Eyre v. Higbee

Davies, Justice.

I shall confine myself, in the disposition of this demurrer, to the question so ably discussed on the argument, whether the recipient of a letter has any property therein.

If Tobias Lear, as the person to whom these letters were addressed, had any property in them, then the averment of the complaint, and which is admitted by the demurrer, that the plaintiff Mrs. Eyre is now the sole owner of the letters, would make that property hers.

If Lear had any property in the letters, it follows, from the admissions in the pleadings, that that property is now vested in his granddaughter.

I think the rule laid down by Lord Hardwicke, in the case of Pope agt. Curt (2 Atk. 342), has always been regarded as the correct one. He says: “ I am of opinion that it is only a special property in the name. Possibly the property in the paper may belong to him, but this does not give a license to any person whatever to publish them (the letters) to the world, for, at most, the receiver has only a joint property with the writer."

These views are re-affirmed and adopted in the very able and learned opinion of Mr. Justice Duer, of the superior court, in the case of Woolsey agt. Judd (11 How. Pr. R. 49).

I have not been able to find, in all the cases which I have *47examined, anything in conflict with them. Lord Eldon says, in Gee agt. Pritchard (2 Swans. 442), “I think the decisions represent the property as qualified in some respects; that by sending the letter, the writer had given, for the purpose of reading, and in some cases of keeping it, a property to the person to whom the letter was addressed, yet that the gift was so restrained, that although the purposes for which the letter was sent, the property was in the sender. * * * I doubt whether the court has proceeded so far as to decree the restoration of letters, for the principle on which it interferes, recognizing a joint property in the writer and the person to whom they are addressed.”

I think the principle deducible from all the cases is, that the writer has such a property, and such only as will enable him to restrain the publication of the letters, and that if consent to such publication be given, or no objection to such publication is interposed by the writer, a stranger cannot say that the receiver has not property in the letters, and may not do with them as he pleases.

In the case referred to supra, Justice Duer observed that “ the receiver of a letter may, indeed, publish it, where its publication is shown to be necessary for the vindication of his rights or conduct, but this license has never been extended to a person whose possession of a letter or a copy of a letter, as acquired without the consent of the writer or receiver, is wholly unlawful.”

It follows, I think, that the receiver of a letter has a property in it, and though this case does not call for any adjudication as to the rights of the writer (the defendants making no claim to them under or through him), these rights have been held to warrant the writer, or his representatives, to restrain the publication of them without his consent.

The demurrer must be overruled, with leave to the defendants to answer on payment of costs.