74 Vt. 81 | Vt. | 1902
Action, case, for slander; plea, the general issue; trial by jury; verdict and judgment foir plaintiff.
At the time of the alleged slander the plaintiff was in the employ, as butter maker, of the Plainfield Co-operative Creamery Association, which was a corporation duly organized; and it was his duty to test the milk of the patrons, ascertain the amount of butter fat, weigh each patron’s milk, weigh the butter, keep a correct record of the quality of the milk, its weight, and the weight of the butter produced from it, and keep correct accounts with each patron. He had been in such employ since August, 1897, and for several years previous thereto he had had like employment with other creameries.
The defendant was a farmer having a large dairy, had been one of the leading promoters of this creamery and its first president, and at the time in question was a patron and the largest stockholder.
It appeared that upon the fairness and reliability of the milk test made by the plaintiff depended the fairness and reliability of the division of the proceeds of the business among the patrons, which was made each month, and that to raise or lower the test at any time raised o'r lowered the income. These tests were made monthly and the average Was thus obtained, and the division of proceeds among the patrons was made on the monthly average of butter fat shown by the test.
The defendant became dissatisfied with his test as made and stated by the plaintiff, and accepted and acted upon, by
He claimed that his statements were privileged because of his relation to the creamery as above stated, and that what he said was to officers of the creamery in an effort to obtain redress and prevent further damage to himself. The court held that both of these occasions were prima facie privileged, and charged on that subject in a manner satisfactory to the defendant.
i. A witness called by the plaintiff testified to a conversation that he had with the defendant November 15, 1899, which tended to support the declaration. He then called another witness and offered to prove by him, as a further ground of recovery, certain words spoken by the defendant in the conversation had with the witness November 16, to which the defendant objected for the reason assigned, that the recovery could only be for words spoken on one occasion, and that the plaintiff had elected November 15th. The plaintiff’s counsel then asked leave to elect over, which the court granted, and the plaintiff chose to stand by the conversation of November 16, and the witness testified to that conversation; to this the defendant excepted. There was no error in this ruling. The conversation on the 15th was abandoned as the ground of recovery and that on the 16th substituted for it. It is true that the two conversations were thus placed before the
2. The words spoken by the defendant by which he charged that the plaintiff had been discharged from, other places for dishonesty, were part of the defendant’s speech wherein he called the plaintiff a thief; therefore proof of those words was proper, although calling the plaintiff a thief was an entire charge.
3. The plaintiff asked a witness if there was “any rumor” in Plainfield and vicinity that the defendant bad accused the plaintiff of stealing and being a thief in connection with his work at the creamery, to which the defendant objected that this evidence would only tend to show an “individual rumor.” This, however, does not seem to have been the purport of the question. The word “rumor” signifies a flying or popular report, the common talk; therefore “any rumor” meant any current report and not the remarks of a single person. That it had become a current report that the defendant had made this charge was proper to be shown as bearing upon the question of damages. It was so held in Nott v. Stoddard, 38 Vt. 25, 88 Am. Dec. 633, and in Crane v. Darling, 71 Vt. 295, 44 Atl. 359. The repetition of a slander, so far as it is the result of the défendant’s wrongful act, is always competent to be shown in evidence.
4. That the defendant at the time of the speaking of the words held, and for five years before that time had held, certain town offices, was a fact proper to be shown by the plaint
5. It was not competent for the defendant to show by way of defense that there was. a slanderous report in circulation against the plaintiff which originated with other persons than himself.
Evidence tending to show charges, made by the defendant in the presence of the witness King was properly admitted, under the rule above stated in respect to' the repetition, and extent of the circulation of slanderous words.
6. It was competent for the plaintiff to show that by reason of these charges he lost his 'employment at the creamery, and that the directors gave this as the reason for not employing him.
7. It was competent for the plaintiff to- show in rebuttal that the rumor of these charges was not in existence prior to November 15.
8. The defendant claimed a variance between the allegations and the proof, and moved for a verdict, which was denied.
The testimony of the witness Cutler in respect to the conversation of November 16, upon which the plaintiff relied, was, in substance, that the defendant said to him that things were not right at the creamery; that the plaintiff was stealing everyday ; that he had stolen from him all be was going to; that he was going to carry his milk to the North Montpelier creamery; that the plaintiff was stealing right before their faces and eyes, and that he did not propose to have'him steal from him any more; that he had a tester, and tested his milk every day and that he-was not getting near what test he ought to; that they could not catch the plaintiff, because he was stealing right before their faces and eyes; that he was an expert in the bus
The court held that the plaintiff could go. to the jury upon three of the allegations, namely: (i) “He is a thief;” (2) “He has been stealing from me all summer, and putting it in his own pocket;” (3) “You got him here because he was so dishonest and stole so much where he came from, they would not keep him, that was why you were able to get him.”
The question, then, is whether the proof above referred to sufficiently sustains the charges.
It is the general rule that in actions' for defamation, the words must be proved as charged, and that there is a variance if the allegations and proof do not correspond; that it is not sufficient to prove equivalent words or those of similar import to the ones alleged; that the words alleged cannot be proved by showing that the defendant expressed the same meaning in different words. “In general, it will be sufficient to prove the words substantially as charged. The old rule in slander that the words must be proved precisely as laid in the declaration is obsolete; and now the action will be sustained by proof that the defendant spoke words concerning the plaintiff, slanderous in their natural and obvious meaning, and the same in substance as those stated in the declaration; but this must be done or the action will fail.” 13 Ency. PL. & Pr. 62-65. It is laid down in the same work that it is not necessary to prove
The defendant moved in arrest of judgment on the ground of variance, and that the three allegations did not, by reason of the plaintiff’s relation to the creamery, impute the crime of larceny; that the words employed in these allegations only imputed to the plaintiff fraudulent acts and fraud com
Judgment affirmed. -