Corning v. Dollmeyer

123 Ill. App. 188, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 741
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 25, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,540
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 Ill. App. 188 (Corning v. Dollmeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corning v. Dollmeyer, 123 Ill. App. 188, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 741 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit by Mrs. Dollmeyer against Mrs. Corning, for slander. The declaration set out the utterance by defendant concerning plaintiff of language imputing that plaintiff had stolen certain articles of personal property out of defendant’s trunk, which charge was alleged to be false and malicious. By a bill of particulars filed under a rule entered by the court, the utterance of the defamatory words complained of was confined to two occasions; the defamatory words set out in" the third and fourth- counts were alleged to have been spoken to Mrs. Laura Mueller, a daughter of plaintiff, in March, 1903, and the words set out in the first and second counts were alleged to have been spoken to Otto Kieckhaefer in July, 1903. Defendant pleaded not guilty, and also a justification. There was a jury trial, and a verdict for plaintiff for $850, and judgment thereon. Defendant appeals.

Mrs. Corning occupied a room at a boarding house in Freeport. She was very ill. Mrs. Dollmeyer was her nurse. Mrs. Corning kept the articles in question in her trunk, and the trunk was kept in her room. The nurse had the key and access to the trunk during Mrs. Coming’s illness, which was so severe that at one time her life was despaired of. When she became well enough to get to her trunk, she missed therefrom certain articles, and she had a conversation with the nurse about them. The nurse claims Mrs. Corning accused her of stealing the articles. Mrs. Corning testified that she did not accuse her of stealing them, but she did tell her that she was the only person that had the key, and that she should hold her responsible for the articles, and should not finish paying her until they were returned. Mrs. Dollmeyer was angry and went away, but afterwards returned and took care of Mrs. Corning for a short time, and then left. The first of the alleged slanders occurred in this way: Mrs. Mueller, daughter of the nurse, came to try to get the pay due her mother, and talked over the difficulty with Mrs. Corning. Mrs. Mueller testifies that Mrs. Corning told her that her mother had stolen these articles. Mrs. Corning denies that she used those words, but testified that what she told her was that she should hold her mother responsible for the loss of the goods until they were found, and while paying the daughter $5 at that time, she refused to pay any more until the goods were found. The second alleged slander was in July, when Mrs. Dollmeyer sued Mrs. Corning for the balance of her wages. Kieckhaefer was the constable who served the summons. He testified for plaintiff that when he served the summons Mrs. Corning told him that Mrs. Dollmeyer had stolen these articles, or some of these articles, from her. Mrs. Corning testified that she made no such remark to the constable, but on the contrary that the constable apologized for serving the summons upon her, and said various things about Mrs. Dollmeyer implying that Mrs. Dollmeyer was a thief. The court excluded defendant’s testimony as to what the constable said. The proof showed that when Mrs. Dollmeyer returned after having once left Mrs. Coming’s place, she had on a long cloak or an apron, and that she went into the closet the first thing. When the daughter visited Mrs. Corning she asked Mrs. Corning if she had looked in the closet for these articles. After she was gone Mrs. Corning looked in the closet and found the supposed stolen articles underneath certain other garments on a shelf and in a place where she testified she knew they had not been the day before. This evidence had some tendency to show that Mrs. Dollmeyer brought tfie articles back when she returned, and went into the closet and put them in the place where they were after-wards found. It therefore tended to support the plea of justification.

Defendant proved that plaintiff’s general reputation for truth and veracity in the neighborhood where she resided was bad. This was competent to impeach her as a witness.. Afterwards defendant asked a witness if he was acquainted with the general reputation of plaintiff in the neighborhood where she resided. To this an objection was sustained, and defendant excepted. The court called attention to the fact that the question was not confined to any time, and defendant’s counsel replied that it meant at the time of speaking the slanderous words, as alleged. Afterwards the witness was recalled, and this question was then put for defendant: “Are you acquainted with the general reputation for moral character of the plaintiff in the neighborhood in which she resides?” Plaintiff objected, the objection was sustained, and defendant excepted. The question was not limited, as it should have been, to a time at or prior to the alleged speaking of the slanderous words; but the objection was not based on that ground. Plaintiff’s counsel took the position before the trial court that only the reputation of plaintiff for honesty'and integrity was in issue. While the question was imperfect, and the ruling, therefore, was not erroneous, yet as the point will probably arise on another trial, and as counsel for each party has argued it at length it seems proper to indicate what we regard as the true rule upon the subject.

Upon an examination of the authorities outside this state we conclude the prevailing rule is that defendant may show in mitigation of damages plaintiff’s general bad reputation prior to the utterance of the slanderous words. Plaintiff sues to recover damages for an injury to her reputation. She asserts her reputation was good, and that it has been injured by the words uttered by defendant. The extent of that injury must be determined by the jury. The character of a person of soiled reputation is not susceptible to the same degree of injury as that of a person whose reputation has previously been unblemished. Suppose two men are falsely accused of arson, and one of them had always theretofore borne an excellent reputation as a just, pure, honorable and worthy citizen; while the other had long been generally reputed a thief, a burglar, a receiver of stolen goods, a swindler, and immoral, and yet had never been reputed guilty of the particular crime of arson. Juries which were strangers to both men would assume each had a good reputation, and might readily award each a like sum as damages. Yet it is manifest that the injury inflicted upon the reputation of the man who had always theretofore been of high repute- must greatly exceed the injury to him whose general reputation was previously unsavory and bad upon every subject but that of arson. Hence, justice requires that a defendant be permitted to show the general bad reputation of the plaintiff in mitigation of damages. If plaintiff did not wish to submit to a judicial determination of the value of her reputation, she should not have brought suit for damages to that reputation. As said in Ross v. Lapham, 14 Mass. 276 : “ By commencing this action the plaintiff put his general reputation at issue. He must be prepared to repel by evidence any attack on his character at large.” The rule above stated is sustained by the following authorities: Lamos v. Snell, 6 N. H. 413; Wolcott v. Hall, 6 Mass. 514; Ross v. Lapham, 14 Mass. 276; Bodwell v. Swan, 20 Mass. 370; Stone v. Varney, 48 Mass. 86; Leonard v. Allen, 65 Mass. 241; Clark v. Brown, 116 Mass. 504; Douglass v. Tousey, 2 Wend. 352; King v. Root, 4 Wend. 113, 139; Sayre v. Sayre, 25 N. J. Law, 235; Lincoln v. Chrisman, 10 Leigh, 338; Sawyer v. Eifert, 2 Nott & McCord, S. C. 511; Lowe v. Herald, 6 Utah, 175; Burke v. Miller, 6 Blackf. 155; Sanders v. Johnson, 6 Blackf. 50; Townshend on Slander and Libel, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Ill. App. 188, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-v-dollmeyer-illappct-1905.