delivered the opinion of the Court:
The objection that there is no convening order of the court, is answered by the amended record, which shows one.
A change of venue was taken by appellant from McLean to Logan county. It is insisted that the certificate of the clerk of the former county is defective in not showing that the papers accompanying the transcript were all the papers, and were the original papers filed in the cause, and that the case should have been stricken from the docket. Before the motion was made for such purpose, and at the previous term, the party appeared in the Logan circuit court and excepted to the ruling of the court in the suppression of a deposition ; and also, upon motion and affidavit, obtained a continuance of the cause. The defects in the certificate of the clerk were irregularities which might be waived. The appearance of the party, and the several steps taken in the cause, must be held to be a waiver of any irregularity if it existed. The effect of the motion, if granted, was mere delay, and should, therefore, have been sooner made.
The action in this case was for slanderous words. The general issue and justification were pleaded, but the latter plea was withdrawn before trial.
Objection is made to an instruction that the passion of the defendant, at the time of the publication of the slanderous words, was no justification or mitigation of the damages, unless the passion was provoked by the plaintiff.
A similar instruction was reviewed by this court in the case of Hasley v. Brooks et ux. 20 Ill. 116, and it was held that, as the law implied malice from the speaking of actionable words, the passion of the slanderer could have no tendency to rebut the malice thus implied. See, also, Harbison v. Shook, 41 Ill. 142.
The same principle was announced in Freeman v. Tinsley, 50 Ill. 497, with the modification that, if the passion was excited by the person slandered, then it should be considered by the jury in mitigation.
In the case first cited, the declaration of the court, as to the effect of anger, is hot dictum, as is supposed. The court below modified an instruction asked by the defendant, that, if the words were spoken in heat and passion, then the jury should find for the defendant, by adding, after the word “passion,” the words “and without malice f and this court held that the instruction should have been entirely refused.
According to the cases cited, and upon principle, there was no error in the instruction.
The opposite doctrine would permit the slanderer to simulate passion and vent his malice, and blacken character with impunity. When slanderous words, such as are contained in the declaration, are published, the law implies malice and a consequent injury; and the injury is as great, whether they Avere uttered with or without passion, unless the passion is caused by the party slandered. In such case, even anger Avould be no justification. It could only palliate the offense and reduce the damages to which a party might be entitled who had provoked the slander. It would corrupt society and destroy its peace if a man should be deprived of compensation for defamation of his good name because of voluntary or involuntary passion which he had never provoked.
There is no objection to the second instruction given for the plaintiff, of Avhich complaint is made. It embodied a correct principle of law, that, if the words charged were proved, or enough of them were proved to establish the slander charged in the declaration, then the jury might infer malice from the speaking.
The instruction given by the court, of its own motion, was as full and as intelligible to the jury as that portion of defendant’s second instruction refused, and hence no injury could have resulted from the modification.
One instruction asked by the defendant was neither marked “given” nor “refused.” The court, however, gave an instruction substantially the same, so that the defendant could not have been injured. The statute, as to the duty of the judge as to the written instructions presented to him, should be obeyed; but where no injury has resulted, we can not reverse a judgment for the mere omission of the judge to perform his duty.
It is contended that the verdict was excessive. It was for $2000. The Avords were spoken in a public place, and in the hearing of divers persons. They charged the serious crime of peijury. The defendant was worth over $100,000, and it Avas proper to consider his pecuniary circumstances in assessing the damages. The plaintiff was a man in humble life, Avhose good character may have been his chief reliance. The slander was uttered in reference to his testimony in a suit to recover the wages of his labor. Such denunciations are too common, and we shall not disturb the verdict.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed,
Mr. Justice Sheldon dissents as to the giving of the first named instruction, as, respects mitigation of damages.