28 Mich. 366 | Mich. | 1873
This was an action brought by the plaintiff in error against the defendants in error in the Wayne circuit court, for a libel.
The defendants demurred. The court sustained the demurrer and rendered final judgment with costs against the plaintiff, which he brings to this court by writ of error.
The declaration is based upon the publication by the defendants, in The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit Tribune, of an article claimed to be false and libelous, and to have been injurious to the plaintiff in his trade or business, as an agent for the sale of Steinway pianos, so called.
As a copy of the declaration will accompany the report, it will be sufficient to refer to it here for the points raised by the demurrer.
The first ground of objection relied upon in support of the demurrer is, that the declaration does not show the application to the plaintiff of the language published and claimed to be libelous; in other words, that it does not show with sufficient certainty that it was published “of and concerning the plaintiff” with reference to his trade and business; that as the publication did not mention the plaintiff by name, but only refers to the agent for the sale of the Steinway pianos, who had also been previously agent for the sale of the Knabe pianos, the mere innuendo, “ meaning the plaintiff,” etc., whose office is to explain and not to enlarge the meaning of the precedent allegations, is not sufficient, and had no effect to show that the plaintiff was the person intended.
This objection would doubtless have been well founded, if the declaration had not contained matter of inducement showing with reasonable certainty that the plaintiff was such agent. But here the declaration does allege in the
The next ground relied upon is that the publication was not libelous, as tending to injure him in his trade or business as the agent in making sales of the Stein way pianos; because, to maintain the action upon this ground, special
But the declaration does allege that prior to the time of the publication he had been and was carrying on the business of the agency, “and had in the way of his aforesaid trade and business, as agent for the sale of the Steinway pianos, acquired great gains and profits, and was, up to that time, daily and honestly acquiring great gains and profits to himself, as such agent in the sale thereof.” And it is further alleged that by means of the publication, the plaintiff has been and is greatly injured in his said trade and business, and has lost and been deprived of divers great gains and profits in his said business, which wbuld, but for such publication, have arisen and accrued to him, etc. This language, “great gains and profits of the business of such agency accruing to him as such agent in making sale of pianos,” ete., and the being deprived of such gains and profits, is clearly inapplicable to an agent employed upon a salary. The fair and only fair and natural import of the language is, that the agency was one in which he derived a part of the profits of, or a commission upon the sales. It is sufficiently clear and certain fairly to notify the defendants of the kind of injury or damage intended to be proved; and to entitle the plaintiff to judgment, if admitted by them.
But it is further said that in setting out the spécial damages, the plaintiff should have shown how he had suffered the damage, and the particular amount, and the particular sales the publication had prevented him from making. But the case is not like that of Shipman v. Burrows, upon which the defendants rely, where the plaintiff, a shipmaster, alleged generally that in consequence of the publication, etc., certain insurance companies refused to insure any vessel commanded by him, or any goods laden on board, etc.,
, In that case, whether correctly decided or not, the plaintiff must have known, and could therefore easily have set forth the particular instance of refusal. But how could the plaintiff thus know and specify the particular instance here where parties simply omitted to call for the purchase of these pianos? Had he been in the habit of carrying them around to supply customers, perhaps the case might have been analogous to that of the shipmaster; but this does not appear. Nor is this like the loss of trade from such a cause in many other cases, where the same customers are in the habit of resorting to the same shop for dry goods or groceries frequently needed; pianos are not bought at frequent, but at very distant intervals by the same person. Almost every customer must, in the nature of things, be a new one. And yet when the injury complained of is-a loss of trade, in ordinary cases, from slander or a libel, it seems to be settled upon authority, and we think upon sound principle, that the names of the customers driven away or lost need not be mentioned; but the general allegation of the loss of trade is sufficient, and the declaration-may be supported by evidence of such general loss. — See Evans v. Harries, 38 Eng. L. & Eq., 347; Hartley v. Herring, 8 T. R., 130; Ashley v. Harrison, 1 Esp., 48 Trenton, etc. Ins. Co. v. Perrine, 8 Zab., 402.
But it is further insisted, that to maintain an action for such a publication, the words must impute some charge or matter in relation to the plaintiff’s business, trade or vocation, which, if true, would render him unworthy of employment. For the purpose of this case it may be admitted that this would be true, if the loss of, or dismissal from employment as agent, was the special injury complained of —though we give no opinion upon such a case. Here this is not the injury complained of; the plaintiff has not ceased, but still continues to be employed as agent; and the gist of his complaint, the very substance of the alleged injury,.
