159 Ky. 605 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion op the Court by
— Affirming.
Plaintiff, Reid Cromer, brought this action against the United Mine Workers of America and G-. B. Reed, to recover damages for libel. The jury returned a verdict in his favor for $500. Judgment was entered accordingly, and the defendants appeal.
(1) The first ground urged for reversal is that the United Mine Workers of America is not a corporation, but a voluntary association, and is not, therefore, suable in the name of the association.
It was charged in the petition that the United Mine Workers of America was a corporation. It filed an answer in whch it denied this fact, and in the same paragraph pleaded to the merits. In another paragraph it pleaded in substance that it was a voluntary association with a half million members, scattered over the United States, and it was impossible to give the names of all of its members, or of any considerable number thereof. The answer, however, did not constitute a plea in abatement. Thereupon plaintiff filed an amended petition alleging that the United Mine Workers of America was not a corporation, but an association, composed of several thousand members, all of whom resided outside of the State of Kentucky. The amended petition further alleged that said association published the paper in which the libelous matter was contained. Both defend
As we have in this State no statute authorizing a suit against a voluntary association as such, it is doubtless true that such an association is not suable merely in the name of the association. Notwithstanding this fact, however, we take it that the question must be raised in some proper way; i. e., by special demurrer, where the facts appear on the face of the petition, or by answer in the nature of a plea in abatement, where such facts do not appear. Civil Code, Secs. 92 and 118; McAllister v. Savings Bank, 80 Ky., 684; Alvo v. Lawson, 17 B. Mon., 642; Rudd v. Deposit Bank, 105 Ky., 443; Ency. Pleading & Practice, Vol. 22, page 247.
In the present case the question was not raised by special demurrer or by answer by way of plea in abatement. On the contrary, both defendants answered to the merits without saving the question. That being true, the defense that the United Mine Workers of America were not suable in the name of the association was waived.
(2) The libel complained of was printed in the United Mine Workers’ Journal, a newspaper published at Indianapolis, Indiana, under the auspices of the United Mine Workers of America, and is as follows:
“The strikebreakers in our little strike here are not practical men. They are here to defeat our purpose. They will not be desirable when we return to work, and will be ordered peremptorily by their employer to move on, go elsewhere, over to Indiana, Illinois, etc., to again illegitimately enjoy benefits and conditions established by union, good and honest men. Believing that it behooves us to keep you readers informed as to who these men are, we are concluding with a list of the names of the detestable scabs and black legs whom we want you to be continually on the lookout for.”
In the list of names printed in the paper is the name of Reid Cromer. It appears from the petition that Reid
are censu has been superseded. Words are now construed by the courts in their plain and popular sense. Under this rule, the words “detestable blackleg” are, we think, libelous per se. Where, of course, the words are used under such special circumstances as to show they have a meaning different from that ordinarily intended, it is for the jury to decide what is, in fact, their true construe
Judgment affirmed.