49 Ala. 168 | Ala. | 1873
—Tbis is an action for verbal slander. It was commenced on tbe 30tb day of September, 1871. Tbe complaint pursues tbe form found in tbe Schedule of Forms given in tbe Be vised Code, except tbat it does not state tbe day and tbe month in which tbe words alleged were spoken. Tbe statement of the time of speaking tbe words is in tbis language, to wit: “ Said words were spoken in tbe year 1871.” The complaint is demurred to. Tbe specification of tbe cause of demurrer is stated in these words: “ Tbe time laid in tbe declaration was too indefinite and uncertain, and tbat everything in tbe complaint might be true, and still tbe plaintiff would have no cause of action against tbe defendant at tbe commencement of tbe suit, because all tbe slanderous words might have been uttered after tbe suit was brought.” Tbis demurrer was overruled by tbe court; and, I think, properly. Tbis objection seems to be rather plausible than sound. Though tbe time is not technically alleged, yet it sufficiently appears tbat tbe words were already spoken when tbe action was commenced. Their grammatical interpretation necessarily leads to tbis construction. They were spoken in tbe year 1871. Their utterance was an accomplished fact before tbe action was commenced. Tbe language of tbe complaint can
2. The second assignment of error is quite uncertain. It does not state concisely “ in what the error consists.” This is the requisition of the Rule of Practice in this court. Rule 1, Rev. Code, p. 816. The assignment is in the following words : “ The court erred in the several rulings and failures to rule on questions of evidence, as shown by the bill of exceptions.” This may comprehend one or any number of errors; and this court may be left to hunt them up as best it may. As a general rule this will not be done. 1 Brick. Dig. p. 102, § 279 et seq. But in this case, the brief of the learned counsel for the appellant has supplied the deficiency of the assignment; and the questions raised in the brief will be considered, so far at least as may be necessary to give the appellant the full benefit of his bill of exceptions.
3. The first objection was to the testimony of Pace. This witness does not fix with certainty the time when the slanderous words he refers to were spoken. If they were spoken before the 30th day of September, 1871, then the testimony was evidence of the words complained of, which was evidence “ sustaining the complaint,” and also of the damages. The evidence does not show with certainty that these words were spoken after suit brought. The presumption is in favor of the ruling of the court. Error must be affirmatively shown. 43 Ala. 542; 40 Ala. 557; 31 Ala. 59, 164, 234. This is not done in this instance, and the objection cannot be sustained.
4. 5. The second objection refers to the attempt by the plaintiff to impeach the veracity of Ruder, a witness for the defendant. This witness was asked, on cross-examination by the plaintiff, if he did not tell him “ that the defendant had been abusing him,” in front of plaintiff’s place of business in Eufaula, in August, 1871. This Ruder denied. The plaintiff
6. In the objection as to the witness Reubenstein there seems to be more difficulty. This witness was called for the plaintiff. The defendant had offered evidence tending to impeach his veracity, by showing that he was a person of general bad character for truth. In Reubenstein’s testimony he had deposed that he had told the plaintiff, before the suit had been commenced, that the defendant had been “ telling his customers that the plaintiff was a thief and a swindler, and would get everything they had.” To support the veracity of this witness, the plaintiff was allowed to depose that “ the said Reubenstein had told him the facts ” to which he had testified before the suit had commenced. There was no evidence that Reubenstein had ever made any contradictory statement about what he had sworn he had told the plaintiff. The defendant objected to this evidence in support of Reubenstein’s veracity; and the court overruled the objection, and the defendant excepted. There was no error in this. It was certainly some evidence to the credit of. Reubenstein that he had been uniform and consistent in his statement of the same fact. Though such evidence may be very slight, it is not wholly irrelevant, as evidence of the veracity of the impeached witness. Henderson v. Jones, 10 Serg. & R. 322; Cook v. Curtis, 6 Har. & Johns. 93; Coffin v. Anderson, 4 Blackf. 395; The State v. George, 8 Ired. 324; Dossett v. Miller, 3 Sneed, 72; Pleasant v. The State, 15 Ark. 624. This- case is unlike Nichols v. Stewart, settled in this court in 1852. In that case the witness had made contradictory statements of the same facts, and his letter was offered, which corroborated his evidence in court, to sustain him. This was not permitted. 20 Ala. 358. Certainly, consistency in the statement of the same facts is evidence of veracity. See Wihen v. Law, 3 Stark. R. 63; 14 E. C. L. R. 3.
7. Upon the issue whether Reubenstein (plaintiff’s witness) was a truthful witness or not, which arose on his impeachment, Ruder was one of the impeaching witnesses for the defendant; and he was asked, on cross-examination, “ to state whom he’d heard talking about said Reubenstein.” Ruder answered, that
The" objection to the testimony of the witness Meier is of the same character as that to Patterson, and for like reasons it cannot be sustained.
8. A careful examination of all the objections set down in the bill of exceptions shows that the errors complained of are rather speculative than real. „ Except the demurrer, they principally grow out of the impeachment of the witnesses Reuben-stein and Ruder. In the conduct of such an issue, much must be left to the sound discretion of the court. In such a case, it
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.