Cheetham v. Tillotson

5 Johns. 430
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedFebruary 15, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Johns. 430 (Cheetham v. Tillotson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheetham v. Tillotson, 5 Johns. 430 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1809).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This cause comes before the • court, from the supreme court, on a writ of error.

From the record it appears, that a judgment has been rendered by default, a writ of error awarded and executed, and 1,400 dollars assessed as damages.

Several errors were assigned ; but as to those relating to form, this court, during the last session, on a motion to remit the record, for the purpose of amending the formal errors, having decided that it was not necessary, because here they could not be admitted as cause for reversing the judgment, has, by that decision, reduced the errors to two.

[433]*4331st. Because the observations respecting the defendant in error, contained in the first part of the declaration, are not libellous and actionable; and,

2dly. Because it does not appear, that the observations contained in the second part, or count, or the declaration, have any relation or allusion, to the defendant in error.

It becomes the duty of the court, on this subject, to discover and lay down a rule which will govern all other cases similarly circumstanced. For, when the rule of law is deliberately settled, it applies to every case clearly within its principle.

In deciding, every fact admitted into the case must appear from the record, and beyond it, whatever facts may exist, cannot be legally taken here as existing, and even some of the facts in the record have no necessary connexion, or are to be mingled with the points presented for decision.

The amount of the damages is of that description. If the damages were excessive, if irregularities have occurred in their assessment, the proper resort, to correct the excess or the irregularities complained of, is to the court in which the recovery was had.

To arrive at the errors assigned, the plaintiif in error has insisted, that the declaration contains two counts.

The declaration, after the usual averments, that the defendant in error sustained a fair reputation ; that he held the office of secretary j that the plaintiff in error, with intent to injure him, published a libel, in one part, according to the tenor and effect following; [setting forth some part of the libel;] and in another part, according to the tenor and effect following; [setting forth other parts of the libel;] concludes, that by means of composing, writing and publishing of which said false, scandalous libel, and libellous matter, herein before [434]*434set forth, the plaintiff [the defendant. here] has been greatly injured, &c.

If this declaration had detailed the whole libel, verbatim ^ in one connected description, no legal subtlety could possibly have severed the different parts ; and yet - the only difference is, that in the former case the whole would be spread on the record, as contained iii one entire paper. In the present case, the libel is alleged to contain, among other things, two distinct paragraphs, set "forth in the declaration, which are complained of, collectively, and not each separately, as a cause of injury.

If there is only one count; if a mere perusal of the declaration does not carry conviction to the mind, that the libel is not only a virulent one, but that it has a direct and unequivocal application to the defendant in error, I shall refrain, by any reasoning on the subject, to endeavour to effect it. To me, both appear clear and undoubted.

I can discover no legal reasons for reversing the judgment. Í have seldom seen a cause brought up on less tenable ground. I am, therefore, of opinion, that the judgment ought to be affirmed.

Clinton, Senator.

This is an action for a libel, in which anlnquisition of damages has been taken. A motion was made in the supreme court, to set aside the inquisition, on various grounds, which motion was overruled. The principal gist of the present controversy was, indeed, incidentally brought into view in that discussion ; but the chief justice, in giving the opinion of the court, very properly said, that the objection to the sufficiency of the declaration was not a matter to be considered, under that motion. A motion in arrest of judgment, or a writ of error, was the only mode in which that question could be properly brought- before the court; and although this is a writ of error from the supreme court, yet, as the plaintiff in error did not demur, or move in [435]*435arrest of judgment, in the court below, the principal point now in controversy, was never adjudicated by that tribunal.

If a declaration set forth words spoken, and some are actionable and some not, iudgment will not be arrested, / ■’ ° _ because the court will intend that damages were given for such words only as were actionable ; but if the declaration contain two or more counts, and one of them contain actionable words, and the others do not, the judgment will be arrested, on a general verdict, or a general assessment of damages. These rules are admitted, by the counsel on both sides, to have been fully supported by the authorities cited, and cannot be controverted in any case.

The questions submitted for our determination are, whether there are two counts in this declaration, and if so, whether one of them is vitious. If there is but .one count, and it contains libellous matter, the judgment must be affirmed. If there are two counts, and one of them is bad, the judgment must be reversed.

A declaration is defined to be an exposition of the plaintiff’s original writ, wherein he expresses at large his cause of action or complaint, with the additional circumstances of time and place, when and where the injury was committed. A count1 is sometimes considered as synonymous with a declaration, and this was its original signification in the law-French ; but it is now most generally considered as a part of a declaration, wherein the plaintiff sets forth a distinct cause of action ; and it frequently contains several counts, in which the plaintiff assigns different gravamens, so that if he fail in the proof of any, and substantiate one only, he may still recover; and if one of his counts be good, and the others vitious, he may, by taking a verdict on the good count, avoid a reversal of the judgment.

In the present declaration, the plaintiff in the court below. states in the introductory part, that there were seve[436]*436ral false, scandalous, malicious and infamous libels, published against him, by the defendant, and he proceeds to set forth a certain newspaper, called the Republican Watch-Tower, as containing a libel, which he quotes at large. He, afterwards, goes on to state, that in another . part of the said false, malicious and infamous libel, there was other false, scandalous and malicious matter, of and concerning him, which he also mentions and specifies.

A person may be libelled more than once in the same publication. In declaring on a libel, so much of the libellous matter as the plaintiff chooses to select, may be counted on. If the declaration states the whole libel, then there is necessarily but one count; but if, after selecting a part, and setting it forth as libellous, he then proceeds to select another part, as distinctly libellous, it appears, from his own showing, that he alleges himself to be twice libelled, and claims damages in proportion to the enormity of the charges.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Johns. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheetham-v-tillotson-nycterr-1809.