Like v. McKinstry

4 Keyes 397
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Keyes 397 (Like v. McKinstry) 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
Like v. McKinstry, 4 Keyes 397 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

Three questions are involved in the controversy between these parties: First, will an action lie for slander of the plaintiff’s title? Second, was there sufficient proof to warrant the submission to the jury of the question, whether the plaintiff had title to the rye in respect of which the alleged slander was uttered, or in other words, were the words false? Third, was the alleged slander uttered maliciously?

If these questions are all answered affirmatively, it is not claimed that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the damages which the jury by their verdict have found in his favor.

The plaintiff having hired the defendant’s farm from April 1, 1861, to the 1st of April, 1862, had, in the fall of 1861, sown rye, and he claimed that the crop was his; that he-had the privilege of harvesting the rye, and of using the hay-press to press the straw, and gathering from the farm slat-wood wherewith to inclose or bind the straw when pressed.

On the 10th of March, in pursuance of previous notice, the plaintiff had an auction upon the premises, at which he put up the growing rye for sale, and sold it for $381.87.

The alleged slander consisted in the public declaration made by the defendant at the auction sale, that he forbade the sale of the rye, and that the rye was his. By reason of which the plaintiff alleges the rye was sold for a less sum than its real value, and that he thereby sustained damage. For that the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff of $60.

1. I perceive no legal impediment to the maintenance of an action for falsely and maliciously asserting title to personal property exposed by another for sale, in order to prevent persons present from bidding or purchasing.

[408]*408Oases of slander of title, most frequently arising, relate to the .title to real estate or leasehold interests therein; but there is no difference in the principle or liability therefor, whether the property referred to be real or personal. On this point I concur in the conclusion of the chief judge, that the action may be sustained.

2. On the question whether the plaintiff or the defendant in fact showed title to the rye, or, in another form, whether the declaration' of the defendant that the rye was his, was false, I think it is not accurate nor at all warranted by the proofs to regard the property put up at the auction, as the property in the rye for any purpose for which a purchaser might make it useful during the twenty days only which would elapse before the 1st of April (when the term of the plaintiff’s hiring would expire), — whether as pasture or otherwise, snow being then on the ground, and the rye itself, or so miich of the growth as had sprung up the previous fall being of very little if of any value, unless permitted to mature and be harvested in the summer or fall following.

Palpably, it was the future crop which was the subject of the auction sale; it was that in which the plaintiff claimed title; it was that for which the bidders offered, and it was that to which the words spoken had the plainest reference, and to that the title of the plaintiff was injured, and by injury to that, he sustained damage. It was obviously that which was sold for $381.87, and not any mere right to the pasture or other use of the rye fields, for twenty days in March. The jury could not have found that, for injury to the title to that twenty days’ pasture, the plaintiff sustained damage to $60 over and above the sum bidden by the purchaser.

■ Whether the defendant’s assertion of title was true or false, depended upon the conclusion which the jury might draw from conflicting testimony.

There was testimony that, upon the hiring for the year, from April 1st, 1861 to April 1st, 1862, the defendant assured the plaintiff that he might sow rye in the fall and harvest it, etc., in the summer or fall of 1862; and, whatever objection may be urged to the want of binding force of such a parol [409]*409assurance under the statute of frauds, it was not irrelevant to the inquiry, whether the acts and declarations of the defendant, in the fall of 1861, did not amount to a then binding contract, under which the plaintiff was entitled to the rye, and to the privilege of harvesting it within one year next ensuing, i. e., in the summer or fall following. And on that subject there was evidence tending to show, that in the fall of 1861, the defendant assisted the plaintiff in preparing the ground for rye, and encouraged the plaintiff to sow it, and that, as a part of the transaction, which of itself would constitute further consideration for the privilege of harvesting the rye, the plaintiff consented to and did put into the ground for the defendant his timothy seed, for the permanent improvement of the farm. Besides this, the plaintiff’s witnesses showed repeated declarations of the defendant, prior to the auction, to the effect, or in substance, that it was the plaintiff’s rye.

From all the testimony it was competent for the jury to infer that there was, between the plaintiff and the defendant when the rye and the timothy seed was sown, a full understanding that the rye produced was the property of the plaintiff, and that he should have the privilege of harvesting the same.

An arrangement, then, made to that effect or mutually affirmed at that time, in faith whereof the plaintiff sowed the rye, and sowed also for the defendant his timothy seed, would not be invalid under the statute of frauds. And, therefore, a finding of the jury that the rye was the plaintiff’s rye, is not without evidence. Such a finding involves the conclusion, that the declaration of the defendant at the auction that the rye was his, was not true. It would not be difficult to suggest, moreover, equitable grounds, plausible at least, for insisting that, after all that had transpired, the defendant could not be permitted to hinder or prevent the harvesting of the rye, which the plaintiff had thus been induced to sow.

3. It is, however, not enough that the words spoken were injurious, and were untrue, it must also be shown that they were malicious.

[410]*410It is entirely clear, that if a person have, or believes that he has, a claim to property offered for sale to third persons, and in order to prevent their purchasing, he in good faith discloses his claim according to its true import, no action will lie against him. In such case he does nothing more than it is his right and his duty to proposed purchasers to do, if he would protect his claim. His silence on such an occasion, and his omission to give warning, would operate to estop him to assert the right which he believes he has to the property. The law does not require parties to forbear asserting their "claim at the peril of an action for slander. Nor does it place a party who acts in good faith, in the alternative of being estopped, by neglecting to give notice if he is silent, or of being liable to damages if he speaks, and his claim proves to be invalid.

It must, therefore, appear, that he acted with malice, in asserting that he had title.

And here, also, the question before us is, was there in this case, evidence which made it. proper to submit the question of malice to the jury % which is in effect the question whether the defendant acted simply from a desire to protect what he deemed his own.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Keyes 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/like-v-mckinstry-ny-1868.