Foster v. Commonwealth

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

The plea before us is bad in every view of it. It is written on the hornbook of the law, that the public and a party particularly aggrieved, may each have a distinct but concurrent remedy for an act which happens to be both a public and a private wrong. Thus a person beaten may prosecute an action for the battery, while the Commonwealth prosecutes an indictment for the breach of the peace; or a nuisance may be visited by indictment as a public wrong, while it is visited by action as a private injury; and, for reasons equally good, a libeller may be punished as a disturber of the peace, while he is made to respond in damages by the person libelled, as a defamer of his character. True it is, that the King’s Bench will not grant an information at the instance of one who is proceeding by action; and that, as was said by Lord Mansfield, the Attorney General would grant a nolle prosequi in the case of an indictment found; but neither Lord Mansfield, nor any other Judge, has said that this is not of grace, or that any matter can be pleaded which is not of right. If it were the latter, why apply to the Attorney General or the court? Before the Act of 1819, a nolle prosequi might have been had in like circumstances; for it is new to me that the Attorney General had not power to grant it. Except for the interference of the crown officers in England, no one will affirm that an action and an indictment for a libel might not be sustained there; and why not here?

It is said the provisions of the 26th and 27th sections of the Act of 1836 preclude it. They ordain that “ no publication out of court respecting the conduct of the Judges, officers of the court, juroi-s, witnesses, and parties, or any of them, on a question depending before such court,” shall be a contempt punishable by attachment ; “ but that the party aggrieved by it may proceed against the author, printer, and publisher, or either of them, by indictment; or he may bring an action at law and recover such damages as a jury may think fit to award.” The argument is that the word ‘ or,’ in the last clause, was used disjunctively with *80design to restrain the party to a choice of the remedies, and to preclude a recourse to both; and it would be a plausible one were libel a private injury only, for the party would not be entitled to a double satisfaction. But the public has a separate and substantial interest in the suppression of those publications which often produce violence, and sometimes bloodshed. Surely the Legislature did not design to leave libels on the ministers of the law, more than libels on any one else, to the exclusive correction of private prosecution; or to establish a difference between publication before, and publication after the determination of the cause in respect to which the minister’s conduct has been aspersed. Why give an indictment under any circumstances, if the private wrong were alone to be redressed ? or why subject the act to double prosecution for matter published after the determination of the cause, which would have no influence on the event of it, and not for matter published before it, which might have a pernicious one? It follows neither necessarily nor naturally, from the use of this disjunctive conjunction, that the Attorney General and the party injured must settle between themselves their pretensions to the right of exclusive prosecution, or that an entry into the field by the one is an ouster of the other; and it is not a little singular, that what is supposed to give colour to the notion is a studious, but over-cautious saving of the rights of both. But their rights are, essentially consistent, and it certainly has not been expressly said that the exercise of them shall not be concurrent. Every statute is to be brought as near as may be to the common law, which is to be displaced no further than is necessary to make room for the remedy, and not to be repealed by anything less than express enactment or unavoidable implication. Neither of these is found in the Statute before us; and its meaning is consequently to be gathered from the context rather than from the use or omission of particular words. Legislation is necessarily too rapid to allow much time for the discussion of motions to amend, or for the allowment of precision in the application of terms; and verbal criticism in the interpretation of statutes is consequently of little account. To show the absurdity of it requires no more than to point out the grammatical effect of the copulative * and,’ in another clause of the same section. It is enacted that the party may proceed against “ the author, printer, and publisher,” which means, in strictness, a single person in whom the three characters are combined; but that the Legislature spoke of them as existing in distinct persons, is apparent from the additional words, “or either of them.” Here, then, is an undoubted copulative accidentally used in a disjunctive sense; and why may not the disjunctive wordf or’ have been accidentally put for a copulative in the same sentence ? Had the word ‘ and’ been put in its place, as it would had the Legislature been hypercritical, would it have followed that there could be no indictment without *81an action, or no action without an indictment ? Yet the argument for it would have been as legitimate as the one that has been attempted. To say no more of that, why should it be thought the Legislature intended to put libel on a more favoured footing than any other misdemeanor'! or to favour a libel on the ministers of the law more than on any one else? or to trammel the prosecution of such a libel still more, when it might corrupt the streams of justice, than when it could have no such effect? There could be no motive for it but to make this particular sort of libel a privileged offence; and to impute it to the legislature, would be itself a libel. It is said the liberty of the press is to be taken into consideration. It is best protected, however, when the citizen is free from antecedent restraint in the use of it, but open to the severest animadversion of the law, for public as well as private injuries from the abuse of it. In some' of our sister States, where the laws are feebly executed, an editor enjoys no more freedom of publication than he can maintain with the pistol or the knife. Is that a wholesome state of the press 1 Yet it must inevitably come to that, wherever its power is a despotism tempered only by assassination ; and that assassination will be resorted to in default of redi-ess by the law, has been shown by more instances than one. No freeman would bear a self-constituted censor’s contumely and scorn, without an attempt to requite it; and such is the infirmity of our nature, that a sensitive man, stung to madness by being turned away from the tribunals without redress for an outrage to the feelings of his wife or daughter, would compass revenge by the most desperate and wicked means. What is the worth of an action against a man who has nothing to lose, and whose person may be freed from confinement, by the Insolvent Laws, at the end of sixty days ? For good or for evil, the press is omnipotent; and there is no slavery more galling, or condition more deplorable, than that of a man who is exposed to its attacks in the hands of profligate and irresponsible men, destitute perhaps of even common humanity. Such a state of things, it certainly was not the purpose of the legislature to encourage. The truth is, the framers of the Statute thought they were not dealing with the Law of Libel or the liberty of the press at all; for there is not a word in it about either. The end in view was to abolish the obnoxious process of attachment for contempt, in all but a few specified cases; not to narrow a libeller’s liability to punishment, by interdicting any procedure which allows him the benefit of trial by jury. There are but few members of the profession who either do not remember or have not heard of Passmore’s Case, by which the Legislature were stimulated to action. The public mind had been roused, by what was thought at the time to be an arbitrary and unconstitutional conviction of that person, though he had certainly incurred the common law punishment due to a contempt of the court, by placarding a gentleman of great respectability, for his *82defence of a cause depending in this court, to which he was a party. The complainant had laid his griefs before the House of Representatives; the power of the courts to inflict summary punishment for contempt had been canvassed in the Legislature, in the press, and in the assemblies of the people; the Judges had been impeached, tried, and acquitted: and the Legislature, having waited till the ferment had subsided, removed the cause of offence by enacting the original Statute, whose substance, including the words under consideration, we have before us, without a thought of mitigating the Law of Libel, or securing the liberty of the press. Not a word had been said, during the period of agitation, about either. The entire scope of the revised act shows that purpose was no more than to regulate the trial and punishment of contempts; and, looking to the old law, the mischief, and the remedy, we entertain not a doubt that the common law has been altered in relation to nothing else.

