Klein v. Millside Farms, Inc.

84 A.2d 705, 8 N.J. 240, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 3, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 84 A.2d 705 (Klein v. Millside Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Millside Farms, Inc., 84 A.2d 705, 8 N.J. 240, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 180 (N.J. 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The complaint sued for compensatory and punitive damages grounding in the slander of plaintiff’s products, the hiring away of plaintiff’s employees and the solicitation of plaintiff’s customers. All of the defendants answered denying the allegations, and Millside Farms, Inc., counterclaimed for compensatory and punitive damages grounding in a libel upon its products as well as in slanders upon it and its products. The jury brought in a verdict of $25,000 for compensatory damages and $5,000 for punitive damages in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants and a verdict of no cause for action on the defendant’s counterclaim. A motion for a new trial was seasonably made and was denied by the court upon the condition that the plaintiff accept the reduced verdict of $9,000, consisting of $7,500 compensatory damages and $1,500 punitive damages. Plaintiff did so consent, and the judgment was amended accordingly. Shortly thereafter defendants made, and were denied, a further application for a new trial resting on recently discovered testimony. The appeal is from the judgment and the subsequent orders and is brought here on our own motion.

Millside Farms, Inc., is a pasteurizer of milk and a dealer at wholesale and retail in milk, cream, butter, eggs and other dairy products. The two individual defendants were employees of Millside. Plaintiff is a subdealer or retailer of *243 milk products who, from 1940 to April, 1947, bought his goods from Millside aud sold them on Long Beach Island and the nearby mainland. About April 1, 1947, plaintiff notified Millside that he had chosen a new source of supply and, effective April 26, 1947, would no longer use defendant’s products. Millside thereupon sought to retain, by direct sales, the Ocean County consumers of its products who had theretofore bought those products- from plaintiff. There resulted a tense and bitter contest from which grew this litigation.

On April 18, 1947, plaintiff distributed through the mail; over his signature, to approximately 710 customers (users of Millside dairy products) a multigraphed letter which said in part:

“During the past year we have received an alarming increase in complaints on the part of our customers as to the deterioration of the quality of our milk, the trouble experienced in whipping the cream, and also that .the tops of the bottles were not properly protected against outside contamination.
We have naturally noticed these failings ourselves and have tried by all means short of changing our source of supply to overcome them. However, these conditions continue to exist, and in order to maintain our reputation for high quality, and to prevent the loss of many of our best accounts we have finally been forced to change the source of our supply.”

The letter did not mention the Millside name, but the identity of that company as the former supplier to Klein was known to the customers because its name was on all of the bottles and oil every container that held its products.

Plaintiff’s complaint contained four counts. The first count charged Millside with a malicious effort to destroy plaintiff’s business by soliciting for the benefit of Millside, through the co-defendants and others, the business of plaintiff and by making false statements about plaintiff and his products and, further, by luring away and utilizing, in its efforts, plaintiff’s employees. The second and third counts were against Millside’s employees, Mahoney and Greenwood, respectively, and made comparable charges against them. The *244 fourth count brought in all three defendants, with like accusations, on a charge of conspiracy. The defendants answered, denying the charges, and Millside counterclaimed, charging that the letter of April 18 was a willful and a malicious libel upon defendant’s products and that following the libel plaintiff disseminated further false charges against defendant and its products. Plaintiff answered the counterclaim by denying the allegations and by setting up that all allegations charged to have been.made were (1) true and (2) privileged.

The trial was protracted, and at its close the judge delivered a jury charge in which he said:

‘‘It has been called to my attention, and I want you to know, that the gist of this action is the defamatory remarks or actions by the people that have been charged with them. As I have given you the law,. I feel that I have made it reasonably clear that taking away employees that are not under contract is not actionable. That is not the gist of this action. The action here is an action for slander of a product on both sides. Of course, one side has a letter that they claim slanders them. But that is the action. It is not the action of taking employees away from Mr. Klein that is the basis of this action. It was brought in to show the whole picture of the case, but that is not the action. In other words, if it had been merely a case of where Mr. Klein’s employees left him and went with the Millside Farms and that was the end of it, there would be no action. It is the conduct subsequent 'thereto that is the gist of this action.”

Therefore the case given to the jury was for defamation, a suit for slander brought by the plaintiff and a cross-suit for libel and slander brought by the defendant Millside. We find it unnecessary to' review the proofs further than to say that while we find some proof, chiefly from plaintiff himself, which would tend to sustain a portion of so much of .the. Klein letter of April 18 as relates to the receipt of complaints, we find no substantial proof to sustain the assertion that faults had occurred within plaintiff’s observation or knowledge and no substantial proof that the products liad, in fact, the faults laid against them.

It is important in the view that we take of the case to know just what was left to the jury to decide so that we may form an opinion as to whether a bias on the part of the jury, *245 if the same existed, could have gone beyond the volume of damages ’awarded the plaintiff and affected the verdict in defendant’s countersuit. The judge put it to the jury that Klein had admitted sending the letter and had asserted that ihe statements therein were true and that, therefore, the burden was upon him to prove that they were true; that the burden was upon Millside to prove that its loss of business was due to plaintiff’s actions; that it was within the province of the jury to find that each party had made out a case against the other, and to bring in a verdict for Klein against the defendants and also a verdict in favor of Millside against Klein—“the same thing as if we had two different suits.” Thus the case went to the jury on the assumption that there was evidence which would permit it to find for or against the plaintiff in his action and at the same time and independently of the determination therein to find for or against Millside on its counterclaim. That position was not challenged at the trial and error therein is not now argued. We accept it as the law of the case. Cf. Cikatz v. Milwid, 5 N. J. Misc. 768 (Sup. Ct. 1927); Berg v. Rapid Motor Vehicle Co., 78 N. J. L. 724 (E. & A. 1910); Berkowitz v.

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Bluebook (online)
84 A.2d 705, 8 N.J. 240, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-millside-farms-inc-nj-1951.