McDonald v. Woodruff

16 F. Cas. 49, 2 Dill. 244
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 49 (McDonald v. Woodruff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Woodruff, 16 F. Cas. 49, 2 Dill. 244 (circtedar 1871).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In an action against the defendant as the publisher of a newspaper, for the publication of an article, libelous in its nature, concerning the plaintiff, a plea setting up that the article in question was first published in another designated newspaper, and that it was simply copied into the defendant’s paper as an item of news, and that the article as copied showed that it was thus copied or taken from the other newspaper, is demurrable; these facts are available under the common law system of pleading, which prevails in this court, in mitigation of damages under the general issue, but in themselves are not pleadable in bar. Such is the weight of authority, and this view seems to us better supported by reason and principle than the opposite one. 2 Greenl. Ev. § 424, and cases cited; Romayne v. Duane [Case No. 12,028].

Tlie cause was subsequently tried before DILLON, Circuit Judge, and CALDWELL, District Judge, and a jury. The plaintiff was the supervisor of internal revenue for the district embracing Missouri, Arkansas, and the Indian Territory. His official conduct iu proceedings against tobacco manufacturers in the Indian country (see U. S. v. Tobacco Factory [Id. 16,528]; The Cherokee Tobacco, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 616) called forth an article stated to have been written by Col. Bondinot, reflecting severely upon the plaintiff. This article, first appearing in another newspaper published in or near the Indian country, was copied by the defendants into the Daily Arkansas Gazette, of which they were the proprietors. The article was of considerable length, but in it were expressions referring to the plaintiff as “a self-convicted liar,” “a stupid ass,” “he is in the pay of the St. Louis tobacco manufacturers.” No plea of justification was filed, and on the trial no evidence was offered to show any fraudulent or corrupt official conduct on the part of the plaintiff. The evidence being in, and the argument concluded, the circuit judge, with the concurrence of the district judge, charged the jury, as follows:

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

1. This is an action of libel. The declaration contains two counts. The one charges the alleged libelous article was published by the defend[50]*50ants of the plaintiff as a private citizen. The other charges that the same libel was published of the plaintiff in his public capacity as supervisor of internal revenue. The defendants plead not guilty. This makes it incumbent on the plaintiff to prove the publication as alleged by the defendants of the article or words alleged to be libelous; the fact that the article or words referred to the plaintiff; his official character, so far as damages are asked, in respect to his official character, and the defendants’ alleged malicious intention in the publication of the article or publication complained of as libelous. If the defendants were the proprietor’s of the newspaper named in the declaration, called the Daily Arkansas Gazette, and if the article containing the words alleged in the declaration was published therein while the defendants were such proprietors, the allegation of the publication is established, and one of the proprietors of a paper is liable for what is done by the others in publishing libelous articles upon individuals.

2. If you find the fact of the publication by the defendants proved to your satisfaction by the evidence, you will next consider whether the article published related to the plaintiff, and is libelous in its character. At the present day the law in relation to libel is "that the judge is not bound to state to the jury, as a matter of law, whether the publication complained of, and sued for, is a libel or not; but the proper course is for him to define what is a libel in point of law, and leave it to the jury whether the publication falls within that definition, and as incidental to that, whether it is calculated to injure the reputation of the plaintiff.” 2 Greenl. Ev. § 411.

Accordingly, it becomes the duty of the court to define what is, in law, a libel. This we do in the language of the supreme court of the United States: “Every publication in print, which charges upon or imputes to any person that which renders him liable to punishment, or is calculated to make him infamous, odious, or ridiculous, is a libel, and. implies malice in the author or publisher. I’roof of malice in such publications is not required of the plaintiff; justification, excuse, or extenuation, if either can be shown, must proceed from the defendant.” [White v. Nicholls] 3 How. [44 U. S.] 291.

It is your duty to determine whether the publication sued for in this action falls within this definition. The plaintiff selects certain parts of the article, and charges it to be libelous. In determining whether the publication was or was not libelous, as above defined, you are to consider the whole publication-take it by the four corners and consider it in all its parts, in order to determine the meaning and purpose, character and effect of the particular words complained of.

3. Malice is essential to make a publication a libel; but in law, every publication which falls within the definition of libel above given, is, in law, presumptively malicious. Malice has, in law, a meaning not exactly the same in all respects with its common signification. Malice, in its common acceptation, means ill-will against a • person; but in its legal sense, means a wrongful act done intentionally, or without just cause or excuse. Malice, in law, is not the same thing as malice in fact. Malice, in law, is implied from wrongful and unjustifiable acts, done on purpose or without just or legal excuse.

4. There is a wide difference between publications relating to public and private individuals. Every person and every newspaper may fairly criticise the action or official conduct of public men or public officers; so far there is no liability; but neither a person nor newspaper can make such comments or criticism a vehicle for malice or the indulgence of private spite; nor impute to public men or officers such conduct as disgraces or dishonors them; or make charges against them which have this effect, unless they are able to justify or prove them to be true, and made in good faith and for good ends.

5. If you find that the publication alleged in the declaration was made by the defendants as therein alleged, and that it was libelous in its character, as a libel is before defined, you will have occasion to consider the question of damages; and in its consideration your attention should be directed to all the circumstances of the ease. Malice is essential to the action; but malice, as above explained, is of two kinds — legal or implied malice, and actual malice: that is, personal spite or ill-will. The amount of damages (if the plaintiff, in an action for libel, is entitled to recover] depends, where no special damage is shown (and evidence of no special damage has been produced in this case), upon the degree or intensity of the malice, legal or actual. You can derive no aid in assessing damages from the results of other cases, for it is quite impossible, in the nature of things, that any two actions for libel should be exactly alike.

The circumstances and the distinctive character of the case before you are to be considered. It must be evident to you, that if the defendants are liable at all, the amount of their liability is, or may be, very different from what it would have been if they had written the article instead of having copied it (as it is conceded they did) from another journal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 49, 2 Dill. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-woodruff-circtedar-1871.