The verdict is so clearly against the evidence that it is unnecessary to consider the exceptions taken upon the trial. *727The publications apparently were written by a lawyer who had in mind the law of libel and was seeking to approach as near the dividing line between criticism and libel as he could without becoming liable to indictment or for damages. The articles are long, and are in various issues of his paper, and it is unnecessary to repeat them. No fair-minded man can read them without knowing just the meaning the writer intended to convey and without appreciating the sense in which the ordinary reader would understand them.
The plaintiff is carrying on a banking business in the village of Waverly. There is also another bank there. The defendant is a lawyer and the editor of a paper in the village. The plaintiff had a mortgage upon the Tioga Hotel in the village for $6,000, the hotel being insured for about $12,000. Some of the policies were for the benefit of the mortgagee. The mortgage covered other real estate worth from $3,000 to $4,000. The first article, in substance, charged that traffic in liquor was being carried on in the hotel under a license issued to a man who had been dead two years, and that the place had been kept open in order to protect the mortgage, and that it was done against the wishes of the owner, who did not want a license in this place, and did not want it continued in the manner in which it is being run. The only fair and reasonable intent and meaning of the article is a charge that the plaintiff was causing this business to be carried on in violation of law. The next article related to the burning of the hotel, which took place after the publication of the first article. If it meant anything, and was not the utterance of a man who did not know what he was talking about, it intended to charge and could only be understood as charging that the plaintiff had burned the hotel, or caused it to be burned, in order to get the insurance money. Another article, if understood by the man who wrote it, and as it must have been understood by those who read it, charged the bank with stealing from the defendant $100. It was accompanied by a statement that he had deposited $100 with the bank to the credit of his paper, the Waverly Free Press-Record, which had not been credited upon the bank book, and that afterwards the bank reported that his account was overdrawn. He claimed otherwise, and the bank wrote *728him that they were not infallible and had made a mistake, and that thereafter he changed the Free Press account to the other bank. No such transaction ever took place. He did have an account in the bank in the name of the Waverly Free Press-Becord. There was also an account in the bank in the name of the Waverly fire department. Two checks had ' been drawn by the Waverly fire department which by the mistake of some clerk in the bank had been charged upon the ledger against the Free Press account. This error resulted in an apparent overdraft of the Free Press account of $81.30: The circumstance was discovered promptly and explained apparently to the defendant’s satisfaction in October, 1907, as he continued the account in the bank, the last deposit being September 21, 1908. He evidently grasped this little circumstance to base upon it a false publication, intending to be understood and being understood as charging the bank with the crime of larceny. The facts relating to the fourth charge were sworn to by the witness Nicholson, who overheard a conversation between one Mikleham and defendant to. the effect that the defendant said he was going to start a new bank, and had parties who would subscribe $75,000. Mikleham suggested that it would be better to consolidate the present banks and make one strong bank rather than to start more. Defendant said, with reference to the plaintiff, “they were the biggest lot of sons-of-bitches he knew; they were thieves and robbers, and they tried to steal a hundred dollars from him,” and that “he would land that gang before he got through with them.” On cross-examination the witness said that the defendant made some explanation with reference to the $100 that the bank tried to steal from him. He really could not follow the conversation through, but understood that the bank had written a letter about an overdraft and had written that it was their mistake.
The defendant was not sworn as a witness, and it did not appear that he believed any of the statements were true. This evidence from a witness is uncontradicted; “he [defendant] said: I am going to bust the bank,’ and I said ‘what is your object in busting the bank,’ and he said ‘ if I do I will start one oí my own. ’ ” This last statement furnishes the only reasonable expía*729nation why a lawyer and editor could make these utterances against the plaintiff. A hank must exist and do business by virtue of the confidence which the public has in it. Its reputation for honesty and fair dealing and faithfulness is its greatest asset, so far as obtaining business is concerned. If a bank is a known violator of the criminal law — a thief — it has no right to exist. The defendant’s utterances necessarily tended to injure the credit and the business of the bank and to destroy its good reputation. They were made for that purpose. The plaintiff necessarily suffered damages unless the defendant’s position in the community was such that his utterances could have no influence, and we cannot assume that his deliberate statements would be disregarded by all. It is a reproach to the due administration of the law if a lawyer and editor of a paper can with impunity make these false and malicious charges against a bank for the purpose of destroying its business and with the hope of building up a business of his own. The falsity of the charge and the express malice are proved beyond all question. That there was any possible excuse for the utterances is not indicated by the evidence. The finding of the jury is so unusual, so contrary to all the evidence, that it cannot be allowed to stand. The case is not one where a verdict in favor of the defendant can stand upon the evidence; neither is it a case for nominal damages. The facts as proved entitled the plaintiff to recover very substantial damages. The judgment is, therefore, reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. The court disapproves of the finding that the defendant did not libel and slander the plaintiff and that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover damages therefor.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed on law and facts and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event. The court disapproves of the finding that the defendant did not libel and slander the plaintiff and that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover damages therefor.