This action was for both slander and libel. The complaint contains five counts. The first and fifth are for libel and the remainder for slander. Upon the trial the court held that the complaint did not state a cause of action for slander, as the words alleged were not actionable per se and no special damages were averred. From this determination no appeal was taken. The case was, however, submitted to the jury as an action for the libel charged in the first and fifth counts of the complaint.
These counts in substance charge that on the fifteenth day of May, 1895, at Albany, the defendant maliciously spoke and published concerning the plaintiff the false and defamatory words following: "An indictment has been issued against Schoepflin (meaning this plaintiff) by the grand jury of Albany county in connection with Campbell's ice bill, and a warrant is out for his arrest;" "I know that an indictment has been found against Schoepflin (meaning this plaintiff) by the grand jury in connection with Campbell's ice bill, from the best authority in the world; I would gamble on it," meaning and declaring thereby that he knew the grand jury of Albany county had found an indictment against the plaintiff, who was then a member of the legislature, for corrupt and criminal conduct in connection with a bill which had been introduced and was pending in the assembly; that such statements were made in the presence of G. Edward Graham, and in the presence of G. Edward Graham and Lewis J. Seabold; and that Graham was the manager of the Associated Press at Albany, and Seabold was a reporter and news-gatherer for the New York World. It then averred, "and thereby defendant caused said false and defamatory statement to be printed and published in most of the daily newspapers of the state of New York and in the said New York World." *Page 16
The first question argued was whether the complaint alleged a cause of action against the defendant for libel. It is to be observed that after stating the slanderous words which were alleged to have been spoken in the presence of Graham and Seabold, and the fact that they were reporters, the plaintiff alleges that thereby the defendant caused those statements to be printed and published. The complaint contains no direct allegation that the defendant caused them to be printed and published, but after stating certain premises which included the speaking of the words in the presence of the reporter and manager of the Associated Press, it is averred as a conclusion from the preceding allegations, but not as a fact, that the defendant thereby caused the statements to be printed and published. Obviously, the word "thereby" was used in the sense of by that means, or in consequence of the preceding allegations, and, hence, the averment was of a conclusion as to the effect or result of the facts previously alleged. If they were untrue, the plaintiff could not be convicted of perjury for falsely alleging and verifying an averment that the defendant caused the statements made by him to be printed and published, as he made no such allegations, but merely stated his deduction from the preceding facts. Obviously the complaint contains no sufficient allegation that the defendant caused the printing or publication of the words spoken, to constitute a cause of action against him for libel.
We have, however, searched the record in vain to find any proper objection or exception which enables the defendant upon this appeal to avail himself of the insufficiency of the complaint. To raise that question it was necessary that an objection to its sufficiency should have been taken, and the ground upon which it was claimed to be insufficient should have been brought to the attention of the court. It is not a fatal objection on appeal that the cause was tried outside the pleadings in the absence of some specific objection to that course. Parties may, if they so elect, depart from the issues made by the pleadings and try other questions relating to the merits of the controversy by consent or acquiescence. *Page 17 (Farmers' L. T. Co. v. Housatonic R.R. Co., 152 N.Y. 251.) As the question of the sufficiency of the complaint was not properly raised in the court below, it cannot be raised here for the first time.
The next question presented is whether the proof was sufficient to justify the court in submitting to the jury the question whether the defendant caused or procured the publication of the alleged libel. In discussing this question, we shall assume that a person who requests, procures or directs another to publish a libel, or connives at or assists in its publication, is liable therefor. But to justify a jury in finding a defendant liable for such publication, there must be some evidence that it was procured by him, or that he was guilty of some affirmative act which secured or induced it. The mere speaking of words in the presence of third persons that are not actionable per se would at most amount to a mere slander, even if special damages were alleged, and their repetition or the printing and publication of them by the independent act of a third party, would not render the person speaking them responsible therefor.
It is too well settled to be now questioned that one who utters a slander, or prints and publishes a libel, is not responsible for its voluntary and unjustifiable repetition, without his authority or request, by others over whom he has no control and who thereby make themselves liable to the person injured, and that such repetition cannot be considered in law a necessary, natural and probable consequence of the original slander or libel. (Newall on Defamation, 245; Moak's Underhill on Torts, 145; M'Gregor v. Thwaites, 3 B. C. 35.) The remedy in such a case would be against the party who printed and published the words thus spoken, and not against the one speaking them, as a person is not liable for the independent illegal acts of third persons in publishing matters which may have been uttered by him, unless they are procured by him to be published, or he performed some act which induced their publication. (Ward v. Weeks, 7 Bing. 211; Olmsted v. Brown, 12 Barb. 657.) The repetition of defamatory *Page 18 language by another than the first publisher is not a natural consequence of the first publication, and, therefore, the loss resulting from such repetition is not generally attributable to the first publisher. This rule is based upon the principle that every person who repeats a slander is responsible for the damage caused by such repetition, and that such damage is not the proximate and natural consequence of the first publication of the slander. (Bassell v. Elmore, 48 N.Y. 564; Fowles v.Bowen, 30 N.Y. 20; Terwilliger v. Wands, 17 N.Y. 57, 58;Laidlaw v. Sage, 158 N.Y. 73.)
