Johnson v. Brown

13 W. Va. 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 13 W. Va. 73 (Johnson v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Brown, 13 W. Va. 73 (W. Va. 1878).

Opinion

GreeN, PRESIDENT,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The first question arising on this'reeord is: Did the circuit court err in overruling the demurrer to the declaration ?

Two defects are asserted to exist in the declaration, either of .which, it is claimed, renders it liable to a general demurrer. The first is, that the innuendoes in the declaration, “ that the plaintiff did obtain money, goods and credit on the faith of said company on the false pretenses, that he was authorized so to do, and defrauded the company out of the same,” and that “ he, the plaintiff, had embezzled the goods and‘moneys of the said People’s Manufacturing Company,” improperly extended the meaning of the alleged defamatory matter ; that these innuendoes state substantially, that by the alleged defamatory matter the defendants meant to charge the plaintiff with being guilty of the criminal offenses of [109]*109obtaining money under false pretenses and of embezzlement. The plaintiffs in error insist, that there is nothing stated in the declaration, which can give this meaning to the alleged defamatory words.

I think their criticism of the declaration just. The only words in the alleged libelous matter, to which the plaintiff can be supposed as referring, when he charges, that the defendant meant to charge him with these criminal offenses, are these: “ That the plaintiff borrowed money and used it in his own private business, and gave the company’s note therefor,” and that the plaintiff and his wife purchased goods, wares, &c. for their own use, and had them charged to the company,” and these words: The plaintiff took the goods and money of the said company to pay his own employes.”

Sinabus 1 The only allegation in the declaration, which could serve to show the meaning of these words, is the allegation, that the plaintiff was the superintendent of said company. His doing of the things above charged, while he was superintendent of the company, did not constitute the criminal offenses of procuring money under false pretenses, or embezzelment; and the innuendoes therefore improperly extend the meaning of the defamatory matter.

It is the duty of the court to determine, whether a publication is capable of the meaning ascribed to it by the innuendo. An innuendo, when proper, explains the meaning of the defendant’s publication by referenoe'to other facts, previously alleged in the declaration. And it is for the court to determine, whether this meaning, thus attached to the publication by the plaintiff, in the light of all the facts stated in the declaration can fairly be deduced. If not, the declaration is defective. Where there is but one meaning attached by the plaintiff to all the alleged defamatory words, used by the defendants, and this meaning is such, that the words used explained by all the facts, stated in the declaration, will not fairly bear the meaning given, the effect is to render the [110]*110declaration fatally defective on demurrer, at least when the complaint without the innuendo would be insufficient.

The above alleged defamatory words, on which are based the innuendoes of these criminal charges, would, without any innuendo, be insufficient to sustain the plaintiff’s action; for entirely unexplained, they -would in themselves not be libelous. And when this is the case, and no facts are • stated in the declaration, which will justify the libelous or slanderous meaning, attached to the words by the innuendo, the declaration is fatally defective, and may therefore be demurred to. See Mosely v. Moss, 6 Gratt. 534; Beswick v. Chappel, 8 B. Mon. 486.

The allegations, which in this case are extended by the innuendo to charges of criminal offenses, are not of themselves libelous. The taking by the superintendent of a company of the goods and money of the company to pay his own employes, so far from being in itself embezzlement, does not unexplained amount even to a charge of dishonesty of conduct. For the law requires, that the words must be clearly and unequivocally libelous on their face; and if not, averments must by made, on which an innuendo can be properly based, giving a clear and unequivocal libelous meaning to the words, used in the publication.

Thus it has been held in Mosely v. Moss, 6 Gratt. 551, that the words, “Turpin’s negroes were trading and trafficking with the plaintiff Moss (who was an overseer) and were cai’rying bacon to the coal pits,” did not in themselves impute dishonesty to Moss as an overseer.

In the case of Eliza Kelly v. Partington, 5 B. & Ad. 645, 27 Eng. Com. Law 145, the declaration alleged, that the defendant said : “ She secreted Is 6d under the till ; stating these are no times to be robbed,” and it alleged as special damages, that by reason of the speaking of these words one Stenning refused to take the plaintiff into his service. The court held, that these words were [111]*111not in themselves slanderous, as they might be construed to mean, that she had secreted her own and not her master’s money.

In Stockly v. Clement, 4 Bing. 162, 13 Eng. Com. Law, 392, it was held, that an advertisement warning the public, that the defendant’s acceptance of a certain bill of exchange, purporting to be drawn by the plaintiff on her, was a forgery, did not of itself amount to a libel.

For the same reason the alleged libelous words “ the plaintiff borrowed money and used it in his own business and gave the company’s notes therefor,” and the words, “ the plaintiff and his wife purchased goods for their own and friends’ use, and had them charged to the company” do not 'of themselves amount to a libelous charge. Not only are they insufficient to amount to a charge of obtaining money or goods under false pretenses, but also in themselves and unexplained, they do not amount to a charge of fraud or dishonesty.

A superintendent of a company may well use the money of a company in paying his own employes, or borrow money in their name, and use it himself, or buy goods for himself in their name, without necessarily being guilty of either a crime, or of dishonesty and fraud. For the money, or goods, so used, may well have been accounted for to the company. The mere failing to keep the moneys and goods of the company distinct from his own is not only not a criminal offense; but also does not necessarily imply any dishonesty of purpose in a superintendent. And therefore such allegations, without facts being stated to show, that the defendants intended by the use of such words to charge the plaintiff with crimes, or with fraud and dishonesty, accompanied by an ihnuendo, that such was their meaning, would not sustain an action ; for these words alone are not libelous.

[112]*112Syllabus 2. [111]*111The declaration in this case being in this particular defective, ought the demurrer to have been sustained ? [112]*112If these had been the only words, complained of as libelous, or if the innuendo, that thereby the defendants intended to charge the plaintiff with the crimes of procuring money under false pretenses and embezzlement, had been the only innuendo, the demurrer to the declaration ought to have been sustained. But the declaration is not limited to these charges. It alleges, that the defendants in said bill in chancery published and composed these words: “ The said Isaac H.

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Bluebook (online)
13 W. Va. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-brown-wva-1878.