Kinney v. . Nash

3 N.Y. 177
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 177 (Kinney v. . Nash) 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
Kinney v. . Nash, 3 N.Y. 177 (N.Y. 1849).

Opinion

Jewett, Ch. J.

The principle is well settled that to maintain an action for words spoken, the words must either have' produced a temporal loss to the plaintiff, by reason of special damage sustained from their being spoken, or they must convey a charge of some act criminal in itself, and indictable as such, and subjecting the party to an infamous punishment, or they must impute some indictable offence, involving moral turpitude, *178 or the breach of some public trust, or with some matter in relation to his particular trade or vocation, and which, if true, would render him unworthy of employment. (2 Kent’s Com. 15, 5th ed.; Brooker v. Coffin, 5 John. 188; Van Ness v. Hamilton, 19 id. 367; McCuen v. Ludlum, 2 Harr. N. J. Rep. 12; Dole v. Van Rensselaer, 1 John. Cas. 330.)

It is also a general rule that “ words not actionable in themselves, are not actionable when spoken of one in an office, profession or trade, unless they touch him in his office, &c. (Com. Dig. Action on the Case for Defamation, D. 27; Doyley v. Roberts, 2 Bing. N. C. 835; Van Tassel v. Capron, 1 Denio, 253.) It is riot enough that the words may tend to injure him in his office or calling, unless they are spoken of him in his official or business character. In Oakley v. Farrington, (1 John. Cas. 129,) the plaintiff was a justice of the peace, and the words were “ Squire Oakley is a damned rogue.” The plaintiff was nonsuited on the ground, that although the words were spoken of a magistrate, they had no relation to his official character or conduct, In Ayre v. Craven, (2 Ad. & Ellis, 2,) the words were laid to have been spoken of the plaintiff in his profession as a physician, and imputed adultery. After verdict for the plaintiff, the judgment was arrested. The court said, that after full examination of the authorities, they thought the declaration ought not merely to state that such scandalous conduct was imputed to the plaintiff in his profession, but also to set forth in what manner it was connected by the speaker with that profession. In Dole v. Van Rensselaer, (supra,) the words were spoken of the plaintiff in his office of sheriff, and affected him in his official character.

The declaration in this case commences with prefatory inducements of the plaintiff’s antecedent good character, and of his being a constable of the town of Hamilton in the county of Madison, and of having faithfully exercised and performed the duties of that office with honesty, &c. and of his innocence of the offences and misconduct imputed to him by the defendant; that an indictment for felony had been found and preferred in the court of general sessions of the peace in that county against *179 one Henry Thomas, for the crime of burglary and larceny; that a warrant, commonly called a bénch warrant, had been regularly issued out of said court and delivered to the plaintiff, commanding him as such constable, in the name of the people, <fec. to arrest said Thomas and bring him before said court to answer to the indictment; and that the plaintiff, in-pursuance thereof, as such constable, used all reasonable efforts and due diligence in seeking for, and endeavoring to arrest said Thomas. It then states the defendant’s malicious intention to injure the plaintiff as such constable, and to cause it to be suspected, &c. that the plaintiff was guilty of being bribed not to perform the duties of his said office of constable, and otherwise of willfully and corruptly neglecting to discharge the duties of said office, <fcc. to wit, on, (fee. at, (fee. in a certain discourse which the defendant then and there had, of and concerning the said plaintiff in the exercise of the duties of his said office of constable of the town, of Hamilton and county of Madison aforesaid, and of and concerning the proceedings of the said plaintiff as such constable aforesaid,• under and by virtue of the warrant aforesaid, in the presence and hearing of the said last mentioned citizens, these false, &c. and defamatory words, that is to say. The words spoken are then set out with innuendos to connect the words with the introductory averments; the substance of which are, that the defendant declared that he would not vote for the plaintiff for the office of constable of said town, on the ground that he had been out west to arrest Thomas upon said bench warrant, and had not arrested him, although he had ample opportunity to arrest him, or that he had arrested him and had let him go, for some pecuniary or other consideration paid him by Thomas. It is then averred that previous to, and at the tinie of publishing the words above mentioned by the defendant, the said persons in whose presence and hearing the words were spoken by the defendant, knew and understood that said Thomas, spoken of by the defendant and referred to in his said discourse, was a person indicted for a felony committed in the town of Hamilton; and that the plaintiff, as constable as aforesaid, went in pursuit of said Thomas, having in his possession *180 a .warrant, commonly called a bench warrant, commanding him as such constable to arrest said Thomas, and that said plaintiff as such constable went in pursuit of said Thomas for the purpose of arresting him, but unavoidably failed to do so; all which the defendant well knew at the time he spoke and published said words in reference to the proceedings of the plaintiff under and by virtue of the said bench warrant, in relation to that transaction, and the said citizens so understood the defendant.

The declaration contains two other counts for speaking words in substance like the words contained in the first count, which, for the purpose of disposing of this case it will not be necessary to refer to. The evidence relied on for a recovery by the plaintiff is as follows:

First. It was admitted that the plaintiff was duly elected and sworn, and acted as a constable of the town of Hamilton and county of Madison, from March, 1845 till March, 1848; that Henry Thomas was indicted for burglary and larceny in the county of Madison, in this state ; and that when the plaintiff, as constable of the town of Hamilton, went to Wisconsin to arrest Henry Thomas therefor, he as such constable was furnished with the requisite papers, and duly authorized to arrest said Thomas, as such constable.

Mr. Lord, a witness, testified that he resided in Hamilton, that he went to vote on town meeting day in 1847, when the defendant asked him if he wanted some votes. He said he erased Kinney’s name, and had some reasons for it; that Kinney had been to arrest Thomas and arrested him and let him go; that he did not vote for any such man as that.

”Mr. Bacon, a witness, testified that at Hamilton, town meeting day, in the spring of 1847, defendant told him that he would not vote for such a man as Tom Kinney, for a man that

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-nash-ny-1849.