Pugh v. McCarty

Warner, J.,

dissenting:

The law governing actions for libel, enunciated by the majority of this Court, as applicable to the facts contained in the record of this case, cannot, in my judgment, be sustained either upon principle or authority. When an appellate Courti decides the law governing a particular class of actions, that decision should be based on sound fundamental principles; otherwise, it will be considered as mere “vain babbling,” entitled to no respect as authority, and will be productive of trouble and uncertainty, in the future. What is a libel ? A libel is defined to be a false and malicious defamation of another, expressed in print, or writing, or pictures, or signs, tending to injure the reputation of an individual, and exposing him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule. Code, section 2923. In all actions for printed or spoken defamation, malice is inferred from the character of the charge. Section 2924. What is the nature and character of the published libel in this case ? Did it tend to injure the reputation of the plaintiff? The words published of and concerning the plaintiff, by the defendant, are as follows: “We have no reply to make to the statement of a lad who is convicted of perjury, by the solemn oath of a gentleman, whose veracity stands unimpeached and unimpeachable.” How, and in what sense, are these words to be construed and understood by the well, established rules of the law? Whatever may have been the rule at one time, as to construing words in actions for libel and slander, in their mildest sense, that rule has long since been exploded, and the rule is now well settled, and established, that words, whether printed or spoken, are to be taken in that sense that is most natural and obvious, and in which those who read them, and to whom the same are spoken, will be sure to understand them. Starkie on Slander, 51; Peake vs. Oldham, Cowper’s Report, 275-8; Woolnoth vs. Meadons, 5th East, 464; Roberts vs. Camden, 9th East, 93; Cooper vs. Perry, Dudley’s Report, 247; Little vs. Barlow, 26th Georgia *450Report, 423; Giddens vs. Mirk, 4th Georgia Report, 371. The general principles and rijles of proceeding are the same, whether"the plaintiff has been slandered by words, or libelled by writing, signs, pictures, or other symbols. 2d Greenleaf’s Evidence, section 410. The deliberate writing and publishing slanderous words of, or concerning, the plaintiff, is, in the eye of the law, an aggravation of the injury. Can there be any doubt that the readers of the publication in this case, would understand that the plaintiff was charged by the defendant with the erime of perjury f Could any one have read it, and not have understood that such was its plain import, and obvious meaning? The charge is, that the plaintiff is convicted o/ perjury, by the solemn oath of a gentleman whose veracity stands unimpeached and unimpeachable. The Court below charged the jury, “that to charge another in a printed newspaper, published and circulated in the county, that he is convicted of perjury, is actionable, without proof of special damage.” The majority of the Court holds and decides, that this charge of the Court below, was error, because it was calculated to impress on the minds of the jury, that the legal effect of the publication was to charge the plaintiff with the commission of legal perjury, that the Court below should have charged the jury, that the published words did not amount to a charge of legal perjury. The point in the case is, whether it is necessary, under the law, that the defendant should have charged the plaintiff with having been legally and technically convicted of peijury, in order to enable him to maintain his action, without proof of special damage. Is there any difference in contemplation of the law, between a charge of perjury, and a charge of legal perjury, so far as damage to the reputation of the plaintiff is concerned? The charge of perjury imputes that crime to the plaintiff, whether the term legal is prefixed to it or not. I maintain, that to charge another, in a printed newspaper, published and circulated in the county, that he “is convicted of perjury,” is actionable, without proof of special damage, as was done by the defendant in this case, that the words contained in the publication' were not to have been construed in *451their legal, technical sense, but in that sense in which the readers thereof would be sure to understand them, according to their plain import and obvious meaning. In the case of Peake vs. Oldham, before cited, Lord Mansfield ldid down the rule, “that where words from their general import appear to have been spoken with a view to defame a party, the Court ought not to be industrious in putting a construction upon them different from what they bear in the common acceptation and meaning of them.” In Woolnoth vs. Meadons, Le Blane^ J., said, “but nobody can read these words, (referring to the words charged in plaintiff’s declaration,) without seeing what they meant to impute against the plaintiff. It is not sufficient to show by argument that the words will admit of some other meaning, but the Court'must understand them as all mankind would understand them, and we cannot understand them differently in Court, from what they would do out of Court.” In little vs. Barlow, this Court, McDonald, J., delivering the opinion said, “The old rule, that words spoken in disparagement of the character of a person, which are susceptible of two constructions, are to be understood in their milder sense, is exploded; they are now to be interpreted in the sense' that a person of ordinary capacity, who heard them spoken, would understand them. To charge a person with 'stealing imports a felony. To charge a person with being a thief, is actionable, because a thief is one who steals. To say of him that he is a thieving wretch, or a thieving puppy, is actionable, for it imports a felony, and so any one of ordinary understanding, hearing the words, would interpret theta.”Much more would such words be actionable if the defendant had deliberately reduced them to writing and published them in a newspaper of general circulation in the copnty.”

