Gendron v. St. Pierre

62 A. 966, 73 N.H. 419, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 A. 966 (Gendron v. St. Pierre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gendron v. St. Pierre, 62 A. 966, 73 N.H. 419, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 74 (N.H. 1905).

Opinion

Cha&b, J.

The plaintiff, by his declaration, places his right of action wholly on the ground that the alleged slanderous words, per se, imputed to him the commission of the crime of killing his wife by his criminal negligence in omitting to perform a duty to her which the law imposed upon him. No question is made that a husband who can supply his wife with the necessities of life, and neglects to do so while she is living with him and is incapable of caring for herself by reason of sickness or other cause, is guilty of the crime of murder or manslaughter, according to the nature and degree of the negligence in respect to premeditation, willfulness, recklessness, and culpability, if her death is caused or hastened by such neglect. Buch v. Company, 69 N. H. 257, 260, 261; State v. Smith, 65 Me. 257; Lewis v. State, 72 Ga. 164; Territory v. Manton, 8 Mont. 95; Regina v. Marriott, 8 C. & P. 425, — 34 Eng. C. L. 816; Regina v. Plummer, 1 C. & K. 600, — 47 Eng. C. L. 600; Regina v. Nicholls, 13 Cox C. C. 75; 2 Pish. Cr. L., ss. 659, 686 ; P. S., c. 278, ss. 1 — 8. The demurrer raises the question whether the declaration sufficiently sets forth an imputation to the plaintiff of the commission of such a crime.

The defendant says the declaration is defective because it does not set forth that the plaintiff had the exclusive care of his wife, and does not allege, except in the inuendoes, that the plaintiff’s negligence caused her death. It is stated in the inducement of the declaration that the plaintiff “ has always . . . supported and maintained his family and treated his wife kindly, giving her of his money and attention all within his power.” This necessarily implies the existence of the relation of husband and wife *422 between him and the woman referred to in the alleged slanderous words, an appreciation by him of the legal duty that pertains to that relationship, and an attempt on his part to fulfil the duty. It states facts showing that the duty was not removed or suspended for any cause, but still rested upon the plaintiff; and that he had the care of his wife, so far as his marital duty required him to assume such care. The alleged slanderous words also expressly state or necessarily imply the existence of the marital relation between the plaintiff — “ woman’s husband ”• — and the woman referred to, the legal duty arising from the relation, and that the wife was sick and needed medical care, medicines, and nursing,.— in fact, that these were absolutely necessary to preserve her life, and the want of them caused her death. The allegation of the declaration that the words were uttered and published “of and concerning the plaintiff,” in connection with the other allegation above quoted, and the words themselves, show that the words were spoken of and concerning the plaintiff in his marital relation to the sick woman and the performance of the legal duties he owed the woman by reason of that relation. Characterizing the plaintiff’s conduct toward his wife as “ apparent indifference with reference to her condition,” — indifference of such kind and degree as to induce a suspicion of fraud depending for its consummation upon her death, — accompanied with the statement that the woman “ appeared to be sadly neglected,” is an emphatic, though indirect, statement that he was culpably negligent in the performance of his legal duty to her. It falls little, if any, short of charging the husband with deliberate and premeditated negligence with a view of causing or hastening the wife’s death. It was not necessary that the plaintiff should have the exclusive care of his wife to render him guilty of the crime, if he himself was criminally negligent. The fact that the wife’s sister, the priest, or some other person was also equally guilty would not relieve the plaintiff from responsibility for his own negligence.

Another objection made to the declaration is that the slanderous words alleged in it are but an expression of a suspicion or opinion that the plaintiff committed the crime referred to; that they do not definitely charge the plaintiff with the crime. According to the defendant’s alleged statements, his suspicion relating to insurance fraud was not the cause of his thinking that the wife was-neglected. On the other hand, the neglect of her was the cause of his suspicion. He noticed when he first visited the woman that “ she appeared to be sadly neglected,” and he attributed the motive for this neglect to insurance fraud. He further stated, in substance, that there was neglect in omitting for three days to administer to her the remedies that had been prescribed by the *423 magnetic healer. If this omission was due to the advice of the priest, the fact would not necessarily show that the omission was not negligence of a culpable nature. He further asserted his belief that if the use of the remedies had been continued the woman might have recovered. He refused to sign a death certificate. These statements, taken together, naturally convey the impression that the wife’s death was caused or hastened by criminal negligence. But he seems to have summed up the whole matter in the definite statement: “ I think the woman was neglected in order that her family might get the insurance.” The definiteness and injurious effect of this statement are not taken away or materially modified by the introductory words “ I think.” The expression “ I think A murdered B ” is quite likely to have the same effect upon the hearers that the expression “A murdered B ” would have. If it be regarded as an expression of an opinion, it nevertheless imputes the crime to the plaintiff; and the imputation is supported and made more effective in this case by the fact, that the defendant was called as the medical attendant of the wife. At least, a jury might find, from a consideration of the words in the light of the circumstances alleged, that the defendant meant by his statements absolutely to impute to the plaintiff the commission of a felony. Moore v. Butler, 48 N. H. 161; Tozer v. Mashford, 6 Exch. 589; Simmons v. Mitchell, 6 App. Cas. 156.

The defendant further says that the inuendo which follows the words “I think,” etc., extends the sense of the words. The inuendo is: “ Meaning that she, the plaintiff’s wife, was culpably neglected in her sickness by the plaintiff, so that she, the plaintiffs wife, might die, and he, the plaintiff, might receive the insurance upon her life.” When the facts recited in the inducement of the declaration, above referred to, and the other statements of the defendant are considered, it appears that the words to which the inuendo applies may have been used in the sense therein stated. As before stated, a jury might find that the defendant meant that the woman was neglected by her husband in order that she might die, and he or her family — it is inuna,terial which — might obtain the insurance which the defendant supposed was outstanding upon her life. The jury might think that describing such neglect as “ culpable ” limited rather than enlarged the idea expressed by the word without qualification. The inuendo does not appear to exceed its proper office. Harris v. Burley,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 966, 73 N.H. 419, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gendron-v-st-pierre-nh-1905.