Orvis v. Jennings

6 Daly 434
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 Daly 434 (Orvis v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orvis v. Jennings, 6 Daly 434 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

Yah Hoeseh, J.

On the application of the plaintiff, Judge J. F. Daly, at special term, ordered the defendants Jennings and Jones to give a bill of particulars of some of the matters pleaded by them in justification of an alleged libel upon the plaintiff. Afterwards, upon the application of the plaintiff, Judge Yan Brunt, at special term, ordered the defendant Dana to give to the plaintiff a similar bill of particulars.

The defendant Dana appealed from the order of Judge Yan Brunt; and the plaintiff and the defendants Jones and Jennings also appealed from the order of Judge Daly. The appeals were argued at the same time, and two questions were discussed upon the argument, and are now to be determined.

First. Has the court power, in an action for libel, to require the defendant to give to the plaintiff a bill of particulars of the matters pleaded in justification %

Secondly. If the court possesses such power, did the plaintiff in these cases present good reasons for its exercise \

The plaintiff complains that the defendants, in both actions, published concerning him the same libelous statement. That statement is general and vague. It alleges that the plaintiff is [444]*444an old swindler, and refers, in a loose way, to some transactions of a questionable character in which he was engaged at different places in former years. The defendant Dana attempts to justify by simply alleging that the charges of the statement are true. The defendants Jones and Jennings, not content with the general allegation of the truth of the charges, plead with fullness and circumstantiality the facts by which they expect to establish the truth of the imputations upon the plaintiff.

There is no precedent, in this State, for a bill of particulars in a libel suit. In all probability, the plaintiff would not have thought of asking particulars in these cases, but for the decision in Tilton v. Beecher (59 N. Y. 176). Because the Court of Appeals decided in that case that it was in the power of a court of original jurisdiction to order the plaintiff to furnish a bill of particulars in an action for criminal conversation, it seems to be supposed that hereafter a hill of particulars is to he as much a matter of course in an action of tort, as it has hitherto been in an ordinary action on a book account. If Tilton v. Beecher had never been decided, there would still be abundant authority for holding that it is a necessary part of the powers of every court of general jurisdiction to order bills of particulars whenever a party is unable to ascertain from the general statements composing the pleadings of his opponent, what particular questions of fact he must prepare himself to try.

It is true that in .New York the courts have never ordered bills of particulars in any actions of tort, except trover and ejectment, but in England and in Ireland, as well as in several States of the American Union, courts whose inherent powers are the same as those of our own courts, have ordered bills of particulars in trespass, in actions for nuisance, and in actions for libel.

In Jones v. Bewicke (5 L. R. C. P. p. 32), which was an action for libel, the defendant, who had charged the plaintiff with perjury, and who pleaded, by way of justification, that the charge was true, was compelled to give particulars of the matters he relied on to justify the libel.

In Wren v. Weild (4 L. R. Q. B. p. 213), the defendant, who had stated to persons who had bought certain machines of the plaintiff, that such machines were an infringement of his [445]*445patent, was ordered by the Queen’s Bench to furnish to the plaintiff a bill of particulars specifying in what respects the machines infringed his patent.

In Wood v. Jones (1 Fost. & F. p. 301), the plaintiff in an action for slander, was compelled to furnish the names of the persons to whom the defendant had communicated the slander, and whose patronage the plaintiff had lost in consequence of the aspersions.

In Slator v. Slator (8 Law Times Rep. N. S. p. 856), the plaintiff was ordered to give particulars of the occasions on which the defendant had uttered the slander. The plaintiff’s counsel stated, in the course of his argument, that he had searched the books from Croke Jac. downward, without finding a precedent in England for the application.

In Lagan v. Gibson (Irish Exchequer, Nov. 15, 1875, reported in vol. 9 Irish Reports, O. L. series, p. 507), which was an action for seduction, the defendant applied for a bill of particulars, and the Chief Baron, though denying the application, used the following language on the subject of the power of the court to order particulars: “ There is no doubt that the court has an inherent jurisdiction to order particulars in all cases in which it is satisfied by affidavit that either for the purpose of pleading, or of defense at the trial, the plaintiff should more clearly define his cause of action. The application, however, is not granted of course; special grounds and circumstances must be proved, to show the necessity for more specific information.”

The case Early v. Smith (Irish Law Reports New Series vol. 12, appendix p. 35), establishing the power of the court to order particulars, was mentioned with approval by the Court of Appeals in Tilton v. Beecher (supra).

In True v. Plumley (36 Maine, 466), and in Clark v. Munsell (6 Metc. 373), the plaintiffs were compelled to furnish particulars of the facts constituting a right of action for slander.

Whilst there is no doubt that the courts I have mentioned have never until recently exercised the power, it cannot now be questioned that they have, even in actions of tort, u an inherent jurisdiction ” to quote the words of Chief Baron Palles, “ to order particulars.”

[446]*446It is contended, however, by the counsel for the defendants, that the courts of New York have not the power to order particulars that is possessed by the courts in the United Kingdom, because the Code, which was intended as a revision of, or as a substitute for, the old common-law practice, makes no provision for bills of particulars, except where an account is pleaded, or where the claim of a party is lacking in definiteness. The word claim has, it is argued, a signification well settled and thoroughly understood. It implies, we are told, a demand for afiBrmative relief, and, for the purpose of showing such to be its meaning, various definitions of the word have been collated from the law dictionaries of Jacob, Bouvier, and Burrill. All the definitions agree that a claim is a demand for a thing, the ownership of which, or an interest in which, is in the claimant, but the possession of which is wrongfully withheld by another. It is singular that no one of the definitions fairly covers the demand made by Tilton against Beecher. It would be doing violence to language to say that the damages which Tilton sought were property which he owned, and which Beecher wrongfully withheld. The Court of Appeals, when they declared it to be within the power of the City Court of Brooklyn to order Tilton to furnish particulars, must have regarded the word claim, in § 158, as having a broader signification than the law dictionaries ascribe to it. In common parlance a claim means an assertion, a pretension. When claim

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orvis-v-jennings-nyctcompl-1876.