Conrad v. Roberts

147 P. 795, 95 Kan. 180, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1915
DocketNo. 19,407
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 P. 795 (Conrad v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conrad v. Roberts, 147 P. 795, 95 Kan. 180, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 190 (kan 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

The plaintiff sued to recover damages for an alleged slander. The petition contained five counts. The cause was submitted to the jury upon the third and fourth counts only, and upon both of these there was a verdict for the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered, from which defendant appeals.

The third count alleged, in substance, that defendant, in a conversation in the hearing of George McKinney, maliciously charged the plaintiff with being a whore. To this cause of action the defendant answered by a general denial. The fourth count alleged, in substance, that defendant in a certain conversation in the presence and hearing of plaintiff’s sister, Velma Warder, and C. M. Roberts, falsely and maliciously charged the plaintiff with running a whore house. To this cause of action the defendant filed a general denial and a special defense that the matter was privileged; that C. M. Roberts is the husband of the defendant; that she called at a house owned by her husband, which she understood at the time was occupied by him and the plaintiff; that she found her husband in his bedroom, and with him the plaintiff’s sister, Velma Warder; that she informed her husband that she desired to speak to him, and called him to the outside door of the house, leaving, as she understood, said Velma Warder in the bedroom; that she then told her husband that “if he did not look out he would be arrested”; that her husband said: “Do you mean to call these women [182]*182whores?” 'That she said, “I never use that language,” and that her husband then said to her, “Do you mean to say that this is a disorderly house?” And that she said, “It looks like it.”

It appears that sometime before this conversation the defendant and her husband had separated and were living apart; he owned several houses and occupied one a few doors from the house where defendant lived. Mr. Conrad and Mrs. Conrad, the plaintiff, and her sister, Velma Warder, lived in the house with him.

The first error complained of is that the court permitted the plaintiff to prove her good reputation and character. One ground of the objection is, that the evidence was not confined to the reputation of the plaintiff at the time the alleged slanderous statements were made. The witnesses testified to her reputation in the town of Fowler, where she lived for a year or more prior to removing to Dodge City. She had moved from Fowler to Dodge City in November, 1911, and the petition charges slanderous statements made by defendant on January 25, 1912, and on May 30, 1912. So far as the time is concerned, we think it can not be said that it was too remote. The principal ground urged in support of the objection to the testimony is, that it is never competent for the plaintiff to offer evidence in chief of reputation and character in an action for slander. A number of cases in support of this doctrine are cited in the brief. While the evidence should not have, been admitted in chief, on the ground that the law presumes until the contrary is shown that plaintiff has a good reputation, still, the admission of testimony to prove a fact which the law will presume can not be regarded as material error. (Stafford v. M. J. Assn., 142 N. Y. 598, 37 N. E. 625.) Aside from any authorities upon the subject this court would not reverse' a judgment for such an error.

The ground of the next complaint is that the court excluded certain testimony offered by defendant, and [183]*183the question is whether in an action for slander, where neither justification nor mitigating circumstances has been pleaded, evidence is admissible under a general denial which tends to establish the truth of the slanderous words.

Mrs. Weingarth was one of defendant’s witnesses whose testimony was excluded and afterwards produced on the motion for a new trial. We think her testimony was admissible for the following reasons:

Over the defendant’s objections the court permitted the plaintiff to offer proof under the first cause of action, which charged the utterance of certain words in the presence of Maggie McKinney. Afterwards the court concluded that the first count stated no cause of action, and withdrew all evidence under it, but, over the defendant’s objections, instructed that the jury might consider the evidence under this count so far as it tended to-show malice on the part of defendant. Now there is a rule supported by well-considered cases, and we think resting upon sound reasoning, that where the plaintiff, for the purpose of showing malice, proves the utterance of words not “laid” in the petition, defendant may then prove the truth of these matters under a general denial. It would seem to be only fair that if the evidence introduced under the cause of action after-wards withdrawn from the consideration of the jury was proper to be considered for the purpose of showing malice, then the defendant should have been permitted to introduce the evidence showing conduct of the plaintiff which would excuse or justify the language. The rule should and does work both ways, and if the plaintiff is permitted to prove express malice, the defendant may offer evidence to disprove it.

In Reiley v. Timme, 53 Wis. 63, 10 N. W. 5, plaintiff, over defendant’s objections, was allowed to prove.that at about the time the words were spoken the defendant caused him to be arrested for the alleged theft referred to in the slander. The court refused to permit the [184]*184defendant to explain the circumstances under which he caused plaintiff’s arrest. The judgment was reversed. In the opinion it was said:

“If evidence of such fact could be properly admitted on the part of the plaintiff without pleading it, to raise the presumption of malice in the defendant, then there would seem to be no good reason why the defendant, without pleading the same, should not have been allowed to disprove or explain the circumstances under which the arrest occurred, to rebut such presumption. . . . It would be a harsh rule, indeed, to allow one party to give evidence of a collateral fact, not pleaded by either, and then hold the other party concluded by the proof made by his adversary.” (pp. 64, 65.)

In Tatlow v. Jaquett, 1 Harr. (Del.) 333, 26 Am. Dec. 399, it was ruled that other slanders not pleaded, but given in evidence to show malice, may be justified without pleading as to them.

“Where plaintiff has put in evidence a fact not pleaded by him tending to show express malice, defendant may without a special plea rebut by showing evidence explanatory of the fact.” (25 Cyc. 480; Henry v. Norwood, 4 Watts, [Pa.] 347; Burke v. Miller, 6 Blackf. [Ind.] 155.)

Under the first count, which did not in fact state a cause of action, the plaintiff offered evidence, which remained in the record over defendant’s objections, for the sole purpose of proving express malice. Plaintiff’s situation was the same as if she had not pleaded the facts, and had introduced the evidence without any pleading with reference thereto. In Newell on Slander and Libel, 3d ed., § 954, commenting upon what may be proved under a general denial, the author says that while “the truth cannot be shown in mitigation of damages, yet any facts or circumstances which will rebut or repel the presumption of malice are properly admissible under this plea.” The evidence of witness Mrs. Wein garth should have been admitted so [185]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 P. 795, 95 Kan. 180, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-v-roberts-kan-1915.