The definition of a libel, as given by Mr. Townshend upon a review of the authorities is, that it is a wrong done by writing or -effigy; and if false and malicious, certainly, and for the purpose of injuring another in reputation, trade, employment or property, every publication of language concerning a man or his affairs, which, as a necessary or natural and proximate consequence, occasions pecuniary loss to another, is prima facie a libel, if the publication be by writing. See for the principle and instances in illustration, Townshend on Slander, pp. 35, 45, 68 and 237 ; Starkie on Slander, pp. 2, 115, 129, and 139 to 144. See also Trenton Ins. Co. v. Perrine, 8 Zab., 402; Gates v. Bowker, 18 Vt., 23.
But it is further urged by the counsel for the defendants that there is no allegation that the Knabe piano was not, in fact, the best.
Which, upon the whole, is in fact the best piano, might' be a very-difficult question to settle; one might doubtless be better in one particular feature, and the other in another, — each would naturally have its friends and its opponents. Both the plaintiff and the defendants were at entire liberty to recommend that for which they were respectively the agents, as superior to the other; to point out all its advantages, as well as all the defects of the other, so long as they confined themselves to their own views, and such proofs as they were able to offer; and a. reasonable latitude' should, of course, be allowed for each to puff his own. But this right must, in justice, be so< far limited that neither should, for the purpose of adding to-his own sales and diminishing those of.the other, be allowed.
The plaintiff having been the exclusive agent for the sale of both pianos up to 1869, and continuing the agent for the sale of the Steinway, while the defendants became and were the agents for the sale of the Knabe piano, after he had given it up; the defendants publish in a newspaper in the city where both are doing business, and of wide circulation, the false statement and representation that the plaintiff had, when agent for both, pronounced, and after full opportunity to test both, declared the Knabe piano in every case the best instrument, and advised his customers to purchase it, as being superior in all respects. The intention of this publication is too clear to be mistaken. It was to place the plaintiff before the public and before customers in a false, somewhat ridiculous and discreditable attitude; to take from his recommendations of the Steinway piano which he was selling, all credit and reliance, and thereby to diminish the sales of the Steinway, in which he was engaged, and to promote the sales of the Knabe, in which they were engaged. This was clearly the design and purpose of it; and this purpose could not be effected without injuring the plaintiff in his business as agent in making sales. Such, therefore, was the natural
This is not like the ordinary cases of merely recommending one’s own articles for sale as the best, and decrying, though falsely, the articles of another which may come in competition. Nor is it in principle like the report of a chemist upon the respective merits of the oil prepared and sold by the plaintiff, and that sold by the defendant, as in Young v. Macrae, 3 Best & Smith, 264. If In that case the publication had represented the plaintiff himself as being the chemist, and the report disparaging his oil as being his own, the cases would have been parallel. It would have presented, as the present case does, a species of wanton wrong and injury which might be very injurious to the plaintiff, and from which he could in no way protect or defend himself without suit.
I express no opinion upon the point, whether, had this been merely verbal slander, it would, or would not have been actionable without proof of special damage.
I know it has been said that the distinction maintained between the oral and written language, as regards its actionable quality where published concerning an individual, as such, is not recognized in regard to language concerning one in a special character; that in regard to language concerning one in a special character, it makes no difference in regard to its actionable quality, whether it be published orally or in writing. — Holt on Libel, 218; Townshend on L. and S., § 180. It may be true, as suggested, that “the language in writing which concerns one in a special character is usually actionable when published concerning the individual, as such, and without reference to his special character; and that the question, whether it is or is not actionable as affecting one in a special character, has arisen
The same principles which recognize the distinction in all other cases sustain it equally in this. And the author first quoted seems to admit this substantially, when he adds, after-the statement of the distinction above stated, “though defamation when written may be actionable when the same words, if spoken, would not.” And see Harman v. Delaney, 2 Str., 898, where it is said: “The law has always been very tender of the reputation of tradesmen; and therefore words spoken of them in the way of their trade, will bear an action, that will not be actionable in the case of another person; and if bare words are so, it will be stronger in the case of a public newspaper, which is so diffusive.”
We think the court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and the judgment must be reversed, with costs.