19 Pa. Super. 525 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
This is an application to reverse the judgment of the court below without furnishing us with any of the evidence pertinent to the questions discussed.
1. Our rulé of court provides that the appellant’s paper-book shall include an appendix containing the evidence; and in general to have a question reviewed, all the evidence given in the court below; bearing upon the point, must be furnished in the paper-book' 1 P. & L. Dig. of Dec. Col. 885. The rule has long been in force in the Supreme Court, and in this court from the time of its organization. The reason for it is plain. “ To justify a reversal of a judgment, after a trial, it must be made apparent from the record, not only that an error has been committed, but that it materially injured the rights of the party complaining. To reverse without being-satisfied in regard to the last branch of the proposition, would, in many cases, be to overturn judgments for errors on abstract points, not properly involved in the proceedings below.” These remarks taken from the opinion of Chief Justice Lewis in Allegheny v¿ Nelson,-25 Pa. 332, are pertinent here, and for the reasons above suggested we would be justified in dismissing all of the assignments of error excepting perhaps the sixth and seventh,
2. It is not pretended that the plaintiff’s statement did not set forth a good cause of action, and where this is the case and a verdict has been rendered for the plaintiff and a question of law has not been reserved, a general assignment alleging error in entering judgment on the verdict is not good.
3. The defendant did not except generally to the charge and the answers to the points, but did take specific exceptions to certain portions of the charge and to the answers to certain points. The answer to the first plaintiff’s point was not one of these; therefore, the second assignment of error is overruled.
4. A man is supposed to intend the natural consequence of his own intentional act. Actions often speak louder than words. The instruction complained of in the third and fourth assignments of error were fully warranted by the authorities, and, so far as we know, by the evidence in the case. “ Everyone who requests, procures, or commands another to publish a libel is answerable as though he published it himself. And such request need not be express, but may be inferred from the defendant’s conduct in sending his manuscript to the editor of a magazine, or making a statement to the reporter of a newspaper, with the knowledge that they will be sure to publish it, and without any effort to restrain their so doing. And it is not necessary that the defendant’s communication be inserted verbatim, so long as the sense and subs tance of it appear in print: ” Odgers on Libel and Slander, *155, Bl. ed. 119. See also cases cited by the learned author on *559, etc., Bl. ed. 430. These assignments are overruled.
5. Where evidence which would properly be part of a case is within the control of the party whose interest it would naturally be to produce it, and, without satisfactory explanation he fails to do so, the jury may draw an inference that it would be unfavorable to him. It is an inference of fact, not a presumption of law: Hall v. Vanderpool, 156 Pa. 152; Steininger v. Hoch’s Exr., 42 Pa. 432; Frick v. Barbour, 64 Pa. 120; Collins v. Leafey, 23 W. N C. 264; McHugh v. McHugh, 186 Pa. 197. In Pennsylvania this principle of evidence is not confined to the nonproduction of documentary
6. The publication charged the plaintiff, a clergyman, with having defrauded the defendant in a business transaction. In his eighth point, and substantially in his seventh, the defendant asked the court to charge as follows: “ Unless the jury find that the publication was false and malicious and published by the defendant with malicious intent, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover and the verdict should be for the defendant.” The effect of affirming this point would have been to hold, to use plain terms, that you may with malicious intent publish of a clergyman that he has been guilty of an immoral and an illegal act, even amounting to a crime, and that it is incumbent on him to prove affirmatively that he is not guilty of the charge, in order to recover in an action of libel. None ot the cases cited by the appellant’s counsel, and none other of which we are aware, sustains such a proposition. The points were properly refused.
7. The eighth assignment is not based on any point presented or exception taken in the court below, and, therefore, will not be discussed.
Judgment affirmed.