Hamer v. McFarlin

4 Denio 509
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 Denio 509 (Hamer v. McFarlin) 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
Hamer v. McFarlin, 4 Denio 509 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

By the Court, Jewett, J.

It is not now questioned but that a defendant in an action for slander, under the plea of not guilty* [510]*510may give evidence of the general bad character of the plaintiff before and at the time of uttering the slander, in mitigation of damages. That principie, so much discussed at an early day, and for a time left unsettled, has since been so well established by authority as not now to be open for discussion. (Foot v. Tracy, 1 John. 46; Springstein v. Field, Anthon's N. P. 185; Paddock v. Salisbury, 2 Cowen’s R. 811; Douglass v. Tousey, 2 Wend. 352; Root v. King, 7 Cowen, 613; S. C. in error, 4 Wend. 113.)

The present question is, whether such evidence is admissible where the defendant, in addition to not guilty, has put in a plea of justification, and given evidence to support it. The statute permits a defendant to “ plead as many several matters, as he shall think necessary for his defence ; subject to the power of the court to compel him to elect by which plea he will abide, in cases where he may plead inconsistent pleas.” (2 R. S. 352, § 9.) With certain exceptions not necessary now to mention, the defendant may plead as many pleas as he may think material to his defence, though they may appear at first view to be contradictory or inconsistent, subject to the power of the court to compel an election. Thus, with non-assumpsit he may plead the statute of limitations, or a discharge under an insolvent act, or ne unques executor, or plene administravit; or with non est factum a discharge in bankruptcy ; and in trespass, with not guilty, liberum tenementum, or a justification. So he may plead non-assumpsit and infancy. The defendant in this case, by his second plea, it is true, confesses that he spoke the words as charged in the declaration, and he justifies himself by alleging that they were true. If this plea stood alone, the controversy would be narrowed down, by the admission of the words, to a single question : whether they were true, the affirmative of which would rest with the defendant. But here there is also the general issue on the record, by which another distinct defence in bar is interposed; and until the plaintiff, who holds the affirmative, has sustained that issue by proof, independent of any supposed admission in the other plea, no cause of action is established.

[511]*511It has, so far as I am aware, with the exception of the cases in Massachusetts which will be afterwards noticed, been uniformly held, that several pleas, put in under the provisions of the statute 4 Anne, ch. 16, of which ours is in substance a copy, are to be regarded as distinct and independent; and that each issue must be proved as if it stood alone. The plaintiff, in an action for slander, must consequently prove the speaking of the words when there is the plea not guilty, though a plea of justification be also interposed, which assumes that the words were spoken and sets up their truth as a defence. It is a well settled rule that each plea must contain matter sufficient, in law, to bar the plaintiff’s action, and cannot be made to depend upon facts stated in other pleas. (Currie v. Henry, 2 John. 434.)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Denio 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamer-v-mcfarlin-nysupct-1847.