Fry v. . Bennett

28 N.Y. 324
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 28 N.Y. 324 (Fry v. . Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. . Bennett, 28 N.Y. 324 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

Rosekrans, J.

The rule is well settled that, if a general verdict is rendered,'upon several counts in a complaint, some of which are good, and others state no cause of action, the judgment entered upon the verdict is erroneous. It is claimed by the defendant that within this rule, the judgment in this case should be reversed, for the reason that the 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th and llth counts in the complaint do not state a cause of action. -The meaning of the articles set out in the several counts is fully explained by the introductory matter and innuendoes stated in the complaint, and is to be. regarded as their true meaning. The 7th count is upon an article which contains a charge of a design on the part of the plaintiff to cheat and defraud the subscribers to the opera under the plaintiff’s management, of the subscriptions, by a fraudulent discontinuance of operatic representations and performances at New York, as he had previously done a.t Philadelphia. The article set out in the 8th count contains a charge that the plaintiff had become bankrupt and insolvent at Philadelphia, and that he was about to become bankrupt and insolvent at New Yoj-k. The article which is set out in the 9th count charges that the plaintiff had violated his business engagements and obligations with the¡ subscribers to the operay and had misapplied the money subscribed for that purpose, to the purchase of a panorama, which he intended to substitute in the place of operatic representations, in violation of his agreement. The 10th count is upon an article alleged to have been published by the defendant, charging the plaintiff with having given a fancy ball at the opera house, at which the gamblers of the city were permitted to appear and mix • familiarly with the characters, and that the opera was patronized,. particularly in the parquette and private boxes, by gamblers. The llth count is upon an article alleged to have *327 been published by the defendant to.the effect that, but for the patronage which gamblers gave the opera house, the plaintiff could not sustain himself for a week; that the fancy ball alleged to have been given by the plaintiff would have failed, but for the patronage of gamblers; and that the grand dress ball which, as was stated, the plaintiff was about to give, would fall through but for the patronage of such gamblers. These several articles are alleged to have been falsely and maliciously published by the defendant, and as they reflect upon the plaintiff and his business, and his management of it, and tend to injure the plaintiff in his business, if they are false and malicous statements, they are libellous. The counts referred to are therefore good, and the objection that the verdict was in part founded upon counts which did not state a cause of action, is not well taken.

The. objection to testimony offered by the plaintiff to show express malice on the part of the defendant in the particular publications counted upon, was also properly overruled. It* was wholly immaterial whether the publications came within .the class of privileged communications, or not. In either case the testimony offered was admissible. If the publications were in the class of privileged communications, the plaintiff could not recover without extrinsic proof of malice, and if they were not privileged, and malice was implied in law, and therefore proof of express malice not within the issue . and unnecessary, still as the proof offered tended to show express malice in reference to these particular publications, it was competent for the purpose of enhancing the. damages. The cases cited by the defendant’s counsel, to sustain the objection, do not state any different rule. ¡Nor am I aware of any principle or decision upon which the objection can be • sustained. In Howard v. Sexton, (4 Coms. 157,) which was an action of slander for charging the plaintiff with perjury, words spoken on a different occasion from that in which the slander was uttered, and of a different import, and not having any reference to the slanderous charge, were sought to *328 be proved, to enhance the damages. Gardiner, J. said: “It has sometimes been argued that proof of this character shows general malice upon the part of the defendant, which may properly enhance the damages against him. So would evidence that he had set fire to the house of the plaintiff, or committed a battery upon his person, furnish stronger proof of general 'malice than mere words, however opprobrious. The principle does not stop with mere words, but extends to the whole conduct of the defendant. Some of the adjudged cases,” he says, “certainly seem to go this length, and if the proposition we are considering is sound, they were rightly decided» But the modern, and I think the better doctrine is, that the action for slander was not designed to punish the defendant for general ill will to his neighbor, but to afford the plaintiff .redress for a specific injury. To constitute that injury, malice must be proved; not mere general ill will, but malice in the special case set forth in the pleadings, to be inferred from it, and the attending circumstances. The plaintiff may show a repetition of the charge, for which the action is brought, but not a different slander, for any purpose.” Within the rule which allows proof of the repetition of the slanderous charge, to show malice beyond that implied by the original uttering of the words, any act or language of the defendant tending to prove malice on the part of the defendant, in regard to the particular slander or libel, which is the subject of the action, may be proved. The testimony offered by the plaintiff was of this nature. It tended to show that the publications complained of were the result of a malicious feeling entertained by the defendant towards the plaintiff, and that the libellous articles were published to gratify this malicious feeling; that they were published, as the plaintiff insisted, to accomplish the threatened purpose of the defendant “to finish Hr. Fry.” (4 Duer. 249.) In 3d Phil. on Ev. 560, (Edw. ed.,) it is said evidence is admissible of other-words and libels which show the defendant’s malice towards *329 the plaintiff in defaming him in the manner charged in the declaration.

The exception to the ruling of the judge upon the objection that the trial should not be had before him, for the reason that he had tried the cause on a former occasion, was frivolous. The practice of re-trying causes before the same judge who presided at the first trial, has continued from the time of the organization of the Supreme Court, and an objection to such proceeding is unheard of. Ho different rule has been adopted for the Superior Court of the City of Hew York. Even a justice of the peace may try an action .between the same parties, involving a cause of action which was the subject of a former action between them, where the judgment rendered by the justice, in such former action, has been reversed. The reasons given in the Superior Court, are sufficient to show the correctness of the ruling on this point. It has been held by the unanimous decisions of this court, that it is the right and the duty of a judge of this court to take part in the determination of causes brought up for review from a subordinate court of which he was a member, and in the decision of which he took part.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.Y. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-bennett-ny-1863.