136 A. 90 | Conn. | 1927
This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action based upon certain slanderous statements alleged to have been made by the defendant. The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $500, and the defendant appeals from the denial by the trial court of her motion to set the verdict aside. There is little, if any, proof of special damages, and if the verdict is to be sustained it must be because the plaintiff was entitled to recover general damages. The slanderous words were to the effect that the plaintiff "is a bad woman." "She runs around with her boarders." "She is a thief." "She steals vegetables from my garden."
To the portion of this utterance which charges the plaintiff with being a bad woman and with running around with her boarders, the plaintiff attaches an innuendo to the effect that thereby the defendant meant that the plaintiff was a lewd and dissolute woman and an adulteress. The defendant claims that this portion of the utterance was not slanderous per se, in that it required an innuendo to make clear its meaning, and hence that it would not be actionable in the absence of proof of special damage. Words claimed to be slanderous are to be given their natural and ordinary meaning and to be understood in the sense which hearers of common and reasonable understanding would ascribe to them; and where their meaning is not apparent upon their face it is for the jury to determine what it was. Carey v. Woodruff,
The remaining portion of the utterance, somewhat variously stated by different witnesses, was to this effect: "She is a thief." "She steals vegetables from my garden." Whether, if this were to be interpreted as a charge that the plaintiff made off with growing vegetables from defendant's garden, the utterance would be slanderous per se, we need not inquire. The jury might reasonably have found that the defendant intended to charge the plaintiff, not with stealing growing vegetables, but with stealing vegetables which had been already severed from the soil, so that the harvesting and the asportation did not constitute a continuous act. Darling v. Clement,
The plaintiff was therefore entitled to recover without proof of special damage, substantial compensation for such injury to her reputation and feelings and for her mental suffering, as it is natural to presume she suffered from the accusation. Craney v. Donovan,
The appellant complains that the charge was such as to create the impression that it was necessary for the jury to award substantial damages to the plaintiff if they found that the words alleged had been spoken; if so, that is not error, for it follows from what we have said that the law would presume some damage to the plaintiff from the utterance of the words, and the trial court was careful to tell the jury that they might find the injury to the plaintiff not to be serious and, that, if they did so find, they should proportion their award to that injury. The appellant also complains that the *538 trial court did not charge the jury that it was their duty to assess damages solely from the point of view of compensation for injury done; the court did not state this to the jury in so many words, but the tenor of the charge was such that they could not have taken the law to be otherwise.
The final complaint of the appellant is that the trial court failed to instruct the jury that in awarding exemplary damages the expense of litigation other than that of the present action should not be considered. The occasion for any such charge grew out of testimony by the plaintiff that she had incurred legal expenses of $200 in a former unsuccessful prosecution for the same slander, and $100 for the present one. The trial court merely charged the jury that, if they found such facts as would justify the award of exemplary damages, these should be limited to the proper and ordinary expenses of the plaintiff in conducting the litigation, less the sum she would in any case receive as taxable costs. The failure of the trial court to refer specifically to the testimony as to the expenses of the former action was no doubt an inadvertence, for which counsel for the appellant are somewhat to blame, in that they failed to object to the testimony, or to request a charge with reference to the matter. Nevertheless, in the absence of directions from the court, the jury could not be reasonably expected to distinguish the expense of the former action from that incurred in connection with the present one, and to the extent that the verdict might have been affected by this omission on the part of the trial court, the judgment must be held erroneous. As the amount by which the verdict would be so affected can be definitely fixed, a remittitur will serve the ends of justice.
There is error, and a new trial is ordered unless the plaintiff within one month enters a