But the majority of the Court, in this case, hold, and decide, that unless the defendant had charged the plaintiff with being a legal “thief,” or with being a legal “thieving wretch,”' or a legal “thieving puppy,” the damages should be reduced. Their point is, that because defendant did not charge the-plaintiff with having been convicted of legal perjury, the damages should have been reduced on that account, and that *452the Court below erred in not so charging the jury. My point is, that the plain, obvious, import of the words published, was to charge the plaintiff with having been convicted,of perjury, that is to say, with the crime of perjury, and so those who read it must have understood it. If the plaintiff is convicted of perjury, then he is guilty of that crime, for the natural and obvious import of the words conveys that idea to the mind of every reader, that he would not have been convicted of perjury unless he was guilty of perjury. There is no more practical difference, as to the effect of the charge made in the publication, on the reputation of the plaintiff, in the minds of common readers, between a conviction of perjury” and “ a conviction of legal perjury,” than in the attempted explanation of a witness of his testimony, who stated, that he did not say, “McCarty come out here,” but said, “come out here, McCarty.” The question is, did the plain, obvious, meaning of the words contained in the publication impute to the plaintiff the crime of perjury, according to the common understanding of them ? In Cooper vs. Perry., the convention of Judges held, that words which are doubtful, or even innocent in themselves, if they be proven to have a criminal signification, according to the common understanding of them, are actionable, and it was held in that case, that the words, “you are a member of the Pony club,” were actionable, and that the case should be submitted to the jury, and if the words were proven to impute the crime of horse stealing, in their common acceptation, the plaintiff might recover. . In Steele vs. Southwick, (9th John. Beports, 214,) the words contained in the published libel were, “our army swore terribly in Flanders, said uncle Toby, and if Toby was here now, he might say the same of some modern swearers, the man at the sign of the bible (meaning the plaintiff) is no slouch at swearing to an old story.” The Court said in that case, “if the words do not import perjury, in the legal sense, they hold the plaintiff up to contempt-and ridicule, as being so thoughtless, or so immoral, as to be regardless of the obligations becoming a witness, and therefore to be utterly unworthy of credit. In this view, the words are actionable.”

*453_ The defendant, in the record now before us, charged in the publication that the plaintiff is convicted of perjury; that charge tended to injure the reputation of -the plaintiff and to expose him to public hatred and contempt. The fact that the defendant states that he is convicted of perjury by the solemn oath of a gentleman, whose veracity stands unimpeached and unimpeachable, does not lessen or weaken the force of the charge made, to the minds of the common readers of that publication. How many of those readers knew, or understood, that the oath of the unimpeached gentleman, was not sufficient to convict him of the offense with which the defendant charged him in the publication ? The charge is, that he is convicted of perjury, and a few professional readers might know that the oath of one unimpeached gentleman, was not sufficient to legally convict the plaintiff in a Court of justice, but such would not be the understanding of a large majority of the readers of that publication; they would neither read nor understand it in its legal, technical sense, but would read and understand the words according to the natural, obvious, import thereof, and the natural, obvious import of the words is, to charge that the plaintiff is guilty of the crime of perjury. According to my understanding of the law, as applicable to the facts of. this case, there was no error in the charge, of the Court below, to the jury. The imputation contained in the publication, that the plaintiff “is convicted of perjury,” was as injurious to his reputation as if it had been stated therein that he “is convicted of legal perjury.” The plain import of the words is, that the plaintiff “is convicted of perjury,” a crime well .understood by everybody who read that publication. In an action for libel, the question is not whether the intention of the publisher be to injure the plaintiff, but whether the tendency of the matter published be injurious to him. Fisher vs. Clement, 21st English Common Law Report, 117.

Nor can I concur in the judgment of the majority of the Court, as to the rule of damages in this case. The question of damages in an action for libel is, in my judgment, a question for the jury, under the evidence submitted to them, and not *454a question for the Court, unless, on a motion for a new trial, the damages shall be excessive, and then the Court should not interfere with the verdict, except in extreme cases. In Bishop & Parsons vs. the Mayor, etc., of Macon, 7th Georgia Reports, 204, Lumpkin, J., said, “the reason why the Court will not disturb the verdict of the jury in batteries, libels, crim. cons, malicious prosecution abd the like, is that there is in fact no criterion of damages to regulate the verdict.” See Lang vs. Hophins, 10th Georgia Reports, 45. It is true, that the 3010 section of the Códe declares, “that if the injury be small, or the mitigating circumstances be strong, nominal damages only are given,” but who is to be the judge of the injury, or the mitigating circumstances, in an action for libel, the Court, or the jury? The 3012th section of the Code answers the question, in my judgment. That section declares that in some torts the entire injury is to the peace, happiness, or feelings of the plaintiff; in such cases, no measure of damages can be prescribed, except the enlightened consciences of impartial jurors. What injury was done to the peace, happiness, or feelings of the plaintiff, in this case, when he was published to the world, in a public newspaper, as being convicted of perjury, can better be ascertained by an impartial jury of the vicinage under the evidence in the case, than by an appellate Court. If the verdict shall' be excessive, then the appellate Court can review and set it aside, on a proper case being made; but where this Court derives its legal authority to declare in advance of the trial of the case, that nominal damages only should be recovered upon the statement of facts presented by the record, in the Court below, is beyond my knowledge. The verdict of the jury rendered in the case, according to the former adjudications of this Court, is not so excessive as to authorize any interference with it. Lang vs. Hopkins, 10th Georgia Reports, 45. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment of the Court below should be affirmed.