Ogle v. Sidwell

149 S.W. 973, 167 Mo. App. 292, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 645
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 973 (Ogle v. Sidwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogle v. Sidwell, 149 S.W. 973, 167 Mo. App. 292, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 645 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

This is an action by plaintiff against defendant for alleged slander. It is averred in the petition that plaintiff had been on trial before a justice' of the peace and a jury in a township in [297]*297Pike county, plaintiff being charged with an assault upon one Wheeler; that plaintiff was acquitted and discharged. It is further averred, that referring to that verdict of acquittal, defendant had wilfully, wantonly and maliciously spoken of and concerning plaintiff and concerning his discharge from the criminal prosecution by the verdict, certain false, defamatory and slanderous words, among others that plaintiff “bought that jury; no jury would ever have cleared him if he had not bought them; he (plaintiff) paid every man on that jury something to turn him loose.” “He (plaintiff) got the jurors drunk and bought them; they would not have turned him loose if he had not paid them to do it.” “He (plaintiff) bribed the jurors.” “It was a concocted thing; it was a bribed jury, and old - was drunk and went to sleep in the jury bos.” “He (plaintiff) bought his way through and swindled his way through; there was no doubt but what the jurors were bought and were drunk; the jurors must have been drunk or bribed.” He (defendant) had “never heard of such a decision in his life. The jurors must have been bribed or drunk and Hugh Ogle bribed them and also got them drunk. ’ ’ It is charged that in speaking these words in the presence of divers and sundry persons, plaintiff intended to charge and did charge plaintiff with the commission of a crime under the laws of the State of Missouri, and further intended thereby to charge and did charge plaintiff with committing a criminal offense by corrupting and bribing jurors by giving gifts and gratuities and using unlawful means with intent to bias the minds of the jurors and to influence their verdict thereby, and that the persons in whose presence and hearing the words were spoken by defendant so interpreted and understood them, and understood by them that defendant asserted that plaintiff committed a criminal offense and bribed the jurors and made them drunk in order to secure a favorable decision in a erim[298]*298inal case. Claiming that he had been greatly injured and had suffered actual damages in the sum of $1000, he prayed for that and for $4000 punitive damages.

The answer was a general denial.

The cause was tried before the court and a jury. The< jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant, judgment following. Plaintiff interposed a motion for new trial and saving exception to that being overruled has brought the case here by appeal.

The errors assigned are to the admission of certain evidence on the part of defendant, to the refusal of an instruction asked by plaintiff, and to the giving of several instructions asked by defendant.

We have examined the assignments of error in the admission of testimony. One of these goes to the admission of evidence drawn out either in cross-examination of witnesses or when offered by defendant, tending to show that the trial of the case in which the State was prosecutor and plaintiff was defendant had been pretty generally discussed in the community and that others joining in the conversations with defendant had made statements similar to those attributed to defendant. We do not think this assignment is well taken. All of this testimony came out in connection with conversations that were carried on between defendant and various parties concerning the trial of plaintiff, and it is difficult to see how any connected account of the conversations and of what it is charged defendant said in them and in which defendant is alleged to have uttered the defamatory matter could have been brought out., unless all of the conversation was' given. That this trial of plaintiff under the charge of assault was a matter of common discussion among the neighbors and that defendant had merely joined in this general conversation, certainly wént to explain what defendant said in these conversations. ' The pertinency of this testimony was two-fold: first, it gave the whole conversation and, second, it [299]*299gave in connection with, the conversation the circumstances tending to remove any implication of malice of defendant in his part of these general conversations.

It is urged that as neither mitigation nor justification was pleaded, the answer being a general denial, this evidence was incompetent for any purpose. We cannot agree with that proposition. As before remarked, without it, it was impossible for the jury to have obtained an intelligent account of the conversation carried on and of the circumstances under which the conversation occurred. We are unable to see how the objection .that this was in mitigation of damages and that justification had not been pleaded in mitigation is pertinent. The jury, by their verdict, found that defendant had not uttered the words with which he was charged, so that there was no question of damages to be considered. If the verdict had been in favor of plaintiff and mere nominal damages awarded, a different aspect would be placed upon this matter. But that was not the case.

It is further assigned as error in the introduction of testimony that the court permitted defendant “to testify as to what he meant by the statements he admitted he made.” We are referred to a page of the abstract in support of this assignment. Turning to that page, we find this occurred:

Counsel for defendant asked him, “What did you mean when you said ‘the other parties taking sides?’ ”

Mr. Hostetter: “We object to that. Let him state the conversation?”

Objection overruled and exception saved.

Counsel for defendant then said: “Answer the question.”

The witness said, “Well, I meant — ”

Whereupon the court interposed and said to counsel, “You may inquire as to whom he referred.” Defendant’s counsel then asked him who he meant by “the other parties.” Witness answered this by tell[300]*300ing who he had meant. It will he seen here that while the court first overruled the objection as . made, he corrected this ruling and practically sustained the objection by directing the witness to answer, not what he meant, hut whom he meant when speaking of the matter. This was a correct ruling. A witness in a case of this kind is always at liberty to testify as to whom he meant, when names are not used. The very gist of the action is to establish as a fact that defendant uttered the words charged as slanderous of and concerning plaintiff. If he had not uttered them of and concerning plaintiff, but of and concerning another party, he was within his right, when testifying, to so declare.

It is further urged that the court erred in permitting defendant to give evidence of circumstances from which .a conclusion could he drawn that the justice of the peace and the constable who had figured in the trial of plaintiff in the state case in which plaintiff here was defendant, had acted improperly in that trial. We cannot appreciate the force of this objection, principally for the reason before stated. That is to say, it was very difficult to give an account of this matter of the trial of plaintiff, without going into all the particulars connected with it. The court permitted all this matter to he gone into very fully at the instance of both parties and we are unable to see how the facts in the case could have been properly presented before the jury without the admission of this evidence. We find no reversible error in the admission of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 973, 167 Mo. App. 292, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogle-v-sidwell-moctapp-1912.