Dolevin v. Wilder

34 How. Pr. 488, 7 Rob. 319
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 17, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 How. Pr. 488 (Dolevin v. Wilder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolevin v. Wilder, 34 How. Pr. 488, 7 Rob. 319 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1868).

Opinion

Jones, J.

The case of Bush agt. Prosser (11 N. Y. R. 347), and Bisby agt. Shaw (12 N. Y. R. 67),, settle two principles in the law relative to actions for libel and slander, under the provisions of the Code. These are :

First. That mitigating circumstances may be pleaded in connection with a general denial, and. with or without a plea of justification.

Second. That all matters which tend to disprove malice may be pleaded in mitigation of damages, although they may tend to prove the truth of the words complained of.

These principles, taken in connection with the law as it stood prior to the Code, which permitted a defendant to give, in mitigation of damages, evidence under the general issue of . facts and circumstances, which induced him to [491]*491believe the charge true at the time he 'made it, as tending to disprove malice, provided such facts and circumstances did not tend to prove the truth of the charge. • (Gilman agt. Lowell, 8 Wend. R. 575; see remarks in Bush agt. Prosser, 11 N. Y. R. 355.) The further principle flows, that facts and circumstances which induced the defendant to believe the charge true at the time he made it, may now be pleaded in mitigation of damages, as tending to disprove malice, although they may also tend to prove the truth of the charge. -

The question now aries, by what rules and principles is the sufficiency of an answer setting up mitigating matters to be treated ?

Since such a plea was not allowed before the Code, we can of course find no guide in the decisions made prior to its passage, upon the sufficiency of pleadings; and since its passage, although more than twenty years have elapsed, there is a great paucity of decisions bearing on the subject.

It may, however, be safely asserted that a defendant cannot spread on the record any matters that he pleases, and then, by asserting that by reason thereof he verily believed the charge to be true at. the time he made it, successfully resist a motion to strike them out.

From this one rule may be deduced, viz: that where a defendant seeks to mitigate damages by pleading facts and circumstances which induced him to believe the charge to be true at the time he made it, the facts and circumstances so pleaded must be such as would reasonably induce, in the mind of” a person possessed of ordinary intelligence and knowledge, a belief of the truth of the charge.

Again, this species of evidence is admitted only for the purpose of disproving malice; and it must appear from all the proof at the trial, not only that the facts and "circumstances were such as would reasonably induce, in the mind of a person possessed of ordinary intelligence and knowledge, a belief of the truth of the charge, but also that the defendant was in fact thereby induced to believe in its truth.

[492]*492From this, two other rules of pleading may be induced, viz:

First. That the pleadings should show that the defendant, at the time he made the charge, knew the facts and circumstances on which he relies; and,

Secondly. That he should either expressly aver that such facts and circumstances induced a belief in the truth of the charge at the time he made it; or that the facts and circumstances should carry with them a reasonable presumption that he believes the charge to be true.

Again, the questions as to whether there was no malice in making the charge, or if any, then to what extent, are eminently proper to be submitted to the jury. The Code has made no change in the previous law on this subject.

. The rules, then, which governed the admission of proof as to mitigatory facts are (except so far as the exclusion of such facts rested on the ground that they tended to prove the truth of the charge) still in force; and as mitigatory facts may now be pleaded, the rule governing the admission of evidence thereof should be applied, as far as possible, to the pleading. One of these rules of evidence was to admit proof of any fact which might possibly bear on the question of malice, under, of course, the restriction, now no' longer in force, that it did not tend to prove the truth' of the eharge. Another was, that, if there was the ■ slightest doubt in the mind of the judge as to whether the facts proposed to be proven tended to disprove malice, then to admit the evidence and submit the question to the jury, under proper instructions.

These rules should now be applied upon a motion to strike out parts of an answer setting up facts and circumstances in mitigation of damages.

Testing the present answer by these principles, that portion of it which sets up the Boston transaction must be stricken out. The answer neither avers that the defendant knew of it at the time he made the charge, nor does it [493]*493expressly aver that by it he was induced to believe the charge true at the time he made it. The absence of the averments forbids any presumption that by reason of this fact he believed the charge to be true at the time he made it.

With respect to the allegation respecting the enticing away of customers and interfering with his business, the facts alleged are not such as would reasonably induce, in the mind of a person possessed of ordinary intelligence and knowledge, a belief in the truth of the charge of theft.

To permit one to relieve himself from any part of the responsibility attached to the imputing to another the crime of theft, on the ground that he, on so slight a basis as this, believed the charge to be true, would be in effect to allow one who became dissatisfied with the conduct or business transaction of another towards or with him, to apply to such other person such epithets as he saw fit, and then, when called to account, to shield himself from a portion of the responsibility by the bare averment that the conduct or transaction in question induced in his mind a belief that the epithets were correctly applied.

It should be the policy of the law to inculcate the' observance of orderly speech, and not by dealing leniently with those who, not being excited by passion reasonably aroused by present acts or language of another, or protected by some privilege known to the law, indulge in opprobrious epithets, encourage slanderous utterances, whereby breaches of the peace may ensue.

Not only are these allegations not of a character which should reasonably induce a belief in the truth of the charge, but they are not such as to carry with them a presumption that the defendant, by reason thereof, believed the charge to be true. It was therefore incumbent on him to expressly aver such belief. This he has failed to do.

For these reasons, but particularly for the first one, these allegations cannot be permitted to remain on the ground that [494]*494by reason thereof defendant was induced to believe the charge to be true at the time he made it.

. These allegations may, however, be retained on the ground that they tend to show that the words were uttered in the heat of passion, caused by the then present acts and conduct of the defendant.

The bare fact of seeing plaintiff standing on defendant’s steps, would' of itself, not be sufficient for this purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
34 How. Pr. 488, 7 Rob. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolevin-v-wilder-nysuperctnyc-1868.