Lead Opinion
The amended complaint in a newspaper libel action has been dismissed on the ground that plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue within the time limited by law for the commencement of the suit. (Rules Civ. Prac. rule 107, subd. 6.)
Concededly the Statute of Limitations has barred plaintiff’s cause of action upon defendant’s original publication of the allеged libel. The question is whether plaintiff’s pleading is sufficient to establish a republication thereof and thus escape the bar of the statute.
It is alleged that in the single issue of dеfendant’s newspaper published on December 16, 1935, there appeared a news article and editorial by which plaintiff was defamed. If we assume that these articles then constituted actionable libel, plaintiff’s right of action expired on April 8, 1937. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 51, subd. 3, as amd. by Laws of 1936, chap. 327, effective April 8, 1936.)
We cannot accеpt plaintiff’s argument that by thus according to the public the privilege of examining bound copies of its prior issues, including that of December 16, 1935, the defendant republished the allеged libels which had appeared in the single edition of that date. Rather does defendant’s conduct impress us as passive in character, with nothing to indicate a cоnscious intent to induce the public or any individual to read the alleged libels. It was at most a gratuitous courtesy which, in the instance cited by the plaintiff, was extended only after a third party had made a request therefor. (Cf. Seelman on the Law of Libel and Slander, p. 120, § 130.)
The number of separate publications of the alleged libels and the causes of action arising therefrom in plaintiff’s favor were not gauged by the number of copies of the single edition in which the articles appeared and which defendant circulated by sale or otherwise. “ In the publication of a defamatory article in a newspaper publicly circulated there is but one publication, and that at the place where the newspaper is published.” (Fried, Mendelson & Co. v. Halstead, Ltd.,
If the bar of the Statute of Limitations can be lifted by means such as plaintiff now seeks to employ, we may no longer term it a “ statute of repose ” which makes effective a purpose which the Legislature has conceived to be imperative — to outlaw stale claims. (Schmidt v. Merchants Despatch Trans. Co.,
All concur, except Sears, P. J., and Taylor, J., who dissent and vote for reversal in an opinion by Taylor, J. Present — Sears, P. J., Crosby, Lewis, Taylor and Dowling, JJ.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). This action wаs commenced on May 7, 1937. Plaintiff’s amended complaint sets forth a news article and an editorial of an alleged defamatory nature which are charged to havе been published of and concerning plaintiff in the December 16, 1935, edition of the defendant’s daily newspaper and which are alleged to have been continuously publishеd by defendant up to the time of the commencement of this action; it is further alleged that the defendant has maintained, in connection with its newspaper business, a reading rоom open to the general public wherein the libelous matter has been made available to the public and has been read therein by various persons.
Defendant moved to dismiss the amended complaint upon the ground that the causes of action, therein alleged, were barred by the Statute of Limitations. In opposition to the mоtion, plaintiff submitted the affidavit of a third person which recited, in substance, that the affiant, between March 11 and 24, 1937, read the alleged libels in a bound volume of defendant’s newspаpers which defendant made available to him in its reading room. The Special Term dismissed the amended complaint and ruled that, it being the normal custom of publishers of newsрapers to preserve a copy of each edition and to permit any one access thereto upon request, libelous matter
I am unable to agree with this determination. The custom of publishers of newspapers is wholly immaterial to the question of publication, and permission to reаd its files which contained the libels was an affirmative act by which the defamatory matter was communicated to the reader. That defendant, the composer of the defamatory matter, did not intend or expect that it would be read on the particular occasion is also immaterial on the question of publication. The law is well settled:
That a libel is published when it is read by any one but the one defamed (Kennedy v. Butler, Inc.,
That, unless occasioned by the wrongful act of a third person, an accidental or inadvertent communiсation is a publication of a libel if the communication resulted from any act or default on the part of the writer (Odgers on Libel and Slander [6th ed.], p. 137, and cases there cited); and
That each publication of the libel is a wrong which gives rise to a separate cause of action (Woods v. Pangburn,
It is my opinion that the application of these rules to the allegations of the amended complaint requires the conclusion that if the defendant, having preserved the libels in its files, permitted its files to be read and as a сonsequence the libels were read, such reading constituted publication, thus giving rise to a cause of action separate and distinct from the cause of actiоn arising from the circulation of defendant’s newspaper on December 16,1935. While it is to be conceded that the causes of action, based upon the December 16, 1935, publication, are barred by the Statute of Limitations, the alleged causes of action, based on the March, 1937, publication of the news article and editorial, arоse within the year preceding the commencement of the action. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 51.) The amended complaint, therefore, should not have been dismissed.
The judgment should be rеversed and the order modified by providing that the causes of action, based upon the December 16, 1935, publication, be dismissed and that plaintiff serve a further amended complaint alleging only the cause of action based upon the March, 1937, publication.
Sears, P. J., concurs.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
