84 P. 482 | Or. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant, Arthur Conklin, was informed against, tried, and convicted of the crime of willfully publishing-false and scandalous printed matter of and concerning another, with intent to injure and defame such person, and, having been sentenced to pay a fine, he appeals. The facts constituting the alleged crime are charged as follows;
“That the said Arthur Conklin on, to wit, the 4th day of June, 1904, in the County of Josephine, State of Oregon, then and there being, did then and there willfully publish in a newspaper called Oregon Mining Journal, the following false and scandalous matter of and concerning R. G. Smith, to wit:
‘ To illustrate a little as to the character and integrity of R. G. Smith, we may cite one case standing on the judgment records to-day, the history of which shows that an old lady, by name Mrs. Sarah E. Lewis, a widow, had Smith (thereby meaning the said R. G. Smith) collect some money and after collecting it he (meaning the said R. G. Smith) failed to turn it over to her (meaning the said Sarah E. Lewis). He (meaning the said R. G. Smith) finally admitted that he had.used it and would give her his notes for the same.’ (Thereby meaning that the said R. G. Smith had feloniously appropriated said money of the said Sarah E. Lewis to his, the said R. G. Smith’s, own use.)
Said published matter then and there being false and scandalous, and said publication then and there made by said Arthur Conklin with the intent to injure and defame*511 said K. G. Smith, contrary to the statutes in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Oregon.”
“I think that whenever you have shown the facts to be true, then you may show every fact that would tend to excuse or justify, because under our law it may be punished although true, because our law, as it stands, is designed to throw a check upon the publication of such articles as this; because it engenders bad feeling in a community and may lead to further violence, and therefore, whenever anything is published of a man or of his family, which is defamatory and of this nature, the law requires the district attorney to prosecute the case, whether the party injured seeks to have it done or not. I suppose you would have to show the fact that the article was true, before you would be allowed to show the rumors. I do not think it would be*512 proper'to say to the jury that you expect to prove these-rumors, because it would be on their minds, and might be difficult to lay aside on the trial of the case.”
Whether or not the rule originally prevailed by the ancient law of England that the truth of the matter published could be given in defense in prosecutions for criminal libel, but was changed by the Star Chamber, is not necessary to inquire, though Mr. Chief Justice Parker, in Commonwealth v. Blanding, 3 Pick. 304 (15 Am. Dec. 214), admitting certain privileged communications as exceptions, says: “That by the common law always, so far as it can be traced back, the doctrine as now mentioned in regard to excluding the truth of the matters alleged, as a defense in a public-prosecution for libel, with the exception stated, has been recognized and enforced, will be denied by no lawyer who has thoroughly examined the subject.” Hawkins, in his Pleas of the Crown (volume 1, p. 543),’arguing that' the publication of a libel tended to breaches of the peace, says: “And from the same ground, it further doth appear that it is far from being a justification of a libel, that the contents thereof are true, or that the person upon whom it is made had a bad reputation ; since the greater .appearance there is of truth, in any malicious invective, so much the-more provoking it is.” In a note to Townsend on Slander & Libel (4 ed.), § 211, a stanza from Burns and another from Moore are quoted to illustrate the phrase, “The greater the truth the greater the libel.” Blackstone, in his Commentaries on the Laws of England (book 3, *125), in discussing this subject, observes: “With regard to libels in general, there are, as in many other cases, two Remedies •; one by indictment, and another by action. The former for the public offense, for every libel has a tendency to the breach of the peace, by provoking the person libeled to-break it, which offense is the same (in point of law) whether the matter contained be true or false; and therefore the-
In People v. Croswell, 3 Johns. Cas. (N. Y.) 337, the defendant was indicted for libel committed by publishing of and concerning President Jefferson certain alleged defamatory matter. A postponement of the trial was asked, to-enable the defendant to secure the testimony of a witness by whom, he stated in his affidavit for a continuance, he expected to prove the truth of the charge. The motion having been denied, the defendant was tried and convicted, and appealed. In the supreme court, his counsel, with whom was Hamilton, contended that, pursuant to the ancient law of England, it was originally held that the truth of the charge was admissible in evidence in an action for criminal libel, and that, though such rule was for a time abrogated by order of the Star Chamber, it ceased to exist with the destruction of the pernicious power that invoked it, and, as the doctrine of the common law was brought by the colonists to the shores of North America, it prevailed in New York/and hence an error was committed in refusing to postpone the trial to enable the defendant to secure the desired testimony. Mr. Chief Justice Lewis, on the last day of the May term, 1804, observed that, the court being equally divided in opinion in respect to the question presented, a new trial was therefore denied. No judgment of affirmance, however, was given. A bill concerning libels was passed by the legislative assembly of New York and became a law April 6, 1805. Section 2 of such act is as follows: “And be it further declared and enacted, that in every prosecution for writing or publishing any libel, it shall be lawful for the defendant, upon the trial of the cause, to give in evidence, in his defense, the truth of the matter contained in the publication charged as libelous:
The legislative assembly of this State, in 1864, passed an act, which remains in force and is as follows:
“In all criminal prosecutions for libel, the truth may be given in evidence, and if it shall appear to the jury that the matter charged as libelous is true and was published with good motives and justifiable ends, the defendant must be found not guilty”: B. &. Comp. § 2170.
In the case at bar, an examination of the language used by the court would seem impliedly to admit that, when the truth of the charge had been established as a defense in a criminal action for libel, evidence of rumors corroborative of the alleged defamatory matter was admissible. It may well be doubted whether or not, under a statute like ours, such evidence is ever admissible in a criminal action for libel; but, as the court’s remark in respect to the admissibility of such evidence was more favorable to the defendant than he had a right to claim, no error can be predicated thereon.
“A man who collects money for another and neglects or refuses to turn it over, but uses the money himself, commits a larceny under our statute. It is termed embezzlement, and is punishable as larceny. You will notice the charge in this information is that he charges Mr. Smith with having collected the money of a widow, and that he failed, he says, to turn it over to her, and that he finally admitted that he used it. I repeat again, that a man who performs the acts that are described in this information would be subject to a charge of larceny, under the name of embezzlement.”
No errer was committed in charging the jury in effect that the language used was libelous per se, and hence the judgment is affirmed. Aefirmed.