Garriga v. Richfield

174 Misc. 315, 20 N.Y.S.2d 544, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1817
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 Misc. 315 (Garriga v. Richfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garriga v. Richfield, 174 Misc. 315, 20 N.Y.S.2d 544, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1817 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1940).

Opinion

Pécora, J.

The original motion, which was based on the legal insufficiency of the complaint, was granted. The decisión, however, was predicated on the ground that the alleged defamatory matter was privileged, owing to the fact that it was embodied in a pleading. As that point was not discussed by counsel upon the original argument, this motion for reargument is granted and the court will proceed to a reconsideration of that original motion.

The factual background of this litigation is rather unusual.

In April, 1939, the present defendant, Richfield, brought an action in this court against the present plaintiff, Garriga, for slander. In that action Richfield alleged that Garriga spoke these words of and concerning him: “ Richfield and John Green are racketeers. They represent the McLane mobsters from Chicago.” In paragraph 5 of his complaint Richfield made the further allegation: “ That the said words were stated by the defendant because the plaintiff disagrees with the political affiliation of the defendant, namely, the Communist party, and that the said statement was made with actual malice toward the plaintiff.”

Thereafter on May 8, 1939, Garriga moved to strike out the latter allegation on the ground that it was “ irrelevant, redundant, repetitious, unnecessary, impertinent and scandalous.” That motion was granted without opinion by the learned justice at Special Term, to the extent of striking out all of paragraph 5 except the words and the said statement was made with actual malice toward the plaintiff.” No appeal was taken by Richfield from the order entered thereon.

Subsequently Garriga instituted this action for libel against Richfield. In his complaint Garriga charges Richfield with having published a false, defamatory and libelous statement ” of him, consisting of the portion of the above-quoted paragraph 5 in his (Richfield’s) complaint for slander which was stricken out by the Special Term. In substance, Garriga asserts that Richfield’s statement that Garrigia is affiliated with the Communist party is libelous.

Other allegations in Garriga’s complaint are to the effect that he is international vice-president of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees International Affiance and Bartenders International League of America, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and the Canadian Trade and Labor Council, having approximately 350,000 members in the United States.

[317]*317Although in form in paragraph 7 of his complaint Garriga charges that the words complained of are libelous per se, he nevertheless further alleges:

“ Eighth. That the defendant, contriving and intending to cause it to be believed that the plaintiff was unworthy of representing members of the said International Union and was incapable of representing said members in collective bargaining negotiations with employers, and intending further to injure the plaintiff in his good name, fame, credit and reputation, caused said complaint and the contents thereof to be issued and published.

Ninth. That by this false, defamatory and libelous statement the defendant herein charged the plaintiff herein with being a Communist and a member of and affiliated with the Communist Party.

Tenth. That the defendant in and by the said publication aforesaid meant and intended to charge and did charge that the plaintiff did not believe in a democratic form of government; that the plaintiff was unworthy to represent members of the said International Union; that the plaintiff was a person whose word was not to be trusted and who did not sincerely represent the members of the said International in negotiations with employers. * * *

Fifteenth. That by reason of the wrongful acts of the defendant and the libel as hereinbefore and in this complaint set forth, the plaintiff has been and will be defamed and generally injured in his reputation and good name as a labor leader and trade union executive and in his business and profession.” (Italics are the court’s.)

Then follows a claim of general damages in the sum of $65,000.

Thus, in addition to the charge that the words complained of are libelous per se, Garriga pleads an innuendo and extrinsic facts in order to color those words with a defamatory hue.

We will first examine the question whether the statement that one is affiliated with the Communist party — even though it be false — constitutes a libel per se.

Generally speaking, a written false statement which exposes one to public contempt, ridicule, hatred or disgrace, or induces an evil opinion of him in the minds of fair and right-thinking men, in libelous per se. (Sidney v. Macfadden Newspaper Pub. Corp., 242 N. Y. 208.) The words used are to be construed in accordance with their ordinary'meaning, and as persons generally understand them. (Cafferty v. Southern Tier Pub. Co., 226 N. Y. 87.)

The words here involved are not esoteric. They have had wide currency for many years. They are commonly understood to mean that the person concerning whom they are published is a Communist, or a member of, or otherwise connected with, the [318]*318Communist party. The meanings given to these terms in the latest (1940) edition of Webster’s New International Dictionary are as follows:

“ Communist, n. 1 — One who believes in Communism in any of the first three senses named, or attempts to put its principles into practice.

2. A supporter of the Paris Commune; Communard.

“ 3. A member of the Communist Party (which see) in any country, esp. Soviet Russia.”

“ Communist Party.— A semipolitical party of recent years representing the Socialist radical wing and holding to the tenets and beliefs of Communism (see def. 3 and note). It has quite generally seceded from the Socialists, organizing in many countries but chiefly in Russia. See Bolshevik: Third International, under International.”

The same dictionary gives this definition of the term Third International” under the general heading of “ International: ” “ Third International, called also Communist International, Moscow International, and Red International, an organization founded at Moscow in March, 1919, by delegates from twelve different countries, as a protest against the inactivity and bourgeois character of the Second International and as a call to Communists all over the world to support the Russian Revolution and inaugurate similar movements in other countries. It is still predominantly Russian.”

The foregoing expositions are amply supported by authoritative publications of the Communist party itself issued here in America. We will quote from one of these publications, which is included as an exhibit in the Report of the Joint Legislative Committee (N. Y. Legis. Doc. [1939] No. 98) to Investigate the Administration and Enforcement of the Law, filed in 1939, as follows (the references are to pages in the separate volume of exhibits forming part of such report):

“ There is a Communist Party in every country in the world. All of them work for the same end, and all of them adapt their activities to conditions existing in their country. Delegates from each Communist Party gather once in a few years to an international Communist Congress. * * * The Congress meets for two or three weeks and discusses thoroughly the international situation and the situation in every country.

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Bluebook (online)
174 Misc. 315, 20 N.Y.S.2d 544, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garriga-v-richfield-nysupct-1940.