14 Misc. 326 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1895
The matter for the publication of which this action was brought appeared in the defendant’s newspaper, the Mail and Express, issued upon the afternoon of ¡November 7, 1892, and read as follows:
“British Gold to Help Cleveland.
“Democrats and Their English Allies Attempt to Purchase Votes—Americans
will Resent the Insult.
“Not the First Time that the Claimant has Appealed to His Free-Trade Friends Across the Sea to Come to His Assistance—The Workingmen will Give Their Answer to This Diabolical Outrage To-Morrow—The Closing Days of a Spirited Campaign.
“The Cobden Club of England has apparently become tired of trying to influence United States elections in behalf of Democratic free-trade candidates by spending millions of dollars in the campaigns here, and the friends of the free-trade claimant have had to hustle about Great Britain themselves to get the money which English manufacturers are willing to give up to buy votes for their friend Cleveland, and to kill their most hated enemy, McKinley Bill. The account of the raising abroad of a great corruption fund by protection America’s enemies and Free-Trade Cleveland’s friends has just been cabled over. The London head of a large New York firm of cloth jobbers is reported as the leader of this movement to get together and send to America nearly half a million of British gold with which to push the cause of the Anti-Tariff Democracy and its candidate for the presidency, Cleveland. To him and his representatives, the mill owners of Bradford, Huddersfield, and other big manufacturing and woolen-jobbing centers, under representations that only under Cleveland as president could the American market be opened to them, gave freely of their money, to help the claimant’s campaign. * * * The claimant’s friend in London refused to deny to the press that he had English money to such an amount to be spent on Cleveland.”
Argument is of course unnecessary to demonstrate the meaning of the publication. That it was intended to, and did in fact, charge
Interpreting the inquiry addressed to the plaintiff upon his direct examination, “Is there any other person whatever, than yourself, who is the London head of a New York firm of cloth jobbers?” as calling upon the witness to say whether or not any other New York firm of cloth jobbers maintained a branch of their business at London, in the charge of a member, it did not necessarily call for the statement of a mere conclusion or opinion. The subject-matter of the inquiry was open to the objective perception of one acquainted with the merchants of both cities, as the plaintiff was shown to be. Sweet v. Tuttle, 14 N. Y. 465, 471; Knapp v. Smith, 27 N. Y. 277, 281.
The defendant’s editor, called as a witness for the plaintiff, testified, under objection on the ground of immateriality, that the article published and complained of was written under his direction, and that the cable therein referred to was an alleged cable published in several morning newspapers of the same day. Copies of the newspapers alluded to were identified by the witness, and the alleged cable which named the plaintiff admitted in evidence, under the like objection of the defendant’s counsel. We are of the opinion that the evidence was admissible to show actual malice of the defendant, but, assuming it to have been inadmissible for any purpose, the error of its admission was cured by the instructions to the jury, made at the request of the defendant’s counsel,— that, in determining whether or not the allusion in the publication complained of was to the plaintiff, they must disregard all evi
The testimony of the plaintiff’s witness Willis, which was to the effect that the plaintiff held a leading position in the trade for many years, was material, as tending to identify the plaintiff’s firm with the “large Hew York firm of cloth jobbers” alluded to in the publication complained of.
The question asked of Leahy, the plaintiff’s partner, and a witness called in his behalf, with reference to the London house of E. H. Van Ingen & Co., “And who is the head of that?” called for a fact, and not a conclusion. Sweet v. Tuttle, supra; Knapp v. Smith, supra. The further question addressed to the same witness, “Do you know of any other London head of a Hew York firm of cloth jobbers?” called for an affirmation or negation of knowledge only, and was not objectionable upon that ground.
Ho error resulted from the court’s refusal to charge “that the publication of other similar articles in other papers immediately prior to the publication of the article complained of is a matter the jury must consider in mitigation of damages,” and “that the fact that the same matter, substantially, was published extensively in the morning papers of the same day is to be considered by the jury in mitigation of damages.” The plaintiff, upon proof of the libel, was at least entitled to compensatory damages, and, the court having instructed the jury that exemplary damages were not to be awarded, a charge as requested by the defendant’s counsel would have been irrelevant and misleading. Witcher v. Jones (Com. Pl.) 17 N. Y. Supp. 491; cases in note to McAllister v. Detroit Free Press Co. (Mich.) 15 Am. St R. 318, 339, etc., (43 N. W. 431). Furthermore, no such defense in mitigation was pleaded. Code Civ. Proc. §§ 508, 535, 536; Willover v. Hill, 72 N. Y. 36.
The defendant’s further requests to charge “that, unless the jury find actual malice on the part of the defendant, they can give no exemplary damages,” and “that actual malice consists in a willful intent to injure the plaintiff,” were plainly immaterial and irrelevant, in view of the fact that the court charged that, as matter of law, the plaintiff was not entitled to exemplary damages.
The court substantially charged the defendant’s eleventh and twelfth requests, in the following language: “That the defendants are not responsible for anything, whether in any other newspaper, or for any damage done to plaintiff by any such other publication.”
Obviously the request to charge “that it is necessary for the plaintiff to prove to the satisfaction of the jury that the plaintiff was known as The London head of a large Hew York firm of cloth jobbers,’ before they can find a verdict for the plaintiff,” was properly refused. It was not necessary to the maintenance of the action that before the defamatory publication the plaintiff had attracted general notice under the specific appellation which the defendant may have conceived for the occasion. The pertinent and