2 Ga. App. 178 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
An action for slander was brought by Chambers against Taylor. The petition as amended alleged, in substance, that the defendant had said to H. W. Griffin, Samuel Long, J. D. Hutchinson, J. F. Robinson, W. W. Byrd, W. F. Matthis, Joel W. Parrish, Willie Lassiter and Eddie Lassiter, that the plaintiff had burned a certain house of the defendant, thereby intending, falsely and maliciously, to impute to the plaintiff a felony, the crime of arson. In the fourth paragraph it is alleged that the defendant also tried to hire Long to swear that the plaintiff confessed the crime. In the sixth paragraph it is alleged that on the preliminary trial at which the plaintiff stood charged with this offense, the defendant, under oath, publicly proclaimed that the plaintiff had burned the house. In the seventh paragraph it is alleged that the defendant attempted to indict the plaintiff before the grand jury for the offense, but failed. The defendant denied all the allegations of the petition, but set up additionally: “that it is true that in December, 1904, one of his houses, out of which plaintiff liad just moved, was mysteriously burned, and all the circumstances pointed toward plaintiff being the perpetrator of the deed; that in good faith and in performance of a private and public duty he made affidavit and had plaintiff arrested for committing said act; that all words spoken by him were in furtherance of .the belief, from facts and circumstances known, that plaintiff committed the act, and not from a wanton and malicious mind on the part of defendant; and although a committal court did not find plaintiff guilty, the facts and circumstances surrounding the whole transaction point strongly to his being the perpetrator; that defendant has never since said committal trial attempted to push in any man
Judgment reversed.