43 Neb. 126 | Neb. | 1894
John S. Mullen brought this, a suit for libel, in the district court of Douglas county against the World Publishing Company, a corporation engaged in the publication of a newspaper in the city of Omaha, and hereinafter called the “Publishing Company.” There was a trial to a jury, with a verdict and judgment for Mullen, and the Publishing Company brings the case here for review. The evidence has not been preserved by a bill of excéptions and there was no motion in the court below for a new trial. After the jury had returned its verdict, counsel for the Publishing Company moved the court for judgment upon the pleadings, notwithstanding the verdict, upon the ground that the petition of Mullen did not state a cause of action. This motion the district court overruled, and its ruling on this motion is the only assignment of error argued here.
The article printed by the Publishing Company alleged by Mullen to be libelous and on which he bases his suit is in words and figures as follows:
“ Mullen's Insurance.
“The Company Declines to Pay the Risk of His Building.
“John S. Mullen is the plaintiff in two suits in the county court against the German Fire Insurance Company*129 of Peoria, Illinois. The suits are to recover the value of two insurance policies which Mullen held on his saloon and store in Albright, which were destroyed by fire August 31, 1890. There were a number of suspicious circumstances at the time, and it was reported that Mullen fired the buildings himself. The agent of the insurance company investigated the matter, and as a result the company refused to pay the insurance, which amounts to $1,900 on both policies. Mullen now brings suit and it will be contested by the company. Its agent said it had excellent grounds for contesting the case, but refused to state what facts they were in possession of in regard to Mullen’s complicity.”
Mullen alleged no special damages in his petition and it contains no colloquium or innuendo, and the argument of the Publishing Company is that the petition does not state a cause of action, as the language is not libelous per se. Counsel for the Publishing Company well say: “The courts no longer strain to find an innocent meaning for words prima facie defamatory, neither will they put a forced construction on words which may fairly he deemed harmless.” Any written or printed statement which falsely and maliciously charges another with the commission of a crime is libelous per se; and in determining whether the words of a publication are libelous the courts will not resort to any technical construction of the language used, but the court and the jury will read the words in court as they would read them elsewhere. Language alleged to be libelous is to be construed in its ordinary and popular sense, and the question is whether the language, when so construed, conveys, or is calculated to convey, to persons reading it the charge of a crime. (Pokrok Zapadu Publishing Co. v. Zizkovsky, 42 Neb., 64.) The question here then is, what is the plain import, the ordinary meaning of the language of the article published? What would ordinary men of ordinary common sense understand from reading this article? That Mullen owned a saloon and store in Albright; that
Affirmed.