I agree that the three rulings pointed out in the majority opinion were erroneous; but I am of opinion that due allow*728anee could be made therefor by requiring, as a condition of not granting a new trial, that the plaintiff stipulate a reduction of the verdict.
In the spring of the year 1911 the defendant employed one Simon Herzig, who to its knowledge had adopted the name of George Graham Eice, and had served a term in the Elmira Beformatory, another in Auburn State Prison, and another in Sing Sing Prison, and one of the crimes for which he had been convicted, according to an article published by the defendant in another of its magazines on the 22d day of December, 1906, was forgery, to write a series of articles to be published in Adventure, containing an account of his personal experiences, prior to his conviction, in various lines of sport, finance, business and travel, including horse racing, mining and prize fighting in mining camps; and it paid him from $500 to $1,000 for each article. The articles were published under the general heading “ My Adventures With Tour Money.” The article containing the alleged libel was the sixth of the series, and its subheading was “Baw Hide and Wall Street; The Press Agent and the Public’s Money.” The part of the article constituting the alleged libel was entitled, “ The Power of the Public Print.” It was stipulated that the circulation of the September, 1911, issue of Adventure was 117,000. It does not appear when the manuscript for this article was written, but it was delivered to the defendant some time in the month of May, 1911, and the September issue in which it appeared came out in August thereafter.
The article which the defendant thus hired Eice to write and which it published, was clearly libelous per se in that among other things it charged plaintiff with being a blackmailer. (Town Topics Pub. Co. v. Collier, 114 App. Div. 191.) The libelous charges against plaintiff for the most part related to matters which had occurred many years before. The Financial World, of which plaintiff was the editor, had been for years conducting a campaign against fraudulent so-called " Get Eich Quick ” enterprises in which the public had been induced, and were being induced, to invest, and in some of which Bice had been active and the Financial World had exposed him and his criminal record. Eice made no attempt in the libelous *729article to defend himself against such attacks but merely libeled the plaintiff with respect to other matters in no manner related to or connected with the attacks of the Financial World upon him; and, therefore, neither Eice nor the defendant was privileged in publishing any part of the libelous article. (Odgers Lib. & Sland. [5th Eng. ed.] 292; Collier v. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., 149 App. Div. 143; on motion for reargument, 150 id. 169.) Moreover, Eice was not called as a witness and it does not appear how long a time elapsed between the last attack upon him and the time he wrote the libel and the burden was on defendant of showing this, if it claimed that the libel was provoked by the attacks and that sufficient time had not elapsed to destroy the privilege of making a counter attack in connection with a defense against the attacks made in the Financial World, and in the absence of such evidence proof of the attacks upon Eice was inadmissible as bearing upon either compensating or punitive damages. (Beardsley v. Maynard, 4 Wend. 336; Klaw v. New York Press Co., Ltd., 144 App. Div. 501.)
The learned trial court on a fair and impartial charge left all evidence bearing upon plaintiff’s character to the jury, with instructions to consider it in determining the amount of compensatory damages; and the court received all competent evidence offered by defendant in its attempt to justify the charge that plaintiff was a blackmailer. The jury thus had before them the conduct of the plaintiff, which defendant claimed tended to show blackmail in the colloquial sense.
The mere fact that the court erroneously ruled and charged that the libel could not be justified so as to exonerate defendant from all liability on account of the charge of blackmail, without proof of a written threat did not, I think, result in any •material increase in the verdict which counsel for appellant argues for the most part represents punitive damages and that is indicated by questions asked by jurors with respect to why the defendant, which was claiming to stand in the shoes of Eice for the purpose of being accorded the privilege which the law gave him to defend himself against attacks, did not call Eice and whether it refrained from calling him on account of his criminal record. Eegardless of any question with *730respect to plaintiff’s character in former years, the case is one, on the facts I have narrated, in which heavy punitive damages should he awarded.
The testimony of' Olcott was corroborative of that given by the plaintiff, and it bore only on the question as to whether plaintiff’s connection, many years before, with a firm, certain members of which had been prosecuted for swindling operations, was merely in handling their advertising, which he admitted) or whether it extended to a ten per centum interest in the profits as the testimony of one witness for defendant tended to show, which plaintiff denied.
The erroneous admission of the certified transcript of a few lines of testimony to contradict a witness was not, I think, seriously prejudicial.
I, therefore, vote for affirmance.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.