McClintock v. Crick

4 Iowa 453
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 4 Iowa 453 (McClintock v. Crick) 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
McClintock v. Crick, 4 Iowa 453 (iowa 1857).

Opinion

Weight, G. J.

The answer, filed in April, 1857, sets up some of the same matters of defence as are contained in the one filed in March, 1855. The defendant, in the last answer, attempts to plead these matters in a more logical and definite form; and we need not, therefore, stop to inquire into the sufficiency of these portions of the first answer. By filing the further and additional answer, and thus, in effect, in this case, amending his former pleadings, defendant waived all right to complain of any supposed error in the ruling, made on the first demurrer, so far as that demurrer raised the same questions as were raised by the second one.

[456]*456In the first answer, however, there is what is claimed to be, a plea in justification, which is not contained in the second, and it is urged that the court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to such plea. The substance of this portion of the answer is as follows: “And for a further answer, defendant says that the said plaintiff, either in person or through his (plaintiff’s) children, and with plaintiff’s knowledge and consent, did kill, take and carry away, and appropriate to his own use, chickens belonging to defendant." To understand this language, it is proper to state that plaintiff claims that defendant charged him, on several occasions, with stealing his (defendant's) chickens. That this allegation of the answer is wanting in almost every essential to make it a good plea of justification, is most manifest. It fails to confess the speaking of the words. See- Starkie on Slander, 248. It fails to set forth such matters as fix upon the plaintiff any crime, much less the specific one imputed to him by the words charged in the petition of plaintiff. The justification, so far from being in point of law, identical with the charge in the petition, falls short of justifying any offence, or of showing that, in the taking of said chickens, there was any crime whatever. That a plea, which relies upon the truth of the words spoken, as a bar to recovery, is fatally defective, which is wanting in the particulars above suggested, is well settled. See 1 American Leading Cases, 178, and cases there cited.

The questions raised by the demurrer, and motion to strike the second or last answer, may be considered under two heads: First, such as relate to those portions which were set up in the answer, filed March 26, -1855. Second, such as relate to the new and distinct grounds of defence, therein contained. In the third clause of his answer, defendant sets up that said words, charged in plaintiff’s petition, if spoken by him, were spoken at a time when plaintiff was speaking and uttering false and scandalous words about defendant, (giving the words spoken by plaintiff,) and at a time when defendant was angry and in a passion, occasioned by the speaking of said false and scandalous words by plain[457]*457tiff. That the matters contained in this clause, if true, ■would not bar plaintiff’s recovery, we suppose to be too well settled to admit of controversy. If, however, the words were spoken through heat of passion, or under excitement, produced by the immediate provocation of plaintiff, such excitement or passion may be "shown in mitigation of damages ; “ for evidence that the speaking was impulsive and involuntary, undoubtedly diminishes malice, as understood by the law.” Larned v. Buffington, 3 Mass. 546; Seely v. Lovejoy, 8 Blackf. 462. And, it may be stated as a general principle, that all the immediate circumstances, under which the words were spoken, are proper to -be shown to the jury, as they define the true character of the speaking, which is alleged to be slanderous. See note to Gilman v. Lovell, 1 American Leading Cases, 203. And this passion — this provocation — and their immediate circumstances, may be shown, without specially setting them up or pleading them. Under the former system of pleading, they might be shown under the general issue; and so, we think, they may be under our practice, without alleging them specifically in an answer.

In the case before us, as these matters were set up, we think the court might well have overruled the demurrer, upon the ground that plaintiff could not complain, if by such answer, he was notified that defendant would insist on the trial, that the words were spoken under the circumstances stated. But as the thing, if proved, could not bar plaintiff’s recovery, but might under the general denial of the speaking of the words, be received in mitigation of damages, we cannot say there was error in sustaining the demurrer to this portion of the answer. If it appeared that defendant proposed to prove the same facts on the trial, and was not permitted to do so, the question would be quite different. Nothing of the kind is shown, however. Eor aught that is disclosed, he had the benefit of all these circumstances on the hearing before the jury. There was certainly nothing to prevent it.

[458]*458In the first, second and foutth clauses of the answer, it is set forth, (but with what legal sufficiency, we do not stop to inquire,) first, that plaintiff is owing and stands indebted to defendant in the sum of six dollars, for the value of four dozen chickens; second, that plaintiff spoke of defendant certain scandalous and defamatory words, to his (defendant’s) great damage and injury, which sum of six dollars, and the damages resulting from such slanderous words, defendant proposes to offset against any damages which plaintiff may show he has sustained by the supposed speaking' of the words charged in plaintiff’s petition; and third, that plaintiff’s character was so bad in the community in which he resided, that he sustained no injury from the speaking of the words by plaintiff. All these matters were struck from the files, on the plaintiff’s motion, and this is now assigned for error. We cannot 'say that the court erred in sustaining this motion. It will be remembered that this case was commenced in 1852, and that at the first term, defendant filed his answer, denying the speaking of the words. On that issue, a trial was had, in which plaintiff recovered. Defendant appealed to this court, where the decision was "in his favor. The cause being remanded, a further answer was filed in March, 1855, which, however, contained none of these matters now under consideration. The demurrer to the answer filed in 1855, being sustained, the case stood at issue upon the answer filed in 1852, until the 13th of April, 1857, (the day before the cause was finally tried,) when the defendant sets up in his defence new matter — matter which raises new issues, and which must almost as a necessary consequence, work a continuance of the cause. No reason is shown why these same matters were not set up long before this trial. There is nothing to show that they came to defendant’s knowledge since filing his former answer; nor does it appear but that he knew them all as well before, as after first pleading to plaintiff’s petition. Under such circumstances, we are far from being satisfied that there was error in refusing t'o defendant the benefit of such further or supplemental answer. To allow a party to make such a [459]*459supplemental pleading, rests so peculiarly in the discretion of the court below, that we should want to be much better satisfied than we are in this case, that such discretion had been improperly exercised, before we would interfere with it.

We are next to inquire, whether there was error in suppressing the deposition of the witness Laforce.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Iowa 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclintock-v-crick-iowa-1857.