46 N.Y.S. 200 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action is brought to recover damages for slander. The averments of the complaint are that plaintiff was chief of the police force of Long Island City ; that, while acting as such chief of police, the defendant spoke of and concerning the plaintiff individually and as such officer, at the same time pointing at him, these false and defamatory words: “ Three years ago I was ejected by force from this building (meaning the City Hall, Long Island City) by a gang of thieves, murderers and robbers and pirates, at the head of whom stood that old gray-headed scoundrel, He committed'an assault on me. We have some police officers on the force of whom I am
The defendant admitted that the plaintiff was such chief of police, hut denied the speaking of the words alleged in the complaint, except that he charged the plaintiff, at said timé and place, with committing an assault upon him . The proof upon the trial tended to sustain the allegations of the complaint. It was the view of the learned ■court before whom the case was tried that the allegations of the ■complaint, coupled with the proof given upon the trial, • were not susceptible of a construction' imputing slander of the plaintiff- in connection with his office. This conclusion is arrived at upon the assumption that the language . used does not impute or charge the plaintiff with the commission of a crime, for the reason that it appeared that the plaintiff had no power of appointment to the police force of Long Island City, or of removal of the members constituting the same, and that, therefore, it was his duty to be at their head, however constituted or bad they might be. That if the language is to be construed as charging-, the 'plaintiff with being at the head of a gang of policemen or of outsiders who were of the. character charged, they do not impute slander to the plaintiff in his office in the connection used, as the act of ejecting the defendant from the office of mayor was illegal Any injurious imputation affecting a person in his office, profession, or business, is slanderous, and an action, may be maintained therefor without, proof of special-damage. (Gideon v. Dwyer, 87 Hun, 246.)
In the present case we have already held, upon an application to strike from the complaint all of the words in the 3d paragraph following the sentence, “ He committed an assault on ine,” that the averment was sufficient to authorize a finding that the words were spoken of and concerning the plaintiff in contradistinction to the force in general. Such ruling,' we think, necessarily embraced a construction of the language used in the prior portion of this paragraph in the complaint as constituting an injurious imputation affecting the plaintiff in his office as chief of police. The charge made by the defendant is "that he was ejected by a gang, whom he characterizes as thieves, murderers and pirates, of whom the plaintiff, an old gray-headed scoundrel, was the head. The designation
The language used, we think, required the case to be submitted to the jury upon both questions, whether the language imputed to the plaintiff a criminal act and, also, whether it was spoken of and concerning the plaintiff in his office of chief of police. While we arrive at this conclusion, we also reach the conclusion that the order should be affirmed. The court was vested with discretion in determining that the ve'rdic-t was excessive, and we see no reason for interfering with its exercise.
The order should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concurred.'
Order affirmed, upon payment by respondent within twenty days of the trial fee and the disbursements of the trial and the disbursements of this appeal, and in default of such payment order reversed, with costs.