But the desired interpretation would not help the plea; for a libel would not be protected by the Statute unless it were not only a reflection on a minister of justice, but also a contempt of court in a pending cause. Other libels are indisputably left to their former measure of prosecution and punishment. It was, as I have said, to abolish the process of attachment, for contempts, and not to restrain the prosecution of libels by indictment and action, that the legislature interposed. The subject is introduced in the twenty-third section of the revised Act with the emphatic declaration that “ The power of the several courts of this Commonwealth to issue attachments for contempts, shall be restricted to the following cases, to wit:” then follows a specification of the excepted cases, which is succeeded by the sections under consideration. Now, neither of these speaks of publications as libels, or pretends to regulate the prosecution or punishment of them as such. Indeed the word is not to be found in any part of the Act; nor was it necessary to introduce it, for a publication may be a contempt without being a libel, and an act may be a contempt without being a publication. The twenty-sixth section provides that no publication respecting the officers, parties, or witnesses, or respecting a cause pending, shall be punished as a contempt by attachment. The twenty-seventh provides that if such publication “ improperly tend to bias the minds of the public, or of the court, the officers, jurors, or witnesses, or any of them, on a question before the court,” it shall be lawful for the injured party to proceed by indictment or action as already stated. Now the defendant is charged, in the indictment before us, not with a publication tending to create an improper bias in regard to a pending cause, but to defame the prosecutor as the Judge of a court in which the cause was not pending. On that ground alone his cause would be decisively out of the protection of the Statute; for the plea would not answer the indictment.

*83Again. Though every contempt is not a libel, every libel which would be within the benefit of the attempted interpretation, ought to be a contempt; but how a libel on the President of the District Court could be a contempt of the Quarter Sessions, cannot be conceived. The publication laid in this indictment, was certainly a libel on the President of the Quarter Sessions; and had the defendant been prosecuted for it by indictment and action, the question whether the Commonwealth could proceed, might have been raised. A libel on the person who is the President of the District Court, touching his acts as a witness or prosecutor in the Quarter Sessions, would doubtless have been a contempt of the latter within the meaning of the Statute. But though he may have been, and probably was a witness or prosecutor in the case of the Commonwealth v. Flinn, to which the publication referred, the fact is not averred in the plea; and on a demurrer to it, we can look at nothing else. It contains an averment that he prosecutes the indictment before us, but not that he prosecuted the indictment mentioned in the publication. He who claims the benefit of an exception, must bring himself within it by proper averments; and the defendant has not done so.

But though the plea is bad, the judgment on the demurrer may be inappropriate; and if final judgment ought to have been pronounced on him in the court below, we ought to pronounce on him here. The ruling principle of this part of the case was settled in Barge v. The Commonwealth, (3 Penn. Rep. 262), in which the proper judgment on an insufficient plea of auter fois acquit, in a case of misdemeanor, was held to be respondeat ouster. There, as here, the plea was not in abatement but in bar. The point had shortly before been ruled differently in The King v. Taylor, (3 B. & C. 502), but we find nothing in the reasons for the decision sufficiently cogent to draw us from our principle. Chief Justice Abbot put the opinion of the court on the common law rule, which prohibits, where life is not jeoparded, the use of more pleas in bar than one. True it is, that the 4 and 5 Anne c. 16, which enables a plaintiff to plead as many pleas as he has grounds of defence, is expressly confined to civil cases; yet the Judges have abolished the rule in felony and treason, without the authority of a statute, so far as to allow the prisoner to plead over after an insufficient plea in bar. And it seems the exception extends to cases in which, though the judgment is capital, the felony is clergiable. According to Mr. Chitty, (Crim. L. vol. 1, p. 434), though it does not extend to misdemeanors as matter of right, yet it is in the discretion of the court to allow him still to plead not guilty; and this, he says, will be done where the punishment is severe. Listening to the voice not of humanity but justice, we have carried this discretion a single step further, by applying it to all cases, without regard to the punishment, in which the plea contains no confession of facts which constitute guilt. The judgment, *84therefore, is right; but as the indictment is still pending, the writ of error issued improvidently. On receiving the record from us, the Judges of the Quarter Sessions will proceed on it as if it had not been removed.