3 Johns. 56 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1808
Several reasons are assigned, why the assessment of damages, in this case, ought to be set aside.
1. It is alleged, that the jury were restrained from examining the remaining parts of the paragraph, or the parts of the publication which preceded, and followed the libellous words selected. But this allegation does not appear to be supported. The affidavit, which is the ground of the motion, states, that the counsel for the defendant did read to the jury “ the remaining part of the paragraph containing the libellous u'ords,” and that they drew their inferences “ from the whole paragraph taken together.” The jury had, then, before them, not only the.libel, but the context, and were left to form .their judgment of the damages “ from the whole tenor of the publication.” It is further stated, that the jury were charged, that the interlocutory judgment admitted the fact of the publica-
2. The defendant offered in evidence, in mitigation of damages, a record containing an assessment of damages in favour of the plaintiff against the defendant, for publishing a libel on the 3d day of July, 1805; and he offered to prove, that the libellous words, in both declarations, were contained in a series of numbers published by him, which related "to the manner and the, means employed in procuring the incorporation of the Merchants’ Bank. This testimony was rejected, and on a reconsideration of the point, I cannot but be of opinion, that it was properly rejected. As the causes of action were wholly distinct, (the one publication being on the 3d, and the other on the 17th
I can readily admit, that there may be cases in which the two offences follow so near to each other, in point of time, that exemplary damages in the first case might answer all the beneficial ends, intended by this species of animadversion. But the possibility of undue or unnecessary damages in a subsequent suit, will not affect an established rule. The rules of evidence are stable and uniform principles, which cannot bend to the hardships of a parti
3. A third ground, of the motion is, that the public character of the plaintiff, as an officer of government, and the evil example of libels, were stated by the judge to the jury, as considerations with them, for increasing the damages. And, surely, this is the true and salutary doctrine. The actual pecuniary damages, in actions for defamation, as well as in other actions for torts, can rarely be computed, and are never the sole rule of assessment. “ In cases of criminal conversation, battery, imprisonment, slander, See. (to use the words of Lord Camden, in 2 Wils. 206.) the state, degree, quality, trade or profession of the party injured, as well as of the party who did the injury, must be, and generally are considered by the jury, in giving damages.” And, in the case to which these observations were applied, he admitted, that the mere personal injury to the plaintiff was very small, but said that the jury had done right in giving exemplary damages, as it was a case which concerned the liberty of the subject. In another case, which came before the court of C. B. for debauching the plaintiff’s daughter, (3 Wils. 18.) chief justice Wzlmot observed, that actions of that sort were brought for example’s sake, and that, although the loss to the plaintiff might not really amount to the value of twenty shillings, yet that the jury had done right in giving liberal damages. Again, in the case of Pritchard v. Papillon, (Harg. State Trials, vol. 3. 1071.) which was an action for maliciously causing the plaintiff, as Lord Mayor of London, to be imprisoned for a few hours, the chief justice charged the jury, that though it was no easy matter to
Thompson, J. and Van Ness, J. declared themselves to be of the same opinion.
A judgment by default is an admission of the plaintiff’s right of action, and where the damages are liquidated by the convention of the parties, witnessed by written documents, set forth in the plaintiff’s declaration, the jury are bound to give the damages ascertained by the parties; there is no necessity of proving the note or writing thus set forth, though they must be adduced to the jury, that they may see whether indorsements have been made. In actions of a vindictive nature, such as the present, a judgment by default deprives the defendant of no other right than that of gainsaying the plaintiff’s title to nominal damages, and of consequence, the printing and publishing the libel is admitted. With respect to real damages, the defendant has the same right to adduce evidence in-mitigation of those damages, as he would have had, upon a plea of not guilty, after the publication of the libel, and the innuendoes had been proved. These are elementary principles, sanctioned as well by daily practice, as by adjudged cases.
It then becomes a question, whether the evidence of a record of a recovery by the plaintiff against the defendant, was properly excluded. It was offered to be shown, in '
The defendant could not have pleaded the recovery in the first suit in bar to the second, because they were, technically, distinct offences, and the recovery in the former suit could be noticed in no other manner, than as mitigating the damages in the second suit. It cannot be inferred, from the affidavit before us, that special damages have been alleged in the declaration in either suit. Hence it results, that the plaintiff having already recovered 1,400 dollars, for a libel of the same nature and tendency, as the one which is the basis of this suit, without the allegation of any special damage in either case, would, on the second trial, recover as though the second publication was, in reality, a new, distinct, and uncompensated offence. In vindictive actions, such as for libels, defamation, assault and battery, false imprisonment, and a variety of others, it is always given in charge to the jury, that they are to inflict damages for example’s sake, and by way of punishing the defendant. In the present case, the Chief Justice, in charging the jury, inculcated the doctrine of
Rule refused.