2 Watts 17 | Pa. | 1833
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Where the accusation has not been made bluntly, but has been insinuated, as it sometimes is, in a way to make it actionable, it is frequently a nice thing to determine whether the attendant circumstances are sufficiently stated to indicate, with legal precision, the sense in which the words are supposed to have been spoken and understood. The latter must in general be coupled, by means of a colloquium, with facts which give a particular hue to the meaning, and which, by the help of inuendoes, to designate the things and persons alluded to, disclose a charge of guilt, resulting
Judgment affirmed.