleged are not reasonably susceptible of the defamatory meaning assigned to them, the court must so determine and direct a verdict. [Branch v. Knapp & Co., 222 Mo. 580, 121 S. W. 93.] It is for the court to say whether a publication is capable of the meaning ascribed to it by the innuendo. Newell on Slander & Libel (2 Ed.), p. 290, sec. 4, where the author adds: “The whole libel should be submitted to the jury. A word at the end may alter the whole meaning. So if in one part appears something to the plaintiff’s discredit, in another something to his credit, the ‘bane’ and the ‘antidote’ should be taken together. The law does not dwell on isolated passages, but judges of the publication as a whole.” [25 Cyc. 542, 545; St. James Military Academy v. Gaiser, 125 Mo. 517, 527, 28 S. W. 851.]
In a case where one person accused another of stealing corn, using words slanderous per se, but on every occasion of speaking the same stated to the' hearers the fact that the corn was grown by plaintiff on leased land and sold by him in violation of his agree
Here the alleged actionable words do not contain any of the words “by false pretenses,” or even “obtaining money” — the offense alleged to be charged by the innuendo. All this must be inferred, if at all, from the language used in the letter with the aid of extraneous circumstances surrounding the parties. There is much difference in a case where the words used in and of themselves charge the commission of a crime, and it is sought to show that the context and circumstances carry an antidote to the poison and reduce the natural meaning to one of innocence, and a case where, as here, ho crime is charged in terms but the poison is sought to be injected by proof of extraneous circumstances and the natural meaning of the words thereby enlarged. In the first case the burden of proof and evidence is on the defendant while in the other on the plaintiff.
What facts are conveyed by the letter in question to ¡every one reading it? The party receiving it had been solicited to become defendant’s agent in his town and had written: “I also observe that there is some
We must bear in mind that plaintiff does not sue on the theory that this letter “tends to deprive him of the benefits of public confidence” by imputing a lack of business integrity or of being dishonest or unfair in trying to collect this claim. The whole charge is that plaintiff was thereby charged with the crime of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses and we
We think it is also true that while the witnesses said they understood the letter to mean that plaintiff “presented a fraudulent claim,” “was passing a fraudulent claim and trying to obtain money from a sick benefit under false pretenses,” “was trying to obtain money under false pretenses — an unjust claim” etc., these expressions of understanding are loosely worded and do not show that the witnesses understood the words in the criminal sense. [Branch v. Knapp & Co., 222 Mo. 580, 597, 121 S. W. 93.] We observe in this connection that in instructing the jury the court did not define the crime of obtaining or attempting to obtain money by false pretenses or the essential elements thereof but left the jury to adopt its own idea of what constitutes that offense. [Krup v. Corley, 95 Mo. App. l. c. 650, 69 S. W. 609.]
We think also that the letter in question is a privileged communication under the facts shown. There is no pretense that defendant was not in good faith seeking to have Mr. Moore, to whom the letter was written, become its agent or that it was using this business communication as a mere pretext to defame the plaintiff. The writer of the letter was a stranger to plaintiff. There is no reason to say that Mr. Moore did not in good faith mention in his letter the fact that he shared with others the belief that the defendant had taken advantage of a mere technicality to defeat plaintiff’s claim. This called on defendant to justify itself
It results that the judgment should be reversed and it is so ordered.