In the latter case the question of proximate cause was considered, and it was held that it was applicable to actions of tort, and that the proximate cause of an event was that which in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new cause, produces the event complained of, and without which it would not have occurred. Applying the principle of those cases to the question under consideration, it becomes obvious that the speaking of the words by the defendant was not the proximate cause of the injury the plaintiff sustained by reason of their publication in the various newspapers of the state. We have examined the case of Youmans v. Smith (153 N.Y. 214), which is so firmly relied upon by the plaintiff, but do not find any principle decided there which is in conflict with the doctrine already stated. There the person who ordered the matter printed informed the printer that he desired it for the purpose of circulation. Under those circumstances it was held that the printer was liable.
The record in this case seems to be entirely barren of proof that the defendant in any way procured, requested, commanded or induced the printing of the matters set forth in the complaint. The most that was established was that a person whom the defendant knew to be a reporter asked him as to a report which was in circulation concerning the matters alleged in the complaint, stating that he understood the defendant had asserted the facts, which were subsequently published, and the latter admitted having done so. There is, however, no proof that his statement was made for publication, but, on *Page 19 the contrary, the proof was that nothing was said upon the subject. There is also other evidence of the defendant which tends to show that he did not intend that it should be published and had no design to procure its publication. We are of the opinion that the court erred in denying the defendant's motion for a nonsuit, and in not directing a verdict for him upon the ground that the proof was insufficient to constitute a cause of action against him for libel.
On the trial the learned judge charged the jury to the effect that the plaintiff had testified that the defendant admitted that he made the statements alleged for publication by the Associated Press, and submitted that supposed evidence to it upon the question as to the defendant's having procured the publication of the articles complained of. No such evidence is contained in the record. It is manifest from the opinion of the Appellate Division that it found no such proof. To this portion of the charge the defendant excepted. The exception, as printed in the record, is apparently meaningless. That the appellant is right in his contention that the words "denial" and "indictment" therein were not the words used in taking the exception, but that "effect" and "admission" were those employed there can be little doubt. The respondent, while claiming that the exception must be considered as it is printed in the record, does not deny that these errors exist. Still, as we are confined to, and must be controlled by, the record, which, if imperfect, should have been corrected by the appellant, those errors in the charge are not before us, although they were considered by the court below. We cannot, however, assent to the conclusion of that court upon the question.
It seems doubtful if the trial court would have submitted the case to the jury except for its misapprehension as to the admission of the defendant, as without that supposed evidence the proof was insufficient to permit a legitimate inference by the jury that the communication by the defendant was made for the purpose of its publication by the Associated Press. It may be conjectured or suspected that he thought it *Page 20 might be published, but that was not sufficient to make him liable. It is not enough to authorize the submission of a question as one of fact, to a jury, that there is a scintilla of evidence or a mere surmise, and where the jury, at most, could only conjecture that the act was performed by the defendant for that purpose it should be withheld from it. "Insufficient evidence is, in the eye of the law, no evidence." "The law demands proof, and not mere surmises." (Baulec v. N.Y. H.R.R. Co., 59 N.Y. 356, 366; Pollock v. Pollock, 71 N.Y. 137,153; Bond v. Smith, 113 N.Y. 378, 385; Cordell v.N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 75 N.Y. 330; Dubois v. City ofKingston, 102 N.Y. 219; Pauley v. S.G. L. Co., 131 N.Y. 90,98.)
Proof was given upon the trial which tended to show that the articles printed and published in the several newspapers were sent out by the manager of the Associated Press with the consent and by the authority of the plaintiff. After this evidence had been received without objection, it was stricken out by the court and the defendant excepted. If the plaintiff consented to or authorized the publication complained of, he cannot recover for any injury sustained by reason of the publication he authorized. We think the defendant was entitled to have this evidence retained in the case and considered by the jury, and that his exception to the action of the court in striking it out was well taken.
The learned Appellate Division held, and the respondent still insists, that even if this action cannot be maintained as an action for libel, it may be sustained as an action under section 254a of the Penal Code. That section provides: "Any person who willfully states, delivers or transmits by any means whatever to any manager, editor, publisher, reporter or other employee of a publisher of any newspaper, magazine, publication, periodical or serial any statement concerning any person or corporation which, if published therein, would be a libel, is guilty of a misdemeanor." The answer to this proposition is that no such action was stated in the complaint or intended by the plaintiff. If we were to assume that the prohibition *Page 21 of this statute conferred upon a person against whom a libel was directed, authority to bring an action for the wrong prohibited, still, it would be quite remarkable if the plaintiff could commence an action for a cause which exists by virtue of the common law, and recover upon an entirely different one existing, if at all, under the statute. We think the judgment cannot be sustained upon that ground.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.