Maurice v. Worden

54 Md. 233, 1880 Md. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 54 Md. 233 (Maurice v. Worden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maurice v. Worden, 54 Md. 233, 1880 Md. LEXIS 87 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Brent, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The libel charged in the declaration, consists of an endorsement written by the appellee upon a letter of the appellant, tendering his resignation of the position of teacher of French in the United States Fa val Academy at Annapolis. The letter, it is alleged, was addressed to the appellee, an officer in the United States ilavy, and then in command and authority over the Uaval Academy, to be by him transmitted to the Secretary of the ISTavy. Before being so transmitted, it is charged that it was falsely and maliciously endorsed with the alleged libel.

To the declaration, the appellee pleaded non cul., and limitations in two forms—1st. That the cause of action did not accrue within one year; and 2nd, that the alleged writing and publishing was not within one year before the commencement of this suit.

Issue was taken to the plea of non cul., and the appellant replied to the pleas of limitations, that he was kept in ignorance by the fraud of the defendant, of the cause of action accruing to him, and did not discover or know of the said fraud, nor could the same have been discovered [250]*250or known of by him, with usual and ordinary diligence on his part, before or until the third day of February, 1876, and that at the last mentioned date,- the defendant -was absent out of this State, and so remained until less than one year before this suit was brought. And the same as to the writing and publishing.

To each of these replications, the appellee filed four rejoinders, denying seriatim each one of the several facts alleged. Issues were thereupon joined by way of rebutter, and upon this state of the pleading, the case proceeded to trial.

The plaintiff put upon the witness stand Mrs. Maurice, who testified, subject to exceptions, that the defendant in 1878, in reply to a question from her, admitted that he had endorsed upon the resignation of the plaintiff, the words complained of as libellous, and also offered, subject to like exceptions, a copy furnished from the files of the Naval Academy, of said resignation and the endorsement thereon of the -defendant. Mrs. Maurice further proved that she told the defendant she had this copy in her possession, and it was to that she referred in her conversation with him. At this stage of the case, the defendant moved to exclude all this testimony, and in connection with the motion, for the purpose of showing that the endorsement in question was a communication made by him to the Navy Department in the discharge of his official duty, and was upon that ground inadmissible in evidence against him, asked leave to call a witness, and to ask him whether the book referred to .in the record as Defendant’s Exhibit A,” was the book of regulations for tbe government of all persons attached to the United States Naval Service, in force on the 4th of October, 1872, and applicable to persons then attached to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. The plaintiff objected, and insists that having commenced his proof, he had the right to proceed and finish before any evidence on the part of the defend[251]*251ant conld be properly offered. The Court overruled the objection, and permitted the witness to be called. This is the error alleged in the first exception.

The rule of Court proyiding that on trials of fact the plaintiff shall have the opening and conclusion,” does not apply to the question here presented ; nor does the rule that the plaintiff must put in the whole of his evidence upon every point or issue which he opens, before the defendant proceeds with the evidence on his part. The offer of the defendant was not for the purpose of placing before the jury his evidence in defence, before the plaintiff had closed. The testimony offered was exclusively for the Court, whose province it was to determine whether the communication in question to the Secretary of the Havy, was such a privileged paper as excluded it altogether from being properly in evidence before the jury. Hot to have decided the question when presented might have unnecessarily prolonged the trial. If the paper in question was absolutely privileged it was not admissible, and no proof, which the plaintiff could have afterwards offered, would have enabled him to recover. ■ The proof proposed was necessary for the decision of this question, and the Court acted rightly in determining to hear it.

Another reason in support of the action of the Court may also be stated. If the communication should not have been held upon the proof offered to be absolutely privileged, it may have been found to fall within the class of communications to which the doctrine of qualified privilege is applied. This being so, the order of proof would become changed, by putting upon the plaintiff the burden of showing that the paper was not written from a sense of duty, but from malice and ill-will.

But the Court has at any stage of the trial, the right and power to exclude evidence improperly admitted, or admitted subject to exceptions. If its admissibility depends upon outside or collateral facts, there can be no [252]*252reason why the Court should not hear them without' delay. The admissibility of evidence must not he confounded with the rule, directing the order in which the respective parties are required to offer their evidence in support of their case.

The defendant, after the objection of the plaintiff, as stated in the first bill of exceptions was overruled, proved that the bookmarked Defendant’s Exhibit A,” contains the regulations for the government of all persons attached to the Naval Service of the United States, which were in force on the 4th of October, 1872, and were in force during the whole of the defendant’s connection with the Naval Academy at Annapolis. These regulations purport to have been established by the Secretary of the Navy in March, 1870. Their binding effect upon the defendant cannot be questioned. The Act of Congress, Rev. Stat. U. S., sec. 1547, passed in accordance with Article 1, sec. 8, of the Constitution of the United States, by express terms, provides that the orders, regulations and instructions issued by the Secretary of the Navy, are to be recognized as the regulations of the Navy.

Number 1448 of these regulations, directs that “All officers through whom communications from inferiors are to be forwarded to the Department, one of the bureaus or any authority higher than themselves, must forward the same, if couched in respectful language, as soon after being received as practicable, and they will invariably state their opinion in writing, by endorsement or otherwise, in relation to every subject presented for decision.” The resignation of the plaintiff was placed in the hands of the defendant, then Superintendent of the Naval Academy, to he forwarded to the Secretary of the Navy for his decision. The regulation referred to plainly required the appellee to state his opinion in writing, by endorsement or otherwise, in regard to the propriety of its being accepted. This he did by making the endorse[253]*253ment complained of. It was therefore made in the line of his duty, and one of the questions presented by the second exception, is whether or not this endorsement is a privileged communication, and if so, to what extent ?

There -are two classes of privileged communications which form exceptions to the general law of libel.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 233, 1880 Md. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maurice-v-worden-md-1880.