Martens v. Martens

181 Iowa 350
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 Iowa 350 (Martens v. Martens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martens v. Martens, 181 Iowa 350 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

1. TjIREL AND SLANDER: words actionable : imputation of unchastity. Plaintiff is the wife of defendant’s brother, Ed Martens. As a cause of action, she alleges that defendant, speaking to her husband of and concerning her, said, in substance:

“You (meaning Ed Martens) had better take that damn bitch, that bobtail bitch of a woman of yours to the hospital again and have two or three more kids taken away from her, as was done before her marriage,” — meaning thereby to imply that plaintiff had not been a virtuous woman prior to her marriage to her then husband, etc. And that plaintiff suffered thereby great distress of mind, humiliation and disgrace, and suffered in her good name and reputation with her neighbors and acquaintances, and was damaged, thereby in the sum of $12,000, etc. She also alleges that, on another occasion, the defendant, speaking of her to one L. O. Hohse and one Jennie Hohse, said: “She, Matie Martens (mean ing the plaintiff], was not a virtuous woman before her marriage and had three illegitimate children before her mar[352]*352riage to her present husband,” — meaning thereby to charge .of and concerning the plaintiff that, before her marriage, she had been unchaste, and had had sexual intercourse with other men. The answer is a denial of the alleged slander. A further plea of privilege was stricken out on motion of plaintiff. The issues were tried and submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $600. Defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled, and he appeals.

• I. The evidence in plaintiff’s behalf as to the language used by defendant in speaking of her to her husband is more or less vague and involved, a condition of the record which is due to some extent to the fact that the parties and witnesses on both sides are Germans, who, though rrpeakmg the English language, have quite imperfect command of it, and not infrequently their answers indicate lack of complete comprehension of the inquiries of counsel; but we think it fairly tends to sustain the allegations of the petition. Plaintiff’s husband, as a witness, first stated his version of the words spoken to him by the defendant as follows:

“He says to me, ‘You had better take that damned old bitch of a woman back to the hospital and get two or three kids taken away from her.’ I sa.ys, ‘Gan you prove it?’ and he says, ‘Yes, I can; John was there and he knows it,’ and he said, ‘John was there and he knows,’ and I said to him, ‘You are framing up that you will have to prove.’ He says, ‘Get you a lawyer and I will show you,’ and I walked away. That was the conversation that day.”
Again, he says:
“Yes, I forgot another little thing in there, ‘That God damned old bobtail,’ is what he called her, that comes in there where he said, ‘You had better take that God damned old bitch, that God damned old bobtailed bitch back to the hospital and get two or three more kids taken away from her.’ ”

The defendant argues that these words, even if spoken [353]*353as stated, do not charge unchastity, and, if construed to mean merely a charge that plaintiff had submitted to an abortion, or had before been pregnant, it would not constitute slander per se, in the absence of any showing that, at the time referred to by the defendant, she was an unmarried woman. These objections would doubtless be good, if the testimony quoted were all that there is upon that subject; but the witness, at another stage of his examination, testified as follows:

“Q. Well, you say that he said it was before your wife was married that these kids had been taken away from her; now just tell where that came in and how it was said, that part of the answer; or did he say it was before she was married? A. Yes, sir, he said it was before she was married.”

It was true that this witness was, upon cross-examination, led into more or less contradictory and inconsistent statements having legitimate tendency to discredit him, but his credibility was a question for the jury alone. The witness L. C. Holise, speaking of the words charged to have been spoken by defendant to him concerning the plaintiff, testifies:

“Well, all he said was that she had children before she was married. I can’t remember how he said it; that was too long ago. All I know is that he mentioned that she had children before she was married, and he called her a bobtail.”

2. Libel and SLANDER: evidence: repetition of slander. While the separate alleged cause of action based upon the defendant’s statement to this witness was withdrawn from the jury, we think the evidence is admissible for its bearing upon the issues joined on the other count of the petition.

[354]*354It follows that the record is not without support for a finding by the jury that defendant stated that plaintiff did become pregnant and have children, born or aborted, before she was married; and this we have no doubt is slanderous per se.

3. Libel and slander: trial: instructions : scurrilous adjectives: effect. II. The defendant objects that the words “bitch” or “damned old' bitch” said to have been applied by him to plaintiff are not slanderous per se, and the court erred in not so instructing the jury, as requested by That these words alone are not slanderous per se may be admitted, but the charge on which plaintiff relies is not that these contemptuous terms were spoken of her, but of the other words used in connection therewith, which plainly charged that she had borne children before she was married. If such language was used, it clearly imported a charge against the woman’s character for virtue. It needed no colloquium in the petition to make the charge definite or complete, and no proof that those who heard the words spoken understood them in a defamatory sense. While the instruction asked might well have been given, we are not disposed to hold that its refusal was error. the defense.

III. Error is assigned upon the giving of certain instructions, but, as no exception was taken thereto in the manner prescribed by statute, at or before the time when the jury was charged, the errors, if any therein, must be deemed waived.

4. Libel and slander: trial: instructions : separation of actual and exemplary damages. In the motion for new trial, counsel made affidavit that, before the charge was given the jury, they orally asked the court that, in submitting forms of verdict for the not so instructing the jury, as requested by case the jury found in plaintiff’s favor, it should separately state or assess the actual or exemplary damages allowed her; and error is assigned upon the court’s [355]*355failure so to do. Assuming, but not holding, that the question may be properly raised in the manner here attempted, no error is shown. There is no statute or settled rule of practice giving a party the right to make such demand. If-there be, in the judgment of the court, any good reason for this sort of cross-examination of the jury, it is perhaps within its discretion to submit such form of verdict, but the wisdom or propriety of it as a rule is not apparent. This is especially true in a case of alleged slander per so, where there is neither charge nor proof of special damage.

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Bluebook (online)
181 Iowa 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martens-v-martens-iowa-1917.