McCuen v. Ludlum

17 N.J.L. 12
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 N.J.L. 12 (McCuen v. Ludlum) 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
McCuen v. Ludlum, 17 N.J.L. 12 (N.J. 1839).

Opinion

Hornblower, Ch. J.

This case comes before the Court upon a demurrer to the first count in the declaration. After the usual averment that before and at the time &c., the plaintiff was an honest and upright man, &c., the declaration avers, that for a long time before, and at the several times, &c., the plaintiff was, and still is Postmaster of the United States for Deerfield street, in the county of &c., and that the defendant well knowing the premises, but contriving &c., to injure the plaintiff in his good name, &c,, and to bring the plaintiff into great disgrace, See. as such Postmaster, amongst all his neighbors &c., on &c., at &c., in a certain discourse, which the defendant had of and concerning the plaintiff, in the execution of his said office of Postmaster, falsely and maliciously spoke, &c., of and concerning the plaintiff'in the exercise of his said office as Postmaster, in the presence, &c., the words following: “He (meaning the plaintiff) has broken.open my letters in the Post Office” (meaning that the plaintiff liad been and was guilty of breaking open sealed letters addressed to the said defendant, and which-came to the hands of the plaintiff as Postmaster.) Upon this demurrer, two questions are raised by the defendant’s counsel, viz :

[14]*141st. Do the words as laid in the declaration, import any crime ? and

2dly. If they do import an offence against the act of Congress, are they on that account, slanderous and actionable ?

In answer to the first question, I would remark, that to say of any man, whether a Postmaster or not, that he broke open my letters in the Post Office, does not in itself and without reference to any statutory regiilations upon the subject, convey the idea that he has been guilty of any crime exposing him to infamous punishment. He may have broken them open, by authority of law; by accident or inadvertency; or by my request or permission. The mere opening of letters, whether for the gratification of idle curiosity, or as an act of wantonness, does not involve the idea of moral turpitude, or render a man infamous, in such a sense, as the law imputes to those terms, when it is settling the doctrine of slander at the common law. Such conduct is indeed a violation of confidence, and a departure from the rules of propriety, but it is not every impeachment of a man’s motives, nor every.imputation of ungentiemanly and dishonorable conduct, that is actionable.'

It is true, these words are charged to have been spoken of the plaintiff, by the defendant, when he, the defendant was speaking of the plaintiff “in the exercise of his office;” aiid therefore, if the words used, in their ordinary acceptation, imputed to him a want of official integrity ; or even of common honesty, I should be inclined to think they were actionable; as in Ashton v. Blagrove, 2 Ld. Baym, 1369, where the defendant, speaking of the plaintiff as a Justiceof thePeacein the execution of his office, said he was a rascal, a villain anti a liar : the court held, that it was the same as if the defendant had said, the plaintiff was a rascal in the execution of his office : a villain in the execution of his office, and aliar in the execution of his office. But to say of a Post-master, that he opened my letters in the exercise of his office, does not essvi termini, or in common parlance, convey any charge of official misconduct.

By the act of Congress, 3 Story’s laws, 1991, sec. 21, Gordon’s Dig. 725, it is enacted, that if any person employed in any department of the Post Office, shall unlawfully delay, detain or open any letter, &c., he shall forevery such offence, be fined, not [15]*15exceeding 300 dollars, or imprisoned, not exceeding six months, or both, &c, Supppose now, the words charged in the declaration had been, that the plaintiff, had delayed or detained, the defendant’s letters in the Post Office; could it be pretended that such words are actionable in themselves ? And yet it is no more criminal under the statute, to open a letter, than to delay or detain one. Nor is it criminal under the statute, to do either, unless it is unlawfully done.

The question comes then to this, do the words laid to have been spoken of the plaintiff in the execution of his office, in their usual and common acceptation, import that he, unlawfully, and in violation of official duty, broke open the defendant’s letters ? 1 think they do not. 1 think the Court cannot judicially understand them so, except by an inference, not warranted by any averment in the declaration. If there liad been a colloquium, of and concerning the malconduct of the plaintiff, in the execution of his office, or of and concerning his unlawfully breaking open the defendant’s letters; then I admit the words spoken by the defendant, might by a proper hiñendo, bo made to appear, on the record, to mean that the plaintiffhad unlawfully broken open tiie letters. The inuendo in this declaration does not indeed, attempt to make the words mean an unlawful breaking open of the letters; it simply says, “meaning that the plaintiffhad been guilty of breaking open, &c.” But if it had been “meaning that the plaintiffhad unlawfully broken open, &c.” it could not have helped the plaintiff in this case.

The office of an inuendo is often mistaken by pleaders. It cannot extend the sense of the words spoken, beyond their own natural meaning, unless something is put upon the record, to which the words spoken may he referred, and by which, they may be explained by the inuendo, Rex v. Horne, Cowp. 684, as in an action for saying of another, “He has burnt my barn;” the plaintiff cannot by way of inuendo,say, meaning “my barn full of corn;” for that would not bean explanation of what was said before, but an addition to it. But if it liad been previously averred, that the plaintiff had a barn full of corn, and that in a discourse about the barn, the defendant had spoken the words ; an inuendo referring the words to that barn, and explaining them to mean, he burnt my barn full of corn, would have been good. [16]*16Barham’s case, 4 Co. 20. So, it is not actionable to say to a man, “he has sworn false,” or, “has forsworn himself,” unless the words are coupled by an inuendo, with a previous statement in the declaration, that the plaintiff had been legally- sworn as a witness, or testified to something upon an oath duly administered to him. Holt v Scholefield, 6, T. R. 69I; Savage v Robery, Salk. 694; Hawkes v Hawkey, 8 East. 427, in which last case, it was held, even after verdict, that where the words'are ambigous and equivocal, and require explanation, by reference to some extrinsic matter to make them actionable; it must not only be predicated, that such matter existed, but also, that the words were spoken of and concerning that matter.

It is true, words are not to be taken in mitiori sensu; but on the other hand, they are not to receive a forced and unnatural construction, in order to sustain the action, when in the exercise of that charity, “which thinketh no evil,” they may be understood in an innocent sense.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J.L. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccuen-v-ludlum-nj-1839.