Conran v. Fenn

140 S.W. 82, 159 Mo. App. 664, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 611
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 82 (Conran v. Fenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conran v. Fenn, 140 S.W. 82, 159 Mo. App. 664, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 611 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages said to have accrued to plaintiff on account of an alleged slander spoken of and concerning him by defendant. The process of attachment is invoked in aid of the principal case and as the finding and judgment on both the attachment and suit on the merits were for plaintiff, the appeal by defendant under our statute (Sec. 2335, R. S. 1909), presents both matters for consideration.

We will first dispose of the questions arising on the trial of the attachment, and afterwards consider the appeal with respect to the merits, or the main case.

By his affidavit for attachment, plaintiff avers four separate grounds therefor. The two first of these predicate npon the twelfth subdivision of section 2294, Revised Statutes 1909, pertaining to attachments, and state that the damages for which the action is brought accrued on account of injuries arising from the commission of a misdemeanor by defendant, while the other two grounds predicate upon the seventh and eighth subdivision of the same statute. One of them goes to the effect, substantially, that defendant has fraudulently conveyed his property so as to hinder or delay his creditors, and the other that defendant has fraudulently concealed, removed or disposed of his property [671]*671and effects so as to hinder or delay his creditors. All of these matters were pnt in issue by defendant’s plea in abatement, and a trial thereof was had before the jury. As before stated the first ground for the attachment predicates upon the twelfth subdivision of the statute in that it is alleged that the injury, for which the damages sued for are sought, arose from the commission by defendant of a misdemeanor. The misdemeanor said to have been committed by defendant and from which the damages are said to flow is alleged to be that defendant Fenn, maliciously intending and contriving to scandalize and to bring in disrepute the plaintiff, did unlawfully, falsely and maliciously charge plaintiff, in the presence of one J. F. Cordon, with the crime of forgery. The misdemeanor charged, in short, is criminal slander spoken of and concerning plaintiff by defendant and the slanderous words set forth in the affidavit as those imputing to plaintiff the act and offense of forgery are that “he, Conran (meaning J. V. Conran, plaintiff) forged-that deed,” meaning and referring to a quitclaim deed from M. H. Powell to J. V. Conran, dated June 8, 1903, acknowledged June 10, 1903, before Lnle R. Colvin, a notary public in and for the City of St. Louis. Section 4817, Revised Statutes 1909 denounces as a misdemeanor the false and malicious speaking of words by one person of another which impute a felony, the. commission of which would subject such person to disfranchisement and other degrading penalties. There can be no doubt that the charge set forth in the affidavit as having been spoken by defendant of and concerning plaintiff, if substantiated on the trial, would infringe the provision of the statute cited and render the defendant liable to answer for the commission of a misdemeanor. But, in order to sustain the attachment on the ground stated, it devolves upon plaintiff to prove the charge laid; that is to say, it devolves upon plaintiff to prove the slanderous words set forth or enough [672]*672of them to constitute the charge laid. The slander proved must substantially correspond with that charged. This rule, it has been repeatedly held by the courts, means that if the words charged to have been spoken are proved, but with the omission or addition of others not varying the same, then the variance is immaterial. It is not enough, however, that the words proved are of equivalent meaning. They must be substantially the same words laid in the affidavit or enough of them to convey the poison involved. [Noeinger v. Voght, 88 Mo. 589; Watson v. Musick, 2 Mo. 29; Townshend on Slander (4 Ed.), sec. 365; State v. Fenn, 112 Mo. App. 531, 86 S. W. 1098.]

To substantiate the charge that defendant spoke of and concerning plaintiff the words ‘ ‘that he forged that deed” in the presence and hearing of J. F. Gordon, plaintiff placed three witnesses upon the stand. Two of them wholly failed to substantiate a single word of the charge as laid. Their evidence is so utterly insufficient as even tending to prove the charge laid, as to render it unnecessary to comment upon it here. The third witness, Mr. Gordon, said he. heard a conversation between defendant and one Mal H. Powell about the deed mentioned when they were looking over the deed record in the recorder’s office at New Madrid, Missouri, and that one of them denounced the deed as a forgery. When this witness was asked who made this statement, he answered: “Well, I don’t know, the statements were mixed up between Mr. Fenn and Mrs. Powell and I can’t say just who made the statement.” Further on in the examination, of this witness, he relates the entire conversation in which it is alleged the defendant spoke the slander complained of: “Q. Well, what was the conversation? A. Well, as well as I remember, the conversation came up— they were examining the records and they were looking for a deed, I believe, to Mr. Fenn, and run across this deed, and he turned around and says to Mrs. [673]*673Powell, he says, ‘Look here, Mrs. Powell, did you sign this?’ And she says, ‘No.’ Then afterwards the remark that it was a forgery, or something of that kind, came up. Q. Who made the remark about it being a forgery? Mr. More: I object to that because the witness already stated that he didn’t know who it was. By the Court: Well, ask him the question. Go on. Mr. More: We except. A. It is my impression that Mr. Penn made that remark, that it was a forgery.” It appears that when the witness is thus pressed, he says no more than it is his impression that the defendant made the remark the deed was a forgery. This may be conceded to be true and still the charge' sufficient to support a conviction of a misdemeanor as for criminal slander is not sustained; for,-though defendant said the deed was a forgery, this in no manner charged plaintiff with the offense of forging. The words relied upon in the affidavit as the slander are ‘‘He (speaking of and concerning the plaintiff) forged that deed. ’ ’ And the mere statement that a deed found to be on record in which plaintiff was grantee is a forgery in no manner suggests that plaintiff was the forger. It appears then that the words proved -in support of the first ground of the attachment are neither the same words laid in the affidavit nor enough of. them to convey the poison said to be involved in the charge. The court should have directed a verdict for defendant on this ground of the attachment and erred in submitting it to the jury.

The second ground of attachment predicates as well upon the twelfth subdivision of section 2294, Revised Statutes 1909. The twelfth subdivision referred to authorizes an attachment “Where the damages for which the action is brought are for injuries arising from the commission of some felony or misdemeanor, or for the seduction of any female.” It is to be noted that, as precedent to sustaining the attachment on this [674]*674ground, there must be damages accrued to plaintiff on account of the commission of some offense or misdemeanor therein suggested. Though an offense may have been committed by defendant, if no damages are entailed thereby upon the complainant which may be recovered in a civil action,, then no ground for attachment on this score appears. The offense charged against defendant in the affidavit for the attachment and as the second ground therefor is, that defendant together with Mal PI.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 82, 159 Mo. App. 664, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conran-v-fenn-moctapp-1911.