Castleberry v. Kelly

By the Court.

McDonalb, J.

delivering the opinion.

This is an action of slander. The words alleged to have been spoken of one of the plaintiffs, are: “Negroes have been with your wife;” meaning that negro men had had carnal communications with her, “ and I can prove it.” On the appeal trial, the jury ■ found for the plaintiffs five hundred dollars damages. The defendants’ attorney moved in arrest of judgment, on the grounds:

1st. That it is apparent on the face of the plaintiffs’ declaration, that no legal cause of action is set forth therein against defendants.

2d. Because the words charged to have been spoken by one of the defendants, taken with the colloquium and innuendo, impute no crime against plaintiffs, or either of them, and no special damage is averred to have been suffered by *608the plaintiffs, or either of them, on account of the speaking thereof.

The Court below overruled the motion in arrest of judgment, and his decision is excepted to. The general rule in respect to actionable words is well established. They must be falsely and maliciously uttered, and impute to the person of whom they are spoken, a crime or misdemeanor, punishable in a temporal Court of criminal jurisdiction; or charge the person with an infectious disease which, if true, would be calculated to exclude him from society. This Court has recognized and acted on this rule. Pledger vs. Hathcock, 1 Kelly, 550; Watson vs. McCarthy, 2 Kelly, 57. The words set forth in the declaration do not impute an indictable of-fence.

Two of the members of this Court are decidedly of this opinion, and on the ground that, according to the penal code, to constitute a punishable offence, the act of adultery or fornication must be committed by two persons, both of whom may be indicted under the code, which declares that any man or'woman who shall commit adultery and fornication, or adultery or fornication, shall he severally indicted, &c.; and that a negro man who commits the act with a white woman, cannot be indicted under the code; and that the laws against adultery and fornication, do not apply to free persons of color or to slaves. This view of the code is supported by legislative construction; for the General Assembly, in January, 1852, deemed it necessary to enact, that the offence may be committed by a white man with a woman of color. If the interpretation put on the penal code be correct, there is no law making it a punishable offence if committed by a white woman with a negro ; and it follows, that words charging the act are not slanderous of themselves, because they do not impute an offence punishable by the law, and that the action therefore cannot be sustained. I am not entirely satisfied with this construction of the code, ©r the law upon which this action depends, and reluctantly assent to the judg*609ment pronounced. The argument is not conclusive to me, that a negro man is not punishable under the law, before the appropriate tribunal for the punishment of slaves, and that a prosecution there is not an indictment within the meaning of the code; and that the white woman may not be separately indicted under the code. At the same time, I concede, that the code has no application to acts of this sort, committed by free persons of color and slaves among themselves. I am strongly of opinion, that the Courts of common law have the same power here, to determine what are remediable wrongs, in new cases, which could not possibly occur in England, as the Courts in that country have. Mr. Starkie, in his treatise on the action of slander, says: “but though in some instances the presumption of the prejudice to the plaintiff in society is a ground of action, yet it may be laid down as an established rule, that no charge or imputation upon the plaintiff, however foul, (except that of having an infectious disease,) will be actionable, unless it be of an of-fence punishable in a temporal Court of criminal jurisdiction.” They have in England no inferior race as slaves, as we have here, with whom it is disgraceful to be on terms of social intercourse. Who can say that, there, a case of the sort before us would not be made an exception to this established rule? I will not enlarge on this subject, but say that I acquiesce in, rather than assent to, the judgment fully, that my brethren are so well satisfied is the law. As no special damage to the plaintiff is alleged, the judgment must be arested, and so it is accordingly ordered.

Judgment reversed.