Brinsfield v. Howeth

68 A. 566, 107 Md. 278, 1908 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 68 A. 566 (Brinsfield v. Howeth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinsfield v. Howeth, 68 A. 566, 107 Md. 278, 1908 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of slander in which the appellee recovered a judgment of four thousand dollars against the appellant in *282 the Circuit Court for Wicomico County to which Court the case had been removed from Dorchester County where it was originally instituted. The plaintiff is a young unmarried woman, a resident of Dorchester County, and was engaged in teaching in the public schools of 'that county. Sections one and two of Article 88, Code 1904 provides that all words spoken falsely and maliciously touching the character or reputation for chastity of any woman, whether single, or married, and tending to the injury thereof shall be deemed slander, and shall be treated as such in the several Courts of law in this State; and any woman, whether single or married, whose character, or reputation as a woman of chastity may be traduced or defamed by any person may sustain an action of slander in her own name against such person. The appellee had instituted a prior suit for slander against the appellant in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County, and this case was also removed to the Circuit Court for Wicomico County where it was tried, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the Court granted a prayer that the plaintiff had offered no evidence legally sufficient to entitle her to recover. Whereupon the plaintiff submitted to a judgment of nonpros.. Two of the causes of action in this case are the same as set out-in the former declaration.

The declaration in this case contains three counts, and the appellant demurred to each count. This demurrer was overruled, and issue was joined upon the general issue plea. The plaintiff brought this suit without having first paid the costs in the former case, and the defendant moved the Court to stay all further proceedings in this cause until the costs of the former action were paid by the plaintiff. This application was denied.

During the trial of the case seventeen bills of exceptions were taken to the rulings of the Court upon questions of the admissibility of evidence; the eighteenth exception relates to the action of the Court upon the prayers and upon the special exceptions filed by -the defendant to the granting of the plaintiff’s sixth and eighth prayers. One of the questions in the case is as to whether certain statements, which will be men *283 tioned later, alleged to have been made by the defendant were privileged communications.

The two important questions in the case are, first: Does the declaration in any of its counts set forth words which are per se actionable? Secondly, were any of the statements alleged to have been made by the defendant privileged? The solution of these questions must be found in the application of well settled rules to the averments of the narr., and to the facts disclosed by the record. The declaration contains three counts, in each of which there is an innuendo and a proper colloquium. There is, however, no prefatory inducement, or statement of the circumstances .under which the words were spoken, and no averment of extrinsic matter to'show that the words set forth in each count had a local, provincial, or peculiar neighborhood meaning.

The alleged defamatory words set out in the first countare: ist. “She,” the plaintiff, “is a fast girl and not fit to teach school.”

2nd. “She,” the plaintiff, “is a girl of loose character and not fit to teach school.”

3rd. “I did say that she,” “the plaintiff,” “was of a loose character and not fit to teach school.”

The words laid in the second count are:

“He” (the said W. Grayson Smith), “has appointed fast girls as school teachers and one of them became pregnant,” (meaning pregnant with child), and on being asked which teacher it was that had become so pregnant, the defendant replied, “Why that was this Nannie Howeth,” (meaning the plaintiff), and the defendant thereby then and there meaning and imputing a want of chastity to the plaintiff. Those set forth in the third count are: “I,” (meaning the defendant), “am only sorry for one thing that I,” (meaning the defendant), “did not strap” (meaning have carnal intercourse with) her,” (meaning the plaintiff), when “I,” (meaning the defendant) "had the chance.” The innuendoes in the first and second counts are that the defendant meant to impute a want of chastity to the plaintiff; and that by the use of the words declared on in the *284 third count the defendant meant that at some time in the past the plaintiff had consented, or would have consented to have sexual intercourse with himself, and that he thereby meant and imputed to the plaintiff a want of chastity.

( If the declaration is not otherwise good, the innuendoes can-1 not make it good. They cannot add to, or enlarge the sense 1 of the words used, and if the alleged defamatory words do not 'constitute slander in themselves, the innuendoes cannot enlarge or add to their legal meaning and effect. The innuendo is merely a form, or mode of introducing explanation; it serves -to point out some matter already expressed, it may apply what is already expressed, but cannot enlarge the sense of the previous words. The legal effect of the innuendo is a question of law which arises under the demurrer. This Court said in Lewis v. The Daily News Company, 81 Md. 472: “Upon demurrer it is always the province of the Court to determine whether the words charged in the declaration amount in law to libel or slander. • Dorsey v. Whipps, 8 Gill, 462; Haines v. Campbell, 74 Md. 158; Avirett v. The State, 76 Md. 510. It is equally a matter of law as to whether an innuendo is good; that is to say, whether it is fairly warranted by the language declared on, when that language is read, either by itself, or in connection w’ith the inducement and colloquium, if there be an inducement and colloquium set forth. Avirett v. State, supra; Solomon v. Lawson, 8 Q. B. 828.”

Mr. Chitty in his work on Pleading, vol. 1, p. 4.00, states the rule to be that: “If the libel or words do not naturally and per se convey the meaning the plaintiff wishes to assign to them, or are ambiguous and equivocal, and require explanation by reference to some extrinsic matter to show that they are actionable, it must be expressly shown that such matter existed, and that the slander related thereto.”

In Peterson v. Sentman, 37 Md. 153, the words declared on were: “You,” (meaning plaintiff) “are a bad woman, and keep a bad house, and I can prove it;” innuendo, meaning thereby to charge that the plaintiff was not a chaste woman, was a whore, and kept a common bawdy house. In considering *285

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 566, 107 Md. 278, 1908 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinsfield-v-howeth-md-1908.