Stone v. Clark

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. In looking at the declaration in the present case, we think that the second count clearly and technically charges slanderous words to have been spoken by the defendant, which, taken with tne averments of a previous judicial hearing and trial of an indictment, and the fact that the plaintiff was sworn as a witness and testified on that trial, and with the colloquia and innuendoes, that the words were spoken of and concerning that trial, and the testimony given by the plaintiff on that trial, were actionable. They imputed to the plaintiff very distinctly the crime of perjury. Then the question is, whether it was competent for the defendant to go into evidence to prove that the facts, to which the defendant alluded as having been testified to by the plaintiff, were immaterial to the issue, and therefore that if he had testified falsely in these particulars, it would not technically amount to perjury. The Court are of opinion that the evidence was not competent for that purpose, and that it would be no defence to an action of slander, for the defendant to show that the plaintiff did not in fact, and even could not, commit the crime, which the slanderous words imputed to him, unless some qualification was made at the time of speaking the words, showing that in the connexion in which they were used, they did not impute the crime which in their ordinary meaning without such connexion they would do. It is within the principle of Carter v. Andrews, 16 Pick. 1. A man may at the time of spealting words, which in their ordinary signification would be slanderous by imputing a crime, so qualify them by other words as to show that he uses them in a different sense. If a man should say of another, that on such a trial he testified to things which were false, adding, true they were immaterial and had no bearing on the case, though he thereby manifested great disregard for the truth, it would not impute perjury. It goes, upon the principle, that all the words spoken at one time must be taken together; and that though one part, detached from another, would be slanderous, yet if taken altogether they do *54not impute an indictable offence, they are not actionable ic themselves, that is, without special damage, averred and proved. A familiar instance is, where one says of another, he is a thief he has stolen the apples from my trees ; taking the latter par; of the sentence as qualifying the former, it imputes a trespass and not a felony, and is not actionable. In the case of Carter v. Andrews, the Court considered it no defence, to show that the transaction which the defendant alluded to, in speaking tne slanderous words, did not amount to a felony, unless accompanied at the time of speaking with explanations showing that they did not impute a felony. In the present case no such explana tion was given at the time of speaking the words, they therefore imputed to the plaintiff the crime of giving false testimony on a judicial trial, which is a charge of perjury. It therefore was not competent for the defendant to prove that he meant to impute falsehood only as to immaterial facts, or to go into evidence of what was testified to at the trial, to show that they were immaterial.

The defendant relied mainly on the case of Sibley v. Marsh, 7 Pick. 38. That case is not very intelligible, nor is it easy to perceive precisely what was decided. The late Chief Justice Parker expresses his dissatisfaction with the report, and thought that it did not state accurately what took place at the trial. There were special pleas in justification, charging the plaintiff with the perjury imputed by the slanderous words, and evidence was given in support of these averments. The question was, whether the jury were warranted in taking into consideration, the evidence given in support of the justification, on the question of damages. The Court stated that it was proper for the jury to consider, whether the words spoken had relation to facts immaterial to the inquiry before the referees, of which a false account under oath would not be perjury. If this related to what took place at the time of speaking the words, if any thing occurred then which tended to show' that the defendant then alluded to testimony upon matters not material to the inquiry before the referees, it is entirely consistent with the principle now adopted. But whether it was so or not the case seems not entitled to much consideration, for the reasons already given, and it appears to have been ordered *:> *55new trial, for the purpose of having a more correct report of the case. The action does not seem to have again come before the Court.

Verdict set aside and a new trial granted.